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The Kirks climbing Mt. Rainier
The Kirks climbing Mt. Rainier (Photo: Courteay John and Alyson Kirk)

Meet the Couple Smashing Colorado’s Peakbagging Records

John and Alyson Kirk have crushed a long list of records in the mountains. This summer, they're chasing another one.

Published: 
The Kirks climbing Mt. Rainier
(Photo: Courteay John and Alyson Kirk)

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There are peakbaggers, and then there are John and Alyson Kirk. While some of the couple鈥檚 achievements are more obscure, like their shared record of 2,204 consecutive days of summiting a peak every single day, others resonate on a global scale:听John鈥檚 record for most summit ascents ever (11,142 as of June 2019), for example.

Last November, the pair became the youngest by nearly a decade (John was 42听and Alyson听35)听to check off every Colorado peak above 11,000 feet.That鈥檚 53 14ers, 584 13ers, 676 12ers, and 468 11ers, and they鈥檙e just getting started. If all goes according to plan, this November, the Kirks will become the second and third people ever to summit all 530 of Colorado鈥檚 10,000-foot peaks.听John started climbing a few years before Alyson, so he has 43 more听10ers听to go, while Alyson has 52.

Since John works a full-time desk job at a titanium supplier and Alyson founded an听auto-cleaning business, for the most part the two can only summit new peaks during听weekends in their home state of Colorado. But these aren鈥檛 your average weekend warriors. A good weather window means seven听to ten new peaks every week for the couple.听John keeps tabs on their adventures on his mountaineering stats website, .

鈥淲hen听we get on the summit, and the sun鈥檚 shining, and it鈥檚 crystal-clear blue skies, and all the granite peaks surrounding you鈥 it鈥檚 what keeps my heart beating and makes me feel more alive than I could ever hope for,鈥 Alyson says.

Of course, the adventure won鈥檛 stop in November. Once the Colorado 10ers are complete, the couple will turn their focus to their ultimate ten-year plan: the Kirk Project.

听is the couple鈥檚 moniker for their decade-long听mission to summit all of the 12,000-foot and above peaks in the lower 48. If completed, the two will be the first ever to finish this gargantuan quest. The Kirks鈥 current out-of-state pace is 70 peaks per year; they plan to finish Arizona and most of Utah by the end of 2019.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to have to be dragged down this mountain on a litter with no pain medication if I want to live.鈥

The couple鈥檚 obsession with peakbagging began long before they ever met. John was a casual hiker throughout high school and college and听didn鈥檛 get serious about mountains until summiting Colorado鈥檚 Blanca Peak (14,344 feet) in his twenties.听Alyson, a听marathon runner, didn鈥檛 know what a 14er was until she bagged Mount听Massive (14,429 feet) with a friend in 2003. She was an instant convert.

Though their growing list of records may beg to differ, for the Kirks, mountain climbing isn鈥檛 just about racking up numbers, it鈥檚 practice in overcoming obstacles.

In February 2010, a year before meeting John, Alyson fell on Colorado鈥檚 Rosalie Peak, slamming into talus and shattering her femur after skidding hundreds of feet down steep snow. 鈥淚鈥檇 heard that freezing and bleeding to death were the easiest ways to die. There would be numbness, and a person would simply fall asleep,鈥 Alyson explains in her 2018 book about the incident,听.听鈥淲hoever said that never lay on a snow-covered mountain freezing and bleeding to death.鈥

Gripped with pain as a storm narrowed in, Alyson and her hiking partner, Prakash Manley,听called for help via a weak cellphone signal as dark clouds swirled overhead. After giving GPS coordinates to the 911 dispatcher, a flight-for-life helicopter finally landed nearby, and the crew ran toward听her mangled body as the temperature听began to plummet. The quickly worsening storm forced听the rescuers听to leave.听That was听when听Alyson realized the gravity of the situation. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥業鈥檓 going to have to be dragged down this mountain on a litter with no pain medication if I want to live,鈥欌 she says.

Seven hours later, a search and rescue ground team, set off by Manley鈥檚 911 call, located them in a whiteout blizzard. 鈥淢ountains almost took my life, but they also saved my life,鈥 Alyson says.听鈥淚t took almost dying for me to commit to myself to live authentically, no matter how hard that was going to be.鈥

(Courtesy John and Alyson Kirk)

Before they met, John and Alyson found themselves in failing marriages. They both struggled with alcoholism and experimented with drugs. Climbing gave John and Alyson something healthy to fixate on, and when the pair connected on a group hike in 2011, Alyson knew it was finally time for her to get a divorce. 鈥淛ohn and I enjoyed living on the edge. I loved mountains because they gave me an opportunity to massage my extreme personality, and John felt the same way,鈥 Alyson says.听

While getting engaged in Arches National Park and tying the knot atop 13,767-foot Ulysses S. Grant Peak in Colorado might sound like something straight out of a fairy tale, there are conflicts when your romantic partner doubles as your mountaineering partner. 鈥淲hen expeditions get challenging,鈥澨齁ohn says, 鈥淚t鈥檚 all too easy, at least for me, to view things as an individual endeavor that we鈥檙e both participating in. This is okay听to a point, but it鈥檚 important to reframe it as a joint endeavor, especially when the going gets tough.鈥

When you鈥檙e a weekend warrior who works a full-time day job and routinely sprints off to the mountains to summit听new peaks when you鈥檙e done at the office, the going gets tough on a regular basis. In a mad dash to complete all of Colorado鈥檚 12ers and above in 2017, the pair,听caught in a downpour with terrible visibility, roped up on a harrowing scramble up Jagged Mountain. The steep granite was 鈥渟licker than two eels in a bucket of snot,鈥 John says. They bagged the peak, hiked back to their 4Runner, and climbed five more听13ers to finish off the weekend before completing the seven-hour drive home.

Despite the storms life has dealt them, the Kirks keep pushing. 鈥淚 almost died in a mountain climbing accident, and it took something that monumental to make me change my life,鈥 Alyson says. 鈥淚 hope the Kirk Project will inspire others to find their authentic self [and remind them that]听our past doesn鈥檛 define our future.鈥

Lead Photo: Courteay John and Alyson Kirk

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