There's an inimitable natural high that overcomes you when you overcome a natural high. This is exactly the feeling I got on the rim of Mt. Longonot this past Wednesday. It was not the shortness of breath at this height that took my breath away. It was the magnificent, completely astounding sight that greets you when you reach the top after an hour or so of wading through crumbled tufa-filled ravines. From here, you can see the parasitic cone below looking like a kid trying to keep up with the mum, the stretch of Lake Naivasha glittering in the afternoon sun and the openness of the Rift Valley lay open reminiscent of a treasure map – with all the spots clearly visible for miles on end.
Nothing beats a supercharged hike up 2,776 metres topped up with a superdelicious homemade sandwich. It’s your perfect definition of “Climax”.
Up here, if you close your eyes standing at the edge of the knife-edged rim, feeling the swishing breeze lifting your thoughts, you’re united with the drums and fullness of ancient Africa’s life. Further thoughts drift you to the birth of this wonder; you feel the raw heat of red-hot lava souring upwards trying to find expression on the surface. You’re acquainted with images of seething 340 degrees of activity several thousand metres below the serene green surface. Quiet steam escapes from its side vents whispering songs of enchanting majesty and unexplored possibilities which make me wander in my own whispers of self-reflection and realization.
At this height, you rapidly descend into feelings of overpowering irresistibility to nature’s aphrodisiac and the humbling effect of your relative insignificance in the midst of this colossal chasm.
Then the thought that you overcame it makes you high and takes you higher.
Nothing beats a supercharged hike up 2,776 metres topped up with a superdelicious homemade sandwich. It’s your perfect definition of “Climax”.
Up here, if you close your eyes standing at the edge of the knife-edged rim, feeling the swishing breeze lifting your thoughts, you’re united with the drums and fullness of ancient Africa’s life. Further thoughts drift you to the birth of this wonder; you feel the raw heat of red-hot lava souring upwards trying to find expression on the surface. You’re acquainted with images of seething 340 degrees of activity several thousand metres below the serene green surface. Quiet steam escapes from its side vents whispering songs of enchanting majesty and unexplored possibilities which make me wander in my own whispers of self-reflection and realization.
At this height, you rapidly descend into feelings of overpowering irresistibility to nature’s aphrodisiac and the humbling effect of your relative insignificance in the midst of this colossal chasm.
Then the thought that you overcame it makes you high and takes you higher.