Type-2 fun stories

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OldTrad
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by OldTrad »

jfm3 wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 11:26 am Took almost 12 hours and I was wallowing through thigh-deep snow most of the last 9 miles.
OMG what am effing nightmare! Hopefully the bulk of the wallowing was done in the dark... :wft:
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TakeMeToYourSummit
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by TakeMeToYourSummit »

Chicago Transplant wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 9:20 am Pretty much any hike I did this year that had long stretches that had been decimated by March's avalanche cycle were Type 2 fun. The worst was the hike out of Lime Creek after repeating the Avalanche/Hammer ridge. Multiple new slide paths with a lot of downed timber. Words can't describe how awful the hike out was.
Yep! I did the Ribbed to Eagle Peak B traverse on LDW. I did the low valley in the morning... so I KNEW I was gonna be stoked to be on some airy cliffs & not repeating the route back through most of that mess! I just read your TR on Avalanche & Hammer - strong work! :bicep: I might have to give that one a go sometime... in a few years, after the trail gets back to normal!
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timisimaginary
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by timisimaginary »

Thanksgiving dinner at my mother-in-law's.

on second thought, that was probably type 3.
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jerseybrian
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by jerseybrian »

justiner wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 11:31 am
jerseybrian wrote: Mon Dec 02, 2019 8:41 pm Long's duathlon would probably be #1 for me so far. I heard about it on top of Green Mountain one day from an ultra guy. I thought it sounded like fun! I trained for a few years doing the Mt. Audobon duathlon and attempting to go for Long's. Last year I made 2 attempts and my 2nd I made it! Even at the Boulder field I was thinking about turning back and why I was doing such a crazy thing. By the time I made it back to Lyons for ice cream at the dairy bar I knew I was hooked! I'll be doing it again to try to shave a couple hours off. I had worked an 8 hour shift, packed and left at 11pm and got back to Boulder at 7pm the next day! One of the best days of my life!
NICE WORK!
Thanks Justin! I got a lot of inspiration from your adventures up there as well!
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by Wentzl »

I ran the Crow Pass Crossing in 2001, when the last 5 miles of the course were underwater and required wading for an hour or more in waist deep glacier run off. As I recall, it really helped the sore knees, but maybe qualifies as type 2 anyway? not sure
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by pbakwin »

I just realized that pretty much my entire life consists of Type II fun... Is there a support group for this?
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by justiner »

Wentzl wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 9:18 pm I ran the Crow Pass Crossing in 2001, when the last 5 miles of the course were underwater and required wading for an hour or more in waist deep glacier run off. As I recall, it really helped the sore knees, but maybe qualifies as type 2 anyway? not sure
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Trotter
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by Trotter »

justiner wrote: Sun Dec 01, 2019 7:59 pm bulls**t.jpg
:lol: :lol: :lol:
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Teresa Gergen
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by Teresa Gergen »

pbakwin wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 9:39 pm I just realized that pretty much my entire life consists of Type II fun... Is there a support group for this?
Probably, but there's not actually a cure.
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by HikesInGeologicTime »

pbakwin wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 9:39 pm I just realized that pretty much my entire life consists of Type II fun... Is there a support group for this?
14ers.com.
timisimaginary wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 3:28 pm Thanksgiving dinner at my mother-in-law's.

on second thought, that was probably type 3.
:lol:

For me, that was any occasion with my ex-stepfather-in-(Colorado’s so troublingly nebulous that I was legitimately worried I’d be on the line for alimony after the breakup) common-law. He missed his calling as a fire-and-brimstone preacher, only he lacked the fire. Type 3 also encompasses the 6.75 years of fun I had with his stepson, though even I can’t place 100% of the blame on that mangy little sewer rat for the apathetic-at-best attitude toward dating I’ve had in the seven years since I dumped him. Only 95-99%, perhaps.

***

As for the original question...my trip reports are largely about the Type 2 outings I’ve had, and most of those either involve the Sawatches or encounters with the infamous Lake Como Road.

My first time up Longs was Type 3; I got my body temperature down to 87.1 degrees, and that turned out to be the least of my concerns! But I went back and did it again the next year (I had to be carried down the last mile on a stretcher the first time, which - by my admittedly ridiculous reckoning - invalidated the previous fourteen), had 100% fewer ER visits, and nonetheless swore that would be my last fighting that mountain. These days, I continuously check weather forecasts for that peak to see if there’s a good window in which I can climb it again... ](*,)
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OldTrad
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by OldTrad »

Teresa Gergen wrote: Wed Dec 04, 2019 7:20 am
pbakwin wrote: Tue Dec 03, 2019 9:39 pm I just realized that pretty much my entire life consists of Type II fun... Is there a support group for this?
Probably, but there's not actually a cure.
Agreed that there's no cure specific to type-2 addiction, however my understanding is that a more drastic "scorched earth" approach can be taken.

All you have to do is increase the "fun"/"treatment" level to type-3 (see definition). This is as effective as anything short of a lobotomy, although those who know me may disagree, and will result in a complete cure for type-2 and type-3 mountain activities.

If, after engaging in type-3 fun you aren't cured, then by definition you didn't really up the fun to type-3, so go back and turn the "treatment" up a few clicks.
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Re: Type-2 fun stories

Post by justiner »

OldTrad wrote: Wed Dec 04, 2019 3:28 pm
Agreed that there's no cure specific to type-2 addiction, however my understanding is that a more drastic "scorched earth" approach can be taken.

All you have to do is increase the "fun"/"treatment" level to type-3 (see definition). This is as effective as anything short of a lobotomy, although those who know me may disagree, and will result in a complete cure for type-2 and type-3 mountain activities.

If, after engaging in type-3 fun you aren't cured, then by definition you didn't really up the fun to type-3, so go back and turn the "treatment" up a few clicks.
This may work, but the root cause is that my memory is SO BAD. Like, was that trip really all that terrible? Maybe not...


"It doesn't have to be fun to be fun"
– Mark Twight.
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