+fox-and-the-hound Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 I've heard that there are logbooks hidden about at almost every major peak in the usa that is climbed regularly. Does anybody know if there is a common coords listing? Quote Link to comment
+CurmudgeonlyGal Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 I've heard that there are logbooks hidden about at almost every major peak in the usa that is climbed regularly. Does anybody know if there is a common coords listing? Many of the trails have trail registers/peak registers on them in these parts. I don't know of any coords listings (as an organized thing)... in fact, a lot of people who hike regular-like don't use a GPS. This is kinda cool though. There are coordinates floating around in there, but not so much for the registers as they are for other things. michelle Quote Link to comment
+Mule Ears Posted September 11, 2008 Share Posted September 11, 2008 Summit registers predate GPS, so they are generally sheltered by a conspicuous cairn of rocks, often marked with a stick jutting up like a flagpole. They are meant to found easily by hikers/climbers using no special navigational aids--just keep going up until you reach the point at which you can't gain any more elevation, and you're standing at or on the summit register. Quote Link to comment
+fox-and-the-hound Posted September 12, 2008 Author Share Posted September 12, 2008 Thanks! I'd heard some of them were hidden exceptionally well, but maybe they just meant hidden from the elements Quote Link to comment
+CurmudgeonlyGal Posted September 12, 2008 Share Posted September 12, 2008 Thanks! I'd heard some of them were hidden exceptionally well, but maybe they just meant hidden from the elements Sometimes they're right out in the open... like you couldn't miss em unless you were blind and even then you'd probably trip over them. michelle Quote Link to comment
+Mule Ears Posted September 13, 2008 Share Posted September 13, 2008 Thanks! I'd heard some of them were hidden exceptionally well, but maybe they just meant hidden from the elements Yeah, a hard-to-find summit register would be pointless, and would probably be reckoned lost by other hikers, who would place a new one. The fact that the summit register tradition evolved before the 'net means that in order to ascertain whether somebody's been there, you have to go there yourself and check the log. You can't sit in front of your computer and gloat over "DNFs," so there's no incentive to hide a register, except to protect it from the elements. Quote Link to comment
+Kit Fox Posted September 15, 2008 Share Posted September 15, 2008 A good place to check is your local Sierra Club. Around my area they maintain a list called the Hundred Peaks Section Peak List Another of my favorites is SummitPost. With a highpoint of 3,213 feet, it looks like you have some "puny mountains" in PA I started a hike to day at 4000 feet, and my personal best was a 9399 feet summit. Quote Link to comment
+Billy Goatee Posted September 16, 2008 Share Posted September 16, 2008 I have seen summit registers 'hidden' in mailboxes. Here in Utah, we have peaks as high as 13,520'. Yesterday, I hiked to a valley and nearly climbed higher than the 'puny mountains' LOL SummitPost is a great site, full of useful data. I post there as KirtDavis Anyway, Keep on Hiking! Quote Link to comment
+cameltrekor Posted September 16, 2008 Share Posted September 16, 2008 here's a site for lists for hikers/climbers, the coordinates are buried a little bit. Quote Link to comment
+fox-and-the-hound Posted September 17, 2008 Author Share Posted September 17, 2008 With a highpoint of 3,213 feet, it looks like you have some "puny mountains" in PA Yep, puny pretty much sums it up. Some great distance hikes, but not much in the way of elevation. A bit depressing for a kid from Alaska. Fox is local and so when he and his wife visited my home in AK with Moun10Girl and myself it was a bit of an eye-opener. Our first day hike across the highway from the house (Mt. Eklutna - really more of a foothill than a mountain) was a bigger elevation gain than anything we've ever done over here in PA. Now he's been completely spoiled and we're trying to figure out how soon we can get back up there for another visit for some more hiking and a few climbs. Quote Link to comment
+Team Chinook Posted September 18, 2008 Share Posted September 18, 2008 Checkout Peakbagger.com for a list of peaks around the country/world. I don't think they have coordinates specific for logs, but they certainly cover peaks! Quote Link to comment
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