20080311 Mini-Burro Peak and Lower Bear Creek
GREG?! Didya guys go? Brought some soju for ya.
Went up to meet Greg and his buddy, whom I told that Bear Creek might be a nice camping spot.
Killed time by going up this small peak. It's got scrambling up the southwest ridge, with some sections you can climb that go at about 5.2 or so, just fun easy stuff in trail runners kinda stuff. 5.easy, I should say, so I don't get my head bitten off.
Headed down, went to Bear Creek, and hiked up until I felt like turning back, probably 3/4 mile past the San Gabriel Wilderness sign. My goal was to meet Greg either on the way in or back, have a drink and eat some of their precious food, and shoot the shit.
And take pitures of Twin Peaks for some adventure climbing this Spring. 8)
NOTE: If anyone knows the name of this peak, or has ideas for a name for it, go for it. Might as well give it a name instead of the boring and depressing "Pt 3100" or whatever it may be. Or "Mini-Burro", which also kinda sucks.
PICS
The small peak. Route goes up the ridge right there.
From the small sub-sub-sub-peak to the south that overlooks the West Fork bridge. Big, chossy face right there is about 1,000ft high, according to Google Erf.
Climbing up. This is the fun scrambling/climbing section. I encountered one move where I turned off and went through some bushes up a class 2 section. If I was roped, I would have pushed that move.
Looking down
Twin Peaks with what I call "Zebra Wall" below.
Baldy
Ontario and the reservoir
The awe-inspiring summit. I'll put a register up here for those of us who enjoy obscure peaks.
Going down
This scree onramp is the way up and down. There are a few that work.
Then, headed down the road to Lower Bear Creek.
There is a sign on the bulletin board at the trailhead near the bridge that states that anyone on Upper Bear Creek Trail will be fined $5,000-$10,000 bucks and 6mo's in jail because of the washout!!!! My opinion on this is rather obvious, and I need not elaborate as to why this angers me so much.
A washout. SCARY STUFF.
Anywho...
Looks like a fun, very small sport climbing wall. Only about 20ft high or so. I'd hit it. "Garbagecan Crag". I'm sure there's some sorta ordinance against bolts though, since grafitti is more important locally.
Blah blah blah, went up Bear Creek, and took photos of Twin Peaks for fun this Spring!
Awesome. I cannot wait. FWIW, I am no planning on reaching any one point. I merely plan on going up to whatever point (or points) in the south and climbing up to whatever we can reach. "Adventure climbing". No specific goal other than to explore and document this area.
The sign on the way back.
Legs
Water
Another small wall that looked "20ft perfect", in automotive terms. Had some small crack systems that might go.
HAH!
One of the campgrounds
End.
Went up to meet Greg and his buddy, whom I told that Bear Creek might be a nice camping spot.
Killed time by going up this small peak. It's got scrambling up the southwest ridge, with some sections you can climb that go at about 5.2 or so, just fun easy stuff in trail runners kinda stuff. 5.easy, I should say, so I don't get my head bitten off.
Headed down, went to Bear Creek, and hiked up until I felt like turning back, probably 3/4 mile past the San Gabriel Wilderness sign. My goal was to meet Greg either on the way in or back, have a drink and eat some of their precious food, and shoot the shit.
And take pitures of Twin Peaks for some adventure climbing this Spring. 8)
NOTE: If anyone knows the name of this peak, or has ideas for a name for it, go for it. Might as well give it a name instead of the boring and depressing "Pt 3100" or whatever it may be. Or "Mini-Burro", which also kinda sucks.
PICS
The small peak. Route goes up the ridge right there.
From the small sub-sub-sub-peak to the south that overlooks the West Fork bridge. Big, chossy face right there is about 1,000ft high, according to Google Erf.
Climbing up. This is the fun scrambling/climbing section. I encountered one move where I turned off and went through some bushes up a class 2 section. If I was roped, I would have pushed that move.
Looking down
Twin Peaks with what I call "Zebra Wall" below.
Baldy
Ontario and the reservoir
The awe-inspiring summit. I'll put a register up here for those of us who enjoy obscure peaks.
Going down
This scree onramp is the way up and down. There are a few that work.
Then, headed down the road to Lower Bear Creek.
There is a sign on the bulletin board at the trailhead near the bridge that states that anyone on Upper Bear Creek Trail will be fined $5,000-$10,000 bucks and 6mo's in jail because of the washout!!!! My opinion on this is rather obvious, and I need not elaborate as to why this angers me so much.
A washout. SCARY STUFF.
Anywho...
Looks like a fun, very small sport climbing wall. Only about 20ft high or so. I'd hit it. "Garbagecan Crag". I'm sure there's some sorta ordinance against bolts though, since grafitti is more important locally.
Blah blah blah, went up Bear Creek, and took photos of Twin Peaks for fun this Spring!
Awesome. I cannot wait. FWIW, I am no planning on reaching any one point. I merely plan on going up to whatever point (or points) in the south and climbing up to whatever we can reach. "Adventure climbing". No specific goal other than to explore and document this area.
The sign on the way back.
Legs
Water
Another small wall that looked "20ft perfect", in automotive terms. Had some small crack systems that might go.
HAH!
One of the campgrounds
End.
Don't like "Mini-Burro?" Should I state the obvious? Burrito! Doh!TacoDelRio wrote:NOTE: If anyone knows the name of this peak, or has ideas for a name for it, go for it. Might as well give it a name instead of the boring and depressing "Pt 3100" or whatever it may be. Or "Mini-Burro", which also kinda sucks.
The small peak. Route goes up the ridge right there.
And of course for this one: Taquito.TacoDelRio wrote:
The awe-inspiring summit. I'll put a register up here for those of us who enjoy obscure peaks.
I'm losing it.
Nature does have a way of creating lovely shapes...well that and doctors in Beverly Hills. But as a fellow enthusiast of geometry I say nature is still number 1!
Sorry Mike but I do not know. It is a mile or so up Lower Bear Creek. There are several like it, basically just big open areas shaded by Live Oak.Mike P wrote:Taco, what was the name of the campground in your pictures?
Thanks
AW, do you know if it has a designation?
I think its name is called Bear Creek (wilderness) trail camp. It is not a USFS maintained campground, but is used quite often by Boy Scouts, thus is in excellent condition. Im not exactly sure where it is...somewhere between the 6-10th crossing of Bear Creek from the WF San Gabriel river....about 1 mile or so from the West Fork SG river. Before this campground is another space that had a couple of tents, but its easy to spot the difference as one is a lot smaller, the real one is significant space.
There supposedly are 2 more wilderness campsites upstream. One at the WF Bear Creek and another by the Upper Bear Creek trail confluence. There was certainly a lot of space just before the WF Bear Creek to make a camp, but I wouldnt call it a wilderness campsite, more like just a super large boulderish area to camp out. Trail at that point was quite intermittent at best.
The only drawback would be the parking situation overnight, which soon it would be that time of year again for more break-ins. During the day, it seems to be one of the safest places to park, checked regularly for adventure pass parking violations.
There supposedly are 2 more wilderness campsites upstream. One at the WF Bear Creek and another by the Upper Bear Creek trail confluence. There was certainly a lot of space just before the WF Bear Creek to make a camp, but I wouldnt call it a wilderness campsite, more like just a super large boulderish area to camp out. Trail at that point was quite intermittent at best.
The only drawback would be the parking situation overnight, which soon it would be that time of year again for more break-ins. During the day, it seems to be one of the safest places to park, checked regularly for adventure pass parking violations.
TacoDelRio wrote:Sorry Mike but I do not know. It is a mile or so up Lower Bear Creek. There are several like it, basically just big open areas shaded by Live Oak...
Thanks guys! I would like to do a through-hike backpack up to Hwy 39 someday as Chicken Legs was alluding to in an earlier thread.AW wrote:I think its name is called Bear Creek (wilderness) trail camp...