Peak 9617 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2021 Peak 9617 towers over Trail Creek and Trail Creek Summit. It has a magnificently rugged northeast face, visible from Trail Creek Road. It separates Basin Gulch from Cold Canyon. This is the first leg of a 3-peak adventure that includes Peak 9617, Peak 10334, and Rock Roll Peak (10,458 feet). … Continue reading

Peak 10014 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2021 Peak 10014 is located at the head of both Bailey Creek and Burnt Aspen Creek. It towers over Kane Canyon to its west. It is most easily climbed via its southeast ridge from the Burnt Aspen Trail. This is the second leg of a 2-peak adventure that includes Peak 9020 … Continue reading

Peak 9020 by Livingston Douglas

This peak is not in the book. Published November 2021 Peak 9020 is a ranked bump on the northwest ridge of Peak 10014. It towers over Kane Creek and has a steep west face. This is the first leg of a 2-peak adventure that includes Peak 9020 and Peak 10014. It covers 7.0 miles with 3,050 feet of elevation gain … Continue reading

Gerdie Hill by Jason Floyd

This peak is not in the book. Note: Jason traverses to this summit from Cavaney Hill. If you are only interested in this peak, you can use his descent route. Jason points out: “Our total stats were 6.23 miles with almost 4,000 feet of elevation gain. You could also easily add Lead Mountain to this route in a long day.” … Continue reading

Cavaney Hill by Jason Floyd

This peak is not in the book. Note: Jason traverses from this peak to Gerdie Hill. His route between the peaks continues on the Gerdie Hill page. Jason points out: “Our total stats were 6.23 miles with almost 4,000 feet of elevation gain. You could also easily add Lead Mountain to this route in a long day.” Published October 2021 … Continue reading

Stormy Point

This peak is not in the book. Published October 2021 Stormy Point is located west-northwest of Riggins on the main Seven Devil Crest. Its west face descends steeply over 5,000 feet to the Snake River. USGS Old Timer Mountain Access and Route, Class 1 Use the link below to read John Platt’s trip report for the details. … Continue reading