Photo by @shonephoto (Robbie Shone) with words by @m_synnott (Mark Synnott) - The Vertical World of Yosemite, The White Spider, The Six Mountain Travels, The Shining Mountain—these books opened my eyes to a hitherto unknown world of high adventure. The authors called the heyday they were describing the “Golden Age.” From what I read, it was a time when there were still blanks on the map, and anyone who had the courage and the tenacity could easily strike out to find their own piece of terra incognita. But there was a problem, and it was a serious one—the Golden Age had come and gone—and I had been born too late to get in on it. This revelation left me feeling rudderless, until one day, it struck me—what if my heroes hadn’t found it all? What if I could find some random mountain, cave or remote tribe that no one knew existed? Surely, there must be something left to discover for someone who was willing to search for it. With this as my inspiration, I set off to pick up where my heroes left off. And I discovered, to my great joy, that not only is the Golden Age still alive and well, in some ways it is just beginning. And it matters that we keep striving to unravel the mysteries that still hide in the remote corners of our world, like these dinosaur prints we found at the lip of Hodja Gur Gur Ata in Uzbekistan’s Baisun-Tau mountains. Baba Dioum, the Senegalese Forestry engineer put it like this: “In the end we will conserve only what we love, we will love only what we understand, and we will understand only what we are taught." #DarkStar

natgeoさん(@natgeo)が投稿した動画 -

ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 4月6日 15時19分


Photo by @shonephoto (Robbie Shone) with words by @m_synnott (Mark Synnott) - The Vertical World of Yosemite, The White Spider, The Six Mountain Travels, The Shining Mountain—these books opened my eyes to a hitherto unknown world of high adventure. The authors called the heyday they were describing the “Golden Age.” From what I read, it was a time when there were still blanks on the map, and anyone who had the courage and the tenacity could easily strike out to find their own piece of terra incognita. But there was a problem, and it was a serious one—the Golden Age had come and gone—and I had been born too late to get in on it. This revelation left me feeling rudderless, until one day, it struck me—what if my heroes hadn’t found it all? What if I could find some random mountain, cave or remote tribe that no one knew existed? Surely, there must be something left to discover for someone who was willing to search for it. With this as my inspiration, I set off to pick up where my heroes left off. And I discovered, to my great joy, that not only is the Golden Age still alive and well, in some ways it is just beginning. And it matters that we keep striving to unravel the mysteries that still hide in the remote corners of our world, like these dinosaur prints we found at the lip of Hodja Gur Gur Ata in Uzbekistan’s Baisun-Tau mountains. Baba Dioum, the Senegalese Forestry engineer put it like this: “In the end we will conserve only what we love, we will love only what we understand, and we will understand only what we are taught." #DarkStar


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