luke - Dec 8, 2024 6:00 pm Date Climbed: Sep 10, 2023
Thanks Matty B
First ever state high point, probably my last for a long time too.
shashinka - Sep 4, 2024 3:13 pm Date Climbed: Aug 24, 2024
Kitahdin! Toughest Hike yet! via Hunt trail
Beautiful day! 50-60 out, clear, hiked with 3 teens (well sort of :)
Miru K, Abby and Quincy
Mark J and i hiked up from Kitahdin streams
Hard to get over the margarita bar :) afraid of heights.
15 hours for the adults :( got stuck at one point
whatdoIknow - Jul 10, 2024 11:16 am Date Climbed: Jun 13, 2024
so fun
up on Paloma, knife edge, down Hamlin. Little over 5 hours. Very enjoyable
Snowslogger - Dec 5, 2023 5:41 pm Date Climbed: Aug 1, 1990
Maine HP and End of the AT
Hiked up the Abol Slide trail with Sally. Clear but windy on top, with great views. Going up the Abol Slide trail was fine but going down was hard on the knees - if I had it to do again I would probably descend the standard route.
aapontyn - Jun 26, 2023 7:48 am Date Climbed: Jun 26, 2023
Abol Alpine Start
Alpine starts are only possible if you A) have a campsite reserved anywhere in the park the night prior to your climb and B) are physically past the gate at the entrance of the park by 8:30 Pm the night before. Otherwise, reservation or not, you are stuck waiting until 6-7AM with everyone else.
If you do achieve A&B, you can start hiking whenever you want after midnight, as long as you register at the trailhead and leave your permit on your dash!
We wanted to start early as the weather was supposed to take a turn around noon (and it did). A surprisingly amount of folks asked “why?” When we asked about the logistics of alpine start access…is this not something east coast maybe? I always feel like the hiking I do in the dark doesn’t count as I’m not fully awake yet haha.
Camped at Neso… Meadow, about an easy forty min drive to Abol. Had great weather, rain hit as we got back to the parking lot!
Baxter has a handy podcast on their website that is a short listen to help people establish expectations.
yadahzoemtn - Oct 7, 2022 8:08 pm Date Climbed: Oct 4, 2022
Via Helon Taylor Route via the Knife Edge
MIles and Miles of boulders. The knife edge was fun. The 3rd class moves on the Chimney were a bit of a stretch for a short person but doable. Views were great.
Understimated the crowds, there must have been some 300 people up either on the mountain, or at Roaring Brook/Katahdin Springs campgrounds. 4th car in line, but without reservations I ended up being ~30th car in Baxter State Park. Definitely recommend getting a resevation ahead of time. C2C 7 hours 40 minutes, starting at Roaring Brook, to Chimney Pond, and Dudley Trail (which was an awesome class 3, probs class 4 scramble) to Pamola Peak. Did low 5th traverse to cut over to the Knife Edge, which was well worth the hype. True Summit, and then back down Cathedral Trail, which was good til I hit my knee ;( Made it though, truly an east coast great, and a majestic mountain from afar.
skinnywhitecomic - Aug 1, 2022 3:11 pm Date Climbed: Jul 27, 2022
HP #41!
This has become on of my favorite highpoints! My wife (HP #12) and I stayed at Daicey Pond campground the night before, and drove to KSC the next morning to take the Hint trail. I had a lot of fun scrambling and bouldering, though it may not be for others. Met a lot of other highpointers and some AT finishers. I'd love to go back and do Knife's Edge!
Adam Doc Fox - Mar 12, 2022 4:51 pm Date Climbed: Mar 5, 2022
Snowmobile Cheat Code
Sleds to Abol Campground, blessed with bluebird sky. Forecast said like -22F windchill at the summit, but really wasn't bad.
admiralcapn - Feb 27, 2022 7:57 pm Date Climbed: Jul 18, 2018
HP #14
Cathedral up, Knife Edge down. Great views until about 300' from the top. Saw a black bear and cub on the way down!
huedho1 - Aug 17, 2021 3:45 am Date Climbed: Sep 21, 2017
(First Post) Katahdin Summit
*NOTE* - This is my first post on here. I may get carried away, but we'll see! - I'm not a mountaineer, I am a hiker. - My son is a long distance hiker, and we're heading Out West in a couple months. - We want to at least bag one significant summit (around Yellowstone). - So far on the east coast, I've only done Katahdin and Blood Mountain.
2017:
I had just flown into Bangor, rented a car and drove to Millinocket to meet up with my son as he was completing his thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail. - We picked him up at Abol Bridge Campground Store and stayed the night back in Millinocket. - The next morning, we dropped him and a few of his fellow thru-hikers off right back at the Abol Bridge so they could complete their hike without missing a mile. - We drove into Baxter State park to the "Abol" Trailhead where I began my own hike. - I had a good 10+ miles head start on my son and his crew. - I'm 55 at this time, had't been working out in a few years, haven't done any "real" hiking in several years. - But from a distance, Mt. Katahdin isn't intimidating at all. - Matter of fact, it's rather unassuming. - Looked like a big hill to me. - Until i was got above the tree line! - Quite a bit of bouldering and using your full body. - Also the psychological game of false summits ways heavy on your fortitude! - I was determined however, but just after my last "false summit", that crew I had a 10 mile head start on had just passed me up and I still had a mile to go for the summit!! - (They had been doing this daily for over 6 months!) - This was my first hike in years. - (And they were all 20-something!!) - None the less, I made it to the top, celebrated with some picture taking, chatting, and just hanging out. - I had brought an airplane bottle of Jack Daniels with me to celebrate with, but it stayed in my pack. - All I wanted was water! - When it was time to descend we chose the Hunt Trail for our trip down. - I was doing fine until we got back down into the trees. - That's another psychological game. - Getting through and out of the trees, as they begin to feel like they are just closing in on you. - My legs began to fail me with about 2-3 miles to go. - My son made me use his trekking poles and I was determined to finish unassisted, (except for the poles). - We mad it back to the parking lot in just under 12 hours I suppose. - According to the trail maps for Baxter State park, the Abol Trail up and the Hunt Trail down totals 9.2 miles. - Anything above the tree line is pretty much bouldering until you get to about a mile before / below the summit. - My wife went shopping and set up "trail magic" in the parking lot, where she had been feeding the hikers both going up and coming down. - She had plenty of food, water, beer, and a some Captain Morgan that a lot of the hikers appreciated and it was cool to get back to the parking lot!
MW - Jul 6, 2021 11:47 am Date Climbed: Aug 1, 2018
Highpoint #8
Favorite highpoint so far (I'm at 20 as of writing, most of the Eastern U.S. mountain). Phenomenal views, awesome steep terrain and the mile of the Knife's Edge is outstanding and challenging. Certainly one of the prettiest locations in the East.
Made some videos here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCxQb_V03jc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJRp8m35uSs
bdreese2 - Jan 31, 2021 5:19 pm Date Climbed: Sep 27, 2013
Walkoutnow - Sep 24, 2020 2:46 pm Date Climbed: Jun 17, 2019
HP #36
Mosquito barrage at the TH was intense. Very nice little climb, and enjoyed the views and the general area. Would be fun to do the traverse from the other direction if I had a chance to come back.
jabfoster - Sep 7, 2020 8:06 am Date Climbed: Jul 19, 2019
Katahdin Summit
Loved this hike. Took the hunt trail up on a foggy day. Views were limited but enjoyed the boulder style climbing.
wbass - Aug 15, 2020 11:50 am Date Climbed: Aug 1, 2020
Abol / Hunt loop
One cannot underestimate the difficulty of Climbing this massif. Though the topout Portion is underwhelming until you see the glaciated E/NE slope, the Abol ascent and Hunt descent are long and seriously intense class 4 routes and too many people are there who are not exactly prepared. We probably had the best weather day we could have expected, just sweaty.
jake_the_snake - Oct 1, 2019 2:18 pm Date Climbed: Jul 4, 2019
Fun peak
Abol
cascadescrambler - Sep 5, 2019 10:08 am Date Climbed: Aug 15, 1970
No view
Abol route, in the clouds
vanman798 - Sep 2, 2019 10:10 am Date Climbed: Aug 27, 2019
via Helon and Knife Edge
Made a cirque hike out of it, up Helon/Knife down to saddle, up to Hamlin down Hamlin ridge. 11.2 miles over 4000 vertical gain. Not crowded. Baxter rules are a pain, but they sure do make the hike more enjoyable by not allowing crowds.
Annalikeslenses - Sep 1, 2019 5:34 pm Date Climbed: Aug 27, 2019
More difficult than expected for such low elevation!
Didn't do nearly as much research as I usually do for peaks, expecting that there would be detailed maps at the trailhead showing the different route options (there aren't). Also expected that there would be a pump to fill up bottles/bladders at Roaring Brook since it's a campground (there isn't) and it definitely slowed us down having to filter water from the stream before starting. But, hit the trail at about 8am, made it up to Pamola by about 11 with some food and photo stops, and a slow climb up the Knife Edge (descent from Pamola and up Chimney seems like class III+ to me) - about 4.25hrs to summit minus the food stops.
Spent about an hour at the summit, and took the Saddle Trail down since it sounded easier than Cathedral, but it's by no means easy! Steep and loose along the gully at the top, and then just a lot of rocks. Big rocks, small rocks, not too many loose rocks, but rocks rocks rocks. Any bits of actual dirt trail were rare. Got to Chimney Pond, had to break to filter more water and eat, and took on the long final 3.3-mile slog back to Roaring Brook, which was more rocks rocks rocks.
As someone from the west, I'm used to many approach trails being mixed dirt and rock and fairly quick to blaze through. But this...even the flatter sections down from Chimney were like walking on a dry stream bed. The miles are long and the footing takes focus. Got back to the car at 5:30, and the final consensus was that while we were definitely not expecting it to be that hard, we were perfectly prepared for it what with prior experience/poles/climbing gloves/water filter etc. Final description can be summed up as rocks rocks rocks rocks summit rocks rocks rocks.
luke - Dec 8, 2024 6:00 pm Date Climbed: Sep 10, 2023
Thanks Matty BFirst ever state high point, probably my last for a long time too.
shashinka - Sep 4, 2024 3:13 pm Date Climbed: Aug 24, 2024
Kitahdin! Toughest Hike yet! via Hunt trailBeautiful day! 50-60 out, clear, hiked with 3 teens (well sort of :)
Miru K, Abby and Quincy
Mark J and i hiked up from Kitahdin streams
Hard to get over the margarita bar :) afraid of heights.
15 hours for the adults :( got stuck at one point
whatdoIknow - Jul 10, 2024 11:16 am Date Climbed: Jun 13, 2024
so funup on Paloma, knife edge, down Hamlin. Little over 5 hours. Very enjoyable
Snowslogger - Dec 5, 2023 5:41 pm Date Climbed: Aug 1, 1990
Maine HP and End of the ATHiked up the Abol Slide trail with Sally. Clear but windy on top, with great views. Going up the Abol Slide trail was fine but going down was hard on the knees - if I had it to do again I would probably descend the standard route.
aapontyn - Jun 26, 2023 7:48 am Date Climbed: Jun 26, 2023
Abol Alpine StartAlpine starts are only possible if you A) have a campsite reserved anywhere in the park the night prior to your climb and B) are physically past the gate at the entrance of the park by 8:30 Pm the night before. Otherwise, reservation or not, you are stuck waiting until 6-7AM with everyone else.
If you do achieve A&B, you can start hiking whenever you want after midnight, as long as you register at the trailhead and leave your permit on your dash!
We wanted to start early as the weather was supposed to take a turn around noon (and it did). A surprisingly amount of folks asked “why?” When we asked about the logistics of alpine start access…is this not something east coast maybe? I always feel like the hiking I do in the dark doesn’t count as I’m not fully awake yet haha.
Camped at Neso… Meadow, about an easy forty min drive to Abol. Had great weather, rain hit as we got back to the parking lot!
Baxter has a handy podcast on their website that is a short listen to help people establish expectations.
yadahzoemtn - Oct 7, 2022 8:08 pm Date Climbed: Oct 4, 2022
Via Helon Taylor Route via the Knife EdgeMIles and Miles of boulders. The knife edge was fun. The 3rd class moves on the Chimney were a bit of a stretch for a short person but doable. Views were great.
Jowzynkyn - Sep 20, 2022 2:56 pm Date Climbed: Sep 17, 2022
Late summer wonderUnderstimated the crowds, there must have been some 300 people up either on the mountain, or at Roaring Brook/Katahdin Springs campgrounds. 4th car in line, but without reservations I ended up being ~30th car in Baxter State Park. Definitely recommend getting a resevation ahead of time. C2C 7 hours 40 minutes, starting at Roaring Brook, to Chimney Pond, and Dudley Trail (which was an awesome class 3, probs class 4 scramble) to Pamola Peak. Did low 5th traverse to cut over to the Knife Edge, which was well worth the hype. True Summit, and then back down Cathedral Trail, which was good til I hit my knee ;( Made it though, truly an east coast great, and a majestic mountain from afar.
skinnywhitecomic - Aug 1, 2022 3:11 pm Date Climbed: Jul 27, 2022
HP #41!This has become on of my favorite highpoints! My wife (HP #12) and I stayed at Daicey Pond campground the night before, and drove to KSC the next morning to take the Hint trail. I had a lot of fun scrambling and bouldering, though it may not be for others. Met a lot of other highpointers and some AT finishers. I'd love to go back and do Knife's Edge!
Adam Doc Fox - Mar 12, 2022 4:51 pm Date Climbed: Mar 5, 2022
Snowmobile Cheat CodeSleds to Abol Campground, blessed with bluebird sky. Forecast said like -22F windchill at the summit, but really wasn't bad.
admiralcapn - Feb 27, 2022 7:57 pm Date Climbed: Jul 18, 2018
HP #14Cathedral up, Knife Edge down. Great views until about 300' from the top. Saw a black bear and cub on the way down!
huedho1 - Aug 17, 2021 3:45 am Date Climbed: Sep 21, 2017
(First Post) Katahdin Summit*NOTE* - This is my first post on here. I may get carried away, but we'll see! - I'm not a mountaineer, I am a hiker. - My son is a long distance hiker, and we're heading Out West in a couple months. - We want to at least bag one significant summit (around Yellowstone). - So far on the east coast, I've only done Katahdin and Blood Mountain.
2017:
I had just flown into Bangor, rented a car and drove to Millinocket to meet up with my son as he was completing his thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail. - We picked him up at Abol Bridge Campground Store and stayed the night back in Millinocket. - The next morning, we dropped him and a few of his fellow thru-hikers off right back at the Abol Bridge so they could complete their hike without missing a mile. - We drove into Baxter State park to the "Abol" Trailhead where I began my own hike. - I had a good 10+ miles head start on my son and his crew. - I'm 55 at this time, had't been working out in a few years, haven't done any "real" hiking in several years. - But from a distance, Mt. Katahdin isn't intimidating at all. - Matter of fact, it's rather unassuming. - Looked like a big hill to me. - Until i was got above the tree line! - Quite a bit of bouldering and using your full body. - Also the psychological game of false summits ways heavy on your fortitude! - I was determined however, but just after my last "false summit", that crew I had a 10 mile head start on had just passed me up and I still had a mile to go for the summit!! - (They had been doing this daily for over 6 months!) - This was my first hike in years. - (And they were all 20-something!!) - None the less, I made it to the top, celebrated with some picture taking, chatting, and just hanging out. - I had brought an airplane bottle of Jack Daniels with me to celebrate with, but it stayed in my pack. - All I wanted was water! - When it was time to descend we chose the Hunt Trail for our trip down. - I was doing fine until we got back down into the trees. - That's another psychological game. - Getting through and out of the trees, as they begin to feel like they are just closing in on you. - My legs began to fail me with about 2-3 miles to go. - My son made me use his trekking poles and I was determined to finish unassisted, (except for the poles). - We mad it back to the parking lot in just under 12 hours I suppose. - According to the trail maps for Baxter State park, the Abol Trail up and the Hunt Trail down totals 9.2 miles. - Anything above the tree line is pretty much bouldering until you get to about a mile before / below the summit. - My wife went shopping and set up "trail magic" in the parking lot, where she had been feeding the hikers both going up and coming down. - She had plenty of food, water, beer, and a some Captain Morgan that a lot of the hikers appreciated and it was cool to get back to the parking lot!
MW - Jul 6, 2021 11:47 am Date Climbed: Aug 1, 2018
Highpoint #8Favorite highpoint so far (I'm at 20 as of writing, most of the Eastern U.S. mountain). Phenomenal views, awesome steep terrain and the mile of the Knife's Edge is outstanding and challenging. Certainly one of the prettiest locations in the East.
Made some videos here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCxQb_V03jc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJRp8m35uSs
bdreese2 - Jan 31, 2021 5:19 pm Date Climbed: Sep 27, 2013
Katahdinhttps://peakbagger.com/climber/ascent.aspx?aid=431063
Walkoutnow - Sep 24, 2020 2:46 pm Date Climbed: Jun 17, 2019
HP #36Mosquito barrage at the TH was intense. Very nice little climb, and enjoyed the views and the general area. Would be fun to do the traverse from the other direction if I had a chance to come back.
jabfoster - Sep 7, 2020 8:06 am Date Climbed: Jul 19, 2019
Katahdin SummitLoved this hike. Took the hunt trail up on a foggy day. Views were limited but enjoyed the boulder style climbing.
wbass - Aug 15, 2020 11:50 am Date Climbed: Aug 1, 2020
Abol / Hunt loopOne cannot underestimate the difficulty of Climbing this massif. Though the topout Portion is underwhelming until you see the glaciated E/NE slope, the Abol ascent and Hunt descent are long and seriously intense class 4 routes and too many people are there who are not exactly prepared. We probably had the best weather day we could have expected, just sweaty.
jake_the_snake - Oct 1, 2019 2:18 pm Date Climbed: Jul 4, 2019
Fun peakAbol
cascadescrambler - Sep 5, 2019 10:08 am Date Climbed: Aug 15, 1970
No viewAbol route, in the clouds
vanman798 - Sep 2, 2019 10:10 am Date Climbed: Aug 27, 2019
via Helon and Knife EdgeMade a cirque hike out of it, up Helon/Knife down to saddle, up to Hamlin down Hamlin ridge. 11.2 miles over 4000 vertical gain. Not crowded. Baxter rules are a pain, but they sure do make the hike more enjoyable by not allowing crowds.
Annalikeslenses - Sep 1, 2019 5:34 pm Date Climbed: Aug 27, 2019
More difficult than expected for such low elevation!Didn't do nearly as much research as I usually do for peaks, expecting that there would be detailed maps at the trailhead showing the different route options (there aren't). Also expected that there would be a pump to fill up bottles/bladders at Roaring Brook since it's a campground (there isn't) and it definitely slowed us down having to filter water from the stream before starting. But, hit the trail at about 8am, made it up to Pamola by about 11 with some food and photo stops, and a slow climb up the Knife Edge (descent from Pamola and up Chimney seems like class III+ to me) - about 4.25hrs to summit minus the food stops.
Spent about an hour at the summit, and took the Saddle Trail down since it sounded easier than Cathedral, but it's by no means easy! Steep and loose along the gully at the top, and then just a lot of rocks. Big rocks, small rocks, not too many loose rocks, but rocks rocks rocks. Any bits of actual dirt trail were rare. Got to Chimney Pond, had to break to filter more water and eat, and took on the long final 3.3-mile slog back to Roaring Brook, which was more rocks rocks rocks.
As someone from the west, I'm used to many approach trails being mixed dirt and rock and fairly quick to blaze through. But this...even the flatter sections down from Chimney were like walking on a dry stream bed. The miles are long and the footing takes focus. Got back to the car at 5:30, and the final consensus was that while we were definitely not expecting it to be that hard, we were perfectly prepared for it what with prior experience/poles/climbing gloves/water filter etc. Final description can be summed up as rocks rocks rocks rocks summit rocks rocks rocks.