See, I think hiking opens up more opportunity for romance. Dinner and a movie? You sit across the table from each other and chat. Sure, you can say sweet things, maybe hold hands. I always find that difficult to establish, though. And the movie means you won't be interacting at all. Yes, yes dinner and a movie CAN be incredibly romantic, but usually after the intimacy has all ready been established.
Hiking, however, gives you plenty of chances to make physical contact. Help her over a fallen log. Climb some rocks ahead of her and give her a lift up. Hold hands or slip your arm around her. Pause someplace beautiful and go for the kiss beneath the shade of a tree as wind rustles the leaves overhead.
Of course I have no idea where you live, but in my neck of the woods it's freezing ass cold, so hiking would be completely out of the question unless you're both very hardcore.
Don't worry yourself over it. That's the worst thing you can do. You know how you keep yourself from getting too obsessed with a girl and blowing it? You keep trying to pick up other girls. Ask for numbers, arrange other dates. You'll be so much calmer and so less inclined to become creepy affectionate when you've got other options open to you. If it makes you feel any better, my date last weekend went more or less identically. We had a good time but I didn't feel the time was right for a kiss. Yeah, we're bordering the friend zone, but she gave me a second chance, and I'm sure you'll get one if you ask for it. So ask and be cool.
Last edited by Gribble; 10-12-10 at 03:11 PM.
God, so atrocious in the Old Testament, so attractive in the New--the Jekyl and Hyde of sacred romance.
-Mark Twain
If people are good only because they fear punishment and hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed.
-Albert Einstein