Lookout Point by Livingston Douglas

Climbing and access information for this peak is on Page 332 of the book. Published December 2020 Lookout Point is located in the Western Centennials. It sits at the head of East Steel Creek and Allan Canyon. It is an open summit with magnificent views. Lookout Point is most easily reached via an ATV trail/road from Lone Pine Pass to … Continue reading

Little Table Mountain by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published December 2020 Little Table Mountain is located in the Western Centennials. It is a rather nondescript sagebrush hump with an ill-defined high point (though it does have a cairn and an ID/MT boundary marker). The Continental Divide Trail gets you pretty close to the summit area. If you can drive to Pete … Continue reading

Peak 7423 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published December 2020 Peak 7423 is located in the Western Centennials above Porcupine Pass (7,062 feet). It is one of three humps of similar height that are south or east of the pass and are close to each other: Peak 7496, Point 7388, and Peak 7429. This area is thickly forested and navigation … Continue reading

Peak 8450 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published December 2020 Peak 8450 is located in the Western Centennials above Porcupine Pass (7,062 feet). It is a long, narrow ridgeline summit that is northwest of the pass. It is most easily climbed via its southeast ridge from Porcupine Pass. USGS Corral Creek Access Porcupine Pass (7,062 feet) is reached from I-15 … Continue reading

Peak 9220 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Please note that the book identifies Peak 9220 as “Big Table Mountain” on Page 332 but that mountain is actually on the west side of East Camas Creek, much farther west on the Continental Divide than Peak 9220 (as per the USGS topo map and LOJ). Published December 2020 Peak 9220 is located … Continue reading

Peak 8026 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published December 2020 Peak 8026 is a forested hump that separates Little Creek to its west from Ching Creek to its east. The easiest ascent route is the southeast ridge from the Aldous Lake/CDT Trailhead at the end of FSR-027/Aldous Lake Road. The south ridge is a much more punishing endeavor. Trust me. … Continue reading