
Hasn't voted | After having gone there, I initially wondered about that too... until a short while later I asked a ranger at the Visitor Center on the east side of the national park about Mount Buckley and Mount Love, and he said they were indeed true mountains and appear on a few maps, albeit they are mountains that are mostly forgotten about. Then, two days later, I went to Wayah Bald (located many miles away to the east) and looked at the official map-sign of peaks that can be seen from the second floor of the Wayah Bald summit tower looking in the direction of these mountains. The "peaks" were listed. In addition, if you click on the GPS coordinates on the SummitPost pages for these mountains, their names are shown on the online map. Plus, the mountains appear on "peakbagger.com" and "mountainzone.com", among other websites. The combination of all of these things is good enough for me. Many "peaks" in the Appalachians (as well as other places in the country) are like bumps along ridgelines, and many such peaks are already on SummitPost. I did my research in advance of posting the SP pages. |