I’m so glad you were happy. Our backyard being from Calgary. We have done the hike to Egypt lake cabin and then hike from there. 3 days of pleasure. Also did it from sunshine gondola to Egypt lake cabin. You need to try that. No regrets there. Just a long hike to Egypt lake cabin. You did a great job.
There is no shame in knowing when you're done. Fear is what keeps us safe. The views were absolutely amazing and I know they are ones I will never get around to seeing, so I appreciate having gotten to see them in this video.
Oh, and freeland lied. She does not go to that church, she's Ukrainian. Does a muslim go to a catholic church? If you want to know about freeland, the UK CBC is called bee bee sea. Then add "torch" to see hundreds of thousands of those people from WWll that Freeland is a part of. @@IdRatherBeHiking
Good for you to recognize your limits and bail. And I love your enthusiasm and drive - keep it up! One thing I noticed is that your footwear is totally inadequate for such complex terrain. You would definitely benefit from a pair of sturdy mountaineering boots? I also wouldn’t rely on a trailhead map to plan your trip, regardless of how closely you study it. On-site route visualisation and experience will always tell you more than a vague map. Just sayin’…
What I find is hike up run down its the perfect mix of everything. Running uphills doesn't yield that much time savings unless you're kilean jornet and the speed up as almost as fast as the speed down haha
subscribed, love that you are showing the highs and lows, the more informative the video the better we can decide on doing a hike/scramble or not thanks!
Believe it or not but those signs were created before 1970, when Canada went metric. It's all good 🎉 beautiful area i was once a part of a hiker group in the 70's. The amazing Rockies
This is ridiculous 😂. Everyone has their own comfort levels but there is NO exposure! It’s an easy steep hike. No… you won’t fall to your death. Mountains are definitely not for you. That’s ok but don’t overdramatize it. There are little kids and lots of grandparents going up phaorah all the time. Good gravy…. You butt-crawled down a hike… it’s not a scramble. Again… ok… do what you wish, but don’t pretend it’s a climb lol. The reason others don’t show it - is becuase there’s nothing dramatic about it. It’s just walking… on a non exposed slope. You don’t have to “dig” footholds lol - and I’m sure you didn’t. You’re also the only person on earth who screamed going to the top of Healy hill lol… most people do it in winter as an easy snowshoe.
Thank goodness the arrogant mountaineer is here to puff his chest. You're just as whiny in my comments section as I was on the mountain expect my reaction is a chemical one I can't control. Who is the poopy pants loser now?
@@IdRatherBeHiking Ignore the haters, not everyone is injury free or have outstanding genes for fitness, people like that wouldn't get it, once they get injured they'll get humbled and then learn what true strength is. My wife has height phobia and still goes on scrambles with me, I truly admire people that face their fears, people with no phobias don't get it!! Keep it up the good work
@@IdRatherBeHiking puff my chest? lol… your childish insecurity is showing through. Your misleading people about this hike to satisfy absurdly over dramatic antics - just like your silly and childish overreaction here. I realize you’re grifting and obviously don’t care if every single local and hiker who’s done this trip is laughing at you, but… well I’m happy to say it. lol. Enjoy crying over my comment - it triggers you because you know it’s true. Try not to fall down any 20 degree hike slopes….
a hot girl counter 😂 & in reference to you mentioning some big youtube hikers who “don’t have panic attacks…” isn’t necessarily true, some of them very well could have had a panic attack at some point but chose not to document it or post it for everyone to see. i’m sure you’ve heard the saying “the internet is a highlight reel” because most choose to only show life’s highs, leaving out the bad and every low. Only the ones who are brave & true to themselves by being vulnerable choose to show all of it, like you, which in my mind makes you more relatable and likable and i’m sure most would agree. i suffer from anxiety and panic attacks as well so i felt for you on that mountain cuz i know what you were going through. I think you handled it amazingly, keep being real and true to yourself…emotion is what makes us human!
It takes a brave man to accept when you're not ready for the mountain, and even a braver man to show the real deal on RU-vid! Most people would just edit out the not so glamorous parts of hiking! Great video and keep on creating such good content.
It really depends on the hike, in general it adds 10% extra distance going back for the tripod and time wise I'm a fast hiker without cameas, day 2 took me just over 11 hours with cameras probably 8 hours without.
I spent 17 years in Search and Rescue specializing in mountain rescue and avalanche rescue. You made a wise and brave decision! It’s a fool who doesn’t recognize and ACT on reducing risks. You have to ask yourself “what are the consequences of pushing further?” If it’s life threatening or major injury then unless you’re extremely skilled AND the conditions are ideal DONT GO! I’ve done too many body recoveries.
I am proud of you bro! I am scared of heights also, but i still enjoyed hiking up mount Seymour with my Canadian bro years ago! I can't wait to get back to Canada next year for more hiking! Love & respect, from the UK bro.
Nice, I've been up there once. Millions of black flies when I was on Seymour haha. Ya heights is something you can work on over time but with no footing I'm done.
Never a bad idea to bail if you're not comfortable. I tend to just try to put my head down and power on, but when you're solo it always feels a lot riskier too. I also find some of those steep paths or trails with bad skree to be pretty bad. Sometimes too it can mean you're doing it the hard way and there are better paths/trails to get to where you want to go.
@@IdRatherBeHiking Makes sense. My area don't have to worry about it much but I've often heard of hikers accidentally ending up on climbing or mountaineering routes from maps. At least you didn't get shelved out and totally stuck! I def get stressed in these situations too.
haha agreed, I'm actually switching up my style of storying telling to be more vlog less produced in the future here, so this is the last episode in that old style, aka dramatic style. If you check out my Athabasca video you'll see the difference.
you were 3/4 the way up and I got so nervous watching you I had anxiety for you before you did. I thought you were going to keep pushing yourself.... but that was you intuition telling you to stop ....so glad you went back down
Good man. Know your limits and never be afraid to turn back. It takes a braver person to turn back than being scraped off the mountainside in a bag. I’m not afraid of heights but when I used to mountain climb, if there was a significant drop either side of me, I’d get uncontrollable giddiness. I think it’s vertigo but I’m not a doctor. Most times I’d overcome it but sometimes it was impossible for me to stop. Just randomly getting giddy and losing balance. Then it’s dangerous and time to turn around.
The hike was 42 km of trail and less than half a km of that shale sandstone which is why I kept with trail runners. If half the hike was that stuff I'd have boots on.
You have nothing to be ashamed of although feer makes the situation harder you had every resign to be scared I'm not sure I would have even tried to go up as far as you did and you didn't give up you found an other way to the top great view thanks for sharing all that you experience it's what makes your videos worth watching , I can't believe the price for walking on the grass is it really that fragile or rare and who is around to inforce it
the grass thing is weird, there were no notices of it I saw anywhere except up there. My brother who lives in the area confimed he has hiked the ramparts before so it was open before but they have it protected now. I don't understand how the government has strict protection laws in one place and clear cut logs another place.. no wonder no one trusts the government.
Regarding the Egypt themed names: 1922 was the year Tutankhamun's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter, so I'd guess that was the inspiration for Wheeler.
Pharaoh peak I feared as well. Not for the same reasons. I did this hike solo, at night. while on top I got caught in a thunderstorm, so I had to go down that exact scramble in pitch darkness as the thunder clouds inched closer... yeah. lol.
I did The Pharaoh during the larch change in the rain, snow and grey overcast. No trail and no other foot steps up the mountain, there 3 foot snow drifts at times. It was my second time in the area but first attempt at the summit. I was solo, wet and cold. Every unstable step needed to be packed down before proceeding as boulders, slabs and voids were hidden bellow the shallow fall snow pack. "One step, one more step," one step at a time I made it through. An avalanche and rock fall came down across the pass in a thunderous glory. The sun peaked through the clouds as I reached the summit contrasting the top whites of the clouds to their darker grey undersides, the summits were decorated with white snow like flour on fresh baked bread, the tree lines began sprinkled with yellow larch trees blending in lower to a wet dark green forest. The blues of the three lakes were vibrant under the sun. The moment was glorious. Shortly there after I realized I had forgotten my head lamp. I trekked down slowly and carefully with cold water sloshing in my boots knowing a bad step through the snow could ruin my ankle or send me tumbling down in my own glory but when my feet hit dirt again I ran. Stopped in by the shelter at Egypt Lake and stoked the fire to dry up. I knew I was hiking in the dark there was no chance in getting back before the end of dusk. So I ran. I ran up Healy pass and as far as I could until the darkness was to dark to spot rocks and roots and there I was alone in the dark. I trudged through the mud blindly, only the gaps in trees and snow lined trail guiding me back. There were times I felt I was sleep walking it was so dark. Bear country may have occupied my mind for much of it. But made it back. I loved every suffering minute.