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It seldom snowed – Part IV by Ivan Donn Carswell
It seldom snowed they said, perhaps they’re right although seldom was never in that endless summer which tightened a fiery grip by day, baking the plateau, relentlessly melting its snow. It began as a cliché on a slow day in a new January of stupid heat that penetrated the heart, enslaving energies replete with blinding lassitude, defeating even the more able. Over a beer shared in the Mess we agreed to climb Mount Ruapehu. The snowline had retreated enough for a leisurely stroll from the skiers upper car park to Crater Lake, we’d take a picnic lunch, snap some great pictures, be home for tea. I had never climbed the volcano before but it sounded okay to me, representing no more than a brisk morning’s walk. I had heard the talk of its moods, how out of the placid blue a shift in weather could strand climbers, I had seen the same phenomenon from a safe distance and I believed it true but things had been stable for weeks. When I reached the peak clad only in running shorts, a T shirt and combat boots I was in awe of the view, it was worth every risk – not that there were any, and to stand in brisk air on top of this part of New Zealand, on the pinnacle, with two properly dressed climbers roped together, ice-axed and slack-jawed gazing at me bewildered, was an inspiration. We exchanged greetings and I left on my bum, there was no other way down. When my friends joined me at the rim of Crater Lake and we had shared snow-chilled Liebfraumilch, chicken and fresh, crusty rolls, they asked if my skinned buttocks hurt. Not when sitting in snow on top of Ruapehu with my friends I said, but tonight, it might be a different matter. © I.D. Carswell
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