This is what I was going to post, only stone cold sober.
I’ve been to the highest point of my home state (Ohio), but Campbell Hill (472 m / 1550 ft) isn’t really much to brag about. Just a grassy hill with a vocational school atop it.
The highest point where I live now is Mt. Korenge which is 2766 m (9074 ft). I haven’t gone all the way to the top yet (just to a nice lake a couple hours from the peak), but I plan to finally get around to it later this year sometime after the snow melts.
Same here.
I agree.
I live about 75 miles north of Hoosier Hill and you really can’t tell that is a “high point” for the state.
Personally I have been to:
Boundary Peak in Nevada (which sadly is mostly in California)
Mount Arvon in the UP of Michigan (I have drive by it as the mountain itself is on timber company land)
Charles Mound in Illinois (Went n a trip to Galena)
Panorama Point in Nebraska (Got some pics of the buffalo in the area too)
As I understand it, Mt. Elbert is a relatively easy climb by Colorado standards, if you’re acclimatized to the thin air. Yes, its peak is 14,440 feet above sea level, but the trailhead is at about 10,000 feet. The vertical rise from the trailhead is only about 4500 feet which only about 10% greater than the vertical rise for Katahdin in Maine whose summit is at a relatively dinky 5269 feet above sea level.
Yes, that is true. My daughter, Queen Bruin, climbed that one for her first Fourteener peak bag. I’m in no shape to climb even a walk up at altitude.
I haven’t had a chance to get to Mt. Elbert yet.
I have, however, driven to the top of Pikes Peak, which is the highest point in my county. (14,110 feet)
I haven’t been to the highest point of any state. But I’ve been to thelowest points in 16 states!
I’ve been to the highest point in North Carolina and the eastern US. Mt. Mitchell at 6,684ft.
This is Highpointing, not peakbagging. Highpointers don’t really care how you get to the top - driving is OK for highpointing but not for peakbagging for example.
I’ve been meaning to go myself but I am afraid of heights so I really have to psych myself up for it.
Yes, I know. Just adding a handy link for those who don’t know the term. The article I lnked to also includes a little about highpointing.