Heath's Highpointing Adventures

dieck

Adventurer
Hey all,

When I am traveling for work, I frequently try to climb a mountain near my destination. This year, on one such excursion while in Las Vegas, at the top of Turtle Head Peak (6323ft) I found a 80+ year old man named John. He was great! I hope I'm in great shape like him when I am his age. Anyway while we chatted he explained the concept of high pointing. I knew as soon as I heard about it that I'd have to do it. I've decided to tackle at the least the highest point in each of the 48 continental states. I may tack on Hawaii and Alaska depending on how Rainier goes.

I'm going to track my progress here if that is ok.

Highpointing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Highpointing is the sport of visiting (and finding) the point with the highest elevation within some area (the "highpoint"), for example the highest points in each county within a state. It can be considered a form of peak bagging.

Over the years, this pursuit has been taken up by thousands of individuals and expanded to include other quirky geopolitical goals; visiting the highest point in each county in a state; summiting every peak in a region above some round number (such as 2000'); and reaching the highest point on each continent (the now famous "Seven Summits"). No official definition exists, but the broadest view holds that any geopolitical region can be "highpointed."

Highpoint "rules"

There is neither a governing body of highpointing, nor any official rules. This is an activity intended primarily to motivate the journey, not to focus on the acquisition of the summits themselves. Highpoint Guides holds to these general principles:

→ The goal is to attain the highest natural point. In other words, regardless of what man-made structures have been placed on top, the goal is to stand atop the highest natural point.

→ If the natural high point is covered with a structure and that structure is accessible, even on a limited basis, entering the structure and standing over the presumed high point is the goal. If the structure is completely and permanently inaccessible -- eg a military base or private telecommunications tower - the goal is to reach the highest accessible natural point.

→ Any route to the top - walking, climbing, riding a cable car, dropping off a helicopter - is a valid means of attaining the high point. Each individual must decide what constitutes good sport. Many will prefer reaching the high point under their own locomotion, but the goal of highpointing is reaching the highpoint - means is a personal choice.

Starting in the early 1900's, a few pioneers of highpointing began visiting the highest geographic point in each of the 50 states of the United States. In the early days, this endeavor involved dispute and lore, as the tools to precisely map every square inch of the country were just beginning to find wide-spread use - and this was perhaps a significant part of the charm.

To date, no person is known to have reached the highest point in every country in the world. To see a list of the country highpoints, visit http://www.highpointguides.com/

County highpoints

The most prolific highpointing organization is the county highpointers club, whose members are collectively attempting to reach the highest point in all 3,142 U.S. counties.

For many highpointers, simply being present at the highest point is sufficient to check the highpoint off the list. This allows for driving to car-accessible summits and stepping out of the vehicle and declaring the summit "climbed." While this extreme case is scoffed at by most mountaineers, it would be almost ridiculous to visit certain very non-prominent highpoints any other way. Drive-up highpointing is allowed by the U.S. State Highpointers Club and the County Highpointers Club. Note, however, that some individual members have their own rules, such as attempting to hike to even car-accessible summits.

In the American West, as well as the Appalachians (notably in New England), county highpoints often present serious climbing challenges. Examples include Mount Rainier, Grand Teton, and, as an extreme example, Mount McKinley. However in many other counties, particularly in the Plains states, the highest point might be a small rise along a farm road, and there is no way to "climb" to the highest point in a literal sense. For this reason, the county highpointers also bag highpoints that most would consider insignificant.

Such an exercise is valuable to the county highpointer because the holy grail is a state completion, i.e. reaching the highest point of every county in a state. To that end, both the state's topographically prominent county highpoints and less significant hills (or even mere mounds) must be reached - be it by driving or climbing as the individual locations warrant. Also, if the highest area or areas in a county are located along a boundary, they must be visited. The highest summit within a county, being lower, does not count under such circumstances (as is the case with the highest point in Connecticut).

The county highpointers' rules are strict. Jerimoth Hill, the highest point in both Rhode Island and Providence County serves as example. While state highpointers for years accepted driving RI 101 to the point closest to the summit of to count for a visit to that state's highest point due to access issues, county highpointers require that one visit the slightly higher rock outcrop at the actual summit to claim . Indeed, the highest natural terrain must be visited, regardless of climbing difficulty and other issues, and as described here.

Many counties, especially flat and low-lying ones, have not been fully surveyed and thus have no single defined highest point, just multiple areas with the same highest contour line. In order to claim to have successfully climbed the county's highest point, then, it is necessary to visit ALL those areas, unless one can clearly be ruled out by line of sight from another one or by virtue of having been graded or excavated. Even if one area has an elevation indicated on the USGS map, the county highpointer must visit other areas within the same contour until and unless the maximum elevations are resolved by an official survey. For flat counties with multiple points, county highpointing is more akin to geocaching than peak bagging, since logically only one of the points is the highpoint, and the rest are not. In this case the number of virtual 'caches' is largely an artifact of the size of the contour interval (for a given area, the larger the contour interval, the more 'possible' highpoints there will be). For instance suppose the two highest points in a county are 101 feet and 106 feet above sea level, and that neither has a spot elevation on the map. If the region is mapped with 5-foot contours, there will be only 1 "highpoint". However, if the region is mapped with 10-foot contours, there will be two "highpoints", and county highpointers will be required to visit both points to claim the county.

Links

* highpointers.org: State highpointers club
* americasroof.com: State highpointers news blog and summit guide
* 50 State Highpoint Quest
* HighpointAdventures.com: information about state highpointing
* StateSummits.com: photographs from state highpoints
* HighpointGuides.com: searchable database of country highpoints
 
Last edited:
#1 Texas High Point Guadalupe Peake June 2006 (8749 ft)

Texas was my first high point (home state). You can tell how serious I took it by noticing that I wore my Keen Sandals (Ouch). I didn't do any research until after the climb when I discoverd that it is the 13th toughest state highpoint in the US.

What looks like the high point in this picture is El Capitan. The real high point is the peak behind El Capitan which is Guadalupe Peak

Fathers_Day_Hike_005.sized.jpg


Almost at the top taking a break. This was a fairly strenuous climb for me. I did not do any training prior to attempting it. I'm going to have to do some cardio training for higher altitude peaks in the future. I was pretty winded.

Fathers_Day_Hike_007.sized.jpg


At the summit. You can see El Capitan behind and below me. This first highpoint ensured that I was hooked! What a sense of accomplishment, and the view was awesome.

Fathers_Day_Hike_010.sized.jpg


 
Last edited:
Very cool! Seems like a grand quest. There are some interesting stories of people trying to highpoint some of the seemingly easier states. Mostly issues with private property rights. Let me know if you ever get up to Michigan. Mt Arvon is in my neck of the woods. Nothing spectacular really as the view is ubstructed by foilage in the summer months.
 
#2 Louisiana High Point Driskill Mountain November 2006 (535 ft)

I was visiting my in-laws over Thanksgiving and decided to knock out the Louisiana High Point. This time I did my research prior to departure. Driskill "mountain" is only 535 feet tall. It is a short but enjoyable hike that is not strenuous in the least unless you decide to sprint it.

Of course the Taco got me to the trailhead which was no small feat with the angry and aggressive Lousiana drivers.

IMG_5643.sized.jpg


The short hike was scenic and peaceful and short.

IMG_5595.sized.jpg


This was an easy peak to bag, so I signed the register, snapped my picture, and headed back down.

IMG_5624_1.sized.jpg


As a bit of trivia, this "mountain" is considered the 25th toughest state highpoint in the US. That means there are 25 that are even easier than this one... :)
 
Last edited:
#3 New Mexico High Point Wheeler Peak March 2007 (13161 ft)

Ok, I'm going to try to tackle Wheeler Peak in March of this year.

taosValleySmall.jpg


This highpoint is going to test me for a few different reasons.

1. It's getting up there in altitude. I get worn out after a day of downhill skiing at 11,000 feet and lugging my skiis back to the condo gets me out of breath.

2. It's going to be March, which at that altitude means snow, possibly lots of it. I've never done any hiking, let alone a summit in the snow. I'll need to get some gear.

3. It's going to be COLD! I'm from Texas, nuff said.

4. It's the 12th toughest highpoint. Even though I did Texas, # 13 without much trouble, this peak is 4000+ feet higher. This mountain is the start of the tuff hghpoints.

So I'm officially starting my cardio training this week. I've planned our route and mapped it out. Click link for an Uber high res image (not safe for slow connections).



So if any of you guys have experience with this mountain, or cold weather hiking, summits, etc, I'm all ears...
 
Last edited:
upcruiser said:
Very cool! Seems like a grand quest. There are some interesting stories of people trying to highpoint some of the seemingly easier states. Mostly issues with private property rights. Let me know if you ever get up to Michigan. Mt Arvon is in my neck of the woods. Nothing spectacular really as the view is ubstructed by foilage in the summer months.

Thanks! I'll definately be in your neck of the woods at some point in the future. I've read some of those stories and hope to avoid the drama.:gunt:
 
Great thread!

High Points are a passion of mine.

On Wheeler, take the Alpine Route. Spring snow will make the traditional route too long and route finding difficult.

Basically, take the pack trail from the Williams Lake hiking trail to Williams Lake and then straight up. That is the route I climbed the mountain on and made the summit in just over three hours. Pack light, bring climbing poles and rip up the side. There is cell coverage on the top.

Here is my climb
 
Oh, and the key to alpine climbing is pacing. For those of us that are not superhuman, pacing is key.

After about 12,000 feet it will be difficult to keep moving continuously, so you must start to pace. start with counting 30 paces (steps) and then stop for 5 seconds, then, when that becomes difficult, move down to 25 paces, stop for 5 seconds and so on. The rhythm helps the time and distance move along and gives your mind an active participation (distraction from the pain). On Elbert, I got down to 5 steps, 5 seconds on the last scramble.
 
Scott, That was my initial plan, but several locals old me that from feb - april there is a high avalanche danger on that approach because of the steep angle and scree base. I'll ask the Rangers about conditions when I get up there. Good to know that I'm in good company doing the highpoints.

I'm planning on doing Rainier in August of 2008 with another buddy. Would love to have you along for that hike.

Do you have any big summits planned in the next few months? I plan to knock out several minor high points on work and family trips this year.

expeditionswest said:
Great thread!

High Points are a passion of mine.

On Wheeler, take the Alpine Route. Spring snow will make the traditional route too long and route finding difficult.

Basically, take the pack trail from the Williams Lake hiking trail to Williams Lake and then straight up. That is the route I climbed the mountain on and made the summit in just over three hours. Pack light, bring climbing poles and rip up the side. There is cell coverage on the top.

Here is my climb
 
Last edited:
All 50 high points and specs.

Here is a list of all 50 high points and their specs. It is borrowed from americas roof. I'm using it to track my progress an make sure I know what I'm getting myself into.

 
dieck said:
I'm planning on doing Rainier in August of 2008 with another buddy. Would love to have you along for that hike.

Do you have any big summits planned in the next few months? I plan to knock out several minor high points on work and family trips this year.

The scree field could be an issue. I would think snow would be pretty stable in March unless a bunch of new snow hits. Check conditions, as that is a preferable route in my mind.

I would be VERY interested in the Rainier climb. I also want to do Hood in 2008.

I am planning to hit the CT, RI and MA highpoints in Feb. Maybe VT

Then a bunch more in July, like TN, VA, and a few others.
:REAdvRockClimber:
 
dieck said:

IMG_5624_1.sized.jpg


As a bit of trivia, this "mountain" is considered the 25th toughest state highpoint in the US. That means there are 25 that are even easier than this one... :)
Hilarious! I'll have to "bag" this peak next time I'm in LA, just for the hell of it.
You cracked me up with that photo.
 
expeditionswest said:
I am planning to hit the CT, RI and MA highpoints in Feb. Maybe VT

Then a bunch more in July, like TN, VA, and a few others.
:REAdvRockClimber:

Are you going to be going through AR on 40 to get to TN and VA? I can take you to the high point on Mt. Magazine here in AR.

Another walk up to it kind of high point, but hey, they can't all be hard.
 
Rainier in August

Quote:
Originally Posted by dieck
I'm planning on doing Rainier in August of 2008 with another buddy. Would love to have you along for that hike.


I went up Rainier in July last year, starting from Paradise. The Muir snowfield was a bright, sunny hothouse and you had to carry winter gear rather than wear it so pack weight was higher. Crevasse danger is higher because they are so big and the snow bridges are weak and small.

Here is the approach to Ingraham flats after coming up from Camp Muir.

You'll have some mixed rock, dirt and ice so you'll want to be comfortable in crampons. This shot is us descending from the summit back to Ingraham flats.


Also starting around midnight from the Ingraham flats (11k') area is advised as you'll have a shorter summit distance and avoid soft ice on the trip down.

With good planning you'll be wearing a BIG GRIN like this!

 

Forum statistics

Threads
191,054
Messages
2,932,105
Members
234,968
Latest member
Camp Tonneau Tents
Top