I’ll admit I’m somewhat new to serious PrepHole, but I was raised with a deep appreciation for the wilderness. My dad taught me to fish, camp, hunt, shoot, etc but he owned a business so we couldn’t go as much as we wanted to.
North cascades is dope. I went there a few times over the last year. If you haven't been to Washington you've gotta see that, the Rainer area, the peninsula, and the Mt st Helens area. North cascades when the larches change color, the peninsula in the rainy season, and the other two when the wildflowers are blooming.
Yosemite
LRC
Zion
Yosemite and Zion are ridiculously packed all the time. The subway is a fun hike and easy to get a permit. If you're at Zion, there's so much fun shit to do within a few hours. You've got Bryce canyon, the north rim, all the St George St parks, Grand staircase, coral pink sand dunes, the wave, and the vortex,
I’ll admit I’m somewhat new to serious PrepHole, but I was raised with a deep appreciation for the wilderness. My dad taught me to fish, camp, hunt, shoot, etc but he owned a business so we couldn’t go as much as we wanted to.
The thing about the John Muir trail and pct is that a lot of it sucks.
Australia - BNT + AAWT
New Zealand - Te Araroa
United States - PCT + CDT + AT + ADT
Canada - TCT
Europe - E1 + E6 + E8 + E9
UK + Ireland - Just rambling wherever
i recently managed to knock a lot of the places off my USA list >crater lake >yellowstone >devil's tower >arches and dune national parks >grand canyon >niagara falls
I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia but a lot of scandinavia and china/india looks fascinating to me
>I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia
I'm always torn between wanting to tell y'all good PrepHole places and knowing that nu-out/Reddit will see it too. The last thing I need are Californians in Virginia's only slot canyon.
Oh, God damn it. Anyway, it's called the Great Channels. 6.6-mile round-trip the casual way, 11 miles the Chad way. Strictly a day hike, but moderate/moderate+ and about 3k elevation gain.
>walk miles and miles to a fire tower that is abandoned and you cannot access
I don't get why they don't fix the fire towers so you can actually get a view
anyways, the random falls off little brumley creek nearby appeal to me more, the REAL chad way would be to access it from the Hidden Valley lake but I assume at some point you are mostly bushwhacking given that it did used to connect but only on old logging roads back when.
>Virginia's only slot canyon
that's not true at all lol
there's tons
the steepest one I've found just from looking at a map is glady fork which is a tributary of stony creek near high knob in sw va
that's the steepest canyon I can locate in VA on a map
the downstream entrance is private property, the upstream entrance is public, but it would turn to private land in the steepest part of the canyon, and I doubt there's any sort of decent trails through it, but it looks gorgeous on a topo map
I'm a wild hot spring nut and an alpine mountaineering nut, So I would love to visit some deep and hard to access hot springs in the himalaya, new zealand, and patagonia.
I’m from Australia, so of course I want to go to to a place that is completely different from it in terms of terrain and environment. Iceland is on my top list.
I’m from Australia, so of course I want to go to to a place that is completely different from it in terms of terrain and environment. Iceland is on my top list.
A 4x4 is expensive but a regular car is normal. I went during corona and there were few tourists at the time though, it may be worse now. Even if you don’t get a 4x4 there are many cool places you can get to, you just can’t drive on mountain roads.
I’ve always wanted to walk from my house to someplace several hundred miles away, down ld country roads. I know it’s kind of dumb, because it’s not a popular scenic mountain or the Pfiffner Traverse or some other grandiose thing people talk about. But it would be extraordinary to me, personally.
The thing is, I live in the South. So walking from town to town means you could end up in a very dangerous country ghetto. Crime here is sky high, and as I would technically be a hobo, I might not be very safe.
>Destinations: >Africa:
South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Cameroon, Tanzania, Mozambique, Uganda, Burkina Faso. C.A.R. if the political situation improves. >Europe:
France, Italy, Spain, Hungary, UK, Austria, Finland, Norway, Czech Republic and Slovenia. >Asia:
Turkey, Mongolia, Nepal, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan. Pakistan too, provided the security situation doesn't deteriorate. >South America:
Argentina, Bolivia. >North America:
USA, Canada and Mexico (in Mexican states that are relatively safe >Australia/Oceania:
Australia (I live here) and New Zealand. >Goals
-Hunt every country listed.
-Achieve the North American Super Slam.
>Kilimanjaro
>Pacific Crest Trail
>John Muir trail
I’ll admit I’m somewhat new to serious PrepHole, but I was raised with a deep appreciation for the wilderness. My dad taught me to fish, camp, hunt, shoot, etc but he owned a business so we couldn’t go as much as we wanted to.
inca trail
annapurna circuit
TMB
north cascades
North cascades is dope. I went there a few times over the last year. If you haven't been to Washington you've gotta see that, the Rainer area, the peninsula, and the Mt st Helens area. North cascades when the larches change color, the peninsula in the rainy season, and the other two when the wildflowers are blooming.
Yosemite and Zion are ridiculously packed all the time. The subway is a fun hike and easy to get a permit. If you're at Zion, there's so much fun shit to do within a few hours. You've got Bryce canyon, the north rim, all the St George St parks, Grand staircase, coral pink sand dunes, the wave, and the vortex,
The thing about the John Muir trail and pct is that a lot of it sucks.
thanks for the tips. been to rainer and the peninsula, and loved them. will be back.
exploring every last inch of public land on the allegheny and cumberland plateaus
Having a campout with the yuru posters
based
>the post count shows that there are two posts in this thread by the same person
Hmm
Yosemite
LRC
Zion
If you like yosemite try emigrant, same scenery with a fraction of the people
Patagonia
Bugaboos
Whatever is going on Mongolia
Australia - BNT + AAWT
New Zealand - Te Araroa
United States - PCT + CDT + AT + ADT
Canada - TCT
Europe - E1 + E6 + E8 + E9
UK + Ireland - Just rambling wherever
#1 on my bucket list is a sea to summit climb of Mt St Elias
it is gonna be a few years though. This spring I will attempt a fly in climb of Mt Fairweather though.
"Saint Elias sees over 100 feet of snow each year..." -- summitpost.org
Godspeed, you magnificent bastard.
To die in the wilderness and not be found for at least 4 years.
i recently managed to knock a lot of the places off my USA list
>crater lake
>yellowstone
>devil's tower
>arches and dune national parks
>grand canyon
>niagara falls
I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia but a lot of scandinavia and china/india looks fascinating to me
>I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia
BASED
>I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia
I'm always torn between wanting to tell y'all good PrepHole places and knowing that nu-out/Reddit will see it too. The last thing I need are Californians in Virginia's only slot canyon.
Oh, God damn it. Anyway, it's called the Great Channels. 6.6-mile round-trip the casual way, 11 miles the Chad way. Strictly a day hike, but moderate/moderate+ and about 3k elevation gain.
>walk miles and miles to a fire tower that is abandoned and you cannot access
I don't get why they don't fix the fire towers so you can actually get a view
anyways, the random falls off little brumley creek nearby appeal to me more, the REAL chad way would be to access it from the Hidden Valley lake but I assume at some point you are mostly bushwhacking given that it did used to connect but only on old logging roads back when.
>Virginia's only slot canyon
that's not true at all lol
there's tons
the steepest one I've found just from looking at a map is glady fork which is a tributary of stony creek near high knob in sw va
that's the steepest canyon I can locate in VA on a map
the downstream entrance is private property, the upstream entrance is public, but it would turn to private land in the steepest part of the canyon, and I doubt there's any sort of decent trails through it, but it looks gorgeous on a topo map
>that's not true at all lol
Fair, but it's the only one really worth POINTING at.
>Black hollow
>I mostly wanna do more stuff in appalachia
It's literally all the same
I'm a wild hot spring nut and an alpine mountaineering nut, So I would love to visit some deep and hard to access hot springs in the himalaya, new zealand, and patagonia.
Summit the highest peaks in all the mountain ranges in my area.
Climb 2 of the routes up Long's Peak
Backcountry ice climbing
Denali/McKinley
Aconcagua
Bugaboos
Pacific Crest Trail
Grand Canyon
Yosemite
I’m from Australia, so of course I want to go to to a place that is completely different from it in terms of terrain and environment. Iceland is on my top list.
Come to Montana, I'll take you snowmobiling.
Don't do it anon he just wants to fugg you.
Don't worry, you can be the fluffer.
No thanks.
It's not optional
There’s snow in Australia.
Yeah but the only bears are Koalas
Man iceland seems so fun, but all the good stuff needs a car and I hear they just rape you with car rental costs there.
Get yourself a moneybags girlfriend.
A 4x4 is expensive but a regular car is normal. I went during corona and there were few tourists at the time though, it may be worse now. Even if you don’t get a 4x4 there are many cool places you can get to, you just can’t drive on mountain roads.
Basically all I want to do is drive on mountain roads to remote hot springs and out of the way valleys.
I understand they are worried about retards who have zero experience getting stuck and dying, but I have plenty.
Cheapest way seems to literally just go for an offroad motorcycle on either the ferry or just buy there and resell.
You can do that in Idaho anon
Landscape is different.
>Buy outdoor gears for camping
>Go a week-end outside camping
Antarctica. I know PrepHole stuff is heavily restricted except to science types, though.
There's tour companies out there that do expeditions for Mt Vinson if youre a seven summits autist (like me)
I’ve always wanted to walk from my house to someplace several hundred miles away, down ld country roads. I know it’s kind of dumb, because it’s not a popular scenic mountain or the Pfiffner Traverse or some other grandiose thing people talk about. But it would be extraordinary to me, personally.
The thing is, I live in the South. So walking from town to town means you could end up in a very dangerous country ghetto. Crime here is sky high, and as I would technically be a hobo, I might not be very safe.
go to the coast and eat things i find in tidepools
>Destinations:
>Africa:
South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Cameroon, Tanzania, Mozambique, Uganda, Burkina Faso. C.A.R. if the political situation improves.
>Europe:
France, Italy, Spain, Hungary, UK, Austria, Finland, Norway, Czech Republic and Slovenia.
>Asia:
Turkey, Mongolia, Nepal, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan. Pakistan too, provided the security situation doesn't deteriorate.
>South America:
Argentina, Bolivia.
>North America:
USA, Canada and Mexico (in Mexican states that are relatively safe
>Australia/Oceania:
Australia (I live here) and New Zealand.
>Goals
-Hunt every country listed.
-Achieve the North American Super Slam.
Hereford Oregon on a clear night.