- Apr 9, 2011
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Quote:
Well, some of the mountains: Spokane is still west of the Selkirk, Bitterroot, Garnite, and the Crazy Ranges, as well as the Grand Teton, Wind River, and Wasatch, at least, until you get to your home; Yakima and Wenatchee are also west of the Blues the way I'm east of the Olympics.
http://bestsmileys.com/thinking/2.gif
http://bestsmileys.com/surprised/1.gif
Does the Loup Loup or Disautel moutian passes count? LOL. Sorry. It is early in the morning and I should be getting ready for work. first High School football game tonight...will be fun.
Loup Loup's officially the North Cascades, and Disautel's in the Okanogans, which is north of the path I took and west of Spokane, which I was arbitrarily using for a divider. I get to be a bit of a smart*ss about mountains; it started when I was in college and somebody from Colorado complained that the Olympics were "cheating" because their base is close to sea level, and was exacerbated by travelling to Montana too often and hearing that Snoqualamie Pass is no big deal (of course, one year we went over White, which is a big deal: not as big as Washington Pass on 2, but only a couple of hundred feet lower than Fourth of July Pass).
Well, and growing up on Yelm Prairie gave me a strong definition of what a Proper Mountain looks like. (About 40 miles of clear air at 350 feet looking 5 degrees north of due west at a 14,411 ft of triple-crowned stratovolcano makes an impression).
Well, some of the mountains: Spokane is still west of the Selkirk, Bitterroot, Garnite, and the Crazy Ranges, as well as the Grand Teton, Wind River, and Wasatch, at least, until you get to your home; Yakima and Wenatchee are also west of the Blues the way I'm east of the Olympics.
http://bestsmileys.com/thinking/2.gif
http://bestsmileys.com/surprised/1.gif
Does the Loup Loup or Disautel moutian passes count? LOL. Sorry. It is early in the morning and I should be getting ready for work. first High School football game tonight...will be fun.
Loup Loup's officially the North Cascades, and Disautel's in the Okanogans, which is north of the path I took and west of Spokane, which I was arbitrarily using for a divider. I get to be a bit of a smart*ss about mountains; it started when I was in college and somebody from Colorado complained that the Olympics were "cheating" because their base is close to sea level, and was exacerbated by travelling to Montana too often and hearing that Snoqualamie Pass is no big deal (of course, one year we went over White, which is a big deal: not as big as Washington Pass on 2, but only a couple of hundred feet lower than Fourth of July Pass).
Well, and growing up on Yelm Prairie gave me a strong definition of what a Proper Mountain looks like. (About 40 miles of clear air at 350 feet looking 5 degrees north of due west at a 14,411 ft of triple-crowned stratovolcano makes an impression).