


From the third Wonder Lake

Scree slope, steeper than it looks here

Final approach
After a slog up the scree, I took a break below the final scramble to the summit. I ascended the most prominent gully. With minimal route finding, it stayed class 2. At the top, the summit was a short hop. With perfect weather, views were sublime. I had a front row view of Mt. Humphries and Mt. Emerson. Most of the Wonder Lakes were visible as well as the lakes along the Pass trail. The Sierra Club has called this peak George Davis since the 1940s. I located the register in a metal box and found it titled Mt. Thoreau. Inside the front cover was an excerpt from a book written by a group of mountaineers to argue for the name change. I found it quite interesting, though I have no preference on the name.
Here is what various entities call it as of 9/6/2024:
USGS: Peak 12691
Sierra Club: Mt. George Davis
Garmin: Mt. Thoreau
Mountaineers for Thoreau: Mt. Thoreau
Peakbagger: Mt. George Davis
Summitpost: Mt. George Davis
Open Street Map: Mt. Thoreau
After signing in, I took photos and flew the drone at the highest elevation I had attempted. With little wind, it performed admirably. I spent about 30 minutes total on the summit. It looked like the side to Piute Pass might also go as class 2, but I couldn't see all the way down. When I got off the summit, my pole was standing right where I left it. The descent was uneventful, though I stumbled down a slightly different way on the low cliffs and around the lakes. I was back to the trail before I saw anyone else.

Humphries from George Davis summit






Mt. Emerson (gray) and Piute Crags (red)
