On May 26, 2019, the Fox Valley Outdoor Meetup had an organized hiking event at Barkhausen Reserve, at Suamico, WI. The place is about 40 minutes drive from Appleton.
Around 25 people showed up. I was in this trail several times last year and I like the trail very much.
The trail is about 4.5 miles long and well-marked. There were many things of the Nature to observe and to be immersed. During the walk, I conversed with a mother-daughter pair. The mother is a recent UWGB graduate and the daughter is a middle school graduate and will be in high school in the fall. The mother is about in the 30’s, and the daughter is in the teens. There were also other people I had conversed with. There was an an armature Nature photographer. There was a gentleman working at IT. There was a lady who worked at home as a medical coding specialist. Most of them are in the 40’s or 50’s. But there are few who are in the 20’s and 30’s. I am the only one in the 70’s.
One thing out of hikers’ expectation was that the trail was still wet; and there were many places on the trail that was covered by the muddy water. Almost all hikers came unprepared. Although no one wore sandals, many came with tennis shoes. I went with a regular hiking shoes. Few places on the puddle, there were occasionally some broken tree branches placed across the puddle which allow hikers to walk through without getting wet on their shoes or pants.
The youngest hiker, the teen girl who just graduated from middle school, beaming on her face, walked balanced and was also like dancing on the wood branch and walked easily across the puddle. Everyone applauded. The mother proudly said that her daughter is a trained ballerina.
Then the mother came next. She did walk across the puddle, but not as gracefully as her daughter. Still everyone applauded to encourage this mother-daughter pair.
Many other people tried; but one by one they fell into the puddle, making mess on their shoes and their pants. Seeing their fellow walkers fell onto the mud, many of them chose either to walk straight through, or chose drier spots on the puddle and jump through the puddle.
I came next. Thinking that I practice Warrior 3 pose every morning, this task should tell me if my training was sufficient or not.
Everyone was watching. They wanted to find out if this old folk made fun of himself or he could succeed just like the mother-daughter pair.
When I finally walked through the puddle unspotted, everyone applauded.
The Warrior 3 practice every morning finally found its usefulness in the real world.