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Snapshot Year/Month Grid-Highest Point Reached

Chris Strode's Ascents by Year/Month

Links for other Snapshot Grids:Use Metric Color Ranges
  Highest Peak Climbed    Most Prominent Peak Climbed    Most Isolated Peak Climbed    Most Vertical Gain Hiked    Highest Climber-Defined Quality    Top Ascents in all Categories  

 

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
1991       Δ North Palisade Δ Castle Dome  
1994    Δ Shasta Δ Lassen     
1995      Δ Whitney     
1998      Δ Devils Tower     
1999    Δ Spruce Knob  Δ Half Dome    
2003      Δ Petit Grepon Δ Doña Ana   
2004  Δ Nam-san Δ Castleton Tower  Δ Bugak-sanΔ North Dome   
2005  Δ Tapochao   Δ Bukhan-sanΔ Inwang-san    
2006     Δ Gwanak-sanΔ Royal ArchesΔ Fuji-san    
2008      Δ Olympus     
2009      Δ Olympus - False Summit     
2010      Δ Halla-san     
2011      Δ PilchuckΔ Shasta Bally    
2012  Δ Black Butte     Δ Vesuvius   
2013     Δ AdamsΔ Saint Helens     
2014    Δ Constitution   Δ EvansΔ Haleakala  
2015      Δ HoodΔ Liberty Bell   Δ Tantalus
2016      Δ BostonΔ Grand Teton    
2017        Δ SahaleΔ Kamilche 2 Benchmark Δ Kaala
2018Δ Capitol     Δ OlympusΔ Rainier  Δ SouthΔ Larch
2019  Δ WrightsonΔ Peak 1280Δ EllinorΔ AdamsΔ EldoradoΔ ChairΔ MadronΔ Ogden HillΔ WalkerΔ La Laguna HP
2020Δ CapitolΔ LarchΔ Rock CandyΔ Baumgard HillΔ CapitolΔ StoneΔ AdamsΔ WestΔ WashingtonΔ PershingΔ EllinorΔ Peak 1575
2021Δ Jupiter-XΔ BaldΔ GuadalupeΔ QuiemuthΔ Crown PointΔ MitchellΔ FoundΔ PershingΔ UnicornΔ CapitolΔ Rock CandyΔ Platinum
2022Δ CapitolΔ Black HillΔ Mauna KeaΔ TownsendΔ LarchΔ EllinorΔ Crystal Mountain - Summit HouseΔ WashingtonΔ Rock CandyΔ WashingtonΔ Larch 
2023 Δ Brewster Rock          
YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

 

Legend for Color Coding

20,000 feet or more
14,000 to 19,999 feet
10,000 to 13,999 feet
5,000 to 9,999 feet
2,000 to 4,999 feet
Below 2,000 ft

About the Snapshot Year-Month Grid

General Considerations:

  • "-X" after a peak name means an unsuccessful ascent, for example "Rainier-X".
  • A parenthetical name is a non-summit goal hike, for example, "(Snow Lake Hike)" or "(Rainier)".
  • The Δ triangle symbol is a hyperlink to the detailed Ascent Page for that ascent. The peak name is a link to the Peak Page for that peak.
  • The color of the cell shows how high, prominent, isolated, or high-quality the peak/ascent is, and the color ranges are shown in the legend to the left.
  • If the color is based on altitude, prominence, or vertical gain, you can switch between meters-based ranges or feet-based ranges. These are set up to be generally equivalent.

This grid comes in seven "flavors", each one showing a different "top" peak for a month. The flavors or categories are:

  1. Highest Point Reached. Can be an unsucessful attempt or non-summit goal hike.
  2. Highest Peak Climbed. Sometimes not the same as highest point, if that point was an unsuccessful ascent or a non-summit goal hike.
  3. Most Prominent Peak climbed. Note that many peaks in the Peakbagger.com database do not yet have a prominence value.
  4. Most Isolated Peak climbed. Isolation values may not be 100% accurate, since most are cacluated to nearest higher peak in the database.
  5. Peak with most vertical gain hiked. Note that many climbers do not enter vertical gain information on their ascents. Also, if several summits are grouped in a "trip", then the total gain for all ascents in that trip is assigned to the trip high point.
  6. Peak with the highest "Quality" value--this is a subjective number from 1-10 given by the climber. Note that many climbers have not given any of their ascents quality numbers.
  7. Finally, "Top Ascents in All Categories", which shows, for each month, the unique peaks from all the 6 other categories. In many cases, one or two peaks will be the leader in the 6 categories, since often the highest peak climbed for a month is also the highest point reached, the most prominent peak, and the one with the most gain. But in some cases several peaks may appear for a month.




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