Islip Canyon To Silver Mountain

TRs for the San Gabriel Mountains.
Post Reply
User avatar
Sean
Cucamonga
Posts: 4052
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 12:32 pm

Post by Sean »

Taco goes down these things, and I try to go up them.

DSC03223.JPG


Yeah, yeah, danger zone, blah, blah...

DSC03225_stitch.jpg


Looks like smooth sailing.

DSC03230.JPG


Doh! Water alert. Maybe not so smooth sailing.

DSC03246_stitch.jpg


What the...

DSC03259.JPG


Hey, look, a waterfall that I can't climb! Better find a bypass.

DSC03274.JPG


The view from this bypass ridge is kinda cool.

DSC03277.JPG


The ridge itself ain't so great.

DSC03286.JPG


Damn, cut myself--AGAIN!

DSC03301_stitch.jpg


I could probably drop back into the canyon now, but it looks kind of messed up. Perhaps I should stay on the ridge top.

DSC03348.JPG


This ridge seems longer than it probably is in reality.

DSC03354.JPG


Hmm, is that Silver Mountain? Yep, it is.

DSC03357.JPG


Wow, look at the time! I better hustle down to the highway before it gets dark.
User avatar
headsizeburrito
Posts: 279
Joined: Wed Nov 15, 2017 1:18 pm

Post by headsizeburrito »

Very cool, did you just find a random pull out along the 39 near the canyon? What would you say the ratio was of stuff you could stay in the canyon for vs having to bypass along the ridges?

I really need to learn some rope stuff so I can do some canyoneering, particularly interested in Fish Fork...
User avatar
Sean
Cucamonga
Posts: 4052
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 12:32 pm

Post by Sean »

headsizeburrito wrote:Very cool, did you just find a random pull out along the 39 near the canyon?
There is a nice turnout at the canyon entrance. It's on the west (left) side about a half-mile before the road that goes down to the San Gabriel Dam.
What would you say the ratio was of stuff you could stay in the canyon for vs having to bypass along the ridges?
You can scramble up the canyon for about a mile before hitting a walled-in twenty-five foot waterfall. Up to this point it's light to heavy bushwhacking, zigzagging to avoid deadfall, and negotiating a few minor falls/cascades (class 2 or 3) which can be climbed on one side or the other without going up a ridge. It's the sort of overgrown, debris-filled canyon where you need to watch your foot placement carefully to avoid breaking an ankle or burying your shoe in mud. You should also be able to identify poison oak, because you might have to step carefully through some of it.

I don't recommend trying to bypass the waterfall and explore the upper canyon unless you really know what you're doing in terms of scrambling and navigating up canyons. But Taco thinks the series of upper falls can be bypassed by going up dirt slopes. I can't tell you for sure, though, because I ran out of time and had to save that challenge for another day.
User avatar
headsizeburrito
Posts: 279
Joined: Wed Nov 15, 2017 1:18 pm

Post by headsizeburrito »

Sean wrote:You should also be able to identify poison oak, because you might have to step carefully through some of it.
I've either gotten lucky so far or just haven't encountered it (I generally hike at higher elevations or other places where it doesn't grow), but I do need to work on my ID skills for that stuff, those rashes sound unpleasant! In anticipation of exploring further up East Fork I did get some lotion last week that is supposedly protective against poison oak, hopefully I'll have a chance to test it next week!
User avatar
Taco
Snownado survivor
Posts: 6036
Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2007 4:35 pm

Post by Taco »

Yeah I think almost all of it could be bypassed on super loose steep dirt slopes, but it would suck more than rappelling or any other option.
Post Reply