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Edward Erbeck January 30th 13 12:48 PM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
1 Attachment(s)
This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.

Crazy Ed



Mad Cow January 31st 13 07:34 PM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
In article , Edward Erbeck
writes
This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.

Crazy Ed


[ A MIME image / jpeg part was included here. ]


What a nice symmetrical mountain, and the forest of rock pillars gives
texture to the foreground. Does it look like a sugar loaf from some
other angle?
--
Sue ]:(:)

Edward Erbeck February 1st 13 12:31 PM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
"Mad Cow" wrote:

What a nice symmetrical mountain, and the forest of rock pillars gives
texture to the foreground. Does it look like a sugar loaf from some
other angle?


Nope. I'm guessing given it is the only Pyramid shaped Mountain in the
Chiricahua Range, Sugarloaf was as close a name as the settlers could come
up with!?

Crazy Ed


Guy Gorton[_2_] February 5th 13 11:26 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013 06:48:39 -0700, Edward Erbeck
wrote:

This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.

Crazy Ed


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/

Guy Gorton

Mad Cow February 6th 13 08:11 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
In article , Guy Gorton
writes
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013 06:48:39 -0700, Edward Erbeck
wrote:

This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/


That's not the Sugar Loaf we climbed in Wales, it was the shape of a
sugar loaf lying on its side and at the top it was sleeting horizontally
Even the sheep had abandoned it.
--
Sue ]:(:)

Edward Erbeck February 6th 13 10:03 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
"Guy Gorton" wrote:


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/


I wouldn't even hazard a guess. But the one in Rio Brazil is the Classicly
shaped "Sugarloaf".

Crazy Ed


Ed H. February 7th 13 03:47 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
In article , Guy Gorton
wrote:

On Wed, 30 Jan 2013 06:48:39 -0700, Edward Erbeck
wrote:

This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.

Crazy Ed


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/

Guy Gorton


There's a Sugar Loaf Hill that was important in the battle of Okinawa
in WW2.

--
Ed H.

Guy Gorton[_2_] February 7th 13 10:29 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
On Wed, 6 Feb 2013 09:11:02 +0000, Mad Cow
wrote:

In article , Guy Gorton
writes
On Wed, 30 Jan 2013 06:48:39 -0700, Edward Erbeck
wrote:

This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/


That's not the Sugar Loaf we climbed in Wales, it was the shape of a
sugar loaf lying on its side and at the top it was sleeting horizontally
Even the sheep had abandoned it.


I know of two in Wales, one with a tunnel for the Heart of Wales line
to go under it, and a railway station named Sugar Loaf just to the
north of the tunnel.

The other one we too have climbed more than once. It is, I think, the
one I linked to but seen from a different angle than from the approach
we climbed which was from the south.

I remember the shape you describe but with a precipitous north side
and a long east-west ridge.

We did not meet your weather but it was windy and cold. The dogs
loved it. One walk was in 1975 my slide catalogue tells me.

Guy Gorton

Edward Erbeck February 8th 13 01:34 AM

A Little Local Snow 2 of 3
 
"Ed H." wrote:

Guy Gorton wrote:


Crazy Ed wrote:


This is Sugarloaf Mt. which is the central feature in Cochise National
Monument. The main attractions are the Rhyolite Pillars, some of which can
be seem in the Picture.


I wonder how many Sugar Loaf Mountains there are in the world. Here
is another one:-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48028479@N00/4251437128/


There's a Sugar Loaf Hill that was important in the battle of Okinawa
in WW2.


Given the Universal use of Sugarloafs around the World I'm guessing the
number of Hills and Mountains with that name would be staggering with the
most famous being in Rio Brazil - which is the one I think of as being the
closest to the shape of a Sugarloaf.

Crazy Ed



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