Since my very first few backpacks, I hadn’t had one trip that beat me that hard until this extremely fun bushwhacking endeavor. Yes, the fun tasted a bit bitter but the trip was fun with no sarcasm added.
This trip was a private trip for friends, and I was the unofficial leader. Therefore I was not as prepared as I always am for every AMC trip and that was the first mistake. The second mistake was that I was too optimistic about the group pace. We were all strong hikers; however, the bushes in the Catskills were stronger than us. They were so thick which made me wish I had a chainsaw; they were so dense which made it easy to get disoriented and hard to stay on the planned route.
And what is the third mistake? Two mistakes were more than enough to make our trip much more difficult than it should have been. The second day, we hiked more than 12 hours and a few of them were in the dark. I bore scars collected mostly from hemlocks and balsam firs for more than two weeks, and my ripped raincoat became my reason not to attempt it again just to prove that my plan would have worked out as sketched if we fixed the above two mistakes.
Alright, the following is my original plan:
The group parks at Denning Road, and hikes on the trail to summit Table and Peekamoose. We then come back to Table and start to bushwhack in order to traverse four summits in this order: Lone, Rocky, Balsam Cap, and Friday. (The route I draw on the map is the bushwhack path and there are in fact 5 summits before we hit the trail again; the last one is not named.) We are back to the trail somewhere between Slide and Cornell, and we will camp there for the night. The second day, we peak-bag Cornell and Wittenburg packlessly, and come back and backpack towards Slide, and hike out of the woods.
The trailhead at Denning Road was not the easiest place to drive in, between it and the exit #19 of the New York Thruway lay sections of county roads, on which nobody could drive fast. We didn’t get an early start as we wanted therefore we agreed on the first plan change: instead of doing the loop counter-clockwise, we did it the reverse direction in order to avoid bushwhacking in the dark.
It took us six hours to reach the campsite and another hour for a side trip of bagging Cornell and Wittenburg. After we finished dinner and bear bag hanging, the night curtain dropped and we called it a day.
That night, I didn’t sleep well. My sleeping pad leaked and I couldn’t pinpoint the problem and I literally had to sleep on hard rock surface for the whole night. My nose was clogged either because of cold or allergies. I woke up so many times during the night, and every time it took me a long while before I could fall back to sleep. I thought of many random things while I was awake, except for one: the mileage for the second day was not shorter than the first day and we had to bushwhack and find our directions. If it took us seven hiking hours for the first day on the trail, 10 hours of hiking would not be an underestimation for the second day.
The fact was: 10 hours still were not enough. We started the second day earlier than the previous day. Putting a compass on my neck and pulling out my GPS as a backup, my body was ready for challenges and my spirit was high. Among the virtual walls formed by tangled bushes, it was fun sometimes to duck and sometimes to pass through holes which hardly fit me. The fun went sour after so many times neither ducking nor passing through was an option anymore and we had to detour and get back on track. Discouragement never stopped accumulating because my forearms and wrists had fresh cuts every so often even though they were covered by sleeves and gloves.
The Catskills are a rocky area, and we were not surprised that giant ledges often stood up and gave us a hard time even though there was no way to learn they were there according only to the contour lines. Sometimes, when we couldn’t go around them, and had to locate a relatively mild path to drop down, I thanked my gym climbing instructor who always advises me to use climbing down as a training method. Of course, it was quite different without a harness and a top rope, and with a backpack, but the general concept applies.
Thank God It’s Friday – we reached our first summit (Friday) and it took us surprisingly long. I looked at my watch and wondered: our legs would be able to hike faster yet we couldn’t hike faster due to the constraints.
We didn’t rest long and started to head to the next goal – Balsam Cap. Between Friday and Balsam Cap, the same old stuff ruled: bushes, ledges, cuts, ups and downs. I managed to get something new: bruises on my lower legs because I tripped on broken logs. We signed our names on the notebook in the canister of Balsam Cap and continued our journey towards Rocky.
An incident happened somewhere between Balsam Cap and Rocky, I ripped open my raincoat. I looked at the 3-inch long opening on my right sleeve as if my raincoat was suffering; oh, I felt that my heart was bleeding, this rain coat cost me a good fortune and it was my favorite color. I wanted to cry as loud as I could and I wanted to spread my tears to drown the goddamn bushes, but I didn’t. I didn’t because I had to remain calm. There was no time to waste; we were in the middle of nowhere. I still stood there stubbornly for 5 minutes as a salute to express the lament.
After signing off the canister on the top of Rocky, it was five o’clock. I didn’t think it would be wise to bushwhack to Lone and then Table, so I proposed to drop down to the Neversink River and follow it to hit the trail and hike out. By doing this, the total mileage was shorter and we didn’t have to worry about getting lost in the woods. The group members agreed with this plan change, and we dropped down to the river. After that point, we needed to hike along Neversink for approximately three or four miles before the trail junction.
It soon got really dark, and sometimes we had to wobble on river rocks. We also crossed the river for a few times to find an easier route to follow. I noticed that our pace didn’t get faster even though bushes were no longer a problem. We were not fast because we were tired. Nobody was talkative anymore and time seemed to flow more slowly among silence.
After a century long, a question broke the ice, “how come we haven’t seen the trail? I thought we had hiked along the river for a long time!?†I did feel the same way; after all, there were ONLY three miles. I pulled out my map and tried to figure out where we were, but it was too dark for me to locate a reliable point of reference. I knew the trail was north of us but I couldn’t give an affirmative answer whether we missed the trail junction or not. We took the assumption that we missed the trail junction and hiked north as an attempt to get back to the trail, but the terrain was too steep to match the elevation profile given by the contour lines. That gave us only one answer: we hadn’t reached the trail junction yet.
I pulled out my GPS again to get our current waypoints to confirm that sad conclusion that we had to hike along the river more. While the GPS was looking for satellites, everybody was chewing their last bit of food, and I kept wondering, “If somebody pops the request to camp, I will not say no.†We still had about a half mile to go, and the moment we saw the blue blaze, I believed that I heard an exciting screaming (Maybe it was from me?!).
Another one and half miles to the car, but that was easy. At the parking lot, everybody didn’t say a word while changing and eating. There was a long silence before somebody said, “I am exhausted and I got really upset up there, but it was fun.â€
Yes, it was fun. No matter how many hassles we have to overcome and no matter how beat-up we feel we are during an outdoor trip, once we are safe home, what is left is always fun. And we will go out of doors again.
除了開始backpacking的那一段時光以外,已經有好一陣åä¸å†æœ‰è¢«backpacking打敗的感覺了—直到這一次,超折磨人的茂林找路任務(bushwhacking)。折磨æ¸æŠ˜ç£¨ï¼Œä»ç„¶æ˜¯è‹¦ä¸å¸¶ç”œï¼Œè€Œèªªé€™æ¬¡æ—…途真好玩,å¯æ²’有åŠé»žè«·åˆºçš„æ„味喔ï¼
雖說這次的旅途是由我è¦åŠƒï¼Œä½†ç”±æ–¼ä¸æ˜¯ç‚ºç™»å±±åœ˜é«”所開的隊,純屬朋å‹é–“çš„ç§äººå‡ºéŠï¼Œæ‰€ä»¥ä¸¦æ²’有兢兢æ¥æ¥ã€ä¸€çµ²ä¸è‹Ÿï¼Œæº–備充分,æ¤ç‚ºç¬¬ä¸€å€‹éŒ¯èª¤ã€‚第二個錯誤是,我å°æ–¼éšŠä¼çš„行進速度太éŽæ¨‚觀,雖然說åƒåŠ 者都是å¥è¶³ï¼Œå¯ï¼ŒCatskillsçš„çŒæœ¨æ£®æž—也ä¸æ˜¯å¥½ç›¸èˆ‡çš„:有太多地方,樹木濃密到æ¨ä¸å¾—手上æŒæœ‰å…©æŠŠé–‹å±±åˆ€ï¼›å¦å¤–,濃密的çŒæœ¨å¢ï¼Œè®“人容易ä¸è¾¨æ±è¥¿ï¼Œæ¥µæ˜“喪失方å‘感。
é‚£ï¼Œé‚£ï¼Œç¬¬ä¸‰å€‹éŒ¯èª¤å‘¢ï¼Ÿå–”ï¼Œå…©å€‹éŒ¯èª¤å·²ç¶“ä»¤äººå¤ å—的。第二天,隊ä¼è¡Œé€²çš„時間超éŽå二個é˜é»žï¼Œé‚„有幾個å°æ™‚是在天黑的情æ³ä¸‹å®Œæˆçš„。從樹林裡收集到的細密傷å£ï¼Œå…©å€‹å¤šç¦®æ‹œå¾Œæ‰æ¼¸æ¼¸æ·¡åŽ»ã€‚而我的昂貴雨衣,也被å¯æ¨çš„樹æžå‹¾ç ´äº†ï¼Œæˆç‚ºæˆ‘ä¸é¡˜æ„å†å˜—試æ¤æ—…途(就為了è‰æ˜Žä¿®æ£å…©å€‹éŒ¯èª¤å¾Œçš„計畫,其實是å¯è¡Œçš„)的有力ç†ç”±ã€‚
好,閒話ä¸å¤šèªªï¼Œä»¥ä¸‹å°±æ˜¯æˆ‘的原始構想:
隊ä¼å°‡è»Šæ³Šåœ¨å–®å¯§è·¯ï¼ˆDenning Road),循著æ¥é“循åºç™»ä¸ŠTableå’ŒPeekamooseå±±é ‚ã€‚æŽ¥è‘—èµ°å›žTable開始尋路之旅,這趟尋路的目標是四個山é ,ä¾åºæ˜¯ï¼šLoneã€Rockyã€Balsam Capã€æœ€å¾Œæ˜¯Friday(其實Friday後還有å¦ä¸€å€‹ç„¡åå±±é )。之後,åˆå›žæ¸åˆ°æ¥é“,大約在Slideå’ŒCornell之間紮營。第二天,輕è£ç™»ä¸ŠCornellå’ŒWittenburgä¹‹å¾Œï¼Œå›žåˆ°ç´®ç‡Ÿåœ°ï¼Œæ‰›èµ·èƒŒåŒ…ï¼Œé †è‘—æ¥é“,經éŽSlide後,回到åœè»Šåœ°é»žã€‚
單寧路åœè»Šè™•é‚„ä¸æ˜¯æ™®é€šçš„曲折,從New York Thruway(I-87)下出å£19交æµé“之後,還è¦é †è‘—好幾段ã€é€Ÿé™è¶…低的鄉間å°è·¯ï¼Œæ‰è¼¾è½‰é”åˆ°ç›®çš„åœ°ã€‚ä¹Ÿå› ç‚ºå¦‚æ¤ï¼Œæ¸…早就開始å¥è¡Œçš„計畫è½ç©ºäº†ï¼ŒéšŠä¼åŒæ„將原本逆時é‡è¡Œé€²çš„è¨ˆç•«ï¼Œæ”¹ç‚ºé †æ™‚é‡ï¼Œä¹Ÿå°±æ˜¯å°‡å°‹è·¯ä¹‹æ—…æŽ¨åˆ°ç¬¬äºŒå¤©ï¼Œå› ç‚ºèª°ä¹Ÿä¸æƒ³åœ¨å¤©é»‘的時候,困在樹林間。
花了隊ä¼å¤§æ¦‚å…å°æ™‚æ‰åˆ°é å®šçš„ç´®ç‡Ÿè™•ï¼ŒåŠ ä¸Šé€ è¨ªCornellå’ŒWittenburgå±±é 的來回路程,總共是七å°æ™‚。匆匆åƒå®Œæ™šé¤ï¼ŒæŽ›å¥½ç†Šè¢‹ï¼Œå¤©æ—©å·²é»‘了,隊員互é“晚安,就迫ä¸åŠå¾…地å‘ç¡è¢‹å ±åˆ°äº†ã€‚
é‚£å¤©æ™šä¸Šï¼Œæ²’æœ‰èƒ½å¤ ç¡å¥½ã€‚先是ç¡å¢Šæ¼æ°£ï¼Œåˆéå°‹ä¸åˆ°æ¼æ°£çš„地方,åªå¥½ç¡¬æ˜¯åœ¨å …硬的岩石é¢ä¸Šæ’了一晚;å¦å¤–,åˆä¸çŸ¥é“å› ç‚ºå¤©æ°£å†·é‚„æ˜¯éŽæ•ï¼Œé¼»å¡žåœ°ä¸åƒè©±ï¼Œä¸€å¤œä¹‹é–“,åå覆覆,醒來了好幾次。æ¯æ¬¡é†’來,都得胡æ€äº‚想個好一陣å,æ‰åˆæœ¦æœ§ç¡åŽ»ï¼Œåå似乎什麼都想到了,å»å¿˜è¨˜äº†ä¸€ä»¶äº‹ï¼šç¬¬äºŒå¤©çš„路程比第一天還è¦é•·ï¼Œåˆè¦æ‰¾è·¯åˆè¦å’ŒçŒæœ¨å¢å¥®é¬¥ï¼Œå¦‚æžœç¬¬ä¸€å¤©é †è‘—æ¥é“èµ°è¦èŠ±ä¸ƒå€‹å°æ™‚,第二天è¦å個å°æ™‚也是ä¸èª‡å¼µå•Šï¼Ÿï¼
事實是,å個å°æ™‚還是低估了。第二天,是比第一天還è¦æ—©é–‹å§‹å¥è¡Œã€‚我抓出我的指北é‡ï¼Œé‚„é…戴GPS以為備案,身體和心ç†çš„ç‹€æ³è‰¯å¥½ï¼Œæº–備迎å‘挑戰。樹æžæ¿ƒå¯†ï¼Œå½¢æˆä¸€å µä¸€å µçš„牆,一行人三ä¸äº”時蹲低,一下å爬行,一下åç¡¬æ“ éŽå¹¾ä¸å®¹èº«çš„å°ç´°ç¸«ï¼Œå€’æ˜¯è »å¥½çŽ©çš„ã€‚ä¸éŽï¼Œå¥½å¹¾å€‹åœ°æ–¹å€’是怎麼穿也穿ä¸éŽåŽ»ï¼ŒéšŠä¼å¿…é ˆå¾€å›žèµ°ä¸€äº›ï¼Œå†å¦å°‹è·¯å¾‘å‰é€²ï¼Œé€™å°‹è·¯ä¹‹æ—…å¯å°±æ¼¸æ¼¸åœ°æ²’有那麼令人欣喜了。雖然穿著了手套和長袖衣物,手腕ã€æ‰‹è‡‚上還是漸漸地出ç¾è¢«æ¨¹æžåŠƒå‚·çš„痕跡,漸漸地,沮喪失æ„的心情開始累ç©ã€‚
Catskills說是岩石山也ä¸ç‚ºéŽï¼Œè‹¥æ˜¯èµ°ä¸€èµ°ï¼Œçªç„¶å‡ºç¾é«˜å¤§çš„岩å£æ“‹ä½åŽ»è·¯ï¼Œä¹Ÿæ˜¯æ²’有什麼需è¦å¤§é©šå°æ€ªçš„。這些岩å£æ˜¯å¾žåœ°åœ–上的ç‰é«˜ç·šä¸Šåˆ¤è®€ä¸å‡ºä¾†çš„,所以也åªå¥½è¦‹æ‹›æ‹†æ‹›ã€‚大部分時候,需è¦ç¹žå¥½é•·çš„一段路,有時候,怎麼繞也ä¸æ˜¯çš„時候,åªå¥½æ‰‹è…³ä¸¦ç”¨ã€æ‰¾å€‹æ¯”較ä¸åš‡äººçš„å¡åº¦ï¼Œæ…¢æ…¢çˆ¬ä¸‹ï¼Œæ¯é€¢é€™æ¨£çš„時刻,我心裡é 都暗暗感è¬ï¼Œå²©å ´çš„教練常常å«æˆ‘用往下爬,來訓練攀岩時判斷攀爬路徑的技巧,這時å¯æ´¾ä¸Šç”¨å ´äº†ã€‚雖然說沒有穿åŠå¸¶ï¼Œä¹Ÿæ²’有岩鞋和繩索,背上還多了個é‡é‡çš„背包,基本的概念ä»ç„¶æ˜¯ç›¸é€šçš„。
æ„Ÿè¬å¤©ï¼Œæ˜ŸæœŸäº”到了—終於到了第一個山é ,Friday,隊ä¼æ‰€èŠ±çš„時間,比é 期地長許多。我看著我的手錶,心ä¸å¿–度:眾人的雙足,若我è¦æ±‚å¢žåŠ é€Ÿåº¦æ˜¯æ²’æœ‰ç–‘å•çš„,åå在茂林ä¸çš„ä¾·é™ï¼Œå°±æ˜¯è®“人沒法兒走快。
æ²’åœç•™å¤šä¹…,隊ä¼åˆå‡ºå‹•äº†ï¼Œä¸‹ä¸€å€‹ç›®æ¨™â€”Balsam Cap。在Fridayå’ŒBalsam Cap之間,情æ³ä¸€é»žéƒ½æ²’有改善:濃密的çŒæœ¨æž—ã€çªç„¶å‡ºç¾çš„巨大岩å£ã€çˆ¬ä¸ŠåŠ 爬下ã€é‚„有令人疼痛的å°å‚·å£ã€‚æˆ‘æ›´å› ç‚ºçµ†åˆ°æ¨¹å¹¹ï¼Œå¤šäº†å°è…¿ä¸Šçš„瘀é’。登上Balsam Cap之後,隊ä¼åˆåŒ†åŒ†é‚å‘Rocky。
Balsam Capå’ŒRocky之間,樹æžå‹¾ç ´äº†æˆ‘的雨衣。我盯著å³é‚Šè¢–å上長é”七八公分的傷å£ï¼Œå¥½åƒæˆ‘的雨衣æ£åœ¨å“€åšŽä¼¼çš„,喔,ä¸ï¼Œæ˜¯æˆ‘的心ä¸åœ¨æ·Œè¡€ï¼šé€™ä»¶é›¨è¡£å¯èŠ±äº†æˆ‘ä¸å°‘銀å,åˆæ˜¯æˆ‘最喜愛的é¡è‰²ï¼Œå¤©å•Šï¼Œä½ 怎麼這樣å°å¾…我?我好想大è²çš„å“,讓泉湧的眼淚淹æ»æ‰€æœ‰çš„çŒæœ¨ï¼Œä½†æˆ‘沒有這麼åšï¼Œé€™ä¸æ˜¯å“的時候,沒有時間啊,我需è¦å†·éœï¼Œé›–說如æ¤ï¼Œæˆ‘還是默默地站立了五分é˜ï¼Œå„€å¼æ€§åœ°è¡¨é”了我的哀傷和痛輓。
到了Rockyå±±é ‚ï¼Œå·²ç¶“äº”é»žäº†ã€‚æˆ‘ä¸èªç‚ºæ‡‰è©²ç¹¼çºŒå‰å¾€Loneå’ŒTable,於是建è°å¤§å®¶å¾€ä¸‹å¡ç›´é™åˆ°Neversink Riverï¼Œç„¶å¾Œé †è‘—æ²³æµèµ°åˆ°Neversinkå’Œæ¥é“的交會處。這樣一來,總行進è·é›¢å¯ä»¥ç¸®çŸï¼Œå°±ç®—天黑,也ä¸ç”¨æ“”心迷路。隊ä¼å¾ˆå¿«åœ°åŒæ„了,而到了Neversink之後,é 計還需è¦æ²¿æ²³è¡Œé€²ç´„三到四英里,æ‰æœƒåˆ°é”與æ¥é“交會處。
天很快地黑了。在河é“æ—行走,ä¸æ™‚得顛顛簸簸地踩著河ä¸æ©¢åœ“çš„æ–æ“ºå²©çŸ³ï¼Œæœ‰æ™‚å€™ï¼Œé‚„å¿…é ˆç©¿è¶Šæ²³æµï¼Œåˆ°å°å²¸æ‰¾å¦ä¸€æ¢æ¯”較好走的路。我注æ„到,雖然沒有å¯æ¨çš„樹木橫亙在å‰é 阻擋我們,隊ä¼è¡Œé€²çš„速度並沒有增快,大家想必都是累了。很安éœåœ°èµ°è‘—,åƒæ˜¯è»éšŠéŠœæžšè¡Œèµ°ï¼Œè€Œæ™‚é–“çš„æµèµ°åœ¨æ²ˆéœé–“,變得難以感覺。
終於有人出è²åŠƒç ´é€™ä¸€ä¸–紀的寂éœï¼šã€Œé‚„沒有看到æ¥é“嗎?ä¸æ˜¯å·²ç¶“沿著河é“行走了好長的一段時間了嗎?ã€æˆ‘承èªï¼Œæˆ‘也是這麼地疑惑著,畢竟ä¸æ˜¯ã€Œåªã€æœ‰ä¸‰è‹±é‡Œå—Žï¼Ÿæˆ‘抓出地圖,想確定隊ä¼ç©¶ç«Ÿåœ¨å“ªè£¡ï¼Œååå¤©é»‘åœ°ï¼Œæˆ‘æ ¹æœ¬æ‰¾ä¸åˆ°ä¸€å€‹å¯é çš„åƒè€ƒé»žã€‚雖說確定æ¥é“在隊ä¼çš„北方,å¯æ˜¯å¯¦åœ¨æ²’辦法很肯定地跟大家說,我們是ä¸æ˜¯é‚„沒到æ¥é“與河æµçš„交會處。所以隊ä¼å…ˆæ˜¯å‡è¨éŒ¯éŽäº†æ¥é“,開始往北行進,但是å¡åº¦å¯¦åœ¨å¤ªé™¡å³äº†ï¼Œä¸ç¬¦åˆç‰é«˜ç·šçµ¦çš„資訊。也就是說,唯一的ç”案是:我們還沒到交會處。
我åˆæ‹¿å‡ºGPS,來讀目å‰æ‰€åœ¨åœ°çš„座標以åšç¢ºèªã€‚當GPS尋找衛星的時刻,æ¯å€‹äººéƒ½é–‹å§‹åš¼è‘—行囊ä¸å‰©é¤˜çš„食物點心,而我心ä¸ä¸€å€‹è²éŸ³éŸ¿è‘—:「如果有人說è¦åœ¨é€™è£¡ç´®ç‡Ÿï¼Œæ˜Žå¤©å†èµ°ï¼Œæˆ‘想我會馬上ç”應。ã€å¤§ç´„還有åŠè‹±é‡Œçš„路程到交會處。喔,當隊ä¼çœ‹åˆ°æ¥é“標示的那一刻,我似乎è½åˆ°äº†èˆˆå¥®çš„é©šå‘¼ï¼ˆé‚„æ˜¯é‚£æ ¹æœ¬å°±æ˜¯æˆ‘ï¼Ÿï¼‰ã€‚
還有一åˆäºŒåˆ†ä¹‹ä¸€è‹±é‡Œæ‰æœƒçœ‹åˆ°è»Šå,ä¸éŽé€™åªæ˜¯ä¸€ç‰‡è›‹ç³•ç½·äº†ã€‚在åœè»Šè™•ï¼Œçœ¾äººä¸å‡ºä¸€è²åœ°ï¼Œæ›è¡£è£³çš„æ›è¡£è£³ï¼Œåƒæ±è¥¿çš„åƒæ±è¥¿ã€‚好久好久,æ‰æœ‰äººèªªï¼šã€Œç´¯æ˜¯ç´¯æ¥µäº†ï¼Œæ²®å–ªä¹Ÿæ˜¯å¥½æ²®å–ªï¼Œä¸éŽé‚„是很好玩。ã€
是啊,真的是好玩。ä¸ç®¡åœ¨è·¯é€”上,é‡åˆ°å¤šå°‘艱險;ä¸ç®¡åœ¨è¡Œé€²é–“,感覺多麼地困苦,åªè¦å®‰å…¨åœ°å›žè¿”家門,留下的記憶總是樂趣,總是甜。而下一次,我們還是會毫ä¸é²ç–‘地走å‘戶外。
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上é¢æžœç„¶æ˜¯å¹³å¦çš„路,有好看的野花,有é®è”½çš„è€æ¨¹ã€‚但是我å¯å€¦äº†ï¼Œè¡£æœéƒ½è¢«æ±—æ¿•é了,四肢都覺軟了。我在樹下ç¡å€’,èžè‘—那撲鼻的è‰é¦™ï¼Œä¾¿æ˜æ˜æ²‰æ²‰åœ°ç¡äº†ä¸€è¦ºã€‚
ç¡é†’來時,天已黑了,路已行ä¸å¾—了,努力的喊è²ä¹Ÿæ»…了。猛çœï¼çŒ›çœï¼æˆ‘且å到天明,明天絕早跑上最高峰,去看那日出的奇景。
wakako,
å°Po我åªæ˜¯æ„›çŽ©å•¦ï¼Œå–œæ¡è·‘來跑去的。ä¸éŽå¤šåšæˆ¶å¤–é‹å‹•ï¼Œç¸½æ˜¯æœ‰ç›Šå¥åº·çš„。
Sylvia,
ä½ ä¹ŸçœŸæ˜¯å¤ªæœ‰æ–‡è—æ°£æ¯äº†ã€‚我記得的åˆå”±æ›²å¯æƒœå¥½åƒæ²’有和登山有關的,勉強è¦æ‰¾ä¸€é¦–å¯ä»¥ç‰½ä¸Šã€Œæˆ¶å¤–ã€é—œä¿‚的,大概是「花ã€å§ï¼š
風和日麗春光好,éŠäººæ¨‚陶陶。
清波盪漾湖色嬌,畫船輕穿繞。
手把槳兒上下æ–,水花四濺高。
滿眼春色觀ä¸ç›¡ï¼Œé›£ç¹ªåˆé›£æ。
清晨æœéœ²æµ´èŠ±æ¢¢ï¼Œæ—光閃耀耀。
æ‘å‰æ¡ƒæŽçˆé–‹æ—©ï¼Œå«µåªšè¿Žäººç¬‘。
夕陽西下霞光照,一曲江天高。
岸邊楊柳拂輕煙,招人去éŠé¨ã€‚
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