Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summit. Show all posts

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Lily Mountain Summit 9,786'

It’s the middle of summer but between motorcycle riding and maintenance, there just doesn’t seem to be enough time to get a good hike in. With the tires on the ST3 all warn out, the tires on the 954RR pretty much gone too and having just done a dirt ride, today was definitely a good day to go hiking.


The beginning of the Lily Mountain Trail


Looking down at highway 7 (left), near the summit a sign for the trail (right)


The trail, this is still close to the trailhead

Since I haven’t hiked much lately I wanted to do an easy hike. I especially like hiking to the top of mountains, because of all the amazing views at the top. Lily Mountain Trail was a short trail that climbed to the top of a small mountain by Colorado standards - it was perfect!


I think that is the Fish Creek Road down there


Some cool dirt road with many switch backs


Getting closer to the summit now


A neat rock formation

According to the internet the trail is just 1.7 miles from the trailhead to the summit of Lily Mountain. According to the sign at the trailhead, it is 2 miles. The Lily Mountain trailhead is located along highway 7 just south of Estes Park. The trailhead doesn’t have a parking lot, parking is allowed on the side of the road.


The trail got rocky at times (left), the scramble to the summit (right)


On top of Lily Mountain


This rock is pretty much most of the summit


Great scenery from the top of Lily Mountain

The beginning of the trail travels up and down. The last mile is a steady climb and to reach the summit requires a bit of scrambling over some large rocks. I haven’t been to the top of too many summits, but this one so far was the smallest summit - area wise.

I hung out on top for a bit, just taking in the scenery and enjoying the sunshine. It was a beautiful afternoon, with no clouds, no threat of lightening. The hike down was a lot quicker than the hike up.


The trailhead for Lily Mountain is just north of Lily Lake Trailhead


Lily Mountain Trail

Difficulty: easy/intermediate

Total miles: 4

Summit elevation: 9,786 feet

Trailhead elevation: 8,780 feet

Net elevation gain: 1,006 feet

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Summit Ascent: Quandary Peak 14,265'


My alarm went off at 2:30AM. I had to leave the house by 3:30 to meet up with the group at 5AM just west of Denver along I-70. I already knew I wasn’t going to get enough sleep for this hike since I ended up going to bed at 10PM last night.



Quandary Trail signs

I was already packed and ready with all my gear, so when the alarm went off I just had to make coffee, grab some breakfast and get dressed. I was out the door and making good time on the highway since it was totally empty. Hydrating as I drove, preparing myself for the highest climb so far. This was my first attempt at climbing a 14er.



Getting ready to hike



Heading to the trailhead

Quandary Peak is located 6 miles southwest of Breckenridge on highway 9 in the Arapaho National Forest. It’s the highest peak in the Tenmile Range, a northern extension of the Mosquito Range. It is the 12th, 13th, or 14th highest peak in Colorado, depending on how it is ranked. Quandary's easiest route is the standard class 1 walk up along the eastern ridge. An excellent beginner hike for a first 14er, with a route of only 7 miles round trip and elevation gain of 3500 feet.



Putting Yaktrax on at the trailhead

I arrived at 5AM to meet up with the group and we car pulled to the trailhead, stopping once at the Starbucks in Breckinridge for coffee and bathroom. I already had my coffee this morning, I continued to hydrate with water.

Access to the East Ridge Quandary trail from highway 9, required us to turn west onto Summit County 850, following the signs to "Blue Lakes". Then take an immediate right (north) onto McCullough Gulch Road (Summit County 851) and drive 1000 feet to the main trailhead. There is another trailhead 1 mile up the road with a wood sign marked "Quandary Trail" but because of snow we had to leave the car on the main road and hike to the actual trailhead. We arrived and were parked around 7AM, geared up and started the hike at around 7:30.



Starting the hike toward the summit



The youngest person in our group was 12

It was a beautiful day so far but we were watching the weather for days and knew there was a storm coming today. We though it would hit early but so far it looked clear. Some predictions had the storm hitting late in the afternoon. The plan was to go up as far as we could, if we made the summit that would be awesome but if we didn’t that was OK too. A few people ended up canceling the hike because of the weather forecast, so there was only 7 of us.



Climbing and climbing



Heading for the Quandary Peak ahead of us

We hiked to the main trailhead and put on out Yaktrax, the snow was very well packed, the Yaktrax would give us more traction. We had snowshoes strapped to our packs for when the snow got deep and soft. We knew we would be hiking in snow all the way to the summit. Which would make this easy 14er summit hike a little harder.

The trail started out with an immediate climb and switch backs. I started to peel off layers immediately, not wanting to overheat. We continued through the trees and finally started to climb up higher, leaving the trees behind us. From here you could already see some amazing scenery in all directions and highway 9 was just a twisty snake in the distance down below.



More climbing

In front of us was a great while hill, and we started to climb it. My pace is still very slow and there were two others that were slower as well, the three of us made a “slow” group while the other 4 continued up at a faster pace. One of the climbers in the faster group was a 12 year old boy, the son of the organizer, this was his 13th 14er, while me, at the age of 40 - I’m trying to bag my first one.



It was nice, warm and sunny in the early morning

Once we reached the big hill it was colder and windy. We stopped to put on our jacket shells, it wasn’t going to get any warmer than this. I was told that the wind would get very bad toward the summit.

We continued up but the pace got even slower. The eastern ridge route was in plain sight, as was the peak behind it. We climbed and climbed and climbed but the peak didn’t seem to get any closer. There were quite a few people climbing this summit today, many on skis. They all passed us. We kept looking ahead at the route to the summit. It looked like an ant hill, with a single file of ants climbing toward it. But these weren’t ants, they were people far a way in the distance.



Many people heading for the summit this morning



People in the distance, so far away they look like ants

We continued to climb, and reached a narrow portion of the ridge, which was almost level. I figured this was the place the catch up with the faster group, I could see them in the distance, they didn’t look that far away. But even though the ground was not very steep here, I was hiking now at nearly 13,000 feet in elevation and I was moving very slow.



That's highway 9 down there

The next section was sleep, the steepest so far, we continued upward, the temps kept dropping and the wind was now blowing constantly, hard at times. I began to count my steps to get in to some rhythm. I felt that I was stopping too much. I would make 30 steps and take a break, then 30 steps again and stop for about 30 seconds to a minute. This method worked well for a while but the mountain got steeper yet. Trekking upward in snow was way harder now. On the steep section I could have actually used my ice axe, although I didn’t bring it since I didn’t think I’d need it for a class 1 summit climb.

It would have been a better tool than my tracking poles for getting up the steep sections that were covered by snow. On this steep section it was one step and rest, one step and rest. Making sure I stepped in a place where I wouldn’t slide back down. The concentration was starting to get a bit fuzzy now. The summit was just above us, it was visible now for the last couple of hours, taunting me. So close but yet so far away. It almost felt like I was climbing up a escalader that was going down. I made so much effort to keep moving toward the summit, but the summit was still way back there in the distance. The wind was picking up fast, and the temperatures were dropping even more now. I noticed the water in my platypus hose starting to freeze. I wanted to get a neoprene sleeve for it so many times now, but somehow I kept forgetting. I changed my gloves from the thick fleece ones to my goose down mittens, my hand were cold now and even 30 seconds without gloves made them start hurting.

I had my down jacket in my pack, which I would have wanted to put under my shell at this point for extra warmth but I should have done that way before, when I was on the level part of the ridge. It was steep here, so I couldn’t pull my pack off. I continued. The slope gradually got a bit better to hike, wasn’t as steep as before. I checked my altimeter, 13,600 feet in elevation. Pushing all the buttons on the thing to display the elevation was hard work that required lots of concentration at this point.



More climbing, the steep stuff is coming up (left), closer to the summit the snow starts (right)



Getting closer now



Clouds rolling in behind me

When we started this hike, The peaks to the left of us had blue skies above them, but over the next few hours the clouds started to roll in. Now the peaks were shrouded in clouds, and now there was snow blowing hard form that direction. We continued up, it didn’t seem like we were that far away from the summit now. I really wanted to put my down jacket on, I was starting to feel cold especially stopping so much but the idea of stopping, removing my snowshoes which were there were attached to my pack, digging in my pack and getting the other jacket out, and taking off my shell to put the other jacket on underneath and securing my snowshoes again on my pack - that was too much, I was too high up, it was too windy and I would have had to take my gloves off, I couldn‘t do it with my mittens and I couldn‘t take the mittens off. I should have brought my silk glove liners to wear under the mittens. The window of opportunity to get more layers on had passed. I wasn’t freezing yet, I was just cold. I had on an insulated turtleneck, a fleece pullover, a fleece vest and my jacket shell. As long as I kept moving I was fine, but it was hard to keep moving with needing to rest with every step.



Some of those ants behind me is our group heading for the summit

After about half an hour, the pace slowed down even more. Actually there was more stops then hiking. I would kneel in the snow at times, this helped me to get out of the wind a bit and give my legs a break. The wind was really blowing now and one of my snowshoes came loose from my pack, I was glad that Tom was a bit down the slope from me to grab it and strap it back on my pack. I have to find a better way to carry my snowshoes.



Almost at the summit we turned around because of the storm, we waited for the rest of the group to join us, those ants up on the mountain are them coming down from the summit



The storm is closer now



Views to the north

By now some of the people that passed us earlier in the day heading to the summit were passing us heading back down. This had to be a good sign right? This had to mean we weren’t that far away from the summit. We asked one of the guys that was on his way down “How much further to the top” he said “about 35 minutes, but hurry, the storm is almost here”. That might have been 35 minutes for him, for us at our slow pace, that was probably an hour.



I clicked this picture as I came back down the mountain, the storm arriving at the mountain



Our group heading down the mountain



Looking to the east



This was steeper then it looks and this is not even the steep section

The wind was only going to get worst, the temps were only going to drop and the last part to the summit was supposedly the hardest. We stopped to contemplate our situation and made a decision to turn back. The storm was upon us, and who knew how much worst it would get toward the top. We climbed too slow and we ran out of time. A few minutes later we saw the rest of our group coming down the summit. We also continued back down, stopping further down the ridge where the wind wasn’t as bad, letting the fast group catch up with us. The faster group made the summit but turned around immediate to head back down the mountain. The winds were really bad up there and the last section of climb to the summit was the most challenging of the whole trek. From what we were told, we were only about half a mile from the summit when we decided to turn back around.



Wind blowing, snow falling and it was cold up there



Half way down the mountain the mountain the storm had passed and the summit was again surrounded by blue sky. The three of us that didn’t make the summit today, joked about turning back around and trying to climb it again, but those were just jokes. By now my lack of sleep was starting to catch up to. I was loosing energy fast, I had used my second wind, and third wind and possibly my forth wind for climbing to the summit. I was all out of wind.



Snowshoeing back down the trail





Tom didn't bring his snowshoes and kept falling in to deep holes in the snow

I was starting to day dreaming about how nice it would be to curling up in to a ball somewhere for a short nap. But we still needed to get drom the mountain. The wind continued blowing, but not as bad as we had experienced up higher in elevation. The temps were cooler now. We made it down the mountain relatively fast. The deep snow was melting toward the bottom of the mountain and walking in it was very difficult. The foot would sink as far down as the knee or the hip. We stopped and took of our Yaktrax and put on our snowshoes. This was much better, the snowshoes allowed us to float on top of the soft and deep snow. We made it to the parking lot by 3:30PM. I was exhausted, not so much from the hike itself but probably more so from the lack of sleep and trying to hike at such high elevation. We were all starved so we stopped in at the Breckenridge Brewery for an early dinner. I had to pass on the beer, knowing that I still had a 1.5 hour drive to Fort Collins once we got to where I left my car parked west of Denver. Even though I was so starved, I was too tired to eat. I took most of my food back home with me in a doggie bag. I was glad someone else drove, I got to take a little nap in the backseat all the way from Breckenridge to West of Denver. That helped so much. By the time I got to my car I was rested enough to drive home. But I went to bed as soon as I got home, about 7:30 PM.



A shot of Quandary Peak out the car window as we headed toward Breckenridge - I'll be back!

Lessons learned from today’s experience? Yep, there was a few.

First, there is no such thing as an easy 14er. Even the easiest 14ers are much, much harder than a regular hike in the mountains, mostly because of hiking at such a high elevation, plus the cold temperature and very strong winds and quick changing and unpredictable weather.

I learned that it’s a good idea to put on the layers before it gets too cold and before one climbs too high.

I was told that this summit will be a lot easier to do once most of the snow is gone, so I’ll be back and I am getting to the top of that summit. Next time I would also like to camp near Breckenridge, so I can get up in the middle of the night and drive in from Fort Collins. That is just too much on the day of the climb.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Summit Ascent: Twin Sisters Peaks 11,428’


The weather was looking iffy this week. By this weekend the weather people were predicting up to a foot of new snow. And the following weekend I had already signed up to climb my first 14er (14,000 foot mountain) with a group. What I really wanted to do between now and then is hike to the summits of some smaller mountains, and get used to hiking at higher elevations. I even made a list of some easy summits to hike to and figured I could do about two summit’s a week before doing the easy 14er but now with this crazy spring weather I wasn’t so sure I would be able to do it.



The road to the trailhead was closed (left), since I couldn't drive to the trailhead, I had to hike the road instead (right)



Twin Sisters sign off highway 7 (left), Twin Sisters Trail sign at the end of the dirt road (center), Twin Sisters 3.7 mi sign at the actual start of the trail (right)



No cars beyond this point, the trailhead is still a but further up (right), Map of the trail (right)

Today was kind of cloudy with possible rain in the afternoon. I was hoping to be off the mountain by then. It was sunny in Fort Collins when I left, but it was cloudy in Estes Park. The mountains were beautiful though, all white. I forgot that when it rained in Fort Collins two days it had snowed up in the mountains.



Looking back at the beginning of the Twin Sisters Trail



When I made the decision to hike this mountain this morning, I was already pushing it for time. I ate a good breakfast, got my stuff ready and got the trailhead by 11:30AM, which I thought was a bit late but still doable.



That's Highway 7 behind me and Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington

The Twin Sisters Trailhead is located on highway 7 just south of Estes Park at 9,040 feet in elevation. Even though this trail travels in to the Rocky Mountain National Park, there is no fee to hike this trail. I parked the car in the muddy parking lot just off highway 7 across from Lily Lake. The dirt road to the actual trailhead was closed, so I had to hike to the trailhead, maybe a quarter of a mile, maybe a bit more.



Mt Meeker (13,911), Longs Peak (14,259), Mt. Lady Washington (13,281)



Same picture as above but zoomed in - hard to believe a few weeks ago I was standing on the summit of the mountain on the right, Mount Lady Washington at 13,281 feet, looks taller now then the day I climbed it



Yaktrax on icy trail at the lower elevations and in deeper snow near the summit

At the trailhead I put my Yaktrax on. I’ve had them for a few weeks now but this would be my first time wearing them. They were perfect for a trail covered in hard snow and ice. They would help my traction for sure. Spring time is definitely Yaktrax time here in the mountains. Not enough snow for snowshoeing but too slippery to hike just with hiking boots.



Less trees at this higher elevation



This was a steep climb in the snow



Looking to the west



Looking west, at this point the trail heads east towards the summit

The trail climbed steadily. It was somewhat steep, but the trail was smooth, wide and well maintained and was not technical at all. After a while the switch backs started to appear regularly although they were far apart. The scenery wasn‘t changing much at first. Trees, more trees, trail, more trail and a few times through an opening in the trees I could see Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington, among other mountains to the west. Seeing these mountains so close was just amazing. Not to mention seeing the peak of Mount Lady Washington, my first big summit, which I only climbed a few weeks ago. From here I could clearly see the route we took to the summit. The mountain sure looked bigger now, then when I was climbing it. The mountains were covered in lots of snow now. There was only snow on the ground at the bottom of Longs Peak Trail a few weeks ago.



Another steep climb through the snow, the peaks are visable now






Looking back at the trail toward the west



Looking east

Finally after what seemed like a while, I turned a corner and instead of seeing one more same switchback and view of more trees, I was heading for a clearing. Then the trail went east and caught a glimpse of Estes Park to the North. Now the trail and scenery was way different from before and more unpredictable. I climbed some steep sections and gazed at Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington for the last time until my return trip.



Looking North, that's Estes Park down there



Looking back at the trail toward the west, you can really see the trail climbing up the slope



The trail headed east again and I hiked out of the trees and continued hiking up a bare slope, littered with small and medium sized boulders. I was above the tree line now and I could see the peaks. The trail became narrower, but it was still very recognizable especially today, that’s where the deep snow was. There was definitely way more snow up here and I should have brought my gaiters. The bottom of my pants were getting wet but temperatures were in the low 50’s so it didn’t really bother me.



On top of the saddle between the two peaks looking southeast



On top of the saddle between the two peaks looking southwest



Twin Sisters Electronic Site






The sign on the door says “These radios are used for finding lost hunters locating down aircraft and saving lives”





Is that a lightening rod?

The scenery was getting more impressive with each step, I could see clearly to the east, north and west from here. As I approached the saddle between the two peaks, I finally got a glimpse of the mountains to the south of Twin Sisters Peaks. It was amazing how much more snow was up here. And how they got that building up here, which appeared to be some radio station.




A cable going from the building down the south slope of the mountain



On top of the saddle at around 11,370 feet in elevation, views to the south

The dark clouds were hanging just above me. At times a few small snow flakes would fall down from the sky. Here on top of the saddle it was a lot more windy and the temperature was only in the low 40’s.

The saddle separates the east (11,428') and west (11,413') Twin Sisters Peaks. From this point cairns mark the way to each summit. The west peak near the research station is easier to get to and to climb. The route to the east peak is harder to find and the climb to the peak is harder also, requiring a steep scramble up boulders and loose rock.



Heading back down, views to the northwest

I wouldn’t make it to the actual peaks today, even though I was standing right underneath the west peak. The saddle between the peaks at 11,370 feet in elevation would be as high as I would get today. Unfortunately by the time I made it to the saddle, walked around to check things out it was almost 4PM and time to start heading back. I was surprised it took me almost 4 hours to get up here, the snow made my progress slower I’m sure. At this point I just wanted to make sure I got off the mountain before it got dark. I would be making another trip up here during summer I’m sure, when the weather was nicer.

As I started to head west I noticed that the clouds were darker now. Maybe this was the rain that was supposed to be arriving this afternoon, at this elevation it would be snow. A few snow flakes started to fall out of the sky again. It was time to go. I only had about 3.5 hours of daylight left, way less here on this trail with huge mountains just to my west.

I was very happy when I saw the sign for trailhead again. The last miles hiking down was hard and I was getting tired. The Yaktrax gave me more traction, especially on the icy sections, but there were still a few snowy sections that made my feet slide out from under me and brought me to my knees.



Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington in the clouds on the way down



About an hour later the sky is clearing over Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington

I made it down from the saddle in about 2 hours with some daylight left. All together I hiked about 7.5 miles up 2,330 feet in elevation and I was just 43 feet shy of reaching the western peak. Even though at some point I couldn’t even see Mount Meeker, Longs Peak, and Mount Lady Washington through the dense clouds, now the sky looked to be clearing and I could see brilliant blue sky above the trees. That’s the thing with the weather in the mountains, it can change really quick and predicting it is hard.



Clear blue skies as I get to the start of the trail

Twin Sisters TH elevation: 9,040 feet
Summit elevation: 11,428 feet
Elevation gain: 2,388 feet
Distance: 7.4 miles round trip
Difficulty: Moderate
Grade I (A short day and up to 3,000 feet of elevation gain)
Class I (On the trail all the way to the sumit)