Sardine and "Wheeler" peak in the northern Wasatch
Posted: Sun Jun 04, 2023 7:46 am
The family has been staying at my parent's new house in Ogden Utah for the last week. (Until last year they had lived in Maine) The hiking around here is awesome. Yesterday I got out with my father/OG hiking partner in crime to tackle bit of springtime peak bagging in the Wasatch. My father is 67 and still a force to be reckoned with on the trail.
We started at the Snowbasin ski resort Maples trailhead, and travelled through an idyllic forest of Aspen and Gambel Oak while dodging mountain bikers bombing down the mountain at 300mph. Once attaining the ridge, we did an off-trail scramble to bag an unnamed bump (which I call Wheeler Peak) that overlooks Wheeler Canyon, where I had taken my son Forest on an overland sledding adventure last christmas. Here is Forest mid-sledding adventure, with "Wheeler Peak" behind him. This was my phone's lock screen all spring, and its pretty hard to have a peak staring at you from your lock screen for a few months without feeling a uncontrollable desire to bag it:
My experience scrambling around the Northern Wasatch is still limited, but its been awesome every time. The ridge to Wheeler Peak proved to be comprised of scrubby Gambel Oak on the south face, majestic conifers on the north, all interspersed by meadows of beautiful wildflowers, punctuated by craggy exposures of 360 mya dolomitic limestone of the Humbug formation.
No good views and generally all very ugly, as seems to be the usual in the Wasatch. This is Mt Ogden and its friends behind my father.
enormous ant hill amongst the Gambel Oaks:
There were a plethora of Moose/Elk tracks. Not small animals.
Back on the trail on Sardine Peak it started sleeting on us, and you could see it was snowing higher up.
Feeling fortunate my sister in law got a job at the University here, and my Parents have followed. Worse places for a peak bagger to have to spend some time.
9.14 miles, 2472ft elevation gain.
We started at the Snowbasin ski resort Maples trailhead, and travelled through an idyllic forest of Aspen and Gambel Oak while dodging mountain bikers bombing down the mountain at 300mph. Once attaining the ridge, we did an off-trail scramble to bag an unnamed bump (which I call Wheeler Peak) that overlooks Wheeler Canyon, where I had taken my son Forest on an overland sledding adventure last christmas. Here is Forest mid-sledding adventure, with "Wheeler Peak" behind him. This was my phone's lock screen all spring, and its pretty hard to have a peak staring at you from your lock screen for a few months without feeling a uncontrollable desire to bag it:
My experience scrambling around the Northern Wasatch is still limited, but its been awesome every time. The ridge to Wheeler Peak proved to be comprised of scrubby Gambel Oak on the south face, majestic conifers on the north, all interspersed by meadows of beautiful wildflowers, punctuated by craggy exposures of 360 mya dolomitic limestone of the Humbug formation.
No good views and generally all very ugly, as seems to be the usual in the Wasatch. This is Mt Ogden and its friends behind my father.
enormous ant hill amongst the Gambel Oaks:
There were a plethora of Moose/Elk tracks. Not small animals.
Back on the trail on Sardine Peak it started sleeting on us, and you could see it was snowing higher up.
Feeling fortunate my sister in law got a job at the University here, and my Parents have followed. Worse places for a peak bagger to have to spend some time.
9.14 miles, 2472ft elevation gain.