1. Apply to University of Wyoming
2. Apply for 2 American Alpine Club climbing Grants
3. Go Snowboarding
4. Go backpacking
5. Go on a road trip with no real destination
6. Buy plane ticket to Glasgow
7. Climb a really big mountain
8. Convince friends to go with me on all of the above stated outings
9. Get Christmas shopping done soon!
10. Log some SERIOUS surfing time
11. Limit internet usage to once a day
12. Call and hangout with friends I haven't seen since last summer
13. Get tires rotated on Big blue
14. Sleep without parental inhibition
15. Objectivity:)
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
New URL!!!!
I randomly decided to change my blog to mark-walters.blogspot.com I think the old one was too long, and cliché.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Foray on Foster Falls
Last weekend 5 intrepid souls from Florida set out into the frigid hills of Tennessee in pursuit of real rock. The pictures that follow recount their epic quest:










For further pictures on their quest for the holy hard rock, consult this web address: http://picasaweb.google.com/6footnglassy/FosterFalls#










For further pictures on their quest for the holy hard rock, consult this web address: http://picasaweb.google.com/6footnglassy/FosterFalls#
Friday, October 31, 2008
Bruegel
I'm taking an art history class this semester and I really like it! After finishing the Northern Renaissance painters, I am a huge Bruegel fan, especially his winter scenes! He is credited as the first person to paint landscapes as the main focus of the painting, rather than just a backdrop for an event or human subject.
The Hunters in the Snow, 1565
The Numbering at Bethlehem, 1566
Winter Lanscape With a Bird Trap, 1565



Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Mt. Yonah
This past weekend, my friend Jason and I went up to Mt.Yonah (about an hour and a half Northeast of Atlanta) to test our skillz on real rock. For those who might not know him, he's an old friend from highschool who started training with me this summer at the rock gym. We left on Friday afternoon right after I finished class. The drive up was sooooo long, it should have taken no more than 7.5hrs, but ended up taking about 9.5hrs because we were stopped for 2hrs in legendary Atlanta traffic, at 9:00pm??? Anyways, when we arrived in Cleveland (the closest town to Mt.Yonah) around 1:00am, we found a relatively unsketchy parking lot to spend the night in at a 24hr supermarket. I would have had a great night's sleep, but some random guy was pressure washing the sidewalk in front of the store from 1 to 4am, so it sounded like a machine gun going off in the distance for 3hrs straight. Jason lost his cool a couple times and flailed around uncontrollably in his sleeping bag screaming...it was pretty funny to watch. This was his first time sleeping in a van. Obviously, sleeping in a van has its drawbacks occasionally, i.e. crazed friends and loud background noise. When the sidewalks started glowing with an immaculate brilliance, the pressure washer stopped, and we finally got some sleep.
Mmmm, goober and bagels!
Saturday morning started out ruff. Jason woke me up around 9:ish and all I wanted to do was go back to sleep; besides, this was my 2 days off from school to rest and recover, and by-golly I was gonna get a little R and R if Jason went psycho on me again or not!...Yeah, I ended up getting out of my sleeping bag about 5 minutes after Jason started trying to wake me up. I woke up a little pissed at first, but I knew we came to climb, not to sleep in an over-sized refrigerator of a van, so I arose from my slumber.
Alas, we were up, we were minutes away from a great climbing destination, we were stoked! All I could think about was hanging off a 300ft cliff and looking out at the mountains thatbegin the Appalachian trail just across the valley. Jason said it felt surreal that we were really about to go climb real rock; it hadn't kicked in yet that he was actually in the mountains.

We hiked up the trail for about 30 minutes to reach the base of the first major cliff face, and in no time we were climbing. I belayed Jason on his first outdoor route. After he left the ground, he was stoked and spooked at the same time. I think the experience of climbing outdoors for the first time, with the possibility of taking a real fall, was almost TOO real for him to fully accept. After he climbed his first route, I went up to the top and showed him how to do his first rappel (descending the rope to the ground). It's not easy to lower yourself down backwards into a yawning abyss, but he did it anyways. As for myself, I climbed a dozen routes or so and rappelled them all. Thats a lot of climbing for one day! It was an honor to teach my friend "the ropes" (haha) of climbing from scratch this summer, and then to climb with him on his first real climbing trip. I suppose it's a proud parent type of feeling. Nothing to get all teary eyed over though. Over all, it was a great trip, my premise to every trip is to have fun, and to keep the adventure high, and I think I did.

Saturday morning started out ruff. Jason woke me up around 9:ish and all I wanted to do was go back to sleep; besides, this was my 2 days off from school to rest and recover, and by-golly I was gonna get a little R and R if Jason went psycho on me again or not!...Yeah, I ended up getting out of my sleeping bag about 5 minutes after Jason started trying to wake me up. I woke up a little pissed at first, but I knew we came to climb, not to sleep in an over-sized refrigerator of a van, so I arose from my slumber.
Alas, we were up, we were minutes away from a great climbing destination, we were stoked! All I could think about was hanging off a 300ft cliff and looking out at the mountains thatbegin the Appalachian trail just across the valley. Jason said it felt surreal that we were really about to go climb real rock; it hadn't kicked in yet that he was actually in the mountains.
We hiked up the trail for about 30 minutes to reach the base of the first major cliff face, and in no time we were climbing. I belayed Jason on his first outdoor route. After he left the ground, he was stoked and spooked at the same time. I think the experience of climbing outdoors for the first time, with the possibility of taking a real fall, was almost TOO real for him to fully accept. After he climbed his first route, I went up to the top and showed him how to do his first rappel (descending the rope to the ground). It's not easy to lower yourself down backwards into a yawning abyss, but he did it anyways. As for myself, I climbed a dozen routes or so and rappelled them all. Thats a lot of climbing for one day! It was an honor to teach my friend "the ropes" (haha) of climbing from scratch this summer, and then to climb with him on his first real climbing trip. I suppose it's a proud parent type of feeling. Nothing to get all teary eyed over though. Over all, it was a great trip, my premise to every trip is to have fun, and to keep the adventure high, and I think I did.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Motivation
I wrote this about a week ago and was hesitant to post it, but after thinking about it I guess i will:
Now that I'm back in school my time is getting extremely occupied. I have become the person I have always loathed -namely the workoholic, always busy, always tired (but without the opportunity to make it up unlike the summer), impatient, intolerant, always trying to be productive type.
More and more I realize that If I'm not suffering, I feel guilty and low. If I am not sacrificing sleep, time, mental well-being, etc for something, then I, in an innate sense, feel I am doing something wrong. Throughout my entire life, I feel like the more I suffer, strive, endure, and demoralize my own self the more I am praised. This world praises those who suffer with honor, nobility, stature, statues; and disdains those who enjoy life, take a long vacation, do what they want instead of what they "should", seek pleasure instead of a goal. It is like society has this malevolent, contemptuous evil eye for those who seek pleasure. Three weeks ago, I read a passage in a book by Schopenhauer, which said that suffering is what we humans strive for to no end. The next day I went to church and my very own pastor said in his lesson that we should all seek to suffer!!!!!!!!!!! I almost shat myself when he said that. And now after hearing that, and considering it here, I'm thinking, "man I'm screwed, my future is to suffer? why do we do this to ourselves, to one another?!" What a way to live. One way to interpret this is to say that "oh Mark, you are just looking at it wrong, just think positive. things that you see as negative are in truth positive...yatayatayata" Then I guess in that case, all is nothing and nothing is all, that is -"its all relative." Bullshit
Now that I'm back in school my time is getting extremely occupied. I have become the person I have always loathed -namely the workoholic, always busy, always tired (but without the opportunity to make it up unlike the summer), impatient, intolerant, always trying to be productive type.
More and more I realize that If I'm not suffering, I feel guilty and low. If I am not sacrificing sleep, time, mental well-being, etc for something, then I, in an innate sense, feel I am doing something wrong. Throughout my entire life, I feel like the more I suffer, strive, endure, and demoralize my own self the more I am praised. This world praises those who suffer with honor, nobility, stature, statues; and disdains those who enjoy life, take a long vacation, do what they want instead of what they "should", seek pleasure instead of a goal. It is like society has this malevolent, contemptuous evil eye for those who seek pleasure. Three weeks ago, I read a passage in a book by Schopenhauer, which said that suffering is what we humans strive for to no end. The next day I went to church and my very own pastor said in his lesson that we should all seek to suffer!!!!!!!!!!! I almost shat myself when he said that. And now after hearing that, and considering it here, I'm thinking, "man I'm screwed, my future is to suffer? why do we do this to ourselves, to one another?!" What a way to live. One way to interpret this is to say that "oh Mark, you are just looking at it wrong, just think positive. things that you see as negative are in truth positive...yatayatayata" Then I guess in that case, all is nothing and nothing is all, that is -"its all relative." Bullshit
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Some passing thoughts and what I'm up to lately
- Yesterday I had a friend tell me that "There are a thousand interpretations of love...fucking is just a thousand and one." This he said after a brief discourse on the philosophy of short term relationships. I'm so confused with life in general right now that all I can do is laugh because it sounds hilarious. Maybe that's all I should do anyways?
- This winter I want to go on a snowboard mountaineering trip. I can't decide on where to go.
- I'm obsessed with hiking across the Scottish highlands next May. This country made me realize my fascination with bleak, featureless landscapes. I've been planning this since December 07.
- My parents are pressuring me on a daily basis to change my major from literary and cultural philosophy to something "more practical." My ration el is, if i have to go to college, everything else I could study would be a waste of my time, pointless; I mean whose to say that one field of study is more practical than another. If they're teaching it, it obviously has some practical application. Socially, it is awkward claiming a philosphy major. Everyone who asks what my major is gets this concerned look on their face, and if I don't mention the words "grad school" after stamping my own forehead with philosophy, they get this look on their faces that screams "Do you want to throw four years of your life away?!" WTF Today even, I saw Mrs.O'Connor, a teacher of mine from Stanton, who did exactly that to me. She even mentioned grad school for me! screw that!
- I really want to transfer to the University of Wyoming by next Spring semester.
- The Summer Olympics are pretty cool and I'm inspired by the marathon runners. I like the winter Olympics more, because I love snow sports, and Hockey is the mightiest of spectator sports.
- I think I'd like to go to Mongolia for a while. I learned alot about it when I read The Travels of Marco Polo
- This winter I want to go on a snowboard mountaineering trip. I can't decide on where to go.
- I'm obsessed with hiking across the Scottish highlands next May. This country made me realize my fascination with bleak, featureless landscapes. I've been planning this since December 07.
- My parents are pressuring me on a daily basis to change my major from literary and cultural philosophy to something "more practical." My ration el is, if i have to go to college, everything else I could study would be a waste of my time, pointless; I mean whose to say that one field of study is more practical than another. If they're teaching it, it obviously has some practical application. Socially, it is awkward claiming a philosphy major. Everyone who asks what my major is gets this concerned look on their face, and if I don't mention the words "grad school" after stamping my own forehead with philosophy, they get this look on their faces that screams "Do you want to throw four years of your life away?!" WTF Today even, I saw Mrs.O'Connor, a teacher of mine from Stanton, who did exactly that to me. She even mentioned grad school for me! screw that!
- I really want to transfer to the University of Wyoming by next Spring semester.
- The Summer Olympics are pretty cool and I'm inspired by the marathon runners. I like the winter Olympics more, because I love snow sports, and Hockey is the mightiest of spectator sports.
- I think I'd like to go to Mongolia for a while. I learned alot about it when I read The Travels of Marco Polo
Monday, July 7, 2008
A Realization
Have you ever looked at a picture of a mountain or driven passed one and said "That would be pretty badass to stand on top of that one," followed by the crushing reality of "yeah right, maybe when I grow wings." I think thats another reason why I'm so motivated to climb, so that when I see those giants, I can get the upper hand. Exposure is inspiring.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
The Tetons!
Two weeks ago I set off on the biggest adventure of my life -I went to Grand Teton National Park with no goal other than to climb and explore the Rockies.
Lewis and Clark were right here!
This video shows The American Alpine Club's climbers' ranch, which i used as a base camp and where I met some of most adventurous people I've ever known! This day I went tramping around the valley floor scoping out my new home. Two days after I took this video, I saw a great big grizzly bear walk right past the boulder I shot this video on!!! yikes
This 800ft cliff is called the Snaz, which I climbed with Jim Donini
On top of The Snaz with Jim, one of the nicest guys I've ever met! Can you tell I'm elated?!?!
I took this one after we finished the route, and were rappelling down. I'm only about 300ft off the deck here but man that's a long way down! I think it's funny that this cliff is in a place called Death Canyon! I'd say that's appropriate
Another day, my friend Sue and I climbed a route called Baxter's Pinnacle, a 400ft...pinnacle
check out the view from the top of this pinnacle!!!!
My feet are bigger than the trees, imagine how big my head is at this point
After one rappel, we headed down a steep snow filled coulior where we had to down climb through a snow cave and then cross it as you'll see in the video below
Floridian crossing a "glacier"
Some time later, I was able to borrow some crampons, an ice axe, and a pair of ice climbing boots from some friends to solo South Teton!!!!!!
Just above snow line
And then there were clouds...
South Teton
Once I decided to go down, I did about 4 long glisades down to a place called the Lower Meadows,which is just a lower snowfield, but hey its sounds nice I guess...
In no time I was out of the storm. Then I made the long hike back to the climbers ranch and took a very long nap. And thats it in short...mission accomplished, I explored a part of the Rocky mountains, I saw a grizzly bear, I scared myself silly, I had the best two weeks of my life... The rest are just shots of my awesome cabin mates and some of my favorite random pics. Enjoy!
my hilarious cabin mates
My cabin
Sunrise in the meadow
The cook shelter the morning I left for home

This video shows The American Alpine Club's climbers' ranch, which i used as a base camp and where I met some of most adventurous people I've ever known! This day I went tramping around the valley floor scoping out my new home. Two days after I took this video, I saw a great big grizzly bear walk right past the boulder I shot this video on!!! yikes







Floridian crossing a "glacier"
Some time later, I was able to borrow some crampons, an ice axe, and a pair of ice climbing boots from some friends to solo South Teton!!!!!!

And then there were clouds...

Once I decided to go down, I did about 4 long glisades down to a place called the Lower Meadows,which is just a lower snowfield, but hey its sounds nice I guess...
In no time I was out of the storm. Then I made the long hike back to the climbers ranch and took a very long nap. And thats it in short...mission accomplished, I explored a part of the Rocky mountains, I saw a grizzly bear, I scared myself silly, I had the best two weeks of my life... The rest are just shots of my awesome cabin mates and some of my favorite random pics. Enjoy!




Thursday, June 12, 2008
Finally

I'm almost there, almost to the Tetons. I don't really know what to say about it. I leave tomorrow (Saturday), and from there I'll let mighty mountains dictate my steps. I have no plan, other than to climb. I think I'm starting to understand why I like climbing so much. Climbing mountains is quite literally the physical embodiment of an innate ideal, characteristic in us all on some level -that is, to persevere and overcome the challenges that is life. Now if I could only begin to understand the opposite sex...wishful thinking I guess
Well, when I get there, I'll do my best to post a visual. It is supposed to snow there tomorrow, so who knows, it could be all white when I get in???
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Thursday, April 24, 2008
My Life
This past Monday, I had a huge 8 page paper due in English, and the first half of my in -class extended essay/final exam. Yesterday, I forgot that my English professor assigned us three 1 page essays to be turned in by today (Wednesday). Since Sunday, I have had worse than usual insomnia, and as a result, I have slept a total of only about 8hrs.Today, I showed up in English, completely comatose,from lack of sleep, and found out that I forgot to write those 3 essays. This messed up the little mental composure I had left, going into the second part my essay/final. At this point I thought to myself, "Alright, I'll just get this essay over with and zone out in the rest of my classes, since I don't have anymore tests or quizzes today." After time was called, I handed in my clumsily written essay, and headed to math. Once I got to class, my math professor came in about 10 minutes late and announced, to all his 100+ students including myslef's surprise,that we were having a test today on what we just learned over the past two days; this all because he's an absent-minded bafune who didn't plan for enough time to take our last test before the final next week. And we just finished taking a test 3 days ago for the last section! After I took the "pop test" I stumbled into geography, which thankfully had no surprises, listened to his lecture for an hour and fifteen minutes, and then went home. When I got home at 1:30, I just crawled into bed and planned to sleep this living nightmare away until work at 3:00. Well, I ended up sleeping past my alarm to wake me up for work, and so I didn't wakeup until my boss called me at 4:00 to see where I was. I was pretty startled by this awakening, especially considering what all had happened so far today, but I got out of bed and rushed off to work. I arrived at work, disillusioned by the sequence of events leading up to that moment, but my boss didn't seem that upset about my tardiness, however he hasn't had a chance to talk to me about it yet. When i got off of work, I came home, laid in bed wide awake until now (3:30am), and I don't know if this was just a really sick dream that I haven't woken up from yet, or whether this is my life.
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Foster Falls part III
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Random but worth reading
Fact:
- Today I read a book called The Munros: The Scottish mountaineering Club hillwalkers' guide by Donald bennett
- On January 11, 1980. The temperature at the Great Falls International Airport rose from -32F to 15F in seven minutes as warm, Chinook winds eroded an Arctic airmass. This 47 degree rise in seven minutes stands as the record for the most rapid temperature change registered in the United States.
- Mother nature herself played an april fools joke on me. I woke up at 2:00pm and was convinced that I woke up before my alarm at 8:30am! so much for going to renew my passport today.
- The Fall of Troy's first two albums contain THE FINEST guitar parts ever rendered by human fingers, and they will rock your face off and make you cry at the same time
- A good friend of mine told me she was moving to Zimbabwe today but I caught her bluff because its april 1st and thought i was super slick
- Within the Jacksonville public library system, I have checked out every DVD in the 796.52s at least once and every DVD having anything to do with Scotland at least twice.
- My sister's boyfriend ate 12/15ths of a bag of sams club trail mix and 3/4 of a half-gallon of chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream from my kitchen last night!
- Recently, a lady from Kansas had an entire toilet surgically removed from her ass after sitting on it for 2 years!
- I tried yoga for the first time today and have mixed feelings about it
- You can never succeed if you don't try
- Today I read a book called The Munros: The Scottish mountaineering Club hillwalkers' guide by Donald bennett
- On January 11, 1980. The temperature at the Great Falls International Airport rose from -32F to 15F in seven minutes as warm, Chinook winds eroded an Arctic airmass. This 47 degree rise in seven minutes stands as the record for the most rapid temperature change registered in the United States.
- Mother nature herself played an april fools joke on me. I woke up at 2:00pm and was convinced that I woke up before my alarm at 8:30am! so much for going to renew my passport today.
- The Fall of Troy's first two albums contain THE FINEST guitar parts ever rendered by human fingers, and they will rock your face off and make you cry at the same time
- A good friend of mine told me she was moving to Zimbabwe today but I caught her bluff because its april 1st and thought i was super slick
- Within the Jacksonville public library system, I have checked out every DVD in the 796.52s at least once and every DVD having anything to do with Scotland at least twice.
- My sister's boyfriend ate 12/15ths of a bag of sams club trail mix and 3/4 of a half-gallon of chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream from my kitchen last night!
- Recently, a lady from Kansas had an entire toilet surgically removed from her ass after sitting on it for 2 years!
- I tried yoga for the first time today and have mixed feelings about it
- You can never succeed if you don't try
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Up yonder mountain
I've spent the past three days tramping through Georgia. This post is not just another set of pictures from one of my rock climbing trips, it was my first time guiding a rock climbing trip! I went to Yonah mountain in northern Georgia. The grommits in the pictures are high school freshmen from my church's youth group. You're probably thinking "Ok, that's random Mark," and I would have to agree with you to a certain extent. Basically my dad is involved in planning trips for the youth, and he wanted to do a camping/rock climbing trip, so I got to lead the climbing portion. For my part, I taught the groms how to rock climb up on the mountain, and how to slackline down at camp. It was by far my favorite climbing trip to date, and I didn't even climb a single route. Enjoy
This is Sam, my protégé. This trip was his first encounter with slacklining and he's already trying to cross a creek! serious cajones!
Did I fall a lot? yes, Did I fall in this pic? no, Did I reach the other side? barely, but only by holding the top border of this pic
loading up the Sherpas for the 2000ft ascent straight up
I carried my fare share of gear too
rappelling down after setting the anchors
I spent most of the afternoon belaying
apparently I forgot to flex (haha) sorry ladies:)







Monday, February 18, 2008
Getting Radical in Northern Alabama (story to come)
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Foster Falls Part II: Mother Nature's Lesson
You know, that weekend up in the mountains of Tennessee was really really cold! The ground was frozen, my water bottle was frozen, the waterfall was frozen! When Chris and I left Jacksonville that Friday afternoon, it was 60, by the time we reached Chattanooga it was 20 and by the time we reached the campsite, about 2000 feet higher up, it was somewhere around 10. As a good Floridian, the warmest sleeping bag I had was rated down to 40 degree weather, so I brought 2 of them. As we hiked into camp, I was thinking "What an experience!, so this is what good ol' Alex McCandless must have felt in Alaska" and "So this is what it feels like to whip it out in 10 degrees! wih-hih-hoo!," but at the same time I was thinking "am I really gonna be ok this weekend just from reading a few "complete guide to winter backpacking" books?!" Then I looked at who I was camping with -3 Northerners. They looked pretty at home in the cold, of course they had their North-face zero degree sleeping bags in their packs, but still their tranquil demeanor that night really changed my whole perspective on what I was experiencing -namely the extreme cold. Racing questions like "why am I here" and the whole "survival mode" mentality seemed to pass away and I just felt at peace with the conditions, just from sitting in the cold dark night and feeling warm. It all started to seem endurable, livable, Comfortable! No, I wasn't getting so cold that I was delirious and out of touch with reality, quite the opposite, I was experiencing an outside perspective from my own, and realizing the true state of things -cold on the outside and warm on the inside, kinda like my heart (haha). What I'm here saying is that everything around us has an influence on us in one way or another, even things as fundamental as gravity assert their influence. What's significant about my story of this timeless maxim, is that the People I was around at that moment of realization, Influenced me by revealing how tolerant I really was of the cold. Now that I'm back in my "habitat" and normal daily routines, the experience has made me realize how influential everyone is around me to my own state of mind -my own reality.
This experience brought a whole new level of meaning to this statement:
"I feel these expeditions to be necessary for me to survive as a human being, to realize myself and maintain my inner harmony."
written by Reinhold Messner who was describing his 100 mile trek to the base of Hidden Peak, which he then climbed with Peter Habler and made the first ever two man ascent of an 8000 meter peak.
This experience brought a whole new level of meaning to this statement:
"I feel these expeditions to be necessary for me to survive as a human being, to realize myself and maintain my inner harmony."
written by Reinhold Messner who was describing his 100 mile trek to the base of Hidden Peak, which he then climbed with Peter Habler and made the first ever two man ascent of an 8000 meter peak.

Monday, January 21, 2008
Foster Falls
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