Continued...
Day 3 of a Southern Sierra roadtrip saw Karl and I doing some peaks around the
Sherman Pass area. It was a marked change from the previous day where we were
3,000ft lower, contending with warm temps, poison oak, ticks and other
unpleasantness. By contrast, today's summits involved hikes through open
forest understory, easy cross-country travel and delightful high country views,
all with more pleasant temperatures.
Peak 8,420ft
This summit is located about 2mi ESE of Sherman Pass, dividing the Trout and
Machine Creek drainages. Forest roads from the northwest
might be able
to get a high-clearance vehicle within half a mile of the summit, but these
were currently closed. Instead, we started from the pavement at the
,
about 3.5mi each way. It is a delightful trail, easy to follow with
on the righthand side, descending about 600ft over the
course of three miles. About halfway along, a is
reached, beyond which
motorcycles are not allowed. Logs have been placed over the trail to
discourage them, but it seems some have taken it more as a challenge.
Where the creek makes a sharp turn to the left to go around the
north and east sides of Peak 8,420ft, we left the trail to climb
on the northwest side. There are a number of rock
outcrops vying for the highpoint and the topo map shows three equal-height
closed-contours. We bypassed the two northern ones, to the
southern one that LoJ had identified as the summit. was
forested with poor view, but it was immediately clear that the highpoint was to
the north. So we backtracked and climbed that which had
better views anyway (LoJ has since moved the highpoint to the correct location).
The views sweep out over with only
of the granite domes and features within the Domeland
Wilderness to the south (the summit lies on the northern boundary of the
Wilderness). We left before heading back down, using much
the same route. We were by 10a, the outing taking us three and a
quarter hours.
Sherman Peak - Peak 9,611ft
These two summits rise above Sherman Pass on the north side, the highest summits
on that side of the pass for many miles. They lie outside Wilderness areas and
can be visited by 4x4 vehicles in the summer months. The COVID-19 pandemic has
left most of these roads still closed, or at least not cleared of winter
downfall. We attempted to find a driveable route from the east, but were
stopped by downed trees on one of the spur roads we attempted. Since we were
within about a mile and a half of Sherman Peak, we decided to just
from the blockage rather than spend more time looking for a
better road. It took us a little under an hour to make our way west upslope,
using a combination of and , eventually
meeting up with the a few hundred feet below the
summit in the east side. has some
solar arrays and small telecom installations, the highpoint found in a small
jumble of rock just behind them. The best views are to the north and east with a
sweeping panorama of the Sierra Crest from Owens Peak to the southeast, all
the way to Kings-Kern Divide in the northeast. The snow-capped Kaweahs can be
clearly seen as well as the higher summits around Mineral King across the Golden
Trout Wilderness to the north. Despite its popularity, or perhaps because of
it, we found no register in the rocks, and didn't leave one of our own.
After yesterday's long outing, Karl decided to take it easier today and skip the
remaining agenda. I suggested he could take the Sherman Peak Trail back to
Sherman Pass and wait for me there, and I gave him an overly optimistic estimate
of how long it would take me to get back. Peak 9,611ft lies almost two miles to
, so I would end up hussling more than I might otherwise
so as not to keep Karl waiting longer than necessary. I went off down the
northwest side of Sherman Peak at a slow jog, happy to find the cross-country
travel as easy I might have hoped. between the two peaks is
found about 2/3 of the way to the second summit, the saddle crossed by a 4WD
road that hadn't seen any traffic yet this year. This is followed by a 300-foot
, a traverse around the east side of a lower summit,
then a final 200-foot climb to the highpoint, found in
buried in trees, much as expected. I
checked a few other points to be sure, finding them all lower before returning
to the original point where I left
and immediately started back down.
At the saddle for a second time, I found that I could bypass Sherman Peak
altogether on the return by utilizing that traverses
low on the north side, eventually reconnecting with one of the older roads that
Karl and I had utilized earlier. The net result was that I got
by 1p, ahead of plan, less than 3hrs for the six mile
outing. I drove back out to the pavement and picked up Karl at the
Sherman Pass overlook where he was nearly successful in taking a nap - pesky
vehicles kept driving in, and finding Karl lying prone in the dirt, they'd
invariably check to see if he was Ok.
Peak 8,886ft
We drove back down to the start of the Cherry Hill Rd on the west side of the
pass where we'd left Karl's Element earlier in the morning. I had one more peak
in mind before calling it a day, so we made plans to meet up again in Big
Meadow where Tom and his crew would be staying for the weekend. Peak 8,886ft
lies a few miles west of Big Meadow, a subsidiary summit on the long NW Ridge
of Cannell Peak. The topo map shows a spur road (23S13) nearly going over the
summit, but the road has had some realignment and no longer goes this high.
Instead, the road ends at a small turnaround 600ft below the summit on the NE
side. Though it is somewhat overgrown, I ignored the pinstriping and drove to
the and went up cross-country on foot
. It was less than half a mile to and took
just over 20min. The summit rocks were
partially open to views, though they were growing hazy as the afternoon wore on.
I left a last
here before beating a retreat back to the jeep, finishing
up at 3:30p. There was still more than four hours of daylight, but I wanted to
rest up for some harder stuff planned over the next couple days...
Continued...