Thu, Feb 14, 2013
|
With: | Adam Jantz |
The highest summits in the Diablo Range are located in the southeast corner of
San Benito County on BLM land designated as the Clear Creek Management Area. It
used to be called the Clear Creek Recreational Area and was a very popular OHV
site until it was discovered that all those OHV vehicles were trailing clouds
of dust in the dry summer months containing naturally occurring asbestos
particles. Since asbestos has been associated with lung cancer, the government
decided there was some risk to human health and closed off the entire area in
2008 until a comprehensive plan could be developed on what to do about it. It's
been almost five years now and there is still no plan. The recreational users
are up in arms, believing the government plan all along was to limit OHV use in
the area and that
they're using the asbestos issue as a convenient excuse. Though
officially closed, it seems no physical barriers have been erected to keep
vehicles out. I've been to the area on several occasions since 2008 and have
found the roads ungated. The management area is huge, encompassing several
hundred square miles, and one gets the feeling of isolation with nary a soul
to be found. The main problem for access now is that with the closure the roads
are no longer maintained and they are falling into disrepair. High clearance &
4WD are needed especially in the winter season when the roads can be muddy and
treacherous. I had talked Adam into joining me for an excursion to the area to
give him some 4x4 fun (and me access, since my own vehicles are woefully not up
to the task). He's not so hot on the mundane peak hikes and
bushwhacking some might entail, so I enticed him with an additional day of
rock climbing in Pinnacles NP where he could do all the leading. We had done
this the day prior, spending the night camped off New Idria Rd. In the morning
we drove to the old mining town (current population:
one) and
into the Management Area.
The primary peaks I was interested in were two CC-listed summits,
Loma Atravesada
and Wright Mountain. Secondary was a list of higher named summits around San
Benito Mountain, the county highpoint which both of us had visited on previous
occasions when we were pursuing the list of county highpoints. The only sign
of closure we found was a single orange sign
indicating "Road Closed" alongside
the roadway. The ground was wet in places, icy in others, with some snow found
on the north-facing slopes. It had been about a week since the last storm had
come through the area. Because it was on our way and as Adam commented, "we're
right there", we first paid a visit to San Benito Mountain, driving to
the top where a gate surrounds a tower complex.
The highpoint
is located a minute's scramble on the east side up a pile of rock.
The register there suggests the
OHV folks have not neglected the area anymore than us peakbaggers.
40 minutes more driving towards the south brought us to the
southwest side of Wright Mountain. There is no road going to this
non-descript summit, but the
hike to the top takes only five minutes
through modest brush. An old wooden stake, some rusty wire and a rusty steel
pole sunk into the ground were all we found at
the sad summit. The best
view was to
the south, looking down Pine Canyon to the Los Gatos Creek
drainage. Through the trees to
the north we could make out the
highpoint of Loma Atravesada about two miles away, across the Arroyo Leona
drainage. We
retreated via the same route, driving east to the
edge of the management area. We encountered
a closed gate, the same we
had found when heading to Joaquin Rocks a few years earlier. I spent some time
closely inspecting the locks and chain which paid off - I found one of the links
had been cut through to allow the gate to be opened. This would save
us more
than a mile of hiking each way today. Had I found it a few years ago, it would
have saved us five miles of hiking each way to Joaquin Rocks. We parked at
a junction with an old road that runs along the ridgeline connecting
Loma Atravesada to the main crest of Joaquin Ridge. The route to our Loma
Atravesada (also called Three Sisters on the older 15' map) would be about three
and half miles. Two miles of this would be
on road, the rest
cross-country. It was the latter part that I was most concerned about of
course and would prove the most interesting of the day.
The road we followed has been used periodically by motorcyclists, but it has
been many years since a truck or other 4-wheeled vehicle has driven on it. We
were happy to be able to use it without any bushwhacking, making good time for
the first two mile stretch. It was a pleasant stroll on the ridgeline for the
most part with some open grassy stretches and views off both sides,
including a good look at Loma Atravesada
in front of us. Some of the
brush we could see ahead was thick and difficult-looking. It would be no picnic,
that much was certain. We reached the end of the easy part where the road peaks
briefly before starting to drop to the southwest. A
wall of brush was
almost immediately encountered on the ridge. Had we stayed atop the crest of the
ridge and pushed through the immediate difficulty, we'd have quickly found
easier going behind it. This we found on the way back, but at the moment it
looked impenetrable. So we dropped east off the ridge for a hundred feet or so,
looking for a way through. We ended up
ducking and crawling through a
nasty stretch of mature chaparral. It took us only ten minutes to cover the
hundred yards to
easier ground, but it seemed much, much longer. The
dust from the dead layers of brush would get in our throats and eyes.
Adam spent some time trying to clear one eye that had picked up a
piece of something uncomfortable.
Past this initial section, things got easier as we climbed
more open slopes to the main ridgeline that defines Loma Atravesada.
Ten minutes later we were on the ridge
heading west and the easy stuff
soon gave out. We needed to drop down the west side of a local highpoint to a
saddle and this half mile section in the
middle of the ridge traverse proved the bushwhacking crux. There were no open
sections, no animal trails that we could find, just
heavy brush up to
head level, a mix of burned old stuff and vigorous new growth. I took
a sharp jab
in the leg that didn't rip my pants but somehow managed
to puncture the skin underneath and draw out some blood. We discovered
ticks on our clothing and spent some time doing periodic tick checks
and flicking them off. To his credit, Adam didn't get freaked out by the
parasites as he had on a previous trip to
Nevada. Perhaps he was growing more used to them. We ended up taking slightly
different paths through the heavy brush, each of us hoping to encounter a lucky
find of easy going, neither of us finding it. After half an hour of such
nonesense wandering along the ridge and pushing through this stuff, we emerged
near the base of the east summit on some rocky slabs that gave us some welcomed
relief.
The slabs led easily up to the east summit in fifteen minutes. Though
we weren't on the highest point, we could now see that the rest of the route to
the west summit was a straightforward hike taking but ten more
minutes. It was just after 11a when we
topped out. We were not
surprised to find no register or survey tower or even a cairn. Surveyors had no
doubt been to the summit (a spot elevation is given on the 7.5' topo for this
point), but probably few others. It was about
as isolated as one could
get in these parts, it seemed. Our elevation was high enough to see over the
Central Valley haze, the
white snows of the Sierra Nevada visible for
a long stretch across the range.
It took us just over an hour to make the return over the cross-country portion.
We were happy to find the easier exit along the ridge rather than
having to redo the crawling and dust inhalation. We did a thorough check for
ticks on our clothing once back on
the old road, lifting up flaps and
looking in other crannies that these pests like to hide in. Another hour saw us
back to the 4Runner waiting for us on the better road. We had to spend
some time to get the sticky mud off our boots that had collected on
our walk over the wet ground for that last half mile.
Having dispensed with the most difficult part of the day and just past 1p, what followed was a series of seven easy summits, some silly drive-ups, others more interesting.
There were no difficulties in reaching the summits. Idria Peak is only a few
feet lower than Sampson and is located along the ridge a short distance from
our starting point. The road goes right over the top and we didn't
even bother to slow down for more than a quick picture. We reached
the summit of Sampson at
the end of the north-trending
ridgeline around 5:10p. It has a small, rocky summit that appears more
peak-like than several of the ones we had recently
visited. There are
good views in all directions, particularly to
the north where the terrain drops off more dramatically to the much
lower terrain that comprises the Griswold and Ciervo Hills. Unfortunately,
afternoon hazed marred much of the view in that direction. Adam was
amused to find a small
socket wrench near the summit - probably
dropped by one of the OHV enthusiasts to have visited the peak. We returned
back over
Idria Peak and back to our vehicle. The last rays of the sun
were settling over
San Benito Mtn as we returned, the sun making a
glorious
orange and red exit over
the western horizon as we
finished.
It would still be a long hour-plus drive back to my van and another two hours to drive home to San Jose, but it was a fine end to a good day tagging the highest peaks in the Diablo Range.
For more information see these SummitPost pages: San Benito Mountain
This page last updated: Tue Nov 24 08:38:55 2020
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