Hard-Silver Summit (peak 3720)

TRs for ranges in California.
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tekewin
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Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 5:07 pm

Post by tekewin »

Hard-Silver is the name I gave to the high point of the wide ridge that separates Harding Canyon to the south and Silverado Canyon to the north in the Santa Anas. In Peakbagger, it has the pedestrian name "Peak 3720".

I started on Williams Canyon Road, then took a private road to Silverado Truck Trail (USFS labels it Silverado Road). There are No Tresspassing signs, but I ran into the property owner on the way up. He stopped in his truck for a brief visit and had no problems with hikers. The road started out wide, got increasingly overgrown as I went, and eventually reduced to a single track. About a mile from the start, I found a sign indicating the start of Cleveland National Forest land. The trail climbed steadily cutting north and south between peaks on the ridge. The single track narrowed to the point that contact with the brush was unavoidable. It was still easy to follow and the soft plants didn't slow me down. But, I soon noticed some ticks on my pants. I brushed them off and went on, only to pick up several more. I became vigilant and when the day was over, I had a new personal best in collecting ticks: 21.

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Warning sign, not a problem for hikers at this time

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Interesting geology near the start

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Cleveland National Forest boundary, about a mile from the start

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Tick #19 and #20. I found #21 in my left boot before the drive home.

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Looking up Silverado Canyon

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Looking up Harding Canyon past a random marker

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Western patch nosed basking on the trail

When I reached the base of Hard-Silver, I looked at the ridge line but didn't see any hint of a use trail. I continued on the trail to the north and wasted time and energy thrashing around in the brush to find the way up. Then I went back to the ridge and found a mostly hidden use trail. It had several obstacles, including some trees that needed to be crawled under and some that needed to be climbed over. There was a false summit, then some more light bushwhacking to get to the unadorned pile of rocks at the top. Views from the high point between the canyons were pretty sweet. It looks like there is a passable trail that comes up Halfway Canyon from Silverado Canyon. It would be a much shorter (and steeper) trip than starting at Williams Canyon Road.

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Veiled use trail up to the false summit

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One of several obstacles on the use trail

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Summit

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Looking south down Harding Canyon

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Looking north to Pleasants Peak (left), Bedford Peak (right)
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Sean
Cucamonga
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Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 12:32 pm

Post by Sean »

Thanks for the report and vicarious bushwhacking experience. And congrats on your record-breaking tick collection. You ought to take a small bottle and save them.
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tekewin
Posts: 1259
Joined: Thu Apr 11, 2013 5:07 pm

Post by tekewin »

A small bottle is a great idea! Since I brushed them off, some of the same ticks might have gotten me going out and coming back.

It calls my judgment into question, but I thought I could get through a 1/4 mile of this in a reasonable time, ummm, no...

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