EAGLE REST, PEAK 6000 & ANTIMONY

TRs for Los Padres National Forest.
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Girl Hiker
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Last time I hiked to Eagle Rest was in 2018.

EAGLE REST & ANTIMONY

I decided to re-visit these peaks because I am training, but not so much for the elevation as for the strenuous, steep, ass kicking to get me in shape.

I met my group of 5 at the Flying J in Frazier Park. We caravaned to Tecuya Mtn Rd (9N22). The parking lot's elevation was actually higher than Eagle Rest Peak.

Anyways, prepared for what was ahead of me, I tried not to think about the steep, overgrown terrain and the grueling pain that I was about to encounter once again.

Bagging the first peak of the morning, Antimony, was the easy part. After a short break we began the arduous part of the journey by dropping down into the canyon below which was quite beautiful. The larkspur in this area were powder blue and the downhill slopes were covered with them.

We then began ascending to a second saddle, and this is where it started to get nasty with unforgiving, overgrown, thick brush. I was impaled many times but this was probably my fault for wearing shorts. There were some sections where we were ducking our heads under low tree limbs and we had to literally push our way through as we were getting scratched by thorns. Also, there were lots of downed trees to hop over.

Finally, we arrived at a small clearing before heading up to the saddle which was at the base of our next big climb. This was the hardest part of the climb towards our destination which we call the big, bad-ass, hump along the way--AKA peak number 6000'. We took a long break here and I ate half of my lunch. I was already exhausted, feeling the wrath of pain in my legs and arms and needed some energy before the next big climb.

After descending this bump with more bushwhacking, we finally arrived at saddle #3, where we got a clearer view of Eagle Rest and the fun rock scrambling ahead of us. The trail picked up again and there were rock formations along the way. The views from here are my favorite. You can see other peaks in the area. Also, as you look back from this vantage point it is a painful reminder of the elevation gain on the return which is greater than the gain to Eagle Rest.

As we continued on to the final ridge to the peak, it became a bit overgrown again with weeds. The final push to the summit is a class 2 rock scramble. By this point, I was already spent and had no energy. However, I love climbing rocks so I got an adrenaline rush that inspired me to press on even if it killed me.

I was so exhilarated to finally summit! The views are amazing! At the very top is a cool, razor's edge rock formation, but it doesn't occupy the entire summit. There are huge rocks to sit on and soak in the views. The register can be found at the high point under a big boulder. No benchmark.

After a long break to re-energize we headed out. As we were descending, we heard thunder and it began to rain, but we were prepared. It didn't last long, so that was good. Unfortunately for me it was a long, slow, painful trek back to Antimony saddle. I slipped on some wet rocks and slammed my hip.

We saw fresh mountain lion tracks on the return, and lots of bear scat when we started.

This is one of those peaks that is seldomly visited. Whoever was there recently placed cairns after descending Antimony. Then the cairns disappear and re-surface closer to Eagle Rest. There is no real trail and it is not on AllTrails.

This is also on the Sierra Club list.

On the bright side I found the most gorgeous butterfly mariposa lilies. The best I've found this season.

Stats: 11 strenuous miles, gain 5300'
2400' ft on the way out, 2900' on the return

Would I do it again? Yes, when I am in better shape.


Antimony peak
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peak 6000'
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Saddle below Eagle Rest
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Final push to Eagle Rest
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Summit
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craigchanowski22
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Post by craigchanowski22 »

Girl Hiker,
nice effort and nice pictures-great job with macro picture of the wild orchid?-keep up the good work and thanks for sharing your adventure.CRC
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Sean
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Post by Sean »

Thanks for the report. How'd you get that butterfly to sit still?
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JeffH
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Post by JeffH »

What a day. I generally don't like uphills on the return half of a hike.
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Girl Hiker
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Sean wrote: Thanks for the report. How'd you get that butterfly to sit still?
It was stuck on the bear poop ?
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Post by Girl Hiker »

JeffH wrote: What a day. I generally don't like uphills on the return half of a hike.
Me either but it was the only way out.
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Post by Girl Hiker »

craigchanowski22 wrote: Girl Hiker,
nice effort and nice pictures-great job with macro picture of the wild orchid?-keep up the good work and thanks for sharing your adventure.CRC
Thanks.
The flowers are Mariposa Lilly's.
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craigchanowski22
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Post by craigchanowski22 »

Girl hiker-thanks for making that plant indentifcation correct with the Mariposa Lilly. For some reason I still get these two plants confused to this day.
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Post by Girl Hiker »

This is the summit of Eagles Rest. I had to wait for my friend to send this one.
PXL_20230610_213651278.jpg

Peak 6000
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Start of the climb to ER
PXL_20230610_213201991.jpg
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Nate U
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Post by Nate U »

Wow, thats a serious trek. Impressive. I've been meaning to hike in the San Emigdio Mts, come close but haven't made it out there yet. Terrain looks like the Santa Susannas on steroids.
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Antimony is 6851
Middle peak is 6000
Eagles rest is 6017
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Post by tekewin »

Instead of a new post, I thought I'd just add on to yours. The trip from Tecuya Ridge was harder than I expected. I underestimated how much water I needed, so it was a hot, miserable trip on the way back. I wasted a lot of time and energy crashing through brush. The summit area was really cool and worth the effort.

The other way to get to Eagle Rest is from San Emigdio Canyon. Based on reports, that route is also brushy as you come up the canyon, and longer, but it's about 1000' less gain and you don't have the crazy rollercoaster on the way back.

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Antimony

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Peak 6000

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Starting up to Eagle Rest

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Dreading the return, plus 700' gain waiting on the other side of Antimony

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Foxtails

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Girl Hiker
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Congrats on conquering Eagles Rest and Antimony. Another one in the books. Hope you found the register.
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Tom Kenney
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Post by Tom Kenney »

'LIKE'

I read a TR (bike-based) about this area, down Cherry Creek and up Tecuya Creek. Many bears were encountered, and a large desert tortoise. You got some great shots, really captures the variety of the area. Thanks!
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Post by dima »

Tom Kenney wrote: Fri Jul 12, 2024 10:54 am 'LIKE'
There's now a button on the top-right.
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Girl Hiker
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Whooohoooo!!!!
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Post by tekewin »

Girl Hiker wrote: Thu Jul 11, 2024 7:30 pm Congrats on conquering Eagles Rest and Antimony. Another one in the books. Hope you found the register.
Yes, the Antimony register was in a broken cement block.

The Eagle Rest register was obvi under a boulder below the main summit block.
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Nate U
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Post by Nate U »

Wow, big day!

Never hiked in the San Emigdio Mountains before, looking forward to a chance to change that. Looks like a stark change in geology with Eagle Rest becoming sandstone as one nears the central valley, but then Antimony is more San Gabriel plutonic intrusive igneous in character. Never studied the geology around there, just going off your photos. But love the apparent diversity.
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tekewin
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Post by tekewin »

Nate U wrote: Sun Jul 14, 2024 6:12 pm Wow, big day!

Never hiked in the San Emigdio Mountains before, looking forward to a chance to change that. Looks like a stark change in geology with Eagle Rest becoming sandstone as one nears the central valley, but then Antimony is more San Gabriel plutonic intrusive igneous in character. Never studied the geology around there, just going off your photos. But love the apparent diversity.
Yes, the geology changes a lot. The rock on Eagle Rest seemed like some kind of conglomerate. The middle bump had almost no rock exposed.
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Girl Hiker
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Post by Girl Hiker »

Thanks Nate for the geology. I love the rock face of Eagles Rest. It looks really cool from a distance.
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