Pretty much the only thing I say in pubski is about going to Upstate New York to hike. I booked another trip for the week before Christmas. I have nineteen summits left and am hoping to make something solid progress before the end of the year. I'm shooting for finishing next year, a year I'm already signed up for a full marathon and two half marathons (one of which has a 10K the night before). I'm also trying to coax family into committing to a 5K, and I'd do the half marathon the same day. My niece is showing some interest in being more active, and I want to show her active people are just normal people. It doesn't take a world class athlete to finish a long run. That's all I have this week.
What summits? I probably have half left? Mostly the ones that are off the usual beaten paths.
I'll be in the area five days, and I'm planning to hike three. Past experience is after a longer day I feel like taking a day off. This is vacation, after all. My December plan is: 1. Cliff and Redfield from Upper Works. If weather or conditions are mediocre, I'll do Marshall instead. 2. Saddleback from Garden in Keene Valley. If things go well I'll go up Gothics, too. I've done Gothics before from the other side, and it was clouded in. It's supposed to have fantastic views. An alternate that day is Colvin and Blake. That hike is just as long but quite a bit lower. I still need Cascade and Porter, too. 3. Colden from the Loj. Cascade and Porter are good alternates, too. Or if conditions are spectacular, I might go for Dix from Round Pond or AMR. My full list of remaining peaks is Marcy, Skylight, Dix, Gray, Basin, Colden, Redfield, Saddleback, Rocky Peak Ridge, Macomb, Hough, Marshall, Cascade, South Dix, Porter, Colvin, Grace, Blake and Cliff. I've been trying to check off some of the trailless ones like the Santanonis, the Sewards and Allen. I've been pretty lucky with weather, but so far those have all gone really well. Couchsachraga is dumb because it's like a mile and a half each way from the Santanoni/Panther ridge, and it's so underwhelming. Allen seems to get some flack for being long for one summit, but the view of Panther Gorge is spectacular. Seymour, too, sits sort of by itself but has some great views near the summit. I figure I need twelve good days to finish my nineteen. Are you trying to finish?
I enjoy hiking the 46, but I'm not terribly serious about it. I don't even have a complete list of hikes I've done; I'd have to confirm details with my Dad and other people we hike with. I would like to complete it though, I just don't have the time to commit to it seriously. Hopefully I'll do it before I'm too old lol Good luck on your trip, three peaks in five days is still a nice chunk of hiking! What hike do you plan on doing as your last?
I'm waffling between Cascade and Marcy for the last. I keep saving Cascade/Porter for a day that's sort of marginal but good enough to go out. If I can save that for the end, I think it would be nice to have the easiest ones to finish on. Sort of a victory lap. But my thought with Marcy is pretty much the opposite: do Gray and Skylight and then finish by coming up the south side of Marcy for 46. I don't want to finish on Cliff, Blake or Marshall, of the ones I have left. I could probably add the lesser Dixes to that list, too. But I've been on Giant, Gothics and Haystack in a sea of clouds, so ending on a treed summit wouldn't really be any worse.