Awe tangled with terror to become a knot in my stomach. Never in my seven short years had I encountered a ladder that had been bolted onto a vertical rock face, and I struggled to conceive of anything more incredible.
I looked back at Dad, to check he was still close. I studied the ladder’s lowest rung and then my muddy sneakers, allowing my eyes to slide down the steep path that fell treacherously below us. I gripped the ladder and asked myself: did I really have to do this? It was my birthday, after all.
I began to back away, but Dad was there and his arms upheld me. “You can do it. I’m behind you,” he said gently and pointed to the ladder’s rails. “Hold here and you’ll be fine.”
I placed my hands on the rails and returned to a forward gaze. I stepped. And again. Perhaps it wasn’t so bad after all.
My attention returned to the ladder and the rock, and my mind transported me to a mountain far away, where I, with my little pack, was braving the wild to reach its mighty summit. A few minutes later, we were standing on the narrow ledge beneath the summit of the Pinnacles, in Coromandel Forrest Park. It could just as well have been Mt Everest.
The ledge was small, the edge felt close and my face must have betrayed my fear. “Don’t worry, Nick,” Dad said as he put down his big pack and drew me close. “Hold on close to the rock and you won’t fall. You’re safe here - and look at this amazing view.” He pointed out, toward the sprawling green and craggy peaks around us.
The view was immense, and I took it in for the first time. We had climbed as high as the clouds. My mind burst with the impossibility of it all and a sense of awe and adventure flooded in. And that was the moment I felt my hunger for more: a fascination with climbing mountains.
(As a brief aside, I must note that over the years, this fascination has brought no end of worry and consternation to my mother. Thanks, Dad.)