By Kristin Noell
Tyler Summer Metals Workshop
The Scottish highlands are riddled with mountains so high you can’t see the tops through the clouds. They are massive, ancient reminders of how that land was formed. The Old Man of Storr is the folk name for one of the tallest, and for good reason; the landscape is gnarled and bent like a old man. Half the path is covered in forest; the other half, the tallest part, is a nearly vertical walk complete with natural steps made of stones and small lakes around the mountainsides.
Close to the summit, the path dissolves into loose stones and dirt, and the ascent is nearly vertical. Now the sign we had passed before taking the serpent route made too much sense. Faced with the decision to continue, at risk of slipping halfway down the mountainside, or to continue to the summit, which was made of 5 great slabs of rock standing over the range like a sentry, we did the obvious thing. For when again would be ever get to climb a mountain in Scotland in our lifetimes?
We scrambled up the bare cliffside, wrenching up handfuls of dirt and loose pebbles, debris spraying everywhere. Surprisingly, neither of us slipped before reaching the top. We clung to the giant sentry-rocks at the top for dear life, and we surveyed the glorious view of the Highlands. It was as if we had been rewarded for our climb by the 5-mile 360 degree view we now had of the surrounding area. In the distance, great waterways sliced the land in two, mountains rose up around them, and the sky went on forever.
And it was around then my fear of heights kicked it and I got surpremely dizzy. We made it down the mountainside post-haste because fainting off the summit of a mountain is not a desirable trait.
Interesting to note, though, is that I discovered soon afterward that hiking Storr completely removed my fear of heights. I would love to go back.