Winston Peak, Twin Peaks, Waterman Mountain 1/10/14
Posted: Sat Jan 11, 2014 8:47 am
I asked Sean Green if he would be interested in doing this hike with me. He agreed, even though he had done them before, saying that his friend Willie Price was also interested. They also wanted to do some bouldering along the way. We planned to meet at 9:45 AM at Buckhorn. Before tackling the big hike, I wanted to climb nearby Winston Peak as a warm up. I was up and down Winston Peak in about 30 minutes, then met up with Sean and Willie.
Parking at Cloud Burst Summit
Winston summit blocks
Winston Ridge, lower front
It was a balmy 48F at the trailhead and would stay warm most of the day. I started with 3 layers and quickly dropped to 2. Sean rocked 1 layer, sandals and no socks. We started up the Waterman Trail and descended to the Twin Peaks Saddle. Heading up toward East Twin, Sean and Willie started pulling away from me. I'd like to blame it on my overstuffed pack, having done Winston Peak first, or my age, but none of that mattered. They were simply stronger hikers. I caught up with them on Twin Peaks East summit, where we signed the register and went down the other side a little for a view of Triplet Rocks.
Start of the Waterman Trail
First view of Twin Peaks East and West
Sean and Willie on the Waterman Trail
Saddle sign
Approaching the Twin Peaks East summit
Willie looking down the south side of Twin Peaks
Sean and I on the Twin Peaks East summit boulder
Twin Peaks West
Triplet Rocks
We left Twin Peaks East and followed a pretty good use trail toward West. We stopped a couple of times for Willie and Sean to climb some boulder routes. During the boulder breaks, I saved my energy for the summit blocks and rest of the hike. The West summit block was the hardest to climb, but still probably didn't reach class 3. We signed the West register and spent some time taking in the best views of the day. Instead of ascending Twin Peaks East to get back to the use trail, we went cross country back to the saddle, stopping for the toughest boulder climb of the day. There were a couple of sketchy moments as Sean and Willie navigated the boulder with a thin ledge up an exposed route.
Willie tackling a boulder between East and West Twins
Looking back at Twin Peaks East
Sean and Willie on Twin Peaks West
San Gabriel front range and Saddleback rising from the haze in the distance
Wilson and friends on the right, Santa Cruz and Catalina islands in the distance
Picking a route up the boulders
Back at Twin Peaks Saddle, we began the tedious climb up Waterman. We were all running low on water, but I had just enough to make it back to the car. Sean and Willie filled up at the one running stream coming down Waterman. They pulled ahead of me again on this stretch and I would catch up with them on the Waterman summit. When I hit the Waterman summit junction, shadows were creeping into the forest, the wind was picking up, and it was getting colder. I went back to 3 layers and put on my gloves. On the Waterman summit, I added some ear protection. I was only the summit long enough to grab a few photos and the benchmark on the class 2 summit block. We all were ready to get out of the wind and down quickly, so we decided to skip the trail and head down the main gully finding a few patches of snow. Before long, we hit an unexpected trail that ran along the gully and eventually hit one of the Waterman ski slopes. We descended that and found a fire road that intersected the main trail near the bottom. It was a fun day that quenched my adventure craving for the week, if not longer.
Limber(?) pines in fading light on the Waterman summit
Waterman benchmark labelled "TWIN"
Waterman summit block
Ski lifts on the descent
Sunset on the Angeles Crest Highway
Track
Parking at Cloud Burst Summit
Winston summit blocks
Winston Ridge, lower front
It was a balmy 48F at the trailhead and would stay warm most of the day. I started with 3 layers and quickly dropped to 2. Sean rocked 1 layer, sandals and no socks. We started up the Waterman Trail and descended to the Twin Peaks Saddle. Heading up toward East Twin, Sean and Willie started pulling away from me. I'd like to blame it on my overstuffed pack, having done Winston Peak first, or my age, but none of that mattered. They were simply stronger hikers. I caught up with them on Twin Peaks East summit, where we signed the register and went down the other side a little for a view of Triplet Rocks.
Start of the Waterman Trail
First view of Twin Peaks East and West
Sean and Willie on the Waterman Trail
Saddle sign
Approaching the Twin Peaks East summit
Willie looking down the south side of Twin Peaks
Sean and I on the Twin Peaks East summit boulder
Twin Peaks West
Triplet Rocks
We left Twin Peaks East and followed a pretty good use trail toward West. We stopped a couple of times for Willie and Sean to climb some boulder routes. During the boulder breaks, I saved my energy for the summit blocks and rest of the hike. The West summit block was the hardest to climb, but still probably didn't reach class 3. We signed the West register and spent some time taking in the best views of the day. Instead of ascending Twin Peaks East to get back to the use trail, we went cross country back to the saddle, stopping for the toughest boulder climb of the day. There were a couple of sketchy moments as Sean and Willie navigated the boulder with a thin ledge up an exposed route.
Willie tackling a boulder between East and West Twins
Looking back at Twin Peaks East
Sean and Willie on Twin Peaks West
San Gabriel front range and Saddleback rising from the haze in the distance
Wilson and friends on the right, Santa Cruz and Catalina islands in the distance
Picking a route up the boulders
Back at Twin Peaks Saddle, we began the tedious climb up Waterman. We were all running low on water, but I had just enough to make it back to the car. Sean and Willie filled up at the one running stream coming down Waterman. They pulled ahead of me again on this stretch and I would catch up with them on the Waterman summit. When I hit the Waterman summit junction, shadows were creeping into the forest, the wind was picking up, and it was getting colder. I went back to 3 layers and put on my gloves. On the Waterman summit, I added some ear protection. I was only the summit long enough to grab a few photos and the benchmark on the class 2 summit block. We all were ready to get out of the wind and down quickly, so we decided to skip the trail and head down the main gully finding a few patches of snow. Before long, we hit an unexpected trail that ran along the gully and eventually hit one of the Waterman ski slopes. We descended that and found a fire road that intersected the main trail near the bottom. It was a fun day that quenched my adventure craving for the week, if not longer.
Limber(?) pines in fading light on the Waterman summit
Waterman benchmark labelled "TWIN"
Waterman summit block
Ski lifts on the descent
Sunset on the Angeles Crest Highway
Track