Tue, Mar 31, 2015
|
![]() |
Etymology Black Rock Mountain |
Story | Photos / Slideshow | Maps: 1 2 3 4 | GPXs: 1 2 3 4 5 | Profiles: 1 2 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day 2 in the Yolla Bollys had me going to North Yolla Bolly, the other P2K found in the region. The previous day had been a long one exploring the area around South Yolla Bolly on a long 26mi hike. This one would be series of shorter hikes that would be punctuated with driving between THs. Easier, but still a long day.
The two summits are only a few miles apart along the same ridgeline, most
easily combined in a single outing of 9-12mi depending on the route. This would
be the
longest hike of the day, taking about 4hrs. There was no snow at the TH, but
it made its appearance within the first 15min of starting up the trail.
It had
the feel
of a winter outing - a cold wind, foggy conditions, snow on the ground,
but without the real dangers of winter. The snow was really just a dusting
though there was some older
consolidated snow found on north-facing
slopes. When I reached
the saddle on the main east-west ridge, I
found ice-encrusted
trees and
shrubs with the clouds blowing
over the ridgeline. I had gloves and balaclava as I made my way
west
towards Black Rock Mtn first, another lookout-topped summit. Off to the left
of the trail I had
fleeting views of
the terrain below, but only enough to see that a fire had swept over the area
in the not-to-distant past. By the time I reached
the lookout around 11:40a,
blue skies were breaking out periodically - it seemed the storm was on its way
out.
The lookout
was in awful condition, neglected over the decades. The bottom
section of stairs was missing, probably by design to keep the curious off the
dilapidated structure. Ice coated the
western face
of the lookout, having been
blasted through the night by freezing rain and fog. I explored several likely
looking
rock outcrops that vied to be the highest, finding neither
benchmark
nor register at either location. By the time I started down some 15-20min
later, the skies were
clearing and I finally had a view
east
to
North Yolla Bolly.
It took about an hour to get from Black Rock to
the summit
of North
Yolla Bolly. I failed to make use of a trail that goes to the summit because it
goes from the saddle along the north side of the ridge which I mistook for
another trail heading downhill. The cross-country scrambling wasn't too bad
though and barely any brush to contend with, so there was little lost. I managed
to find the trail aqain in the forest before reaching a high saddle between the
two summits, only to lose it again
due to old snow and a poorly-defined tread. The highpoint is the
northernmost of the two points. A
benchmark is located here along
with a leatherbound
register book placed
in 2000.
In marked contrast to the
general lack of registers I found in the area, someone had lovingly prepared
a beefy container for the handsome register and perhaps that contributed to it
lasting as long as it has.
By now the skies had virtually cleared and blue sky was dominate. The clouds
that remained served only scenic purposes,
no longer of any threat. The storm had
cleared out the haze and left crisp air in all directions. Immediately to
the south was the lower south summit (which I did not visit) and
over its left shoulder could be seen South Yolla Bolly in the distance. Tomhead
was visible now to
the east, Black Rock framed in the view to
the west and Mt. Shasta visible far to
the north.
From the summit I spotted what looked like a faint trail traversing a talus
slope heading north. I knew that it would be a much shorter route off that
side if I could find a way around the cliffs present on the NW aspect of the
mountain and went off to investigate. Whether it was an actual use trail or not
I never really deciphered, but the route off the north side
was a good one.
Cliffs were easy to avoid by staying north and not veering to the left too
early and after a steep descent through forested slopes one eventually comes
upon
the trail
that forks off from Pettijohn Basin and goes around the north
side of North Yolla Bolly. After reaching this trail I had intended to follow
it back to the junction, but the cross-country was working so nicely I simply
continued down on a more direct path to intersect the main trail about half a
mile from the TH. By 2p I was back at the
Stuart Gap TH
where I found it had
finally warmed enough to forgo the gloves and get by with just a tshirt.
Flush with the success of reaching the top, I decided to explore an even
shorter route off the north side, following the motorcycle track
to its end,
then dropping further north along the ridge before making a right turn to
follow down through forest cover to the NE in a direct line to the car,
all in less than half an hour.
I would spend the next hour+ driving back down to SR36, then east for a few
miles, then north on a Forest Service road to
Deerlick Springs. This decent
road was paved at one time which means that it has some serious potholes now
that one needed to watch out for in the fading light. I followed Dennis
Poulin's directions for the eastern approach to Chanchelulla Peak where I
planned to hike the next day. I spent the night tucked away in an unofficial
campsite along Chanchelulla Creek about a mile SW of Deerlick Springs. It
occurred to me that if I died here in the night it could be months before
anyone might chance upon my decomposing body. Not the best of thoughts to
drift to sleep by in the Wilderness...
For more information see these SummitPost pages: Black Rock Mountain - North Yolla Bolly
This page last updated: Sat Jul 13 14:34:37 2019
For corrections or comments, please send feedback to: snwbord@hotmail.com