LifeSucksAnyway

LifeSucksAnyway t1_isp3uu2 wrote

> You're very pedantic, but also correct. I was poking fun at the phrase "flatlander," after all, which is itself superfuckingsilly for each and all of the points you've just made. Katahdin is beautiful, and while I was born in the NW, I'll die in Maine where my child was born.

Flatlander is a silly and outdated term anyway so full agree

Thanks for the recs btw, I’ll be sure to save those if I ever make it over there. Douglas Fir is an S tier tree

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LifeSucksAnyway t1_isotbmy wrote

Aconcagua is kind of cheating because it’s the highest mountain outside of Asia haha

Being serious though, I just think it’s very close minded to define a “mountain” by the residual snowpack on its summit, after all there are plenty of mountains with high elevation which A: don’t have snowpack year round and B: start at high elevation already. Topographic relief is generally the biggest factor in what makes a mountain physically large, which is why Tahoma feels so much larger than Mt. Elbert, for example, despite being slightly lower in elevation. It’s just hard for me to look at something like Katahdin and be like “ah yes, that is a hill now since the snowpack generally melts around late July, woe is me and my silly east coast rock piles”

All that being said though I’d love to travel to the PNW, I have friends who say the high elevation meadows are quite nice

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