Pallett Benchmark North ridge
Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 11:11 pm
Today I filled in some glaring gaps in my knowledge of the North side of the San Gabriels. I went to Devil's Punchbowl park intending to climb some peak I've never been to, preferably off trail at least partially, and preferably as a loop at least somewhat. Done and done.
The first order of business was to scramble around the Sandrocks and to check out the Punchbowl:
There's a creek flowing out of it. Neat! Then I walked to the Burkhart trail by following the High Desert trail West. This section is now signed as the PCT in a few places, so the frog closure is probably permanent.
After the Burkhart trail crosses Cruthers creek, it mostly runs well below the ridge West of this creek. This ridge eventually ends up at the Pallett Benchmark on Pleasant View Ridge. So the plan was to walk up to the benchmark by scrambling up this ridge, then come back via the trail. The lower section is brushy. The start looks like this (the trail contours to the left; the ridge is straight ahead):
There's a use trail here and there, and I found somebody's fire ring. It's very lightly traveled, however. The good news is that the brush gets more manageable as you ascend over some bumps (note the destination in the background at right):
The bad news is that the going gets much steeper as you ascend. The start of the final climb:
Soon after the final climb begins there's a surprisingly well-defined section of use trail cutting to the right, and somebody even sawed a dead tree blocking the path:
This turns out to be a large switchback that soon peters out. It's not really needed anyway, since it's clear what to do here: climb!
The last section (a bit over 1000ft vertical) is very steep, but eventually you top out at one of those triangular posts. I LOVE ending a long climb at one of these!
The ridge doesn't end directly at the benchmark, which is a short walk to the West:
There is no register, although some of the rocks make me think there was one at some point. The view of the Mojave is very nice, and the long ridge I just ascended is visible:
Will Thrall Peak is a short walk across a saddle to the East. It has a container where a register lived previously, but it does not live here anymore.
And there's a nice plaque commemorating Will Thrall:
Mt. Williamson looks like this:
And a whole slew of peaks poke out to the South:
In order from left to right:
Santiago/Modjeska (way out there)
Unnamed ~7150ft peak by Cedar Springs
Three-headed Snowcrest ski area
Unnamed ~7180ft peak SE of Buckhorn Spring
East Twin
Akawie (in front)
Waterman
Winston (barely poking up above West slope of Waterman)
San Gabriel
Disappointment
Unnamed bump on Waterman's West ridge (in front of Disappointment)
Deception
Lawlor
I took in this pleasant view for a while while thinking about how just how easy this ridge was. It was expectedly brushy and steep, but. I don't think I had to use my hands once. Compare this to the adjacent ridge ascending Mount Williamson that walker climbed earlier: https://eispiraten.com/viewtopic.php?t=6413. I was eyeing this ridge the entire time and it clearly has some bumps, but it wasn't visibly different; maybe I needed a different angle.
Today's haul of birthday balloons: only 3. Apparently I need to get deeper into the wilderness.
The first order of business was to scramble around the Sandrocks and to check out the Punchbowl:
There's a creek flowing out of it. Neat! Then I walked to the Burkhart trail by following the High Desert trail West. This section is now signed as the PCT in a few places, so the frog closure is probably permanent.
After the Burkhart trail crosses Cruthers creek, it mostly runs well below the ridge West of this creek. This ridge eventually ends up at the Pallett Benchmark on Pleasant View Ridge. So the plan was to walk up to the benchmark by scrambling up this ridge, then come back via the trail. The lower section is brushy. The start looks like this (the trail contours to the left; the ridge is straight ahead):
There's a use trail here and there, and I found somebody's fire ring. It's very lightly traveled, however. The good news is that the brush gets more manageable as you ascend over some bumps (note the destination in the background at right):
The bad news is that the going gets much steeper as you ascend. The start of the final climb:
Soon after the final climb begins there's a surprisingly well-defined section of use trail cutting to the right, and somebody even sawed a dead tree blocking the path:
This turns out to be a large switchback that soon peters out. It's not really needed anyway, since it's clear what to do here: climb!
The last section (a bit over 1000ft vertical) is very steep, but eventually you top out at one of those triangular posts. I LOVE ending a long climb at one of these!
The ridge doesn't end directly at the benchmark, which is a short walk to the West:
There is no register, although some of the rocks make me think there was one at some point. The view of the Mojave is very nice, and the long ridge I just ascended is visible:
Will Thrall Peak is a short walk across a saddle to the East. It has a container where a register lived previously, but it does not live here anymore.
And there's a nice plaque commemorating Will Thrall:
Mt. Williamson looks like this:
And a whole slew of peaks poke out to the South:
In order from left to right:
Santiago/Modjeska (way out there)
Unnamed ~7150ft peak by Cedar Springs
Three-headed Snowcrest ski area
Unnamed ~7180ft peak SE of Buckhorn Spring
East Twin
Akawie (in front)
Waterman
Winston (barely poking up above West slope of Waterman)
San Gabriel
Disappointment
Unnamed bump on Waterman's West ridge (in front of Disappointment)
Deception
Lawlor
I took in this pleasant view for a while while thinking about how just how easy this ridge was. It was expectedly brushy and steep, but. I don't think I had to use my hands once. Compare this to the adjacent ridge ascending Mount Williamson that walker climbed earlier: https://eispiraten.com/viewtopic.php?t=6413. I was eyeing this ridge the entire time and it clearly has some bumps, but it wasn't visibly different; maybe I needed a different angle.
Today's haul of birthday balloons: only 3. Apparently I need to get deeper into the wilderness.