W
By JUSTIN A. LEVINE
e all milled about in the parking lot, saying hello to old friends and meeting new ones. We were an eclectic group, from all over the upstate area. Despite the differences in age and location, we all had one thing in common. We were there to partake in what could be a historic hike. Now, Peaked Mountain, near North Creek, has a well-established trail that is easy to follow and is not that difficult in hiking terms. But this was no first climb or something like that. No, this was a millennial ascent. Spencer Morrissey, who hails from Long Lake and now lives in Cranberry Lake, was the connecting force for this hike. Morrissey, who hiked his first High Peak by accident, was going to reach the top of his 1,000th named Adirondack mountain on this sunny Sunday late in June. But before you get too googlyeyed over this accomplishment, you should know he’s only about halfway to his goal of hiking every named peak within the Blue Line. “It feels really good. It’s something I’ve been flirting with for a little while,” Morrissey said. “The big mark was sort of when I hit 50 percent, right around 900, (but) it kind of seemed like that last 100 went so slow. “So when you’re finally looking up and you’re seeing that sunlight, you know you’re almost there. Granted, I’m only at 54 percent now.” Morrissey has been working on this hiking effort for years, and has tallied the number of named mountains at 1,817. “But I’m always finding different ones that have been named by locals that have good views that I’ll add to the list,” he said. Morrissey researches the names of most of the places he’s gone, and has written extensively on the history and hiking of all the peaks he’s climbed. Morrissey said his friends, many of whom were on the hike up
August-September 2017
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Spencer Morrissey climbs to the top of a boulder during a trip that included his 1,000th Adirondack peak.
Peaked Mountain, will sometimes find a “new” mountain and send it to him. “I sort of give a half-assed thanks,” he chuckled. Morrissey said he will sometimes research the history of a name beforehand. Other times, he may stumble on a peak and then look up its name later. And while it may seem obvious that Morrissey is — by almost anyone’s definition — a peak bagger, he’s a little uncomfortable with that term. “I guess I kind of have to,” consider himself a peak bagger. “Peak bagger has become such a derogatory term that … I don’t climb the mountain just to climb the moun-
tain. I don’t go up there, touch the top and then just leave. “Yes, I’m going to touch the top. I’m going to experience the top of the mountain, that’s kind of the big purpose,” Morrissey said. “But if there’s a view, I want to find it. I want to flirt with the mountain. I want to be one with the mountain. I want to experience the whole mountain. “So no, I won’t go out and do six, eight, 10 mountains a day, because you can’t and (still) enjoy the mountains.” Morrissey said he never likes to tackle more than four mountains in a day, and thinks even that sometimes is a little too much. Although he does admit that the
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first 500 mountains went pretty quickly, “the last 500 kind of went slower,” he said, adding that he was savoring the mountains more and more. “There’s a lot of really, really small peaks out there that have names,” he said during an interview outside of Origin Coffee in downtown Saranac Lake. “And they really don’t have a whole lot to offer so I don’t spend as much time there.” Morrissey said he doesn’t use Google Earth because he likes the mystery. “I don’t want to know what’s up there until I get there,” Morrissey
‘I want to flirt with the mountain. I want to be one with the mountain. I want to experience the whole mountain.’ Spencer Morrissey
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