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Bold in Bouldering and Business

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Cummins Stories presents: Climbing toward Destination Zero

NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESS Newswire / April 15, 2025 / Cummins - Carrying a giant, black folded foam pad on her back, Alexandra Toth hikes a path surrounded by towering southern red oak trees in a Tennessee forest. She is on her way to boulder at one of her favorite rock-climbing spots.

"I did not like bouldering when I first started climbing," Alexandra admits. "It was so hard. I couldn't figure out how to do it. I didn't feel strong enough. So I tried other types of climbing, and over time, especially as I started to climb outside, I found that bouldering was actually my favorite."

Unlike traditional rock climbing, bouldering doesn't use a safety rope. It's highly dependent on the balance, grip and technique of the climber to complete a sequence of moves called a "problem." Rather than moving toward neck-craning heights, Alexandra must find her way through a shorter climb with condensed, complex formations. She must think creatively and rely on her flexibility to figure out the movements that work best towards finding the solution, the giant, black folded foam pad there to catch her if she can't.

Climbers may have to put a heel well above their head, hang upside down, and carefully but forcefully swing a leg or arm from one spot to the next. It's why Alexandra describes boulders as hard puzzles.

"As someone who has always loved a puzzle to solve and finding different solutions, it's what attracted me to bouldering - a way to exercise my mind and my body, but also find these unique ways to problem-solve."

Alexandra's passion for rock climbing was born from an even deeper passion for the environment that began when she attended a unique elementary and middle school located down the river from a national park. Much of the curriculum focused on environmental education. Field trips and activities included spending a weekend backpacking through a forest, learning how to kayak and flip the kayak back over if you tipped, climbing rocks and alpine towers, and mastering how to use a compass to navigate your way through the woods.

After taking an environmental science course in high school, Alexandra knew she wanted to apply those learnings into her career. So she did just that.

As an Environmental and Product Data Manager at Cummins Inc., Alexandra focuses on technology investment portfolio analysis and product greenhouse gas emissions accounting, strategic planning and reporting. Her goal is to help Cummins make investment decisions as technology evolves through the energy transition.