Longs Peak is seen from the Boulderfield campsite on Thursday, the day a gaggle of eight hikers summitted Longs Peak in honor of adventurer Isabella Bird’s historic climb 150 years in the past. (Courtesy Photo)
English adventurer and author Isabella Bird’s legacy is being saved alive as mountaineers climb Longs Peak in commemoration of Bird’s ascent 150 years in the past.
On Thursday, a celebration of eight climbed the 14,259-foot peak, positioned in Rocky Mountain National Park. After beginning their trek at 3:30 a.m., every member of the group was finally in a position to attain the summit.
“It was a beautiful, sunny day,” mentioned Estes Park resident John Meissner of Thursday’s climb. “We didn’t even have to get off the top by noon. … It was like Isabella was talking to everyone, saying, ‘Hey, come and do it.’”
In her travels to Colorado, Bird fell in love with Estes Park upon her go to to the city in 1873. With the assistance of some companions, together with the rugged “Rocky Mountain Jim” Nugent, Bird summited Longs Peak on Sept. 30.
Around Estes Park, Meissner mentioned there’s been some enthusiasm for climbing Longs Peak this weekend as a strategy to mark the historic anniversary. One purpose for his social gathering’s earlier climb was to scope out the circumstances, particularly after listening to the route was chilly and icy.
“We were kind of the rabbits in the long-distance race, in that we weren’t going to do it on the day (of the anniversary),” he mentioned. “We definitely didn’t want to encourage people to do something that wasn’t safe.”
The circumstances they discovered have been favorable — aside from a couple of patches of ice larger up — and the social gathering even encountered a couple of mountaineers sporting shorts on Thursday. Meissner’s group additionally used the hike as a possibility to unfold the phrase concerning the anniversary.
“We told everybody why it was significant to be climbing around this time of year, so if they didn’t know it before, they know it now,” Meissner mentioned.
According to Bird’s account in her e book, “A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains,” her ascent of Longs Peak was fairly a problem, not made any simpler by her climbing apparel: Victorian-era boots and a Hawaiian using skirt.
At 58, Meissner mentioned he didn’t give the problem of the climb a second thought, utilizing Bird’s resolve as inspiration.
“It’s more humanizing in that she wasn’t summiting Everest,” he mentioned. “She was just an ordinary person who loved the adventure and loved the travel.”
Meissner, who has lived in Estes Park since 2008, known as Bird’s summit of Longs Peak the “apex” of her journey to the city.
“It’s important to honor our past, and it’s important to recognize how Longs Peak was the thing that brought people to our area,” he mentioned. “It was the guidepost.”
For Meissner, one other side of the anniversary is the possibility to acknowledge Bird’s position in recording Estes Park’s historical past as a lot as she was part of it.
“We’ve forgotten how important primary source material is to save and make available to the public,” he mentioned. “(Bird) is Estes Park’s best historian for that time. Just a fascination with her can yield a lot of information that’s helpful for Colorado history.”