• Correct.

    Rock climbing is super low risk. Especially if you do it indoors.

    Mountain climbing and cave diving have so many factors outside your control it might as well be flipping a few coins and if they all come up heads, you die. At least in more controlled environments, even if that environment is still outside but in a well used rock climbing spot, your chances of death and/or dismemberment are much lower.

    • some_kind_of_guy@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      “Mountain climbing” is a generic term. It doesn’t refer to a specific activity. I’ve climbed plenty of mountains. Half of them were a nice, leisurely 1-3 hour hike requiring nothing more than a free afternoon, a water bottle and a day pack with a couple snacks.

      I’m kind of confused by the responses here. Idk if you guys just need to go outside more, or maybe I’m just spoiled, as at least half of the cities and towns where I’m at have at least one local peak. A lot of them are glorified hills with a good view. Many of them don’t even have a view, but it’s still fun to go up, be in nature, and see the different habitats, zones, and natural features as you go up. This is a casual activity for a great number of people. Some mountains even have actual paved roads/paths that gently take you up, but I prefer trails, unless I’m on my bike.

      “Mountain climbing” doesn’t have to equate to Everest/K2/etc. There are a vast number of levels to it. There are still dangers to what I do at my preferred level, but the life-threatening stuff typically only happens on much bigger mountains.

      • Maybe it’s just me, but when someone says “mountain climbing” I assume actual climbing takea place.

        Not a leisurely stroll on a hiking trail.

        I think the fact that most people are acting as though they expect actual climbing as well is enough to say the general thought of mountain climbing is not to hike a trail to the top.

      • msage@programming.dev
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        26 days ago

        Mostly when you fuck up.

        Very, extremely rarely is it due to the equipment.

        But you can die thousands of ways even inside your home.

        Climbing if done responsively is safer than walking in some parts.

          • my point, which spawned the conversation, was that mountain climbing and cave diving are far far more dangerous than rock climbing, which I don’t really think is up for debate. Someone just took that to mean “rock climbing is not dangerous as all” which is a separate statement.

            Kind of like that “oh so you hate waffles” meme.