ORIGINAL: ny59giants
New Hampshire - Mt Washington will be a serious challenge. Besides the elevation (6288 ft),
I live at that altitude [:D] [8D] Hiking around here starts at 10k [:'(]
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
ORIGINAL: ny59giants
New Hampshire - Mt Washington will be a serious challenge. Besides the elevation (6288 ft),
don't always make for a harder hike...greater elevations



Strategic Bombing: Most bombers declined to fly or got lost in the night. Tomrrow, large raids ordered vs. Nagasaki and Kanoya.
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
Moon is about 55% but weather hasn't been good.
Your photos of Panama look like humid hiking in dank woods. Arg! That'd be brutal!
ORIGINAL: MakeeLearn
Where in Japan are you planning to hike?
Strategic Bombing: Most bombers declined to fly or got lost in the night. Tomrrow, large raids ordered vs. Nagasaki and Kanoya.
Are weather and moon a factor or is it just "FLY MY PRETTIES!"
Moon is about 55% but weather hasn't been good.

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
It's just "fly my pretties."
I don't micromanage weather. Often, the squadrons seem to exercise good judgment by not flying when the weather is bad. And forecasts can be wrong so that players sometimes miss good weather or hit bad weather by trying to abide by forecasts (I think).
By rotating my bombers carefully, managing fatigue or pilots and aircraft, I find that weather doesn't seem to be a major issue and that ops losses are minimal.
A much bigger factor is occasionally leaving a squadron on daytime ops, which usually does result in losses to CAP. That seems to be a bigger issue than weather. So I try to mind the settings and not mind the weather, trusting the AI to handle that.


ORIGINAL: ny59giants
Vermont - Mt Mansfield is not too bad a hike, but the trail down to Stowe has some challenging sections. You will need to focus on the trail and not the scenery. I know this is at least 10 years away. [;)]
New Hampshire - Mt Washington will be a serious challenge. Besides the elevation (6288 ft), the weather up there can be nasty. Snow in late August and winds can go over 100mph.

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
That's true but not the whole truth.
In the Appalachians, hikes start at 1k or 2k and go to 4k or 6k. You climb or descend at 500 to 700 feet per mile, a tough gradient with a pack on....especially if you're doing it in southern heat and humidity or New England wind, cold and rain.
In the Rockies, hikes may start at 8k and go to 12k. But the climbs and descents go on forever and forever, because many of the trails were originally meant to handle pack animals. The grade might be 100 to 200 feet per mile, which is relatively easy going, especially when the temperatures are moderate and the humidty low.
Sunday I talked to a young lady who had done 350 miles on the Pacific Coast Trail earlier this year, baiing out of slipping and sliding down a snow field. Regarding the comparative difficulties of the two trails, she said, "The AT is a ball buster."
P.S. There are very steep and tough trails in the Rockies, and the weather can be more brutal than anything I'd ever experience in the southern Appalachians. But the greater elevations out west aren't really good for comparison purposes.
ORIGINAL: morejeffs
Who is planning to hike in Japan? Feel free to mail me! I often hike Mt Takao (easy but lovely hike) and just did Mt Fuji with my son (Fuji is only open to the general public until September).