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Pictures -- Maine

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Greyhound and I at Speck Pond, the highest body of water in Maine at 3,500 feet.


The Bemis Peaks, East and West.


The trail up Saddleback mountain is a granite slab for almost three miles, giving some awesome views.


Approaching the summit of Saddleback Mountain.


The reason why they call it Saddleback Mountain: the two peaks with the hump in the middle.


The view from Little Saddleback, north.


The Poplar Ridge Shelter still features the "baseball bat" design -- on which I would have slept fine had it not been for the snoring French-Canadian beside me.


West Peak of the Bigelows, with Avery Peak barely visible to the right of it.


Avery Peak of the Bigelows, supposedly the last of the major climbs until Katahdin.


The "2000 mile road" -- just 168 miles away from Katahdin.


Finally -- the 100 Mile Wilderness. The view from Barren Ledges, where I wrote a few pages in my journal and watched the sun go down.


Strolling along Nahmakanta Lake.


Katahdin at dawn from Rainbow Lake Ledges, where I slept the last night on the trail.


Katahdin from Abol Bridge, over the Penabscot River. The amazing part about Katahdin is that it comes out of no where -- it's a huge mountain on a 1000-foot plateau.

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