This peak is not in the book. Published November 2018 Peak 8438 is located about a mile west-northwest of Harrington Peak. It sits at the head of Rattlesnake Basin and has plenty of aspens on it to qualify it as a member of the Aspen Range. Aspen Benchmark (8,410 feet) is about ¾ mile due west of Peak 8438. This … Continue reading
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Outdated climbing and access information for this peak is on Page 368 of the book. I have updated the access and route information for the standard route below. Livingston Douglas has provided a detailed writeup covering a new multi peak excursion beginning in Rattlesnake Canyon that he climbed in 2018. Updated July 2022 Harrington Peak is the tallest summit in … Continue reading
This peak is not in the book. Published November 2018 There are two unnamed peaks that straddle Rattlesnake Canyon. Peak 8098 is located on the south side of the canyon. It separates Rattlesnake Canyon from Big Canyon. It is a seldom-visited summit that sees more hunters and shepherds than hikers. Its cohort, Peak 8140, is located on the north side … Continue reading
This peak is not in the book. Published November 2018 Peak 7631 is the highest of three scrub-covered hills above the large meadow at the confluence of the mouths of the three Sulphur Canyons (North, Middle, and South). Peak 7470 and Peak 7389 are the other two hills. All three of these ranked summits are visible from the junction of North … Continue reading
This peak is not in the book. Published November 2018 Peak 7389 is one of three scrub-covered hills above the large meadow at the confluence of the mouths of all three of the Sulphur Canyons (North, Middle, and South). Peak 7470 and Peak 7631 are the other two hills. All three of these ranked summits are visible from the junction … Continue reading
This peak is not in the book. Published November 2018 The easiest ascent route for South Sulphur BM is its northwest ridge via the junction of North Sulphur Canyon Road and South Sulphur Canyon Road. It is on beautiful, wide-open terrain (desert scrub). Unfortunately, this route is almost entirely on private land. Although I did not see any “NO TRESPASSING” … Continue reading