My husband and I met in a basic mountaineering training course offered by the Sierra Club. He was one of the instructors, I was a student. Many of our dates involved hiking or backpacking, and hiking has remained an important part of our lives. In addition to a shared interest, it provides us time together to talk about our week, and, of course, exercise.
A number of years ago, I heard about the HighPointers Club. The members share a goal of attaining the high point of every state. This sounded great! We started by trying to fit in hiking a state highpoint whenever we vacationed, and one year decided to attend the annual convention (proving the point that there is an organization for pretty much any interest). We were hooked, and our highpointing efforts stepped up considerably.
Some of the high points are ridiculously easy (Florida is basically a mound in a small roadside park); at the other end of the spectrum is Alaska’s highpoint, Denali. Regardless of the difficulty, one of the beauties of this goal is that you see every state, and some beautiful scenery. But the highpoints are typically not in the most easy to get to locations, and Maine is a good example. It’s a full day drive from anywhere, and closer to Canada than it is to most towns in Maine. Which means that you have to plan your trip carefully to allow sufficient travel time and hiking time, especially if you are traveling from southern California just to hike this peak.
We learned this the hard way eight years ago, when we planned our trip so tightly that we only allowed one day for our hike. That was the day the tail-end of Katrina hit the Northeast, and the park closed all access to the mountain. Four years ago, we tried again. It was raining heavily when we left the trailhead at 6 am, and my husband had had a bad night after eating something that did not agree with him. We turned around after a mile.
So you can imagine I was determined to get this peak on our third attempt. I planned 2 hiking days, so one could be a back-up in case of weather. Fortunately, the weather cooperated, and we attained the summit last Tuesday – state highpoint #42 for me, and #44 for my husband. We’re already planning our next highpoint adventure.
Make sure you create your own highpoints- It’s important to plan time in your week for those activities about which you are passionate. It’s too easy to allow other things to co-opt your time if you don’t. As a start, acknowledge what you love to do but aren’t. Then schedule time this week on that activity. Make it a commitment by commenting what you will do below.
A very interesting and inspiring post. I had no idea that the HighPointers Club exists. My life list entails RVing in each state. Haven’t begun yet but I think its about time to start planning.
I think there is an organization of people who want to RV in each state. Are you aware of it? Would help with your planning!
I loved this post! I need to get more information on the HighPointers Club. I agree with you–if you’re not intentional in planning the time and making the commitment to do things that you are passionate about. I definitely need to get better at that. Thanks for sharing!
http://www.highpointers.org will give you more info. Suggest you join ( I think it’s $25 a year), so you get the quarterly newsletter. There is also a FB group page. Hope to see you on a trail!
I love this Maura! I want to get in to hiking so something like this is awesome! How long have you been a hiker?
40 years! And I still love it. There are great regional hiking clubs to get you started. What state do you live in?