There was a couple of years ago but it was bolted to rotten tree that had fallen down. Not a lot of good candidates for relocatng it.There's a register at Eagle Cliff?
As of Labor Day weekend 2021 it was there, but the canister had a couple inches of water in it from a recent storm. (Bad seal?) I left a new register, brought the old one home, dried the contents, and sent them to Keith D. I'm not sure if they were salvageable, though, it had been a thoroughly soaked wad.There was a couple of years ago but it was bolted to rotten tree that had fallen down. Not a lot of good candidates for relocatng it.
Thanks for finding and sharing that!From the document: Note: This document is a work in progress. A condensed version is intended to be incorporated into a future book on the Slides of the White Mountains, with P. Thompson Davis, retired Professor of Natural and Applied Sciences at Bentley University (specializing in glacial geology), as consultant. Thanks to Thom for reviewing this document and providing many excellent suggestions.
Recently in some Facebook group or another, I don't recall which, I read a discussion about what to do about register books that were full or damaged, and about broken or missing canisters. IIRC no one in that discussion knew what to do with the registers.As of Labor Day weekend 2021 it was there, but the canister had a couple inches of water in it from a recent storm. (Bad seal?) I left a new register, brought the old one home, dried the contents, and sent them to Keith D. I'm not sure if they were salvageable, though, it had been a thoroughly soaked wad.
YES! Please do leave the registers in the canisters. It's pretty cool when you come across sign-ins from the mid-seventies. I've only evern removed the one and it was completely completely saturated and wadded together."Carry a spare jar, plastic bag, register, pencil and string with you. LEAVE the existing register in the new jar for others to enjoy. If there’s no register and you’re sure you’re on the recognized high point, replace it, make sure to write down the peak name, elevation and the date of replacement.
If the register is SO water damaged that it can’t be left, there’re folks that archive these older registers. Carry it out and message me via this Facebook messenger or send me an email and I’ll get it to them.
Keith Dalessandro is the VP of the 4000 Footers Club. Now the 4K club does not oversee the NH500 Highest list but Keith will archive all registers that have been removed from any of the NH500 peaks. Please reach out to Keith by email [email protected] if you have taken a register.
That said they would rather see the register left in the jar for all to enjoy."
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