Bishop Mountain by Livingston Douglas

The summer cabin atop Bishop Mountain. Livingston Douglas Photo

This peak is not in the book. The Bishop Mountain Lookout and its cabin were constructed between 1936 and 1938 by the Civilian Conservation Corps. The lookout and cabin were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. The cabin is currently available as a rental through the recreation.gov website linked below. Note that Livingston climbed the peak … Continue reading

Moonshine Mountain by Livingston Douglas

Moonshine Mountain as viewed from the west. Livingston Douglas Photos

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2020 Moonshine Mountain is a thickly forested mound with a narrow east-west summit ridge. It is located south of Thurmon Ridge, east of Bishop Mountain, and southeast of Green Canyon Pass. This climb is the second peak in a three-peak adventure that includes Thurmon Ridge (7,338 feet), Moonshine Mountain (6,931 feet), … Continue reading

Little Butte by Livingston Douglas

Little Butte as viewed from the west. Livingston Douglas Photo

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2020 Little Butte is a forested hump located west of US-20 and southwest of Island Park. It is a ranked summit and is a reasonable scramble via its north ridge from Little Butte Road/FSR-317. You may have a harder time dealing with badly-rutted FSR-317 than with the climb up the north … Continue reading

Peak 8773 by Livingston Douglas

Peak 8773 as viewed from the south, from the summit area atop Peak 8613. Livingston Douglas Photo

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2020 Peak 8773 sits above Webber Creek to its south. It is a gentle hump that is a mix of forest and open scrub. In actuality, Peak 8773 is a ranked summit that is a point on the east spur of the southeast ridge of magnificent Fritz Peak (9,738 feet). It … Continue reading

Fritz Peak by Livingston Douglas

Fritz Peak and its rugged southwest aspects including its Class 3 southwest face (left of center). Livingston Douglas Photo

Climbing and access information for this peak is on Page 327 of the book. Published November 2020 Fritz Peak is an impressive summit with some very rugged aspects. The southwest side of the southeast ridge is particularly wicked and should be avoided. The southeast ridge itself (discussed in the book) is no picnic. The southwest ridge is challenging but doable … Continue reading