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Peakbagging
White Mountain 4,000 Footer Grid
Current Total: 368/576
63.89% complete
NH 4,000 Footers in One Winter
2009/2010 Season
Current Total: 44/48
Current Total: 368/576
63.89% complete
NH 4,000 Footers in One Winter
2009/2010 Season
Current Total: 44/48
Photography
I just recently integrated my Picasa Web Albums into Wordpress. Check it out.
Last Update:
Lincoln and Owl's Head
Last Update:
Lincoln and Owl's Head
2010 Highlights
30+ Mile Winter Pemi Adventure
Hale, Zealand, the Bonds, the Twins, and Galehead in a Day - 2/6/2010
Hale, Zealand, the Bonds, the Twins, and Galehead in a Day - 2/6/2010
2009 Highlights
NH 4,000 Footers in One Winter
Completed 2/16/2009
48 x 4 Seasons in 2009
Completed 12/6/2009
Single Day Pemi Loop
With West Bond - 6/13/2009
With Galehead and West Bond - 7/25/2009
Hiked: 272 4,000 Footers
Completed 2/16/2009
48 x 4 Seasons in 2009
Completed 12/6/2009
Single Day Pemi Loop
With West Bond - 6/13/2009
With Galehead and West Bond - 7/25/2009
Hiked: 272 4,000 Footers
NH Hiking Resources
Blogs I Follow
Contact
I appreciate your comments and feedback. Please feel free to send me an email.
Archives
Words that Inspire Me
"There is only one thing that makes a dream impossible to achieve: the fear of failure."
- The Alchemist
"Try the meditation of the trail, just walk along looking at the trail at your feet and don't look about and just fall into a trance as the ground zips by..."
- Jack Kerouac
"The climbing of mountains never ends, because climbing is continuous: you go up and over, and up and over again. This repetition, driven by the need to climb again, is hard to explain. No true mountaineer heads upward in a spirit of conquest — a heavily laden term burdened by implications of against. Rather, the climbing itself is the main event, and the randomness of climbing is part of its attractiveness."
- Tim Muskat, Appalachia (Winter/Spring 2006)
- The Alchemist
"Try the meditation of the trail, just walk along looking at the trail at your feet and don't look about and just fall into a trance as the ground zips by..."
- Jack Kerouac
"The climbing of mountains never ends, because climbing is continuous: you go up and over, and up and over again. This repetition, driven by the need to climb again, is hard to explain. No true mountaineer heads upward in a spirit of conquest — a heavily laden term burdened by implications of against. Rather, the climbing itself is the main event, and the randomness of climbing is part of its attractiveness."
- Tim Muskat, Appalachia (Winter/Spring 2006)

