Mountain People Who Inspire

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Greetings from New Zealand. You’ll start to see articles on this blog under the column named “Mountain People Who Inspire” whenever I or other authors should come across them. 

Londoner Mark Rosen, Wanaka, NZ

Londoner Mark Rosen, Wanaka, NZ

I’m starting this column with an entry on a retired man from England named Mark Rosen. Mark hails from Norfolk, Sheringham which is a fishing and vacation village on the east coast. We crossed paths in the Matukituki Valley when Mark was on his way to fulfill his annual volunteer stint at the French Ridge Hut near the base of Mt. Aspiring. He has been volunteering at this hut as well as Mueller hut at Mt Cook for a number of years.  He’s an inpsiration because of his great attitude about getting out in the mountains, and his ability to continue hitting the trail. He’s a mountain man in the true sense. Getting to the French Ridge Hut is not easy. Once you’ve hiked four hours along the Matukituki Valley, the trail climbs 3000′ in about a mile and a half, to arrive above treeline and at glacier’s edge at the small hut.

I only met him briefly on the trail, and later caught up with him in Wanaka, New Zealand where we asked him a few questions about his thoughts on hut wardening at Mt. Aspiring and Mt. Cook.  
MSI:What do you love most about your volunteering?
MR: I love relating to the people, and hearing about their first impressions. Especially at Mt. Cook when many of the visitors are seeing a large glaciated mountain for the first time. They’re enjoying the beauty of the mountains and for most, this is their first experience of going to a place like that. Their eyes are wide with wonder.  More though, I come back because of the place, the mountain environment, this special location.  I like the time alone too and can retreat to the hut warden’s quarters when need be.

MSI: What do you do in your spare time at the huts?
MR: I like to get out and hike the surrounding routes, read or plug into my ipod and conduct the London Symphony Orchestra or do my aerobic exercises.

MSI: What are some of the challenges of being a hut warden?
MR: Well, in a humorous vein, people tend to ask the same questions over and over, such as,  “How do you get your food and water up here?”, or “How do you get up here?” Depending on my mood sometimes, I like to make my answers more interesting.  I’ll tell a fibb by replying that I bring my food up in big boxes and haul water from the valley floor in buckets. Oh, and that “The outhouse poop needs to be hauled out in containers strung over my shoulders.” Sometimes I might say “I arrive by private helicopter.”
One thing that can bother me is when parties don’t clean up after themselves and leave the hut or toilet a mess. I almost feel as if I need to inquire about their toilet habits upon their arrival, hopefully stemming their bad behaviour. Of course, this is the minority of the visitors, but it does have a negative impact.

When I met Mr. Rosen the second time in Wanaka, I observed at how well grounded and at peace the man seemed. I guess part of it stems from all that time in the mountains. Keep going Mark.

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3 Responses to “Mountain People Who Inspire”

  1. Robin Says:

    Great piece about Mark. I was lucky to be a hut warden at Mueller Hut in December and it was truly life changing. Being in those mountains for one week is out of this world. A week or two later I was sitting on a bench in Arthur’s Pass when Mark (whom I hadn’t met yet) walked by. We started talking and I told him I had just come from Mueller Hut and he said he was on his way up there for two weeks. He is definitely very grounded at at peace. I saw him the following day on the top of Avalanche Peak and if I had been in the country longer I would have tried to visit him when he was up at Mueller Hut.

    • mtnspirit Says:

      Thanks for the comment. I just ran into Mark again at the Wanaka internet cafe a few days ago. He looks younger than he did a couple of years ago. It’s that mountain living.
      “Now I see the secret of making the best person: it is to grow in the open air and to eat and sleep with the earth.”
      Walt Whitman

  2. Chris Varcoe Says:

    Mark is indeed a true legend and an absolute gentleman. One of a dying breed. I have been bumping into Mark in Switzerland on for the last 20 years and am honoured to know him. He is an inspiring man with a zeal for life and its natural wonders and beauty. It was great to see him again recently in Stechelberg. Hope to see you again soon, my friend .

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