erugs
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Yes, it certainly is. Great fellow. I've just cleaned out my message box.
Its a con game. If you believe you can do it, you can.albee said:I've done the Knife Edge 3 times (in running shoes each time, and once on a wet day with a girl that only wore Chaco sandals) and never had a problem or felt uneasy, either. I think the way you mentally approach these climbs can really affect how you perform. Have you ever seen someone that was so scared that their motor skills became impaired and caused them to have an accident? I have. I find that when I approach a situation with confidence and conviction, my rate of success goes way up.
If you don't think you can reach that hold, you probably won't. But if you know your abilities and limits, and you think you can do it, you probably will. If you go into it thinking Huntington's is going to be scary and treacherous, your mind will find reasons to prove yourself right. If you think you will need rock climbing shoes, you will find a reason to use them when you get there. If you expect to freeze up if you get to an exposed section - guess what? You will! I guess my point is that a lot of it is mental.
I've never been up the Great Gulf headwall (but would like to). It certainly is a longer route up Washington, so that has to count for something. King Ravine is steep, and I found it more tiring than Huntington's because of the larger boulder fields you have to go through before the actual climb. I would imagine that Mahoosuc Notch would be similar, and probably even tougher, than King Ravine's Subway or Ice Caves Loop.Kevin said:We had a hearty discussion on the Mount Washington Observatory Forum a while back about the steepest trail in the Whites. The AMC guidebook claims Huntington is the most difficult. Great Gulf Headwall has got to be tough. It's 2950' elevation gain over 6.5 miles just to reach Spaulding Lake. From Spaulding Lake it's 1700' elevation gain over a mile to it's junction with the Gulfside Trail. Huntington is 2050' elevation gain over 2.8 miles to reach the bottom of the talus field, then 1400' over 8/10ths of a mile to reach the Alpine Garden Trail. What are people's thoughts on this? The Tripyramids North Slide comes to mind, as does the hike from Galehead to South Twin on the Garfield Ridge Trail.
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