this post was submitted on 03 Dec 2023
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Please don't do that while hiking around others, lots of people go hiking to get away from constant sounds like that.
Or camping, OMG. The people who set up at a national forest and start blaring shitty music.
Unfortunately lots of people lack self awareness. I do honestly try my best to not be one of those people.
I keep the volume to a reasonable personal level and pause any time people are within range. Try my best to be considerate.
Just use headphones. Sound caries further than you think.
No one but you wants to hear your music in nature.
Hiking out in the backcountry of the Rocky Mountains having headphones in would be extremely unsafe. A city or busy trail absolutely, headphones all the way. Bear and predator country, 50 miles from any major form of civilization, I still want to be aware of my surroundings. Iβm hiking on trails where I see maybe 10 groups of people over 3 days, and half of them are at the alpine lake or water source, not even on the trail.
Then you shouldn't be listening to music if you can't play it without others hearing. Full stop.
You're just trying to justify your selfish behavior.
If you have to listen to music and hear your surroundings, get a pair of open ear headphones.
Yβall act like volume adjustment isnβt a thing. Just traipsing through the forest at 100 volume. Itβs totally possible to adjust the volume to a level that allows one some background ambiance while able to hear the world around you. I will agree, open ear headphone would be nice on some trails.
Any suggest on good open ear headphones?
I just got these from JVC, and they're awesome. Although I did buy a $15 pair as a proof of concept before buying good ones.
Would be much easier than scrambling to hit the pause button anytime I see someone coming up on the trail.
Yeah, they're pretty great. Bone conduction ones are nice too, but definitely less comfortable imo.
Thanks! I often forget the technologies available today. I appreciate you.
Sounds like you shouldnβt be listening to music either then.
Not completely safe being out hiking and blocking off your ability to hear your surroundings. I think it's completely acceptable to be considerate while out with a Bluetooth speaker.
You're wrong. Get some open ear headphones if you're concerned with hearing what's going on around you.
Playing music through speakers on the trail is never considerate.
I'm not wrong. I'm stating my opinion. If I am wrong in stating my opinion than you are wrong as well for stating your opinion. I have a pair of open headphones, Audio Technica R70X. They still allow music to escape just as bad as it would be for a Bluetooth speaker to be playing at low volume. Perhaps Samsung Buds Pro 2 could work, but why would you want to seal yourself away from nature that much if you're out hiking? Bluetooth speaker has been an appropriate choice in my experience.
If you're in nature to enjoy nature, leave your music at home. No one wants to hear it but you.
And open ear headphones are different from open headphones. Open ear headphones are basically ear buds that don't go into your ear canal, but direct music into it.