Dix Mountain is the sixth highest peak in the
High Peaks Region of the
Adirondack Park, and is located roughly on the boundary between the
towns of
North Hudson and
Keene in
Essex County,
New York. The peak was named in 1837 after
John Dix (1798–1879), who was the
Secretary of State of New York at the time, and later became the state's
governor.
While it stands somewhat south of the main High Peaks region (and in fact is at the center of its own
Dix Mountain Wilderness Area) and is more difficult to reach and steep and challenging to climb, the mountain enjoys great popularity with serious
hikers not only due to its status as a required peak for
Adirondack Forty-Sixers but for open views of the region from its summit, almost as good as those to be found at nearby
Mount Marcy with far less crowds.
Dix is also the gateway to four other High Peaks in the Dix Range, all of them, unlike Dix itself, officially trailless:
Hough,
Macomb,
South Dix and
East Dix. One of the most difficult Adirondack
peakbagging challenges is to do all five in the same day; while many have, most hikers prefer to break the trips up into separate assaults on Dix and/or one of the others.
The mountain was reportedly first climbed by a man named Rykert in the course of
surveying the town line.
Hikers commonly choose to climb Dix from the south by taking the
Elk Lake Trail from the similarly named lake toward Hunters Pass, where a spur leads up to Dix. Less frequently, a lengthy northern ascent can start from...
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