What is the tallest point you have been on Jow Forums? Mine is Volcan de Agua, 3750 metres.
What is the tallest point you have been on Jow Forums? Mine is Volcan de Agua, 3750 metres
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Mt Rainier
Also to all the retarded east coast posters, the Appalachians aren’t real mountains, just shitty humid hills populated by inbred cannibals
Higher than you, Cletus
Torres del Paine. Probably around 2000m since the peaks are 2600m tall and you can only reach the lake seen in the pic
Säntis, Switzerland, 2500m
Have you heard of Mt.Washington?
About 10km in an aeroplane.
On my feet, about 300m.
Came to post this
10km or so on a plane
As a kid I would climb on top of the roof of a place we were living at. It felt pretty high up at the time.
Pikes(sic) peak
4,300m
Sliabh Beg.
Are you asking about elevation or prominence?
lolno
But you are in Australia so climbing up means you are even more down than before
frighteningly low
Australia is near the top of the planet, though. You guys are on the bottom.
At least 3400m
Highest anywhere: The Zugspitze (9178 feet)
Highest in my country: Emory Peak (7832 feet)
Well vist that and the Adirondacks.
Catskills are ok too.
>still no Dutch flag itt
Very comfy, both ranges.
en.wikipedia.org
Location btw
It's not a peak but this shithole Leadville, Colorado. It's the highest incorporated city in the u.s. at 3094 meters above sea level.
Somewhere around 3200m / 10 500ft
Pic related
Elevation!
Still counts!
You guys are pathetic. I've been 32,000 miles above the Atlantic in comfort
In that case, around 5230 meters above sea level in the Iztaccihuatl volcano.
Why would you call it such rude word?!?
joli pêh
Sky Pond up in Rocky Mountains NP - 3337meters above sea levels.
However, it doesn't feel so high because all of Colorado is very high above sea levels.
3776m I guess
Eagle's Nest in Germany around 1800 meters I think.
Thinking about visiting Triglav in Slovenia in the near future.
Aiguille Rouge, domaine des Arcs
My tallest point would be The Quill. Its a dead volcano being 601 meters tall and is the major feature of Sint Eustatius.
I'm another airplane poster. Also: Tokyo Skytree (451.2 m).
Snowdon at 1000m
Humphrey's Peak 12,633ft
There were like 80mph wind gusts last time I was up there and I pissed with it lol
I've heard the hike is tougher than it looks because of frequent harsh weather conditions and no shelter because no trees
Nepal was a British colony so Everest
A plane, don't know the altitude though
Can you get into the crater on foot
Yeah but it is pretty steep but once you are down there, its realy flat and comfy. Because all the rain funnels into the crater and the walls shield you from the wind, its actualy quite hot and damp down there. Its like a mini-tropical forrest down there.
Very nice, would hike the fuck out of it
Candanchú ski resort in the Pyrenees, around 1600-1700 m
Pasul Urdele, Romania, 2145 meters above sea level
Probably Mt. Teide in Tenerife.
Probably Kunzum-La in the Himalayas, at about 4500m or 15,500 feet. If not Kunzum-La, then the Refugio on Cerro Cotopaxi in Ecuador, which is at around the same height.
Pic related is from Lahaul-Spiti Valley in India's Himachal Pradesh. Kunzum-La was a few thousand feet higher up.
Cerro El Plomo, 5.424 ms, it took me 3 tries