Continued...
With my wife having returned to San Jose, I was on my own in the Las
Vegas area for three days until she flew back on Thursday. With temps
approaching 90F in town, I headed to the higher elevations in the
Spring Mountains to give me cooler temps for sleeping, as well as for
hiking the next few days.
I ended up parked at 6,500ft near Wheeler Well,
plenty chill for sleeping - too much, really, as it was 36F when I awoke
in the morning. It was the first night sleeping in the Jeep, consumating
our new relationship, so to speak, and it worked out well enough. I had to
do more gymnastics than I was used to in the van - getting from the front
to back of the Jeep without going outside takes some effort, and
manuevering in the night for my periodic pee breaks was tough as
well, but I slept as good as could be expected. My peaks for the day
included a pair of P1Ks and a P300, all of them found in Purcell's
Rambles & Scrambles.
Spring Peak
This was the hardest of the day's outings, about 2,000ft of gain and
six miles roundtrip, which is why I chose to do it first.
My approach was from the east near Wheeler Well,
not far from where I had spent the night. I attempted to use a 4WD road
shown on the topo to get me a little closer, but this was signed for
No Vehicles and blocked with large boulders, just to be sure everyone
gets the message. I parked at what appears to be a redneck-y
near the main road and would use the last quarter mile of the
to start up. The travel was through
semi-open forest - no real bushwhacking, but lots of weaving around trees, all
the way to .
As Purcell describes in his guidebook, the higher south summit is mostly
covered in trees with poor views. I found a lightly-used register left
by John Vitz and added my entry at the bottom of the
. I paid a visit to as well, a
more aesthetic point with some
easy class 2-3 scrambling and open views in all directions. Haze obscured
views to Pahrump to the southwest, but views east and along the
Spring Mtns were nice. Dropping east off the north summit, I followed
an alternate return route, though not appreciably better or worse than
the ascent route. before 9:30a, the outing had taken just under
3.5hrs.
Mine Peak
Purcell describes a route coming from Wheeler Pass, but acknowledges it's
probably easier from Wheeler Well, and so it is. There is a road that
climbs up to near the saddle on the northeast side of the
peak, less than 1/3mi from the summit. Unfortunately, this 1.5mi spur
road is as part of a Wilderness study area. Still, it
can be hiked to make it fairly easy to . More
forest meandering from gets one to the upper rocky
summit area in short order.
There is some fine class 3 scrambling to be had, albeit somewhat short.
There are two closely-spaced summit rocks of nearly equal height. I
visited both in traversing the summit to before
circling back to the east side to descend. An hour and a half sufficed for the
effort, less than 1,000ft of gain and 4mi roundtrip.
Wheeler BM
I probably could have saved a good deal of time by climbing Wheeler BM
in conjunction with Mine Peak, but that would have negated the need to
drive to . Normally I would have been happy to forgo the
extra driving, but with the Jeep it was really great fun. The road has some
pretty rough areas that would have challenged most vehicles, but the Jeep
made it seem like play. Hugely fun play, too. Wheeler BM lies about 2.5mi
of Wheeler Pass, all cross-country
save for a short bit of road/trail just above the pass. The route follows
a long ridgeline rising to the peak, with steep portions at the beginning
and end, a more in the middle, covering 3/4 of the
route. The only real scrambling is contrived and avoidable, with lots of steep,
limestone talus for . The highpoint is found
of where one gains the crest, an easy, welcomed finish.
looms
higher across Wheeler Pass as do the other high summits of the Spring
Mtns. To , the peaks fade off in the distance, Wheeler
standing as the highest one west of the pass. There was the expected
and a rather busy register, a MacLeod/Lilley special
with 35 pages of entries. It gets far more attention than Spring
Peak, the other P1K, probably because it is quite a bit higher and very
prominent on the crest from both sides of the range. A little over 3hrs
for the five miles and 1,800ft of gain.
Afterwards I drove back down to Wheeler Well and then further down to
a traversing road that would take me to Wallace Canyon where I planned
to spend the night. I found a nice spot with a view at 6,200ft to make
camp - hopefully not so cold tonight...
Continued...