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Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 8:09 am
by 9patrickmurphy
Wentzl wrote: Mon Jan 25, 2021 9:08 pm Full moons are nice, but I have learned that half full waxing is better than full if you want light after dark!
Why would this be? Does the moon stay out longer if it's still waxing? Been a while since middle school astronomy.

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 8:29 am
by Wentzl
It is higher in the sky and provides more useful light when needed. A "full" moon rises at sunset, but not high enough to light many canyons until well after dark

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 9:06 am
by Reg0928
I went up Shav on a full moon. Left Salida after work around 6:00pm and hit the summit at like 9:30-10:00 or so. The cows around the CT junction scared the hell out of me on the way down :lol:

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 10:23 am
by myfeetrock
I did a full moon hike of Sherman in mid April a few years back. It was really cool to not have to use a headlamp. Incredibly bright. I did a late hike on Antero. I was chased down to treeline by storms, but went for it when the skies cleared. I was on the summit at 10PM. The moon came up not to long after. I didn't realize it was going to be a full moon, so this was a bonus. Handies was a sun set hike. No moon on the way down. Elbert was another full moon hike. All worth it.

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 11:17 pm
by Ivar
These stories are great to hear. My favorite: Capitol Peak, Friday the 13th, full harvest moon (Sept 13th, 2019). My buddy forgot his headlamp, but it was so bright we only occasionally turned on our one light. We arrived at the top around midnight and slept there, waking up to watch the shadow of the peak at sunrise, right next to the moonset. IMG_1665-smaller

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2021 3:47 am
by KingHenryJames3rd
JQDivide wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2021 3:18 pm Anyone else feel...
Perfectly normal hiking in the dark in the morning, no worries?
But hiking down a peak in the dark evening feels eerie, noises are creepy, and you wonder what is watching you? Is that a cougar?
Why the difference? Maybe just used to the morning darkness?

Have done a few peaks at night. Mostly just to do it. Was OK. You can usually find people on the easier peaks during fool moons in the summer and early fall.

I really love sunsets on the summits. Few people, if any. Watching the colors change to the night sky, pretty incredible up high.

Joel
Definitely not alone in that feeling. It's weird I have no problem starting a hike at 12am to 3am but for whatever reason try to start at 9pm and I freak myself out. Makes no sense!

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2021 8:19 am
by WolverPete
Safely finding your way in the dark up any peak is a challenge, especially if you are solo. But catching a sunrise from the top of a 14er is an incredible feeling. Should be on your bucket list to experience at least once in your life. Planning to get some Astro/Sunrise pics this year from the the top of a 13er/14er. That would be awesome. Just need to find out a good peak to summit.
Pic of sunrise over Kit Carson is from April 2019 from the top of Humboldt.

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2021 9:01 am
by Wentzl
Finding your way up in the dark, especially in winter, where there is only snow, no obvious trail,can be tricky.

Finding your way down in the dark, especially in winter, when you have a nice snowshoe track to follow is usually easy.

So why does the consensus seem to lean toward starting in the dark to finish in light rather than the other way round?

Hey Ivar, Nice Photo!

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2021 8:06 pm
by Wentzl
Long's Peak some years ago. Started at 6:00 p.m looking forward to the nearly full moon later that night. Getting the the keyhole around 9:00 and the clouds are thickening. By 10:00, advancing to the top of the Trough, where the rock is now coated with a slick layer of ice, we pull through onto the narrows. Then the storm finds us. From 11:00 to 1:00 we hunker down while the weather comes down all around us. Later, after getting down, we learn that this storm washed away a mobile home park somewhere to the east.


Anyway, we take the beating and head down, not realizing that the worst has past. By the time we get back past the keyhole, the full moon is out and we regret not tagging the summit, but the decision has been made and the only thing to do is continue down.

3:00 a.m. we start meeting those starting up for the new day. What an odd convergence. What can be said? Did you have fun? Will you have fun?

Cross currents on the same river.

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Thu Feb 18, 2021 1:41 am
by pvnisher
This thread is about the new Stephenie Meyer book with vampires and werewolves each vying to be the first to claim the coveted full moon grid, right?

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Thu Feb 18, 2021 5:35 am
by Will_E
ellenmseb wrote: Fri Jan 15, 2021 5:07 pm I overslept when heading up for Belford/Oxford/Missouri, in September just after the big snowstorm. This resulted in heading down Missouri just around sunset. This sunset was stunning, the very best picture I've ever taken on a 14er.

Image

On the way down the bowl from Missouri, in the pitch dark and snow, I heard a lot of eerie screaming/howling. I knew it was a fox because I heard the same sound coming from a fox previously, but it would've been easy to convince someone it was a hungry wolf or a person being murdered! If you haven't heard fox sounds before, they're extremely creepy: [YouTubeVideo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zk1mAd77Hr4[/YouTubeVideo]
I thought we were gonna be Rick rolled with this. https://youtu.be/jofNR_WkoCE

Re: Twilight 14ers

Posted: Thu Feb 18, 2021 7:17 am
by Wish I lived in CO
Grays and Torreys 2008. Started at about 2 or 230 am. Had the whole place to myself, at least on the way up. Saw the Denver lights from Grays summit. Then en route to Torreys saw this very striking sunrise:

https://www.14ers.com/forum/download/fi ... w&id=32881