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Solo Travel for Inspiration – a new passion

DSCN0096 1024x768 Solo Travel for Inspiration   a new passion

The Fells of Cumbria - better known as the Lake District.

The human eye is designed for distance. Unfortunately, I work on a computer many hours a day using a focal length that can be measured in inches. I live in a city where my view bumps up against buildings rather than enjoying the sweep of the landscape. And when I get outside Toronto into relatively flat Ontario, my vision is stopped short by trees.

That’s why I love to travel to mountains where I can stretch my eyes and really see the horizon. When I do, I’m inspired.

When I lived in western Canada, I knew the pleasure of mountains. But for the last 25 years I’ve lived in the east. I forgot how mountains enrich life.

In November, I rediscovered their wonder when I went to the Lake District and walked for four days. Climbing the fells was not just exercise for my legs, a work-out for my heart and fresh air for my lungs, it was also a relief for my eyes. And, as my eyes drank in the view, I could think differently. I was inspired.

DSCN0643 1024x768 Solo Travel for Inspiration   a new passion

The view from the top of The Canyons ski resort in Utah.

In January, Utah was my mountain destination. I went and volunteered at the Sundance Film Festival but the best day of my trip was skiing at The Canyons.

At 10,000 feet, the views were stunning. The thin air may have contributed to the Rocky Mountain high that I felt for days afterward but the mountains served well to free my mind and inspire creativity.

It doesn’t surprise me that the famous poet, William Wordsworth, went to the Lake District of England and stayed.  In the same way, it’s not surprising that the mountains of Utah are the backdrop to the Sundance Institute to support emerging and aspiring filmmakers. It’s simple; mountains are inspiring.

When I plan my travels, I now try to include some time at a higher elevation with a view. It frees my eyes to do what they do best and, in the process, frees my mind to new inspiration. It has become a passion of mine.

Note: Next week I’ll be in Acadia National Park in Bar Harbor, Maine. Hopefully I’ll make it to the top of Cadillac Mountain. At just over 1500 feet it is the highest point along the north Atlantic coast of the US and the first place to see the sunrise. I’ll have pictures to share soon.

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  • solotraveler

    Hi Mary, Thanks so much for you comment. Clearly, you’re hooked too but mountains outside of Las Vegas? REally? I didn’t know. How cool that they are cool. j

  • http://www.wanderandexplore.com MaryM

    Janice – sounds like we have a lot of parallels in our lives. I spend a lot of time in front of a computer screen and welcome the opportunity to get to the top of a mountain and just breathe. Here are some places that have surprised me: Mount Charleston in the Spring Mountains outside Las Vegas. Being in the mountains at 50 degrees Fahrenheit…looking down into the desert which was 80 degrees. Excellent road trip. Also – after seeing my first mountains 30 years ago in Shenandoah National Park, I finally got back to the Blue Ridge Mountains – -driving Skyline Drive near Asheville, North Carolina. Watching the fog move through the valleys was just spectacular.

  • http://spinsterscompass.wordpress.com Spinster

    Mountains are amazing. In my lifetime I’ve been lucky enough to experience the Andes Mountains (Venezuela) and Pinnacle Mountain (Arkansas) by climbing both. Those are a couple of my fondest memories. I’ve seen others, but climbing any mountain is indescribable. As usual, good post & food for thought.

  • http://priscillamaeetal.blogspot.com Meg Mitchell

    You gave me such a new and different perspective for traveling. You are so right about stretching your line of vision along with your mind. Food for thought.

  • solotraveler

    What a wonderful addition to this post. Thank you fro sharing Adri. I will have to make it to the mountains of Mexico.

  • Dale Egan

    Cadillac mountain is supposed to be the fist part of the United States to catch the sun’s rays each morning….. maybe pick a clear day and hike really early. Its a popular thing to do so you’ll have company you solo traveler you.

  • http://www.gringofurniture.com Adri Pedersen

    Thank you, this is an inspired post. So true about mountains. They do change us. Perhaps it’s their “advise” to us … to reach up with our hearts and arms while being well-grounded … perhaps it’s their majestic power — it always amazes me that they create their own weather-systems! No question that mountains seem to be calling you. In Mexico mountains remind us of legend and myth. Near Mexico City the male and female volcanos can be seen resting next to one another … a love story repeated by generations of Mexicans to this day. And when you here the story, and you look … you “see” them.

  • http://www.hometoitaly.com lee laurino

    i spent 3 months in Sorrento with a view of the sea EVERYDAY. often i just walked along the cliff for miles with no purpose but to stop and sit and look.

    i love florence and rome and venice, but a town on the sea has something i do not have in atlanta ga. must go hometoitaly

  • http://www.LiveTravelMountains.com Sonya

    Beautiful, thoughtful post! I so agree that “mountains enrich life”!!!!

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