"We do not stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing."
> That's a quote from one of two 68-year-old Wellington, New Zealand grandfathers that will set out this Tuesday from the small town of Campo on the Mexican border to walk the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail to the Canadian border. Click here to read their story.
> A couple of weeks ago the Alex City Outlook published a series of articles written by Dadeville, Alabama resident Harold Banks. The series recounts his hike and near-death experiences on the Appalachian Trail near Mt. Rogers in the Jefferson National Forest in Virginia. The author and his companions were thrown a curve ball when they discovered that one of their destinations, a shelter at the base of Mt. Rogers, was burned down by vandals a couple of weeks prior to their hike. Their discovery was made in the middle of a sleet and snow storm as darkness was approaching. To read the entire four-part series, click on Part 1 , Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4.
> Yesterday, three wounded Iraq War veterans completed a 9-mile hike through the Smokies on the inaugural Highlander Expeditionary Tours Wounded Warrior Backcountry Trek. The trek was designed to introduce wounded service members to the backcountry and to give them the opportunity to experience what the park has to offer. Please click here to read the entire story.
> Blue Ridge Outdoors Magazine has an excellent article about Kurt Kornegay and the updated map he's recently published to Panthertown Valley. The map features two “new” adjacent tracts of land, Bonas Defeat Gorge and Big Pisgah Mountain - two large swaths of forests that only locals were privy to in the past. Within these two tracts are rock faces that have never been climbed, faint trails that have never been mapped, and even waterfalls yet to be named. Please click here to read the story.
> The state of New Hampshire is dropping its efforts to get an Eagle Scout to pay $25,000 to reimburse the costs of finding him after he got stuck on the Northeast's highest mountain. Scott Mason, of Halifax, MA, spent three nights alone on Mount Washington last April after spraining his ankle and veering off marked trails. The story sparked a huge debate within the outdoor community on whether or not outdoor adventurers should be charged for search and rescue operations.
> The Girls Only Hike Club is a program hosted by Diamond Brand Outdoors, an outdoor outfitter based in Arden, NC. The club offers free monthly hikes for the growing number of modern, rugged, outdoors women who are looking for ways to socialize and exercise — without the men. The monthly hikes, which meet the third Saturday of every month, are free and are open to women of all ages. Most hikes are in the 10 miles roundtrip range, and last most of the day.
> From American Trails Magazine is a Report of the National Park System Advisory Board Committee on Health and Recreation: Vision and recommendations to encourage the National Park Service to manage and promote parks as places for people to take part in physically active experiences and not just to “see the parks,” thus contributing to a healthier nation. Click to read the article.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, hiking gear store, and more.
Archive for the ‘Mount Washington’ Category
Hiking in the news
Sunday, April 11th, 2010Posted in Big Pisgah Mountain, Bonas Defeat Gorge, Girls Only Hike Club, Jefferson National Forest, Kurt Kornegay, Mount Washington, Mt. Rogers, Pacific Crest Trail, Panthertown Valley, Scott Mason | Comments Off
Mount Washington loses wind speed record
Thursday, January 28th, 2010
Since 1934, Mount Washington in New Hampshire has held the record for the fastest wind gust ever recorded on the surface of the Earth. In a report released last Friday by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), that record was toppled on April 10, 1996 at an unmanned station in Barrow Island, Australia during Typhoon Olivia. According to the report, the new record now stands at 253 mph.
“It was bound to happen, but it’s definitely quite a shock to hear that news,” says Scot Henley, Executive Director of the Mount Washington Observatory. “While we are disappointed that it appears that Mount Washington may have been bumped from the top, at our core we are all weather fans and we are very impressed with the magnitude of that typhoon and the work of the committee that studied it.”
Cara Rudio, Marketing and Communications Coordinator for the Observatory has been fielding many questions from the media, mainly as to why it took 14 years to figure this out. The quick answer according to Rudio is that it didn't: the record has been there all along. It was recorded by the Barrow Island station when it occurred, but not publicized until the WMO evaluation panel stumbled upon it while conducting a review of world records.
Mount Washington’s famous wind gust of 231 mph, recorded on April 12, 1934 at the Mount Washington Observatory, still stands as the record for the fastest surface wind measured in the Northern and Western Hemispheres.
“The new record does not diminish the fact that Mount Washington is one of the fiercest places on the planet,” says Ken Rancourt, Mount Washington Observatory’s Director of Summit Operations. “It remains consistently one of the windiest places on Earth and a location that begs further study of wind, weather and climate.”
Mount Washington Observatory, which operates within the 59-acre Mt. Washington State Park, is a private, non-profit, membership-supported organization. Since 1932, the Observatory has been monitoring the elements in one of the most extreme locations on Earth, using this unique site for scientific research and educational outreach.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Great Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, and more.
“It was bound to happen, but it’s definitely quite a shock to hear that news,” says Scot Henley, Executive Director of the Mount Washington Observatory. “While we are disappointed that it appears that Mount Washington may have been bumped from the top, at our core we are all weather fans and we are very impressed with the magnitude of that typhoon and the work of the committee that studied it.”Cara Rudio, Marketing and Communications Coordinator for the Observatory has been fielding many questions from the media, mainly as to why it took 14 years to figure this out. The quick answer according to Rudio is that it didn't: the record has been there all along. It was recorded by the Barrow Island station when it occurred, but not publicized until the WMO evaluation panel stumbled upon it while conducting a review of world records.
Mount Washington’s famous wind gust of 231 mph, recorded on April 12, 1934 at the Mount Washington Observatory, still stands as the record for the fastest surface wind measured in the Northern and Western Hemispheres.
“The new record does not diminish the fact that Mount Washington is one of the fiercest places on the planet,” says Ken Rancourt, Mount Washington Observatory’s Director of Summit Operations. “It remains consistently one of the windiest places on Earth and a location that begs further study of wind, weather and climate.”
Mount Washington Observatory, which operates within the 59-acre Mt. Washington State Park, is a private, non-profit, membership-supported organization. Since 1932, the Observatory has been monitoring the elements in one of the most extreme locations on Earth, using this unique site for scientific research and educational outreach.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Great Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, and more.
Posted in Barrow Island, Mount Washington, Mt. Washington Observatory, New Hampshire, Typhoon Olivia, World Meteorological Organization, australia, wind speed record | Comments Off

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