Fish Fork

TRs for the San Gabriel Mountains.
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dima
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Post by dima »

Not that long ago I would do big trips through the mountains. In the last year or two I mostly switched to trip-report-inappropriate mountain activities, and temporarily put big days aside. But plenty of areas remain unexplored, and I just went back this past weekend to do a thing. Things feel very different now :)

The plan was to climb the North ridge of Iron Mt. This is remote and challenging, but decently well documented. And I haven't done it yet. Various previous reports:

- https://www.summitpost.org/north-ridge/297109
- https://www.trvrsoutdoors.com/blogs/tra ... orth-ridge
- viewtopic.php?t=7636
- viewtopic.php?t=6469
- viewtopic.php?t=1635
- viewtopic.php?t=7816

I've been eyeing this ridge on multiple previous trips:

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Fish Fork is the big drainage on the left of the photo. The ridge is to the right of that.

Alright. So I was pretty sure I wasn't strong enough at the moment to do the whole loop in a day (smart!), so I planned to hike up in the afternoon to the mouth of Fish Fork, sleep at fish fork camp, and do the climb the following day. I did that, arriving just as the sun set at ~ 5PM. A bit over 3 hours from parking to Fish Fork Camp. There's a lot of water in the river, and it was nice to see it so healthy at this point in the season. Made travel wet and slow, though. The usual logs and rock crossings below the bridge are all gone, and you're walking in the river a lot. And that all goes without saying above the bridge.

To everybody's shock, there were 3 hikers camped at fish fork camp when I got there. They were doing a 3-day one-way traverse of the East Fork. It was nice to chat with them before I went to bed. The plan was to get up early, and to start walking as early as sunlight would allow. It turns out that my sleeping pad leaks, so it wasn't the most comfortable night, but I was off at 6:30AM.

The route goes into Fish Fork, then turns right into South Fork Fish Fork. At some point you turn right to climb up the ridge. Somewhere here: https://caltopo.com/map.html#ll=34.3032 ... o=f16a&n=1

The recommended route was to climb the prominent gully at 4100ft. headsizeburrito picked up the ridge earlier, and _kicks_rocks_ even earlier than that. None of them seemed excited about their choice, so I planned to take the gully.

Fish Fork is wild. The going was slow in the main branch of the East Fork, but slowed down significantly in Fish Fork. You are CONSTANTLY climbing over rocks or trees or brush. Nobody goes over there.

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I think it took me over 2 hours to make it to the gully. It didn't look like anything, and I actually walked by it, and had to backtrack. You know it's the right spot when you look up, and see a gap:

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Here I even found some miner trash, which I haven't seen for miles at this point:

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I can't imagine it's worth the effort for them to go way over here. The gully doesn't look all that great at the bottom:

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I climbed that mossy wall, and it was medium-open for a bit

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Then there's a much bigger mossy wall:

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To either side are steep walls of terrible rock and lots of brush. It's all passable, but sketchy. I walked around for a bit, looking for a line I'd feel comfortable going up AND down, if need be. There wasn't one. I was doing well on time, and felt fine. But making sketchy, committing moves in the middle of absolutely nowhere all by myself wasn't something I was excited about, so I decided to abort. So I completed the approach and a tiny bit of the climb, but the approach was something like 10 miles of ROUGH terrain. Mad respect to those that did this all in one go. I'm not sure if I lost some of the mentality that made this feel OK before. This one might just be tougher than the other routes I've done solo. I'm going to climb the SW ridge of Iron Mt in the near future to see. I've done that one before, and it felt long, but relatively straightforward.

So I went back the way I came, going slow, stopping to smell the roses, and hauling out quite a bit of garbage. There're lots of mushrooms in Fish Fork, some growing in unexpected places

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I finally saw the outflow of Falls Gulch

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And Clark Gulch

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And found more mine stuff

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And some of the local critters

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Not happy about the quitting, but maybe that just means I need to get stronger.
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Matthew
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Post by Matthew »

Looks spectacular out there! I gotta explore east fork one day
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Sean
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Post by Sean »

Thanks for the report. That moss looks like it's hiding something. Glad you stayed safe.
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JeffH
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Post by JeffH »

Right decision even if it wasn't the original plan. You still got to see some nice country.
"Argue for your limitations and sure enough they're yours".
Donald Shimoda
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HikeUp
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Post by HikeUp »

Seeing sheep is always a good time!

Always a good thing to consider before climbing up is the question of "can it be down climbed". Would having a capable partner changed your mind?
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Tom.Kane
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Post by Tom.Kane »

What a trip!
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dima
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Post by dima »

HikeUp wrote: Would having a capable partner changed your mind?
Definitely. Being able to talk about it would have made this a different situation entirely.

I just looked at some of the old reports, and they confirm that I was doing fine on time. LD's old report even talks about the big headwall where I turned around, saying they went around on the right. It sucks there too, but more motivation could have been the key here.
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AW~
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Post by AW~ »

Hmm...did you use your gps/satellite ?
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dima
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Post by dima »

I have a satellite rescue beacon thing, but I was a good boy, and bailed before needing to use it.
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Nate U
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Post by Nate U »

Good on you for resisting the temptations of "summit fever" and turning back when you got far enough outside of your comfort zone. Our comfort zones fluctuate with many variables, and all of them should be respected! I hope to work myself up to something like this route, but I need more big days navigating off-trail in the Gabes with experienced people before I'd attempt it.
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