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Why Do We Hike?

menu_book picture_as_pdf bookTim Savage Resource Blog Inspiration Australia
Issue_22_April_2017-54

In writing this article I started with a clear picture in my mind about why I like to hike. I don’t have to think too hard about why I enjoy hiking so much or about what drives me in life and why I do the things I do. Are other people that transparent in their motivations or is it just me? The following are just some of the reasons we hike. Some will have an affinity with them and others will think “What the …?”

Why Do We Hike?

Tim Savage aka Australian Hiker

An early start to beat the heat, Larapinta Trail, 2016Tim Savage

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The obvious reason that many people hike is fitness. It doesn’t matter how far you walk or for how long, you are improving your health at the same time. For many of us it is the opportunity to get out of the office and exercise muscles we don’t use much of the week when sitting at a desk.

The Lancet is one of the world's oldest and best known general medical journals. A Lancet article found that sitting at least eight hours a day increases your chance of premature death by up to 60% and this is now considered as posing as great a threat to your health as smoking, and causing more deaths than obesity. The prevention? One hour of brisk walking or cycling a day, which can be spread over the day.

Weight loss is also another health benefit of hiking, particularly for males. While I may not be trying to lose weight when hiking, I will lose on average up to seven kilograms on a two-week hike. Females will usually not lose the same amount due to physiological differences but will still lose weight on long hikes.

For most of us hiking is very different from what we do in our day jobs. We are walking around, we are outside and we usually don’t have computers and mobile phones beeping at us. On walks I carry a fair amount of technology for the blog and I enjoy going into areas with no phone and internet access. Between this blog and work, I spend about 10 hours a day online so it’s nice to just get away.

In addition to health and fitness, for me exercise in any form is also about thinking time! As a result I like doing forms of exercise where I can go into autopilot, let my body do what it needs (left right, left right, repeat). I can devote part of my brain to doing what I need to do but this automation process also allows me to focus on other things. Most of my ideas for this blog, for work, for life in general occur when I am in this autopilot mode.

Another reason, at least from my perspective, is connecting to nature.

Photography, Switzerland, 2015Gill Savage

Weight loss is also another health benefit of hiking, particularly for males.

I enjoy just being in nature and interacting with the environment.

... you learn a lot about nature and a lot about yourself.

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I have had what can only be described as spiritual moments on three occasions during my life and all of these have been in the outdoors. I have done and seen some amazing things over my lifetime and I haven’t finished yet. I enjoy just being in nature and interacting with the environment. I enjoy sunrises; I enjoy the play of light and shadow that creates new scenes even though I may have visited an area dozens of times before.

In recent years I have discovered night hiking and when the conditions are right I take this opportunity any time I can. By being in nature you get to see things that many people never experience; its just plain life affirming.

Time with your significant other/best friend is also a reason that many people hike. You get to exercise all of the above and do it with the person with whom you have a strong connection. One of the strangest questions that we have ever been asked is “What do you talk about for so long?” We talk about everything and anything, we laugh, we argue and we talk about what we are seeing and

experiencing. We live these memories long after a hike is over and it reaffirms that we weren’t just imagining something because someone else was there.

When I hike with my wife I will usually follow behind and let her set the pace and focus on her boots, which is fine, until recently when she walked under a low tree branch which she cleared quite comfortably without having to dip her head; but I didn’t. She couldn’t work out why I was on the ground when she turned around, @#*&! After I recovered we did laugh!

Another reason for hiking is that you learn a lot about nature and a lot about yourself. You get to see things others don’t see. You come to learn that there is a big wide world out there containing some pretty amazing things that has been hidden to you up to now. I like to take photographs and some of my best shots have happened at odd times or at times you would think had nothing to offer. I love taking wilderness photos just after a big storm and as result “bad” weather is not an obstacle but an opportunity.

Unnamed Bhutan mountain, 2012Tim Savage

... “bad” weather is not an obstacle but an opportunity.

... I see myself as my biggest competition.

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Tim on the Larapinta Trail, 2016Gill Savage

Hiking is a challenge. Obviously if you are fit, short hikes are usually easier physically but you still need to overcome the mental challenges. We need challenges in our life that take us outside of our comfort zone. The use it or loose it concept applies to your mental and physical self. This is where I get on my soapbox. People will often assume that because I or they are in the older age bracket that they can’t keep up or won’t be able to do something that a younger hiker can. This may or not be true. Ability has nothing to do with age and while I don’t mend as quickly as I did 20 years ago if I injure myself, I have a great level of experience and know my own body and my own abilities. There are many 40 year+ hikers out there, doing some serious hiking. Don’t let age restrict your dreams, just ease into it if you are starting late in life.

While most people can relate to what I have written so far I’ll now move into the realms of crazy, or at least that’s how people look at me when I discuss some of my more extreme adventures and the reasons behind them.

I’m what can only be described as a type A personality; I’m competitive, outgoing and ambitious. I don’t like being told that something can’t be done. Thankfully this competitive streak is inward focused and I see myself as my biggest competition. I still intend to be hiking for the next thirty years at least and have some extreme through hikes planned that generate the crazy looks from friends and family. As an example of this extreme behaviour I decided to do a 54 kilometre hike on Christmas Eve. Partially just because and also as a way of determining my current abilities. In the short term for events like the 2017 Oxfam Trail Walker

which is about 100 kilometres in 48 hours and in the longer term for a series of through hikes of 650 kilometres+ that I have planned over the next six years.

I operate differently when I’m solo hiking, in fact I’m probably safer when I am hiking alone because I am very, very focused on my surroundings because I know there is a lot less margin for error when you are by yourself. I blogged and podcasted on this 54 kilometre hike to Mt Bimberi in the ACT in January 2017. It was the first long-distance solo hike I have done in a wilderness area and it was a very interesting feeling to know that there wasn’t another living soul anywhere within 20 kilometres in any direction. For me this something that I will continue to do in conjunction with hiking as a couple.

So whatever the reason you hike, and whatever the distance, the important thing to remember is just to get out there.

The best way to describe Tim is obsessive. He’s a compulsive planner; a compulsive walker has a love of learning, as well as a love of helping others to learn. For Tim walking is a way to connect with the world in an almost primal manner and he identifies most of his "spiritual" moments throughout his life as coming from time spent outdoors. He has a background in landscape architecture, horticulture and cultural heritage with a particular interest in how we engage with the environment. He has been a hiker on and off for over 40 years and enjoys walks ranging from a short walks to work through to multi-day hikes. In recent years he has become interested in long-distance and ultralight hiking and writes a blog.

Tim and Gill

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