I always pictured mountaintops, even the ones in Bangladesh, as unimaginably high and only reachable by mountaineers. I was proven wrong when I, a guy who takes rickshaws for the shortest of distances and sits in front of his computer all day, hiked almost 3200 feet up to the peak of Keokradong, one of the highest peaks in Bangladesh.I always pictured mountaintops, even the ones in Bangladesh, as unimaginably high and only reachable by mountaineers. I was proven wrong when I, a guy who takes rickshaws for the shortest of distances and sits in front of his computer all day, hiked almost 3200 feet up to the peak of Keokradong, one of the highest peaks in Bangladesh.I always pictured mountaintops, even the ones in Bangladesh, as unimaginably high and only reachable by mountaineers. I was proven wrong when I, a guy who takes rickshaws for the shortest of distances and sits in front of his computer all day, hiked almost 3200 feet up to the peak of Keokradong, one of the highest peaks in Bangladesh.
I always pictured mountaintops, even the ones in Bangladesh, as unimaginably high and only reachable by mountaineers. I was proven wrong when I, a guy who takes rickshaws for the shortest of distances and sits in front of his computer all day, hiked almost 3200 feet up to the peak of Keokradong, one of the highest peaks in Bangladesh.