Re: ultra runners, etiquette
I am of the 'uphill has the right-of-way' group. The downhill hiker/runner has much better vision usually, whereas the uphill hiker/runner may tend to be...
kurt.sedler 2011-06-07 14:39:02 #65962

Re: ultra runners, etiquette
True enough, Darin. Whereas on any remote trail, I virtually always stop to chat with any hikers I meet, no matter which way I'm going, so again uphill versus...
Davidian Marcus 2011-06-07 14:17:53 #65961

Re: ultra runners, etiquette
A discussion about trail etiquette is somewhat lost here if we're talking about etiquette on the corridor trails. Most tourons you'll find there have no clue...
mowcowbell24 2011-06-07 14:00:25 #65960

Re: ultra runners, etiquette
It may be nice to have a protocol for passing, but for me the process is always situational: I try to assess who will have the easiest experience. ...
Daniel Fox 2011-06-07 09:18:24 #65959

Re: ultra runners, etiquette
In trail running races, uphill yields to downhill, slower runner yields to faster. It is much quicker for both, for a slow uphill runner to step aside than...
Davy Crockett 2011-06-07 08:58:20 #65958

Re: Invitation to connect on LinkedIn
This is a good club. On Tue, 07 Jun 2011 22:58 EST Chris Trask wrote: > >> >>LinkedIn >> > > Avoid LinkedIn as though it were the...
Bronwyn Clark 2011-06-07 06:48:35 #65957

Re: Invitation to connect on LinkedIn
Is she your wife ? On Tue, 07 Jun 2011 22:58 EST Chris Trask wrote: > >> >>LinkedIn >> > > Avoid LinkedIn as though it were the...
Bronwyn Clark 2011-06-07 06:26:03 #65956

Re: Invitation to connect on LinkedIn
LinkedIn > Avoid LinkedIn as though it were the plague. It's nothing more than an open email address collecting service. Chris
Chris Trask 2011-06-07 05:58:50 #65955

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