Showing posts with label Lemhi Mountains.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lemhi Mountains.. Show all posts

Monday, June 01, 2015

Climbing The Brow and Lame Jake Peak, May 31, 2015


The Brow from Birch Creek Valley, Lemhi Range, Idaho
I drove to the Birch Creek Valley late Saturday night. Once I got to the Pass Creek turnoff just south of Lone Pine, the light was nearly gone. Headed towards the mountains and found a place to sleep a few miles off the highway. The plan was to photograph the Lemhis at first light and then find my way to the North Fork Pass Creek Canyon. This canyon, just north of Diamond Peak, leads to the impressive east face of The Brow. See above.

Arose at 5:00 A.M. had a bite to eat and waited for the light. Made several images of the range around Diamond Peak.

Big Boy Peak, The Riddler, Diamond Peak, and The Brow, Lemhi Range, Idaho

Little Diamond Peak, Black and White Peak (hidden), Shoshone John Peak, The Riddler, Diamond Peak, The Brow, Lemhi Range, Idaho

The Riddler, Diamond Peak, and The Brow, Lemhi Range, Idaho

Dome Peak, looking southwest, Lemhi Range Idaho
Shoshone John Peak, Big Boy Peak, The Riddler, and Diamond Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho

Diamond Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho
The drive to North Fork Pass Creek was straight forward. The road was excellent for Lemhi standards. My Forester had no problem at all. The most important turnoff comes shortly after turning off on Pass Creek Road from the highway. Not long after turning, look for a road on the right that takes you up a small bench. Once on this road, follow it until you see the mouth of North Fork Pass Creek Canyon. It is quite a distance.

The hike up the canyon was beautiful. Springs emerged from several places to feed the creek. They often disappeared and reemerged alone the way. A nice bonus of such a hike is drinking straight from icy cold mountain spring water.

As I neared the end of the canyon, I veered left. I could not get a good look at the mountain because of the trees. From what I could see and from looking at the face from the Birch Creek Valley earlier in the morning, I had pretty much decided on a line up the east face towards the south end. I also planned on coming down the east face on the north end to make the ridge leading to Lame Jake Peak.


A highlight of the trip was viewing the exotic north face of Diamond Peak. It looked like some foreign vista.

North Face Diamond Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho
Big Sister in foreground, The Iron Divide in center distance, Bell Mountain on right

Walking south along the ridge of The Brow

Summit peak of The Brow
Bell Mountain on the left

Coming off peak on the east face, the snow was soft and deep. Taking big steps, I sunk past my knees. I triggered several small slides on my way down. The last two weeks have brought lots of rain in the valleys and deposited a few inches of new snow on the mountains. Where there was already snow, this new snow settled on the surface of a compacted snow pack. At this point the two layers had not sintered. With my downward motion, the top 2 inches would occasionally break away and slide down the mountain. I thought about the two men who were killed on Moran in an avalanche a few week ago. The conditions were similar. An unconsolidated, relatively shallow, slab of new snow broke away above them, picked up momentum and swept them five-hundred feet down the steep Sickle Couloir.  The Brow is not as steep as Moran and the snow pack is no where near that of the Tetons this time of year. Still, I watched, with fascination, the small slides triggered by my steps, slowly pick up more snow and momentum as they glided down the mountain. I decided to move closer to the edge of the snow pack, just in case.

Once off the mountain and onto the ridge leading to Lame Jake, I heard a loud swooshing sound and looked back over to the north face of The Brow. The steep north face of The Brow was sill laden with snow and a moderate slab of new snow had broken free near the top and was sliding down the mountain. It was a bit surreal to see it pick up speed on its way down. It looked quite harmless until it slammed into the side of large rocks and exploded dramatically into the air. I was amazed at the force hidden in so little snow. That must have been similar to what hit those guys on Moran.

North Face of The Brow
Avalanche slammed into the lower center rocks
You can see the dark stain continue on the right of the outcropping
The walk to Lame Jake Peak from The Brow is an easy ninety-minute stroll along a gentle ridge. One might as well take in Lame Jake in the same trip as The Brow. And besides, if you climbed from North Fork Pass Creek, you can loop back around and end up back in the canyon.


GPS Track


The ridge to Lame Jake Peak
The three summits of Lame Jake
Three peaks on right...Rust Peak, Incredible Hulk, and Meadow Peak in distance
Rocky Canyon
Lame Jake Peak on right and Rust Peak upper left

Summit Cairn on Lame Jake looking back to Diamond and the Brow

I began hiking at 7:40 A.M. and reached the summit of The Brow at 11:30 A.M. I am a leisurely hiker and take my time. I would think that a 3 hour summit is very doable for those who like to speed up mountains. I reached the summit of Lame Jake Peak at 1:00 P.M. and was back at my car at 2:40 P.M.

For more trip reports of other mountains visit idahoclimbing.weebly.com

Monday, April 27, 2015

Saddle Mountain, Lemhi Range, Idaho

Images made of the the peak of Saddle Mountain. Taken from the Little Lost River Valley a little north of Howe. All images are taken from the same spot using different focal lengths to draw attention to different aspects of the scene.

Saddle Mountain Peak at 200mm



Saddle Mountain Peak at 24mm

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Climbing Nicholson Peak From Fowler Springs, Lemhi Range, Idaho

One of the problems hikers and climbers face in the Lemhis are access roads. There are very few marked roads which makes route finding challenging. It is frustrating seeing your destination and crisscrossing the desert in every direction but the right one. Initially I followed the advice in Tom Lopez's book to access Fowler Springs from the mouth of Badger Creek Canyon. The topo map actually shows a road in this area leaving the canyon and heading for Fowler Springs. I thought it should be pretty straightforward. Driving into the canyon, I kept my eyes peeled for any semblance of a road leading south and crossing Badger Creek. Once in the canyon, I concluded that any access road from this point would be impossible, so I carefully retraced my path to no avail. I saw some hunters at the mouth of the canyon and asked them if they were aware of any access across the creek and south. They knew of no such route. Next, I drove back to the highway and headed south. I turned off every side road I could find. Two looked promising but were eventually blocked by barbed wire fence; probably put there by landowners who were tired of closing gates left open by lazy drivers. Next, I found another road far to the south that, on the map, pointed to Fowler Springs. Following this road for some distance looked very promising. The route was heading right to the destination point of the springs on the GPS! Unfortunately darkness fell fast and the faint road in the desert was impossible to follow. 

I pulled over and bedded down for the night. In the morning, the road I was following was indeed faint, but I could see a definite road leading over a hill in the distance that looked like this was the ticket. Driving toward this distant road, I found my self with no road whatsoever and looking for passable routes to the hilltop location…off-roading in a Forester. Finally, I met up with the distant road and climbed the steep hill with the telltale smell of a burning clutch. My little car has taken quite a few beatings, yet keeps on going. I just hope I don't burn out a clutch in the middle of nowhere. Once again, I just knew this was the way. Reaching the top of the hill, a sturdy barbed wire fence blocked further passage. I had exhausted every possibility I could think of, and had only one last thought; if Tom Lopez wrote the springs were accessible from Badger Creek Canyon and if the map actually showed a road, I must have missed something. So, I headed for the highway and north again to Badger Creek. Once again I drove towards the mouth of the canyon scouring the brush for some way south. I struck out again. If there is a route there, I must be an idiot. Driving back to the highway, I had given up and even thought of walking the 6 or 7 miles through the desert to Fowler Springs. That thought quickly gave way to heading home and getting a Jamba Juice. I drove south towards Howe. Suddenly I saw a road that I had missed the night before and turned left into the desert. Eureka. This road was the one!

To help out the next traveler, I have recorded 3 GPS points that will provide information to make the journey to the springs a leisurely drive. The first is the turn off point from the highway. The second is a midway point. The third is the actual springs. Once at the final point, drive up the road just a bit to find a grassy area to park or camp.

N 44.02399 W 113.19722
N 44.05100 W 113.16235
N 44.06224 W 113.13763

climbing Nicholson Peak, idaho
Nicholson Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho
climbing Nicholson Peak, idaho
Knife Edge Ridge Leading to Nicholson
I came along the top of the left tower and descended here between the two towers.
climbing Nicholson Peak, idaho
Diamond Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho
climbing Nicholson Peak, idaho
Little Diamond Peak, Lemhi Range, Idaho
Ridge from Peak 10,965 to Little Diamond Peak
climbing Nicholson Peak, idaho
Lemhi Crest from Diamond Peak to Little Diamond Peak
Bell Mountain can be seen in the far distance on the left.
Saddle mountain can be seen in the far distance on the right.


Once at the springs, the hike is straightforward. You may have noticed some cliffs at the top of the ridge when approaching the springs. Hike up the spur toward these cliffs and bypass them on the left. After the cliffs, you will see the ridgeline point right to Nicholson Peak. Follow this ridge.


While hiking this ridge, it soon narrowed to a few feet wide and presented a series of small chimneys. I climbed up and down several with precarious foot and hand holds. I was reluctant to give up elevation by dropping off the top and skirting the narrow rocky spine below.  I am not ashamed to admit that I straddled the ridge a few times when it narrowed to the kind of point that I came off of the Chimney pictured above on the left. Finally, I had had enough and found a passage down to the talus at the bottom of the razor ridge. I decided to head southeast to the ridge that connected Nicholson and Peak 10,965 (Coined The Joker by Rick Baugher).  Baugher wrote that this ridge connected the two peaks and then, from 10,965, connected to Little Diamond. I just wanted to see this for myself.

The view was worth the detour. Little Diamond Peak sits at the south end of a large box canyon. The impressive crest from Little Diamond to Diamond Peak encloses the east side while Nicholson and peaks to the north rise on the west side.

After admiring the breathtaking view, I hiked back off the ridge, veering northwest towards Nicholson. I headed toward some cliffs that I knew must be skirted to ascend the summit. Once around these cliffs, it was simple climb to the summit. 

Coming down was one of the most pleasant descents I have ever had. A pleasurable hike. It was pretty easy scree skiing off the summit. I was reluctant to retrace the ascent route over the gnarly ridge, so I “skied” past it down into a gentle gully into the canyon to the south. I decided to follow this gully to the desert floor.  The gully was fantastic. Not too much brush. Not too many rocks and boulders. The rocks that were there acted much like stair steps. The hike passed by incredible rock cliffs and formations and most of the hike was in shade. My worry about the often-narrow passageway down cliffing-out never materialized.

Coming onto a thicket of Mahogany trees signaled the lower elevations of the descent. Once in these trees, I veered a bit to the north and could see the foothill that I needed to wind around to meet up with Fowler Springs. Coming around the bend on the hill, led me straight into my parked car. A perfect end to a satisfying hike.

Other Resources:

Tom Lopez Website:
Nicholson Peak

For more trip reports of other mountains visit idahoclimbing.weebly.com