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Summiting Mt. Kephart and Mt. Ambler
| Mt. Kephart as seen from Mt. Mingus, circa 1932 |

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| Univ of TN Libraries, used by permission |
- Mt. Kephart - 6,217 feet; Mt. Ambler - 6,120 feet
- November 3, 2005
- 1,800 feet elevation gain, 8.5 lateral miles, 8 hours
- 50 deg Farenheit, mostly sunny
- 4 climbers: Nelson and Sharon to 5,000 foot level, Stephen and Olivia to summit
It's said to be the highest sheer
drop-off in the eastern half of the United States and
the views were incredible.
Olivia (a.k.a. Sis) and I decided to take advantage of a job I had in southwestern
Virginia and make a father/daughter climb in the Smokies while we were close by. So we left for my job three days early and
made our climb on Thursday, November 3rd. We chose Mt. Kephart because it was close to Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg
(where we were staying in my mom and dad’s motor home), because it was among the tallest peaks in the southeast, and
because we could also bag Mt. Ambler in the same climb. To our surprise, mom and dad had trained a bit and decided to go with
us.

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| Lunch break 500 feet below Kephart's summit |
In the first few yards of the trail it was evident that we would have to split
up because Sis and I were keeping a far quicker pace than mom and dad. So they went along slowly and we paced ourselves a
little quicker up the mountain. We kept in partial contact by radio throughout the day and later learned that they made it
nearly a mile up the trail before eating lunch and going back. Pretty good, really.
Olivia and I went on past an icy patch in the trail and made the summit of Mt.
Ambler (6,120 feet), then pushed on to Mt. Kephart. The Appalachian Trail, which we stayed on for most of the trip, does not
actually cross the summit of Kephart. We looked around and found a point that was only a few yards away from the summit on
Boulevard Trail, which junctions the Appalachian Trail, and then went on to a point called the Jump-Off. Its said to be the
highest sheer drop-off in the eastern half of the United States and the views were incredible.
From here we went further down the AT to the Ice Water Springs shelter house
to eat a freeze dried lunch of sweet and sour pork with rice and a side dish of elk sausage, then took the short walk down
to the springs themselves before starting the trip down. We made it back about seven hours after departure, still in relatively
good shape after climbing more than 2,000 vertical feet and making more than 8 lateral miles. It was a great time and
the views were wonderful. We bagged two peaks (Ambler and Kephart) and saw the Jump-Off and the Ice Water Springs.
We
were really pleased that all of our training hikes at home had paid off. Our boots, packs, clothing and gear performed very
well and we could have gone farther if necessary. It was exciting to bag our first peaks and Sissy liked it as well as I did.
I think I have a climbing partner now.

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| View from 4,600 feet up Mt. Kephart |

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| Father and daughter on the rolling, almost indistinguishable summit of Mt. Ambler |
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