Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Nature, Environment, Mountains
Cover of the book Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada by Clarence King, anboco
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Clarence King ISBN: 9783736419568
Publisher: anboco Publication: June 23, 2017
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Clarence King
ISBN: 9783736419568
Publisher: anboco
Publication: June 23, 2017
Imprint:
Language: English
Mountaineers will realize, from these descriptions of Sierra climbs, how few dangers we encountered which might not have been avoided by time and caution. Since the uncertain perils of glacier work and snow copings do not exist in California, except on the northeast flank of Mount Shasta, our climbs proved safe and easy in comparison with the more serious Alpine ascents. And now that the topography of the higher Sierra has been all explored by the Geological Survey, nearly every peak is found to have an accessible side. Our difficulties and our joys were those of the pioneer. My own share in the great work of exploring the Sierra under Professor Whitney has been small indeed beside that of the senior assistants of the Survey, Professors Brewer and Hoffmann. Theirs were the long, hard years of patient labor, theirs the real conquest of a great terra incognita; and if in these chapters I have not borne repeated witness to their skill and courage, it is not because I have failed in warm appreciation, but simply because my own{x} mountaineering has always been held by me as of slight value, and not likely to be weighed against their long-continued service. There are turning-points in all men's lives which must give them both pause and retrospect. In long Sierra journeys the mountaineer looks forward eagerly, gladly, till pass or ridge-crest is gained, and then, turning with a fonder interest, surveys the scene of his march; letting the eye wander over each crag and valley, every blue hollow of pine-land or sunlit gem of alpine meadow; discerning perchance some gentle reminder of himself in yon thin blue curl of smoke floating dimly upward from the smouldering embers of his last camp-fire. With a lingering look he starts forward, and the closing pass-gate with its granite walls shuts away the retrospect, yet the delightful picture forever after hangs on the gallery wall of his memory.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Mountaineers will realize, from these descriptions of Sierra climbs, how few dangers we encountered which might not have been avoided by time and caution. Since the uncertain perils of glacier work and snow copings do not exist in California, except on the northeast flank of Mount Shasta, our climbs proved safe and easy in comparison with the more serious Alpine ascents. And now that the topography of the higher Sierra has been all explored by the Geological Survey, nearly every peak is found to have an accessible side. Our difficulties and our joys were those of the pioneer. My own share in the great work of exploring the Sierra under Professor Whitney has been small indeed beside that of the senior assistants of the Survey, Professors Brewer and Hoffmann. Theirs were the long, hard years of patient labor, theirs the real conquest of a great terra incognita; and if in these chapters I have not borne repeated witness to their skill and courage, it is not because I have failed in warm appreciation, but simply because my own{x} mountaineering has always been held by me as of slight value, and not likely to be weighed against their long-continued service. There are turning-points in all men's lives which must give them both pause and retrospect. In long Sierra journeys the mountaineer looks forward eagerly, gladly, till pass or ridge-crest is gained, and then, turning with a fonder interest, surveys the scene of his march; letting the eye wander over each crag and valley, every blue hollow of pine-land or sunlit gem of alpine meadow; discerning perchance some gentle reminder of himself in yon thin blue curl of smoke floating dimly upward from the smouldering embers of his last camp-fire. With a lingering look he starts forward, and the closing pass-gate with its granite walls shuts away the retrospect, yet the delightful picture forever after hangs on the gallery wall of his memory.

More books from anboco

Cover of the book Barty Crusoe and His Man Saturday by Clarence King
Cover of the book The Picture of Dorian Gray by Clarence King
Cover of the book Artists' Wives by Clarence King
Cover of the book Courtship of Miles Standish by Clarence King
Cover of the book Five Years in the Alleghanies by Clarence King
Cover of the book The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Clarence King
Cover of the book The Academic Questions, Treatise De Finibus, and Tusculan Disputations by Clarence King
Cover of the book Uncle Sam's Boys on Field Duty by Clarence King
Cover of the book The Battle of Gettysburg 1863 by Clarence King
Cover of the book In Beaver Cove and Elsewhere by Clarence King
Cover of the book The Business of Life by Clarence King
Cover of the book Life of a Pioneer by Clarence King
Cover of the book The World as Will and Representation or Idea III by Clarence King
Cover of the book Under a Veil by Clarence King
Cover of the book Wings and the Child: The Building of Magic Cities by Clarence King
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy