Mountain Passages: The Journal of the New Hampshire Chapter of the Appalachian Mountain Club

Updated:
March 21, 2026

Your source for outdoor adventures and “how to” articles about hiking, skiing, paddling, mountaineering and other outdoor activities, as well as articles about the history and natural environment of the New Hampshire forests and mountains

ARTICLES WANTED.  Mountain Passages welcomes and needs contributions from AMCNH members.  If you wish to contribute an article and/or photo essay on a topic you think relevant to the AMCNH community please email to newsletternh@amcnh.org. BE A PUBLISHED AUTHOR.

Mountain Passages Featured Blog Articles

The Snowiest Winter Ever – by Ham Mehlman

The Snowiest Winter Ever – by Ham Mehlman

If you are over 55, you may remember the winter of 1968-1969, a winter that validated a Currier and Ives like recollection of winters of Yore. It would prove to be the snowiest New Hampshire winter on record. The Mt. Washington Observatory recorded 566.4 inches (47 feet) of snow.

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Is Mount Washington the Biggest, Baddest Mountain in the East? – by Ham Mehlman

Is Mount Washington the Biggest, Baddest Mountain in the East? – by Ham Mehlman

Around these parts Mt. Washington is number one – the biggest, baddest knob in our provincial universe. We are aghast to hear that Mt. Washington (“Mt. W”) isn’t technically the loftiest peak in the Appalachian range or the East. No, Mt. Mitchell in North Carolina owns this distinction reaching 6,684 ft. in elevation. Is it case closed, or can we admirers muster arguments in support of Mt. W. as the biggest and baddest in the East? We can and we will. Our points start with the definition of a mountain…

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Volunteering at AMC Campsites and Huts:  “Best Volunteer Gig Ever” – by Lynn Fisher

Volunteering at AMC Campsites and Huts: “Best Volunteer Gig Ever” – by Lynn Fisher

That’s what I found myself thinking a couple of summers ago, somewhere on the Carter Dome Trail.  I was hiking back (eventually) to my car after my first-ever two nights of serving as the Carter Notch Hut Volunteer Naturalist. I had just encountered a couple of lightly-equipped hikers who, noting my somewhat official volunteer labelling, asked questions for five minutes including “Is the top a long way from here?”  They took a photo of my paper map and pushed onward.  I enjoyed the satisfaction of helping someone’s day in the mountains go a bit more smoothly.

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Still 48 4,000 Footers? – by Ham Mehlman

Still 48 4,000 Footers? – by Ham Mehlman

In 2019, Mt Tecumseh failed to make its number – 4,000 ft.  The USGS slapped down a marker on the summit reading “elevation 3,997 ft.”  Might as well read “foreclosed” or “condemned”. 142 years after first making the grade (so to speak) Tecumseh came up short.  Now Tecumseh was at risk of being cut from an important roster – the esteemed White Mountain 4,000 Footer list, the highest honor for a White Mountain peak.  For 88 years Tecumseh had been a respected founding member of the list first proposed by in a 1931 article in Appalachia Nathanial Goodrich.  Would Shawnee Chief Tecumseh drop his endorsement after all these years?  What happened?  Too much Ozempic?

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A New White Mountain 4,000-Footer Challenge?  The White Mountain “4k x 4k” List – by Ham Mehlman

A New White Mountain 4,000-Footer Challenge? The White Mountain “4k x 4k” List – by Ham Mehlman

How about adding some integrity to a 4,000 footer list? Call out the sophistry. Anoint the real knarly dudes or dudesses. Formulate a 4,000 footer list that credits actually scaling 4,000 ft. of vertical relief (summit elevation minus lowest trail elevation), not just tagging summits – “peak-bagging” in the parlance.

THE WHITE MOUNTAIN 4k x 4k LIST CHALLENGE:
Scale the 20 distinct “aspects” (think sides) of White Mountain peaks with 4,000 feet of vertical relief and a one-way trail length less than 10 miles. These ascents total approximately 87,600 feet of vertical relief (the summit elevation minus the lowest elevation of a trail).

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TRIP REPORT:  Point-to-Point Trek Up and Over Kinsman Ridge is not a “Traverse” – by Ham Mehlman

TRIP REPORT: Point-to-Point Trek Up and Over Kinsman Ridge is not a “Traverse” – by Ham Mehlman

I referred to my little project as a “traverse”. In common parlance, we/I often use the term to describe “crossing” something.  Merriam-Webster seems to agree. So it seemed reasonable to refer to my hike as a “traverse” of the Kinsman Ridge.  Unh unh.   It turns out that various disciplines of mountaineering have differing ideas of what “crossing”, and therefore “traversing”, might mean and have coopted differing interpretations for their own jargon.

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How-to Advice, Suggestions and Information

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WHERE IN THE WHITES?

SPRING 2026 CHALLENGE 

John Williams, AMCNH Excursions Chair Emeritus, shot this photograph on January 1, 2012.

What summit is John standing on?  Name three peaks and the glacial cirque in the view.

Please send answers (and any suggestions for future challenges) to 

Hopefully a bit more obvious than the winter challenge…

Winners so far:

  • Loretta Boyne
  • Mike Sullivan

WINTER 2026 CHALLENGE RESULTS

Whether it was the haze sent to us by Canadian fires or the location, Diana Moore stumped everyone with the view from the top of Mt. Israel in Sandwich, NH.  Peaks in the view include Flat Mountain, North, Middle and South Tripyramid and Whiteface.   Thanks Diana.

NOTES:

MOUNTAIN PASSAGES 

Editor: Ham Mehlman

Contributing Editor: Diana Moore

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Mountain Passages periodically posts new material on this website and generally advertises updates in the AMC New Hampshire Chapter Quarterly Newsletter email.

© 2026 by New Hampshire Chapter, Appalachian Mountain Club