Restless Peregrine

per·e·grine (pr-grn, -grn) adj. Foreign; alien. Roving or wandering; migratory; tending to travel and change settlements frequently.

Sunday, May 22, 2005

The Best Adventure

Thursday afternoon I climbed a mountain - what an adventure! This is that story. But before I begin, a disclaimer. One of my friends has a thing about literary integrity, so for his sake I need to make a couple of points perfectly clear. 1) We are not talking about Everest here. This mountain is routinely climbed by young children, old people, entire families on Sunday afternoon outings. It is directly behind my house, and normally heavily trafficked. I repeat, this is not Everest. 2) I am a big chicken. Coward. Neurotic. Who is deathly and unaccountably afraid of heights. There. Disclaimer finished. On with the story.

Clinging to a bald bit of rock face at the top of the universe, warily eyeing the 700 meter vertical drop to the military airfield below and lamenting the removal of the helpful rope trail by construction workers, I remember why I've only climbed this particular ridge line once. When I was new to this city and didn't know any better. Why did the worker at the trailhead let me go on, lifting the warning tape barricade for me to pass, when he knew this was ahead??? Damn. I'm not sure if I'm happy that no one is around to see my creeping-fear, or unhappy than no one's around to help me. How exactly did I get myself into this???!

The mountain behind my house is long and narrow - about 5 kilometers end to end and only 2-5 meters wide along most of the top. A trail runs the entire length, with a very steep stair approach up one side (the rocky end nearest my home, where I began), and a series of more gradual forested approaches up the other. The views are breathtaking, expansive - from the ocean in one direction to the charcoal fading of a host of mountains in the other. At 3pm on a sultry holiday Thursday, tired of endless weed pulling in my garden, it seemed like the best place to be.

Though I have done it several times and have no difficulties making it to the top, the climb terrifies me. Alone the entire distance, I distract myself from the tiny stones plummeting off the edge and the stomach-dropping vertigo of the treeless incline with a running pep talk. Out loud. If anyone else were around, they'd think me insane. But there aren't - it's just me and the mountain, getting closer and closer to the sky. And the happy knowledge that the worst part is over - I don't have to turn around and face this trail in reverse.

But wait a minute...is that hammering above? I crest the ridge to discover a 2-man construction team, building a shelter in the flat area at the trail head. Which is heavily barricaded with "danger!" tape in red and white bands. The thought of returning the way I've come is nauseating - something the workers must see. They motion me over, smiling, lift the tape away from the trail so that I can pass and wave me onwards. Phew! Must just be a safety thing for the construction site, I think. No problem.

Uh huh. Someone once told me in India that the biggest difference between that country and Canada is that there's no security in the knowledge that you are on a public trail. That in Canada, if someone skinned their knee on a trail there'd be a government inquiry and new safety measures would be put in place immediately. Whereas in India someone could have died on the trail this week, and no one would mention it. If those cases are opposite ends of the same extreme, then Korea falls somewhere in the middle - the construction workers... towards the Indian side.

The first couple of hours are brilliant - picturesque trail, absolutely deserted. I successfully negotiate the two places where the trail peters out on shallow cliffs, making ignominious descents from one narrow ledge to the next on my butt while gripping the low chain assists. This is the life! I am thrilled to be here!!

And then...the trail ends. Coming around a bend in the ridge, I meet 2 more workers, busy welding steel posts together to be anchored into the almost vertical incline at the base of which the trail continues. They are roped up, secure, very, very surprised to see me. All of us look at our watches simultaneously - know that there isn't enough time for me to return the way I've come before it gets dark. I've got to go on. The slope is about 20 meters high, bends, then continues another 10 meters (on which they've already built the frame of a staircase). I have no idea what to do.

The workers contemplate me, my teva sandals, the slope, each other. Finally one of them finds a secure spot and motions me over to him. We repeat this maneuver, slowly, slowly, slowly, until the stairs. Which I once again descend on my butt - which humors him to no end. He returns to his work, and I return to my solitary wander.

From this point on, the trail is complete. The workers have already finished a long staircase wrapping around the highest, steepest part of the ridge - nearly dead center. It goes up one side of a narrow jut of stone, has a viewing platform at the top, then drops down the other side in two sections. It is secured to the cliff face with steel beams set in horizontally, as there is nothing at all below the frame to secure to. The new wood and metal creak and groan, still settling in, as I go over them. I know that, workmen aside, I am the first person to test them. Exposed on all sides, the wind is fierce and howling. Though my knuckles are white and my heart is in my throat, I am LOVING this!!!!!

After the stairs, the trail descends a bit into a more forested part of the ridge. Eventually meeting the tape barricade on the other side, I slither underneath and take a deep breath. An old man in full mountaineering regalia eyes me oddly from his perch on the open side. Except for the workers, he is the first person I've seen. A bit later on, dropping back down into the valley, I meet him again. Wordlessly, he hands me a fat mandarin orange and continues on his way.

Where the trees narrow around the trail, storms of wood grasshoppers rain down on my passage. Curtains of electric green inch-worms dangling from invisible threads are brushed aside, dropping into the soft layer of fallen acacia petals still scenting the air. Pheasants lumber through the underbrush, gunshot flap of wings when startled, and a host of smaller animals scuttle nearby, invisible.

As the trail broadens at the fork of a stream, flattens out, the sun begins to drop below the ridge above me, suffusing everything with light and shadow. Sometimes the best adventure is the one closest to home.