Friday, July 24, 2009

Hiking the "M"

As we are trying to do "Bozeman things" this summer, I'm happy to report that Emily, David, Duke and I hiked the "M" today. For non-Bozemaneers, the "M" is a large letter M, made of rocks, on a mountainside for all of Bozeman to see. It represents Montana State University, I suppose. We started out about 11:00 on this very warm day, and needed to have Emily to work at 2:00. No problem. There are two routes to the "M", the Steep Route and the Gradual Route. Well, since this was our first time up, we decided to take the Gradual Route. Or so we thought. We quickly tired and opted for the "short cut" which actually was no shortcut at all. See, at some point up the Gradual Route Short Cut, we got off the beaten path. Not a good idea, especially when we couldn't even see the "M". At one point Em and I were crawling on our hands and knees up the mountain. Dozens of times I wanted to quit and thought "This is really far enough for my first time". To which Emily would reply "Come on Mom, we can do it!" After approximately 75 minutes of climbing, we DID make it to the top. The "M" is a little disappointing, just a pile of white rocks, but the view of the Gallatin Valley is breathtaking. As was the climb up! Next time we are sticking to the Gradual Route up. I'm sure we'll get there quicker!

3 comments:

D.R.C + D.E.C said...

You are the best. We are so happy/jealous that you get to go hiking whenever you want!

And, we think the letter M is for Mom!

Anonymous said...

I always thought the M stood for Montana as on the hillside to the left there is/used to be a huge B.
The B is on private land so it is not maintained like the M is. It fades until you can't see it and then some service group decides to white wash it again so it appears once again.

I like the idea that is stands for Mom so lets go with that. :-)

Carol K. said...

Don't feel too bad. We got off-trail the first time we hiked the "M." It was before all the trail restoration. We decided to take the steep route but instead ended up on the drainage trail that went straight up the mountain face. (We didn't know any better. It looked like the signs pointed that way.) It was brutal.