Saturday, October 13, 2012

Highpoint #6: Pennsylvania


Touching The Highpoint!

Vanity Shot at Highpoint Sign























Yay, my home state!  I am embarrassed to admit that I grew up less than 90 minutes from the highpoint in Pennsylvania, and I have never been there.  It was something I was only vaguely aware of, really.   If I had to reflect on it for a minute or two, I would probably have summoned the name Mt. Davis as being the highest mountain in Pennsylvania, but I knew nothing about it.  I certainly would never have thought to seek it out as a destination either, but that ended up being my loss.  This was a very nice part of Pennsylvania to visit, and I managed to catch it during the seasonal change of the leaves.



Observation Tower
Sign at Entrance















A Clear Road Sign North of the Entrance













The drive there from DC was anything but clear though.  The route quickly devolves into farm roads and tiny offshoots from farm roads that are gravelly.  The GPS on my phone guided me to the highpoint well enough, but I might be reluctant about the drive in severely inclement weather.  There were certainly no signs on this approach indicating that a highpoint might be nearby.  Ironically though, when I left on the north side, there was a very large road sign calling out the highpoint.  So how you arrive here really makes a difference.



Relief Map at Top of the Tower
The View from the Top of the Tower


I was able to pull into a parking lot just below the highpoint tower.  So the climb to the summit was a very short walk up a moderately sloping paved path.   I did the obligatory photo shot at the signpost along the way.  The observation tower is fairly simple in design, and after 7 quick flights of steps, you will find yourself at the top.  The platform is small and narrow, but the panoramic view is grand.  I was able to see the full fall foliage well into the distance.  On the platform itself, they had a 3D relief map of the surrounding area and a short paragraph in raised lettering above it discussing the highpoint. 


Looking Straight Down
Of course, the tower is man-made so climbing to the top of it is entirely unnecessary.  The true highpoint is actually nearby much closer to the ground.  Indeed, just beyond the tower there are some large boulders.  The largest among them, coming in at shoulder height or so, has a geodetic marker on the top of it.  That’s the highpoint!  I posed for a self-taken photo of me touching the highpoint with the observation tower in the background (see below).  The marker has no sign pointing it out, and it is very easy to miss!  I imagine most of the visitors here climb the tower and completely miss the marker.  It is an openly hidden secret, really.



The Highpoint is on the Largest Rock Straight Ahead


Just beyond the tower and the boulders, there is an extensive series of signs, arranged side by side, talking about the surrounding area and points of interest:   the tar kiln, the Baughman rocks, etc.  One of the signs interestingly points out how the sorted stone pattern at and around the highpoint was entirely due to frost pressure.  That was kind of cool.  Beyond this, there is a very short trail that leads down to a picnic area and another parking lot.  I suppose one could have started there and properly summited via this trail, but it all comes down to which way you are traveling.




The Highpoint Marker


One thing I definitely recommend is traveling down the road from the highpoint a quarter mile or so.  There is a small pull-off there with a very lovely view of “Highpoint Lake” off in the distance.  The views are gorgeous here, making this a fun highpoint to do.         



View of Highpoint Lake






Thursday, October 4, 2012

Highpoint #5: Delaware



Vanity Shot at Delaware's Highpoint Sign



 The highest point in Delaware?  It almost sounds like a joke.  After all, Delaware is known for being both a very small state and a very flat state.  There are no mountains there!   What could possibly even count for a highpoint in Delaware?  The answer, as one might imagine, is less than glamorous:  a hilltop alongside a road.  Yes, the highpoint is not even on a stand-alone hill.  Worse, it is not even clear where the highpoint really is.


Sign for Delaware's Highpoint
So let me go through this.  There is a very prominent sign along the Ebright Road (at it’s azimuth) that declares the highpoint of Delaware with the name “Ebright Azimuth”.  The sign says that the elevation is 447.85 feet high, making it the second lowest highpoint in the United States, falling in just after Florida.  The sign also says that the highpoint is not at the location of the sign, rather it is “in the vicinity”.  This is where it gets confusing.  A stone’s throw away from the sign there is a geodetic marker on the ground, also along the road.  One can easily take this marker as being the true highpoint.  However, it is not unique.  If you follow the direction of the arrow on the marker, it points to another geodetic marker several hundred yards away across the road that leads into a trailer park.  A quick trip over, one can find the second geodetic marker housed prominently in a concrete cylinder just across from a historic house.  Certainly between these two markers and the sign, one should have a true highpoint among the three, right?  Well, not so much.  Apparently there is yet a THIRD marker also in the “vicinity”.  Its location is uncertain, even among people who really worry about such things.  Supposedly it lies on private property and may very well have been built upon in the intervening years.  Wow, what a mess!  Suffice it to say, the true highpoint is not particularly obvious, but it most certainly lies somewhere on the plane above this hilltop.  For the purposes of highpointing, the sign together with the two markers are more than sufficient to claim a successful ascent. 
First Geodetic Marker near Sign

Now, I would never have known so much about this confused history of where the true highpoint lies just by coming across that sign.  I actually had the very good fortune on my visit to have my very own tour guide.  It all happened by accident.  I was just looking for a place to park, so I pulled into the subdivision beside the highpoint sign.  I parked in front of a house, and I started to get my camera, phone, etc.  The lady who lives at the house soon approached me.  I assumed she was just going to tell me to leave, or something to that effect.  In fact, she asked if I was a “highpointer”.  I answered, embarrassingly, that I was.  She introduced herself as Doreen, and soon told my girlfriend and me all about the Ebright Azimuth including the spiel about where the true highpoint actually is.  She graciously walked us over to the sign and the first marker, and she even gave me a lot of literature to read on the highpointer’s association.  Who knew?  Uncommonly friendly and helpful, she really made this molehill as interesting as any mountain.  That was a real treat!



Second Geodetic Marker
Detail of Second Geodetic Marker




Historic House Across from Second Geodetic Marker




References:

Doreen provided me with a lot of reading material.  Some of it is directly available on the web, and part of it was from a book available from Amazon.  Here is what I have:



Interesting article about someone doing 50 peaks in 50 days:



Another article about an ultra-athlete who has done all 50 peaks:



The official organization:



An out-of-print book that serves as a guidebook to each of the state highpoints: