Viewing 15 posts - 41 through 55 (of 55 total)
  • Are we losing our sense of adventure? Discuss
  • kennyp
    Free Member

    Well, just do what YOU think is fun. If this is taking a hard-tail with Vs out in the wilds then do it.

    I think most people mix things up a bit. Sometimes it’s nice to do natural, wild rides, sometimes a trail centre is nice. Sometimes camping in a remote spot is nice, sometimes a good hotel is nice.

    That pretty much sums my views up perfectly.

    Aristotle
    Free Member

    b r – Member

    “MSP

    ps. My fathers generation seemed a lot less adventurous than ours, if anything technology and travel have opened up an amazing world of possibility and adventure not known to the vast majority of previous generations.”

    MSP

    Or did they just have their kids younger with the consequential mortgage/responsibilities?

    I was thinking about this only yesterday.

    Compared with my Dad, I had more opportunities, 8 more child-free years in my 20s/30s and a seemingly (relatively)lower cost of living/playing.

    I’ve done and experienced some great (and some challenging and dangerous) things and places.

    -I’m very fortunate.

    My grandfathers’ generation(and many generations before them) had a war to go to, which either killed them, maimed them and/or gave them a lot of amazing (good or bad) experiences think about. Life was harder in the past for most.

    Having now become my Dad, my opportunities for ‘adventure’ are somewhat more limited by time and having to earn money, which is a shame. Yes, I know that it is a selfish view.

    andytherocketeer
    Full Member

    Just don’t get me started on Strava and Endomondo pish! Ha! Ha!

    Great to hear someone else say this. I had a little rant about this crap recently and simply think tracking every metre of your ride is utter nonsense and about as far from adventure as you can get.

    100% agree on the Strava thing.
    But have no problem with using technology to record interesting adventures/trips whether on foot, bike or skis. Bit like taking photos of interesting rides/trips.

    ps. My fathers generation seemed a lot less adventurous than ours, if anything technology and travel have opened up an amazing world of possibility and adventure not known to the vast majority of previous generations.

    Might be a generation thing? or just the way things change?
    My Grandfather and Great-Grandfather certainly seemed more adventurous than my parents’ generation. (edit: and not just due to wars as above^^ but also out of war, although maybe the adventure of war shaped their peace time adventures?)

    Or maybe it’s just what you get and can do as a kid? Was off exploring on my Raleigh Winner from about age 11. Many miles away on country lanes, with nothing more than a 20p coin and knowing how to use a phone box. No Megadrive/SNES for me (had to share and Amstrad).

    Who would let their 11yo kid ride 4 villages away these days, 10 miles there and back, sans iPhone, without needing to be told where they are going, but just have free reign and have to be back by 6:30pm for dinner?

    Aristotle
    Free Member

    andytherocketeer – Member

    Might be a generation thing? or just the way things change?
    My Grandfather and Great-Grandfather certainly seemed more adventurous than my parents’ generation. (edit: and not just due to wars as above^^ but also out of war, although maybe the adventure of war shaped their peace time adventures?)

    I agree. I think the overall “harshness” of life resulted in people who died young or were tougher/more resilient.

    My parents generation became more ‘comfortable’, although thankfully my Dad did introduce me to the outdoors and ‘man skills’.

    saxabar
    Free Member

    Wow, back to the days of Nicomachus – that’s going some.

    Aristotle
    Free Member

    saxabar – Member

    Wow, back to the days of Nicomachus – that’s going some.
    Complaining about the youth of today isn’t a new thing, you know…

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    I don’t think there is less adventurous stuff going on. I think there is much more of a divide between people who do stuff and people who don’t nowadays. But if you want adventure, it is much easier to find people to do it with, and get information about it, and get out there.

    For example I do a lot of ‘wild swimming’, or what in the past would just have been called ‘swimming’. In the past, lots of people would have swum outdoors every so often, so if I went down the river for a dip, your average person wouldn’t have thought I was a nutter. Yesterday, my pile of clothes next to the river was briefly mistaken for evidence of a suicide attempt (thank goodness I got back before they called the police – I shall hide my clothes better next time!), that is how odd outdoor swimming is to the average person nowadays.

    But on the flip side, thanks to the internet, there is tons of information out there and I know loads of other people who also choose to go swimming outside on a regular basis. For example, I’ve got a bit of an ongoing swimming project relating to our local river. Before a swim, I have easy access to good maps and aerial photos to check out where is swimmable, where weirs and rapids are, what the banks look like, I can ask other local swimmers about the area and the access, I also get a lot of good info off canoe sites, the current water level is available on the environment agency website so I know if it’ll be deep enough, and sometimes I can arrange people to swim with. I can also access more information about how to push myself safely with relation to currents, extremely cold water, big lakes or whatever which mean I can do bigger things without being in too much danger.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Good question OP!

    I think there are two answers to this – and they are diametrically opposed.

    One the one hand we have become much greater risk takers – biking, off-piste skiing, white water rafting, rock climbing (does anyone start on diffs and v diffs anymore?) etc. To the extent that I believe that we often under-estimate risks and over-rely on technology improvements.

    On the other, we have become absurdly risk-averse in more mundane aspects of life and our kids are being prevented from enjoying a lot of the freedom and controlled risk-assessment and risk-taking that their parents enjoyed. Could that be a reason why they increasingly find solace in binge drinking? (ok a bit left field there!)

    Aristotle
    Free Member

    joemarshall – Member

    I don’t think there is less adventurous stuff going on. I think there is much more of a divide between people who do stuff and people who don’t nowadays.

    Very true.

    “The Trafford Centre set”?

    Most ordinary people in the UK have it quite good or are at least warm/fed/sheltered/clothed/TV’d/car’d/iPhone’d these days (the wealth may decline in future decades) and there is no need to do difficult/arduous/risky activities in the course of a normal, everyday life.

    Even a foreign holiday involves only a taxi ride to/from the airport and a ‘resort’ for most people.

    Those who do ‘adventurous’ activities actively seek them out.

    grum
    Free Member

    rock climbing (does anyone start on diffs and v diffs anymore?)

    If we are talking outdoor trad leading I never progressed beyond V Diffs (well, Severe actually) 😳

    ianv
    Free Member

    One the one hand we have become much greater risk takers – biking, off-piste skiing, white water rafting, rock climbing (does anyone start on diffs and v diffs anymore?) etc. To the extent that I believe that we often under-estimate risks and over-rely on technology improvements.

    On the other, we have become absurdly risk-averse in more mundane aspects of life

    I sort of agree with this. If you define adventure as doing something where the outcome is unknown and the consequences are potentially dangerous, on an individual level the outliers are probably more adventurous than in the past (think: Rampage, Baumgartner et all). Collectively though, we have become more risk averse and therefore less adventurous.

    I am not sure if I would catagorise most biking (even with a map)or even rockclimbing as adventure though. Not massively dangerous and too close to civilisation and security.

    imnotverygood
    Full Member

    I’m nearing 50. Do you think my dad would be out on the hills on a pushbike when he was that age?

    nosedive
    Free Member

    munrobiker – there are some exciting bits of track into, and out of rivelin if you know where to look……..

    I actually agree with the OP on this one. I for one am much less likely to be seen with a map these days.

    I think I simply have less time, and I am fatter, and I have a bigger bike. It all adds up to not really wanting to spend 5 hours trudging through a bog to figure out what a certain piece of trail is like.

    I’m much more likely to go to Greno \ wharnecliffe \ parkwood \ bolehill \ some trail centre and at least know I will be able to get the wheels off the ground

    Aristotle
    Free Member

    imnotverygood – Member

    I’m nearing 50. Do you think my dad would be out on the hills on a pushbike when he was that age?

    Possibly not.

    My Grandad, who had been quite adventurous, was still into a bit of urban exploration, or “trespassing” as it was known then when in his 60s-70s. If he was around now he’d probably be posting up photos on the www.

    fasthaggis
    Full Member

    I’m nearing 50. Do you think my dad would be out on the hills on a pushbike when he was that age?

    or whizzing round woods at night with a head torch.
    🙂

    I plan to be doing things that would have been classed ‘adventure’
    back in the day ,for as long as I can.

    Keep going

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