50 for Tibet: Celebrating One Mountain Culture to Preserve Another.
 


News & Blog: Team Blogs

12/30/07

50 For Tibet Fund Raising Passes $150,000.00 Mark

Team HighPoint is pleased to announce that financial donations through the 50 For Tibet adventure fund raiser for The Rowell Fund For Tibet has now passed the $150,000.00 mark. We extend a sincere "thank you" to all that have contributed so far and hope that by the time Team HighPoint attempts Mt. McKinley (Denali) in Alaska this coming June that new donations will push the total amount raised to over $200,000.00.

Every contribution, no matter the size, is tax deductible. Contributors who have donated in 2006 or in 2007 can make a new, additional contribution in 2008 as Team HighPoint looks to finish their quest of climbing all 50 state highpoints in two years to help preserve the Tibetan culture. We ask all who care about human rights anywhere on this planet help support and preserve the Tibetan language and visual arts in the face of a 50+ year occupation of their country by the Chinese by donating to The Rowell Fund For Tibet.

by John at 08:24:32 pm



12/15/07

The Home Stretch - # 48, # 49 & # 50

50 For Tibet's homestretch is coming up during the first half of the 2008 calendar year. With Arkansas, Wyoming and then Alaska on tap, the journey to visit the top of all 50 states will be coming to a close by the end of June when, if all goes as planned, Team HighPoint stands not only on highest point in the United States, but all of North America; Mount McKinley/Denali (20,320 feet).

First up of the final three is Arkansas and it's highpoint, Magazine Mountain (also known as Signal Hill) at 2,753 feet. In 1819, botanist Thomas Nuttall wrote of his observations as he traveled up the river. Near Dardanelle Rock a prominent landmark was called Magazin for its shape resembling a storehouse. That mountain is now called Mount Nebo. All of the mountains between the Arkansas and Petit Jean Rivers were called the Magazines. As Nuttall continued up river, he wrote that "a lofty ridge appears to the south called by the French the Cassetete, or Tomahawk Mountain." Later surveyors and mapmakers called it Reveille or Revolee Mountain. Eventually, each Magazine mountain had an official name with the largest of them representing the whole range.

by John at 01:37:13 pm