Friday, June 11, 2010
TREKKING
In spite of the various fast and well-developed transport system of the modern era, trekking has its own fun and attracts many people. Bent under the weight of their rucksacks, struggling up deserted slopes, thousands of people doggedly raid India's mountains in droves. Trekking for these people is more than just a holiday; for most, it is one of the few adventures that they can act out in their other wise drab, regulated urban lives. What is more, it can come with additional excitement, be it rappelling (descending a cliff) or the act of crossing a swift-flowing river.
Many organizations representing this new eagerness for trekking have come into being. Most of the uninitiated find it hard to understand what motivates a trekker. Why should a person actually motivates a trekker. Why should a person actually want to sweat, risk foot sores and aching limns, on a well-earned holiday/ The reason is simple and uncomplicated; it could be the sight of an unusual flower, or a snow laden mountain or any such simple pleasure. The trekkers swear that the special satisfaction of panting slowly to the top of a ridge or having a cup of tea in a sun-drenched valley engulfed in silence, or of simply sitting on a river bank watching the water rush by, can be rivalled by few city pleasures.
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