In White Mountain parlance, "the Grid" refers to hiking each of the 48 New Hampshire 4000 footers in every month, usually over many years. People who pursue the Grid are referred to as Gridiots. In November 2003 I became finisher #3, the first woman -- what I like to call a Gridiette -- to do so. That Grid took about 15 years of relatively casually picking away at the monthly lists. When I started to pursue this game, only one person was known to have finished. I referred to it simply as "the 48 in every month," the Grid term coming along a few years later.
As far as a single-year Grid, that seed was planted a few years ago on one of the local hiking forums when I jokingly (mostly) entertained the possibility. My immediate thought was that it could be done but that the candidate would need to have a rather unique lifestyle that permitted such a... well... such a lifestyle! Someone who loves to hike, is focused, driven, fit, healthy, retired/unemployed/unusually employed, childfree, and with a supportive partner or spouse. Hey, I thought, that candidate would be me! :)
So in late 2015 we decided to give it a go, Chris committing to the crucial support role for an entire year. (Yes, I am a lucky woman. 2017 is HIS.) It was important to me that it be a CALENDAR year Grid, done entirely within 2016, from the short days of January to the short days of December, the ending not known until the very end! Knowing that stuff happens -- sickness, injury, weather issues, family stuff, reasons why success was definitely not a sure thing -- I did not make a big announcement... just started hiking. New Year's Day we climbed Moosilauke via Glencliff followed by Tecumseh. At the end of each month I posted my itinerary, mileages and feet climbed. Those who are interested in those numbers can scroll down this blog. January and February I did more doubling up than later months -- squeezing more miles into a day -- partly due to the fact that where we lived added a whole hour to our round-trip commute time. January was completed in 15 days of hiking, February in 16. In March we overcame an added complication: that of selling our house, packing up and moving to a place 1/2 hour closer to the Whites. Being a mere 15 minutes from Franconia Notch was huge! (Our house had been on the market a year. Contrary to what some folks assumed, we did not "sell our house in order to do the CYG!")
The winter was easy in terms of snow depth with just a handful of times on snowshoes, but it was the winter and spring of ICE in the White Mountains -- holy moly! - with treacherous ice lasting well into May. Walking in microspikes became second nature! The summer months brought blessed warmth, long days, light packs and trail runners, and a few 30+ milers. I spiced up July and August by doing a Direttissima and the Trailwrights Six-Pack respectively (scroll down for those posts). We also fit in the Maine 4000 footers, including a trip to Baxter. September and October meant less midweek crowds, crisp air, and spectacular foliage, although October was a bit of a challenge due to an almost two-week trip to New Mexico. (Being the 10th month, no way was I giving up now!) November and especially December turned out to be the hardest months due to the ever shortening days, colder temperatures, and uncooperative weather for being above treeline. I joked to Chris that I should have started in November of last year since the weather was so mild then, but then it would not have been a Calendar-Year Grid of course.
The entire year was a JOY. I never got tired of hiking, it never ever felt like a job, and except for a couple of rainy hikes, I was always excited to spend the day walking in the woods and climbing mountains. :)
In May or June I happened upon the blog of a runner who was training for the Hardrock 100, who focused not only on mileage but also total vertical climbed. Thus was the impetus for my secondary goal of the year -- that of climbing at least a million vertical feet -- funny, since I have never really kept track of vertical before. For the most part, I got my numbers from the White Mountain Guide but did occasionally use a GPS app, for example, if bushwhacking. Surely my numbers are not totally, completely accurate to the foot or tenth of a mile, but I think they are pretty close. The last few days of December were spent ensuring that I got over that million-foot mark!
In May or June I happened upon the blog of a runner who was training for the Hardrock 100, who focused not only on mileage but also total vertical climbed. Thus was the impetus for my secondary goal of the year -- that of climbing at least a million vertical feet -- funny, since I have never really kept track of vertical before. For the most part, I got my numbers from the White Mountain Guide but did occasionally use a GPS app, for example, if bushwhacking. Surely my numbers are not totally, completely accurate to the foot or tenth of a mile, but I think they are pretty close. The last few days of December were spent ensuring that I got over that million-foot mark!
Now for a few stats:
- Miles hiked: 3,181
- Vertical feet climbed: 1,001,820
- Days hiked over 4000 feet: 206/366 (includes other, non NH48 hikes)
- GRID peaks soloed: 289/576
- Total peaks summitted over 4k: ~620 or so
- Highest elevation: 12,632 ft. - Santa Fe Baldy, New Mexico (not a GRID peak!)
- Days over 20 miles: 44
- Days w/over 10k in climb: 3
- 6/18 - Presi Traverse w/Isolation 10,050 ft.
- 7/5 - Franconia Ridge, Owls Head, Garfield, Galehead, Twins - 11,250 ft.
- 8/23 - Cabot, Waumbek, Moriah, Wildcats - 12,050 ft.
- Total peaks summitted over 4k: ~620 or so
- Highest elevation: 12,632 ft. - Santa Fe Baldy, New Mexico (not a GRID peak!)
- Days over 20 miles: 44
- Days w/over 10k in climb: 3
- 6/18 - Presi Traverse w/Isolation 10,050 ft.
- 7/5 - Franconia Ridge, Owls Head, Garfield, Galehead, Twins - 11,250 ft.
- 8/23 - Cabot, Waumbek, Moriah, Wildcats - 12,050 ft.
- Mornings getting up waaaay before dawn: Almost all (Chris even earlier)
- Evenings going to bed after 8 pm: Very Few
- Evenings going to bed after 8 pm: Very Few
- Days I didn't feel like hiking: 0
- Highest mileage month: September - 294.6 miles
- Lowest mileage month: October - 210 miles
- Times on Lincoln Woods Trail: at least 20
- Favorite peaks: Moosilauke, Bonds, Lafayette, Northern Presidentials
- Least favorite peaks: Cannon, Osceolas ('cuz the steep ice scared the crap outa me last winter)
- Favorite peaks: Moosilauke, Bonds, Lafayette, Northern Presidentials
- Least favorite peaks: Cannon, Osceolas ('cuz the steep ice scared the crap outa me last winter)
- Do I really like Owls Head: Yes
- Did I carry a SPOT/PLB: No (but did carry enough emergency gear to spend an uncomfortable night out, did carry an iPhone, and someone always knew my itinerary)
- Did I carry a SPOT/PLB: No (but did carry enough emergency gear to spend an uncomfortable night out, did carry an iPhone, and someone always knew my itinerary)
- # Sandwiches made by Chris: 400? 500?
- # Times running, biking, and skiing: half dozen, one, and zero respectively!
- Wildlife sightings: Moose, bear, deer, fox, one attack spruce grouse, dozens of gray jays, bunnies, porcupine, and tracks of just about every NH mammal
- # Times running, biking, and skiing: half dozen, one, and zero respectively!
- Wildlife sightings: Moose, bear, deer, fox, one attack spruce grouse, dozens of gray jays, bunnies, porcupine, and tracks of just about every NH mammal
- Stuff broken: 3 poles, 1 pair snowshoes, 2 spikes, lots of shoelaces, and killed a few pair trail shoes
- Injuries: Pulled back muscle while front-pointing up ice on North Carter in April.
Tripped on crampon points twice, falling ass-over-teakettle on Adams in December. Got owies.
- Chris/Fancypant's "Not Doing the Grid" progress: 280/576 (yes, I'm keeping track)
I will close with a quote from Eugene Daniell III, the first finisher of the 4k's in every month, and someone with whom I had the pleasure of hiking a couple of times back in the early 1990s:
"I had undertaken the project with the idea that not only would it help satisfy the obsessive-compulsive urges that all of us whom Guy Waterman called 'ultimate peak baggers' harbor; it also had a certain delightful whimsicality to it -- doing something that others would consider crazy and enjoying it. But mostly I looked forward to seeing my beloved mountains in the full panoply of beauty they assume as the seasons pass around. I have always said that for me and most other peakbaggers I know, the List is an itinerary rather than a goal -- on completing a list most of us experience a certain bittersweet exultation, knowing that a beloved old friend will never be with us in the same way again."
I will close with a quote from Eugene Daniell III, the first finisher of the 4k's in every month, and someone with whom I had the pleasure of hiking a couple of times back in the early 1990s:
"I had undertaken the project with the idea that not only would it help satisfy the obsessive-compulsive urges that all of us whom Guy Waterman called 'ultimate peak baggers' harbor; it also had a certain delightful whimsicality to it -- doing something that others would consider crazy and enjoying it. But mostly I looked forward to seeing my beloved mountains in the full panoply of beauty they assume as the seasons pass around. I have always said that for me and most other peakbaggers I know, the List is an itinerary rather than a goal -- on completing a list most of us experience a certain bittersweet exultation, knowing that a beloved old friend will never be with us in the same way again."