Chapman Mt or Timber Peak?
Yesterday I go to what I thought was the top of Timber Peak and found a register for "Chapman Mt." I can find only one other reference to "Chapman Mt" on the web, and John Robinson doesn't mention it either.
Can anyone tell me what's going on here? According to Google Earth, the location of the Chapman Mt register is short of Timber Peak, though at about the same elevation.
Can anyone tell me what's going on here? According to Google Earth, the location of the Chapman Mt register is short of Timber Peak, though at about the same elevation.
Nunc est bibendum
Can anyone who has been there tell me what's at the top of Timber Peak? The peak I was on ("Chapman Mt") had a signpost with two wooden signs that had all their lettering weathered off a long time agao, plus the register in the mailbox set into the tree.
It looked like there might have been another summit a little ways beyond after a dip down in the forest, but I didn't see any footprints in the snow.
I'm trying to finish a video and I don't want to look like a doofus getting two mountains mixed up.
From Sierra Club Hundred Peaks Section on Timber Mountain:
It looked like there might have been another summit a little ways beyond after a dip down in the forest, but I didn't see any footprints in the snow.
I'm trying to finish a video and I don't want to look like a doofus getting two mountains mixed up.
From Sierra Club Hundred Peaks Section on Timber Mountain:
I found this in the HPS archives, from 2001:Name given by early Sierra Club skiers and hikers (ca. 1930). It was singled out by Walt Wheelock as one of 30 early m peaks with use-names that at that time had "not yet become well established" (1954).
This peak overlooks the Baldy Notch facility of the Mount Baldy Ski Lift Company. They recognized the value of accepting a romantic-sounding local use-name for this peak (1950). With its addition, and the later renaming of the original Mount Harwood to Thunder Mountain by the USBGN, the "three T's" as a dream advertising gimmick were completed (1963).
Indeed, where?all eleven of us arrived safely atop Timber.
Where we found not one, but two registers! One in a container labeled Chapman Mountain nailed to a tree, another in the usual cairn. Just to be on the safe side, we signed both. (So, does this count as two peaks, Timber and Chapman? Where are the Peak Police when you need them?)
Nunc est bibendum
Nope, that's the Summit of Timber Mountain alright.simonov wrote:Can anyone who has been there tell me what's at the top of Timber Peak? The peak I was on ("Chapman Mt") had a signpost with two wooden signs that had all their lettering weathered off a long time agao, plus the register in the mailbox set into the tree.
It looked like there might have been another summit a little ways beyond after a dip down in the forest, but I didn't see any footprints in the snow.
I'm trying to finish a video and I don't want to look like a doofus getting two mountains mixed up.
Chapman Peak is just an older name from the trailblazing days as Taco wrote, changed for the Triple 'T' effect and because it's more descriptive of what you'll find there.
There is no higher point there, or a little ways beyond.
Just down.
Thanks, that confirmed it.
Video complete.
Video complete.
Nunc est bibendum
Nice video!
Not to be too picky, as you probably know the names now, but the 3-T's are, from N-S:
Thunder Mountain 8587'
Telegraph Peak 8985'
Timber Mountain 8303'
Telegraph is without a doubt the nicest peak, with a small summit proper, but a nice broad south summit with awesome views to the south and west, and lotsa small camping spots. Thunder Mountain gets tons of wind, and has a ski lift on top, so its' significance in an emergency is that you can get back to the lodge rather easily, linking up with a second lift that takes you to the notch from its' base in the Miners Bowl area.
Not to be too picky, as you probably know the names now, but the 3-T's are, from N-S:
Thunder Mountain 8587'
Telegraph Peak 8985'
Timber Mountain 8303'
Telegraph is without a doubt the nicest peak, with a small summit proper, but a nice broad south summit with awesome views to the south and west, and lotsa small camping spots. Thunder Mountain gets tons of wind, and has a ski lift on top, so its' significance in an emergency is that you can get back to the lodge rather easily, linking up with a second lift that takes you to the notch from its' base in the Miners Bowl area.
Did I screw that up? I was delirious after the walk to the Saddle. I'll have to add some subtitles.TacoDelRio wrote:Nice video!
Not to be too picky, as you probably know the names now, but the 3-T's are, from N-S:
Thunder Mountain 8587'
Telegraph Peak 8985'
Timber Mountain 8303'
Nunc est bibendum
No worries. I say off-the-wall crap in some of my videos out of physical exertion.simonov wrote:Did I screw that up? I was delirious after the walk to the Saddle. I'll have to add some subtitles.TacoDelRio wrote:Nice video!
Not to be too picky, as you probably know the names now, but the 3-T's are, from N-S:
Thunder Mountain 8587'
Telegraph Peak 8985'
Timber Mountain 8303'
Nice video Mitch.
I like how you captured your arrival from two angles.
I have yet to hit Telescope Peak.
It's like Kyser Sose, the elusive 4th-T.
Hehe. Seriously, you're the best spontaneous narrator I've met, the Ole' Farmer's Almanac of SoCal Mountaineering.
I like how you captured your arrival from two angles.
I have yet to hit Telescope Peak.
It's like Kyser Sose, the elusive 4th-T.
Exertion; That's what you call it?TacoDelRio wrote: I say off-the-wall crap in some of my videos out of physical exertion.
Hehe. Seriously, you're the best spontaneous narrator I've met, the Ole' Farmer's Almanac of SoCal Mountaineering.