Dicey? Well, maybe for folks used to paved tower-controlled strips.
Into the mountain, you'd best make dang certain you've calculated your Density Altitude.....or you turn to clear obstacle, lose your lift, and you prang.
I've flown into some strips in the Vaupes and Amazon river jungles....and we had Pucker Factor 10..often.
And that's with an STOL Helio Courier.
One...Cacua strip, couple of minutes from Brazil...nice and level and flat on top....had to take off towards the river....strip dropped and angled 20 degrees left....and now you're downhill (steep) on slick grass with no prop reverse, and you....are...committed. Try to keep it from flying earfly when it crests the drop peak to keep the wheels on the ground to direct the craft until you get up enough airspeed for full rudder control.....