Noticed the references to Black Diamond above, I guess because of an association with Dean Potter. Black Diamond and Patagonia were created when Yvon Chouinard split his company, the Great Pacific Iron Works, into clothing and climbing equipment business, I think for liability reasons. Chouinard was a very skillful but also very ethics-conscious entrepreneur. He more or less monopolized steel American-made pitons, then wiped out that business in a few years with chocks. Very ethical, very public-spirited and very, very good business. An excellent way to sustain a durable-goods business by making the stock of products you sold obsolete, and making people believe they had to replace them with a new product line of yours. You could write a Harvard Business School case on it. Also very good judgment when it came to climbing. On the day when Willi Unsoeld decided to take his students up Rainier, leading to his death and that of one of his students, Chouinard reportedly looked up at the mountain from Paradise and said no way I'm going up when it looks like that. There's a saying, 'There are old climbers and there are bold climbers, but there are no old, bold climbers.' I suspect it was borrowed from pioneer aviators or some other class of people.
I'm afraid I don't agree with Dylan Thomas, I would like to go gently into the night. His own death was certainly not the model most people would like to follow. I'm not fond of leaving important matters up to God and the medical profession, or to accidents in the wilderness. But like most people I probably won't have a choice.
Is this discussion becoming morbid? Did I start it in that direction? Hope not! Well, it is a natural subject for thought when you are older.
