The name DeCaLiBron is based on four 14ers you can hit in one loop:
- Mount Democrat 14,154'
- Mount Cameron 14,248'
- Mount Lincoln 14,292'
- Mount Bross 14,178'

Mount Democrat near the start

Democrat from the saddle

Mt. Democrat summit



Climbing Mt. Cameron

Looking back at Mt. Democrat from Cameron
The drop off from Cameron was only 100', then up 150' to Lincoln. Lincoln looked like it might involve a some class 2, but it didn't. Class 1 all the way. Lincoln had a benchmark and reference mark, but no register. It was the highest of the four and had some cool chutes falling away from the summit. I savored a brief bit of solitude on Lincoln and had lunch there before another group arrived. The last section followed a trail that cut across the shoulder of Cameron to Mt. Bross. Like Cameron, Bross was a giant mound with an indistinct high point. The summit was a wind shelter where a group of fifteen was resting and taking photos. The trail off Bross was steep and loose. The main trail dropped off the ridge and was the only part that might have been class 2. I followed advice from 14ers.com and took a use trail further down the ridge, letting me pass about 20 other hikers in a traffic jam on the main trail. When I got back to the parking lot, I packed up and drove north to Dillon, where I had accommodations for the night. I had climbed five 14ers in two days. Looking back, I slightly overestimated the difficulty of Sneffels, and underestimated the DeCaLiBron. 3500' gain at elevation was honest work, though Sneffels was harder due to terrain. With destroyed quads, my strike mission to CO had come to an end. I flew back to the OC the following morning. 7.7 miles, 3500' gain.

Mt. Lincoln from Cameron




Mt. Bross from Lincoln

Bross


Democrat from Bross

The mountains were teeming with pika

King’s Crown (Rhodiola integrifolia)