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Progressive Peak Lists for Jason Pair

Personal Superlative Climbs over Time

Progressive Highest Point Reached

Includes unsuccessful attempts and non-summit goal hikes.

DatePeak NameElev-mLocation
1989Stonewall Peak1747USA-CA
1989Yosemite Point2115USA-CA
1990Windy Peak2540USA-WA
1992Volcán Villarrica2860Chile
1993Cerro Chirripó3819Costa Rica
1993Mount Shasta4317USA-CA
1997Pico de Orizaba5636Mexico-Pue/Ver

 

Progressive Highest Peak Climbed

DatePeak NameElev-mLocation
1989Stonewall Peak1747USA-CA
1989Yosemite Point2115USA-CA
1990Windy Peak2540USA-WA
1992Volcán Villarrica2860Chile
1993Cerro Chirripó3819Costa Rica
1993Mount Shasta4317USA-CA
1997Pico de Orizaba5636Mexico-Pue/Ver

 

Progressive Most Prominent Peak Climbed

DatePeak NameProm-mLocation
1989Stonewall Peak263USA-CA
1990Windy Peak540USA-WA
1990Mount Saint Helens1394USA-WA
1992Volcán Villarrica1575Chile
1993Cerro Chirripó3755Costa Rica
1997Pico de Orizaba4922Mexico-Pue/Ver

 

Progressive Most Isolated Peak Climbed

DatePeak NameIso-kmLocation
1989Stonewall Peak2.85615USA-CA
1990Windy Peak14.8629USA-WA
1990Mount Saint Helens51.4851USA-WA
1993Cerro Chirripó877.415Costa Rica
1997Pico de Orizaba2690.14Mexico-Pue/Ver

 

Progressive Furthest North Ascent

DatePeak NameLatitudeLocation
1989Stonewall Peak32.96088USA-CA
1989Yosemite Point37.756237USA-CA
1990Windy Peak48.928311USA-WA
1990Armstrong Mountain - Southeast Peak48.997881USA-WA
2016Fairview Mountain51.399227Canada-AB
2019-08-02Deer Mountain55.342944USA-AK
2019-08-02Blueberry Mountain55.34655USA-AK
2019-08-05Dude Mountain55.414497USA-AK

 

Progressive Furthest South Ascent

DatePeak NameLatitudeLocation
1989Stonewall Peak32.96088USA-CA
1992Volcán Villarrica-39.420849Chile
1992-12-01Cerro Cristal-41.181422Argentina

 

Progressive Furthest East Ascent

May not be accurate due to around-the-world effects. See note below.

DatePeak NameLongitudeLocation
1989Stonewall Peak-116.571959USA-CA
1992Volcán Villarrica-71.939371Chile
1992-12-01Cerro Cristal-71.66223Argentina
1994Masada35.353732Israel
2012-06-01Mount Tapyas120.228882Philippines
2017-01-08Chocolate Hills Viewpoint124.168567Philippines
2019-03-10Puu Wanawana-159.445597USA-HI
2019-03-10Puu Ainako-159.436795USA-HI
2019-03-12Puu Keke-159.417285USA-HI
2019-03-15Nounou Mountain-159.354867USA-HI
2019-03-23San Vicente Mountain-118.512833USA-CA
2019-03-24Monument Hill-117.259614USA-CA
2019-06-30Sugarloaf Mountain-77.39326USA-MD
2019-09-01Castelo de São Jorge-9.133566Portugal
2019-09-06Monte de Santo Estevao-7.816436Portugal
2023-04-09Alcázar de Segovia-4.13087Spain
2023-04-12El Albaicín - Cerro 773-3.592819Spain
2023-04-13 aMirador de S. Miguel-3.587624Spain
2023-04-13 cLa Alhambra Este-3.586435Spain

 

Progressive Furthest West Ascent

May not be accurate due to around-the-world effects. See note below.

DatePeak NameLongitudeLocation
1989Stonewall Peak-116.571959USA-CA
1989Yosemite Point-119.593352USA-CA
1990Windy Peak-119.97057USA-WA
1990Mount Saint Helens-122.195606USA-WA
2019-03-10Puu Wanawana-159.445597USA-HI
2019-03-13Pihea-159.617414USA-HI
2019-12-30 aMount Maculot121.051858Philippines
2019-12-30 cMaculot Rockies121.042213Philippines
2022-04-10Pincio12.479608Italy

 

Notes

  • For all the eight lists on this page, the first entry will be the first ascent chronologically for this climber.
  • The last entry will be the current superlative ascent for the category.
  • Each list shows all the ascents that set a new record for highest, most prominent, furthest north, etc.
  • Ascents logged without a date are not counted for these lists, obviously.
  • Isolation number is approximate for most peaks in the database, and Provisional Peaks are not counted for Most Isolated Peak list.
  • If two ascents have the same date, they are sorted randomly. Ideally, climbers should add a suffix (e.g. the letter "a" in "2003-08-12 a") to distinguish ascents on the same day.
  • For globe-trotting climbers that have crossed oceans many times, the furthest east and west lists will break down and become meaningless towards the end.  This is because the direction of travel from peak to peak is not recorded when a climb is logged. If a climber travels from the USA to Kilimanjaro, it is not possible to tell if that represents eastbound or westbound travel. The lists above try make an intelligent guess but will often "wrap around" the wrong way.



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