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I think it was this one actually. That description of how they got there sounds about like what we did; we had a base camp somewhere around 11,000, then we hiked up to a high lake (saw some distant mountain goats there) that sounds (and looks like the picture included) like that Crater Lake mentioned in the article, then you just hit the granite and the sleet until you get to the top. We went in July of (I think) 1987 or so, so my memory's a bit hazy on the details of which peak we hit and all that. I'm pretty sure this was the one, though. Looking at the pictures, I'm even more convinced; that's exactly as I remember it.Joshua Dyal said:I went hiking as a teenager near the Durango-Silverton railroad; in fact, we rode that halfway down the line, hopped off, walked a day or two to our base camp and then scaled the 4th (or was it 5th?) highest peak in the Continental U.S. That was a mountain.
EDIT: This is the 4th highest in Colorado, but the 7th highest in the lower 48. The guy who told me must have mixed it up. Either that, or my memory has.
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