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Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 1:29 pm
by mcphersonm80
Headed up to Mineral King this past weekend. I've been wanting to go here for years and finally set aside a couple days and drove up early Friday morning.

Weather was nice and mild, and the skies were perfectly clear. Forecast for the night had a low of 20 degrees though, so we packed a ton of layers (managed to keep my pack weight down to approximately 500lbs, I'm getting better at this). The trail starts out pretty steep, especially noticeable with a full pack, but quickly levels out and the views keep you sufficiently distracted.

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Mineral King Valley from Early on the Sawtooth Trail


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Empire Mountain Outcroppings


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Sawtooth Peak Comes into View


After a couple hours, we reached Lower Monarch Lake, our basecamp for the trip. From here, I drew up several options. The lakes over Sawtooth Pass, Empire Mountain from Glacier Pass, a fun scramble up nearby Mineral Peak, and Sawtooth Peak itself being our main goal.

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Lower Monarch Lake


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Room with a View


Ended up having the whole place to ourselves Friday night. We set up camp, cooked dinner, and enjoyed the sunset. I got up periodically throughout the night to enjoy the almost-full moon illuminated landscape. Temps dropped to just a hair below 30. Not bad at all.

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Sunset in the Western Sierra


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Orion Rising over the Crest


Given that Sawtooth was our primary goal, we decided first thing Saturday morning we'd give it a shot (this ended up being a good idea). We opted for the south ridge approach, intending to descend the standard ridge route from Sawtooth Pass.

The maintained trail ends at Lower Monarch, and a decent use trail leads you up to Upper Monarch Lake. From there, you're on your own with nothing but slabs, sand, and huge boulders. Upper Monarch is about as scenic as these High Sierra lakes get, perfectly clear water, sandy beaches, and surrounded by towering peaks and crags.


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Mineral Peak above Upper Monarch Lake


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South Shore of Upper Monarch


After a completely unnecessary break at the lake, we continued south up some slabs until they opened up to head east up to the saddle between Sawtooth and the unnamed peak south of it. (In Secor's book, this is the Walter Starr variation). The rock on this stretch is extremely solid and reliable, and you can use it most of the way to avoid the soul-sucking sand. Nothing more than Class 2 scrambling up to this point. Steep and fun.

Once you reach the saddle, incredible views open up over Amphitheater Lake and Needham Mountain.

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Needham Mountain


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Amphitheater Lake and Beyond


From here, you're past the slabs and you head directly up the south ridge. Again, nothing exceeding Class 2 with maybe one or two extremely easy Class 3 moves. Views also open up to the east over the entire Sierra Crest.

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The Sierra Crest (Whitney on the left, Langley far right)


More of the same up the ridge as you approach the summit push. At this point, we took note of some significant cloud build-up heading our way from the west. Almost every trip report I've read of Sawtooth Peak mentions clouds rolling in. I guess this is standard fare up here.

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Something's Brewing

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Upper and Lower Monarch Lakes as we near Sawtooth's Summit


Upward we continued, now racing the clouds. The scrambling soon became some of the most enjoyable bouldering I've ever done, again easy Class 3. Turns out that race with the clouds would end in a tie, as right when we reached the summit rock (a ridiculously narrow fin-shaped rock with a 1200'+ drop to the NE), the clouds smothered our view of the Kaweahs (something I was REALLY looking forward to :x ) and soon would pretty much sock us in. We took a short break at the top, snapped what pictures we could, and decided to head down the ridge towards Sawtooth Pass.


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Boulders increase in size as you ascend, leading to some extremely fun climbing. Holds are abundant and extremely obvious, sometimes hilariously so, almost as if they were designed that way


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Columbine Lake and the Obscured Kaweahs from Sawtooth's Summit


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This is gonna complicate things...


Turns out there is a ridiculous abundance of cairns on Sawtooth and trying to follow them is pointless. We dropped down to the east, hoping to find a path to the ridge. At this point, the clouds limited visibility to about 100 feet or so, and soon we were far below where we should have turned north to join the ridge.

We ended up descending pretty much directly to the ledge between Upper and Lower Monarch Lake. This route is solid Class 3 most of the way, with a handful of Class 4 moves to negotiate some huge outcroppings and minor cliffs. Also, that nice sticky rock we enjoyed earlier in the day sucks over here, as it's covered with a continuous slippery coat of sand and pebbles that want to send you flying into oblivion. Not recommended unless you're comfortable with downclimbing Class 4. No pictures of this part, because my hands were generally wedged between rocks and clinging onto what little holds there were. :shock:

(I'd love to go back up earlier in the season and explore this slope more. There are countless routes up and down)

With a sigh of relief, we reached the shores of Upper Monarch Lake before the clouds condensed enough to do anything. It would have been a lot more fun without the clouds rolling in and temperatures plummeting. We had plenty of daylight left, but you never know how quickly these systems will roll in and ruin your day.

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Seasons Changing at Lower Monarch Lake


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So much for climbing Mineral Peak...


We got back to camp, kicked back and had a bit to eat before the snow came.


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So it begins...


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Okay, that was nothing. NOW it's starting! :shock:


It snowed steadily for about 13 hours, from 4:00pm until about 5:00am, when, as quickly as it started, the clouds cleared and the entire landscape was changed.


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Outside Our Tent at 5:00am, 18-degrees


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Good Riddance, Summer


At sunrise, I scouted the route up to Sawtooth Pass and decided that without our spikes, it wouldn't have been a good idea to go up and over to Columbine Lake as we intended. Glacier Pass to Empire Mt, same story.

So with much of our plans rejected, we decided to just relax around the lake and enjoy the first snow storm of the season (with hopefully many, many more to come).

Early afternoon rolled around, we packed up and headed out completely satisfied, and then ate extremely delicious pizza in Three Rivers for even more satisfaction. Pizza is awesome.


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Lower Monarch Lake


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Somewhere in there is our descent path from the day before... kind of exhibits why we decided to get the hell down quickly and not spend too much time picking the "most fun" way


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Mineral King


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If given a chance, they will eat your radiator hoses. And children.


More pics here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/wattifoto/ ... 808133886/

Cheers 8)

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 1:35 pm
by mangus7175
Amazing photos as usual...wow :shock:

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 3:28 pm
by tekewin
Great report, mcphersonm80.

The Sierra crest pano from the west is awesome. Your photos belong in National Geographic. Vivid!

Bummer that the snow changed your plans, but few get to witness such a seasonal change in one day. Thanks for sharing.

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 8:06 pm
by Uncle Rico
Wow McP. Nice. Some buddies and I foolishly tried to get to the Monarch Lakes over Memorial Day in 2011 without appropriate equipment, but got shut down by snow at about the 8800 foot level. Need another year like that. Nice to be able to see what we missed.

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2013 4:26 pm
by JeffH
Outstanding trip! And you got a change of seasons too.
Sigh, maybe we'll get one down here some day.

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Sun Oct 06, 2013 7:46 am
by bechtt
Got caught in the same system. Clouds settled on me on Mt Eisen and light grapple by the time I made it down to the Big Arroyo. Woke up to snow which killed our chance to climb Squaretop on Sunday. No problem exiting on Monday and no snow at all in Mineral King by 3PM. Pictures. #11 shows Sawtooth with the clouds coming -- probably about the same time you were up there.

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Sun Oct 06, 2013 9:35 am
by ur2slo
Koolish......

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Sun Oct 06, 2013 3:05 pm
by Steven_9407'
Nice TR! Great views. Love the Sierra crest photo and that of Orion. Have to put that one in the bucket list!

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Mon Oct 07, 2013 5:14 pm
by lilbitmo
Super great shots Mcphersonm80 what a great area, thanks for sharing that TR :D :D

Re: Sawtooth Peak/Mineral King Backpack - 9/20-9/22

Posted: Mon Oct 07, 2013 8:57 pm
by Teejate
What an awesome report. Great job man.

I was there just before you but was out toward Hockett Meadows and Evelyn Lake.

Just love that area. Thanks again for sharing this.