Sunday, August 12, 2012

Mount Kennedy, 13,125', and Aztec Mountain, 13,310'

Essence: A full day of easy walking on the east side of Mountain View Crest across an expanse of tundra and sheets of granite along the rim of an escarpment; Needle Creek and Chicago Basin, 3,000 feet below. Across the rift, the earthline is cluttered with fantastical, sky-scraping peaks. Mount Kennedy is a Class 1 walk; Aztec Mountain, for Class 3 scramblers only. Driving to the trailhead is notoriously challenging. 
Travel: From Durango, drive north on US 550 to Trimble Lane. Zero-out your trip meter as you turn right/east. Turn left on East Animas Road, CR 250, at 0.8 mile. At 4.0 miles, make a shallow right onto Missionary Ridge Road, La Plata CR 253. The road is good for many miles, though the washboard degrades as summer proceeds. Passage is on a mild shelf for miles. At 16.0 miles go straight towards Henderson Lake on FSR 682. Pass through an aspen forest. At 22.7 miles go right on FSR 081. Immediately, pass Henderson Lake and drive on FSR 081 for 5 miles to the end at the Lime Mesa Trailhead. The last 2 miles are demanding 4WD, high clearance, almost impassible when wet. It takes 1.5 hours from the bottom of Missionary Ridge Road to reach the trailhead. For an alternate approach that cuts off the last 2 miles of road, see the end of this post.
Distance and Elevation Gain: 16 miles, 3,518 feet of vertical
Time: 7:00 to 8:30
Difficulty: Trail, off-trail; navigation considerable; no exposure to Kennedy, Aztec has a short knife ridge on good rock.
Maps: Mountain View Crest; Columbine Pass, Colo. 7.5 Quads; Weminuche Wilderness, Trails Illustrated #140
Dates Hiked: September 11, 2004; August 12, 2012
Poem: 
Come live with me and be my Love,
And we will all the pleasures prove
That hills and valleys, dale and field,
And all the craggy mountains yield.
Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593)

A compelling force all through the day, the grandeur on The Other Side. Mount Eolus, 14,083', presides.
(Chris Blackshear, photo)

Map: The route from the Lime Mesa Trailhead is depicted in red. The alternate trailhead, beginning at Hairpin 11,040', is good clearance, 2WD accessible. That option is shown in dotted blue. The route splits after Pass 12,500'. Take the northern course on your way to the mountains and the southern on your way home if weather is agreeable.

Route: Starting from the Lime Mesa Trailhead, 11,500', head NNE on City Reservoir Trail #542 for 0.4 mile to a large meadow where our track, Lime Mesa Trail #676, branches to the north as #542 heads east. Looking back to the trailhead. (THW, photo)

The path stays in the timber on Lime Mesa, hovering near the border of the Weminuche Wilderness, bearing north for the first 2 miles to Dollar Lake, 11,880'. This pretty little orb is a popular destination for casual hikers. (THW, photo)

After skirting the lake on the right/east, it is common to see domestic flocks protected by sheep dogs, the shepherd keenly interested nearby. Enter the wilderness a mile north of Dollar Lake.
There will we sit upon the rocks
And see the shepherds feed their flocks,
By shallow rivers, to whose falls
Melodious birds sing madrigals. Christopher Marlowe 
(Chris Blackshear, photo)

The well-worn track climbs gradually, trees but a memory for the remainder of this far-flung hike. After 3.5 miles, our route leaves the Lime Mesa Trail on a social treadway branching to the right. It curves toward the east to approach a NNW ridge defined on the 7.5 topo by Pt 12,448'. Our next objective is the shallow, 12,500' pass on that ridge just south of Hill 12,600'. Climb 100 feet over 0.5 mile to claim the pass.

Hiking Alternatives: From our juncture with the Lime Mesa Trail, it continues 0.2 mile, and tops out at 12,500', about 4 miles from the trailhead. The trail plunges down to Ruby Lake, 11,910', a favorite fishing hole. Another sterling option from this point is to walk northwest on Mountain View Crest proper. In a mile, crest ranked Overlook Point, 12,998', for a commanding view of the Needle Mountains. Another 3.6 miles leaves you breathless on the West End of Mountain View Crest looking down at the Animas River 4,300 feet below.

Route to Kennedy and Aztec: From the pass the entire journey to Kennedy and Aztec may be scoped. They are the two pointed peaks at the far end of our long ridge laying in front of Eolus and company, the highest peaks on the horizon. Note where you are standing for you must return to this slight pass for the most efficient way home. However, from here, the route to Kennedy is free-form. Simply move ENE, darting over to the rim as you please. For now, I suggest walking east 0.5 mile and curving north 0.4 mile to Pt 12,603'.  This optional prominence may be skirted to its southeast. (THW, photo from pass)

Drop off Pt 12,603' and in 0.2 mile arrive at a premier lookout. Pigeon Peak, Turret Peak, Peak 15, and Mount Eolus tower over Needle Creek and Chicago Basin down in the trench. Hanging Lake 12,150' (partially visible below) locates this vantage point on the map. (THW, photo)

Continuing east, stay south of a prominent, symmetrical 12,700' grey, talus mound and set your sights on the false summit of Mount Kennedy. Once past the mound, turn north and gain the ridge. Kennedy is a mile away. The easiest approach is to remain on or near the ridge. Below, hikers admire pink-blushed granite, the edge of the escarpment a few yards away. Climb the false summit (to the right of this photo), and lose 100 feet before gaining another 200 feet to the crest.

Kennedy's summit is a broad, comfortable affair. Aztec is just a mile off but requires a little more concentration and experience. If you've had enough, return as you came. In this image, Aztec is the perfectly symmetrical peak, as seen from Kennedy.

To reach Aztec, stay near the edge/ridge (see above). A gash stops progress 0.2 mile before the top. After locating an agreeable egress, scramble down into the cleft about 75 feet off the south side of the ridge. Emerge and scale the south flank back to the ridge as this hiker is doing.  Rosy granite provides a relatively cohesive passage atop the 0.1 mile knife to the summit.

To return from Aztec, descend as you came, back through the gash and then on the ridgetop for 0.7 mile to a saddle. The homebound route will depend on the weather. On a clear day, angle southwest to the northern edge of West Silver Mesa. Gleefully glide west over granite sheets pocketing a plenitude of ponds. Parallel the incoming route, and rejoin the social trail at the low pass just south of Hill 12,600'. One day in August, electrified weather whooshed in fast and hard so we could only look longingly at the granite for fear we'd encounter lightning out in the big open. (THW, photo)

We hurried off the lower slopes of Aztec. (THW, photo)

We snatched a glimpse of Eolus before walking west along the protective base of Kennedy's southern slope.
(THW, photo)


Curtains of rain approached as we scouted the quickest way to the low pass, shown.
(Chris Blackshear, photo)

Rain had its way with us as it so often does in the mountains of southern Colorado in mid-summer. The road degenerated to slimy clay. The supreme skill of the drivers and the worthiness of their vehicles escorted us home that night.

The world is mud-luscious and puddle-wonderful.  e.e. cummings

Driving Alternative: As you drive to the trailhead, about 2 miles from the end, the road, which has been heading basically northeast, makes a hairpin and turns to the southeast. You may park at Hairpin 11,040'. Walk northeast for 2.4 miles and intersect the Lime Mesa Trail 0.6 mile north of Dollar Lake. This choice is for the navigation savvy. It is quicker than driving to the main TH and walking from there. See Mountain View Crest, West End.

5 comments:

Unknown said...

What a lovely and informative blog - thanks!

Debra Van Winegarden said...

Thank you!

Dillon Sarnelli said...

Debra, I tried this yesterday. SO much snow. I had my dog and couldn't get past the snow slope after the false summit on Kennedy before the actual summit without my ice axe. Also the pass is a cornice. :) I'll be back. Great site. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

I’m thinking about making up a backpacking trip using part of this route to get from Lime Mesa to Trimble Pass, but am stuck trying to figure out a way across Missouri Gulch without dropping all the way down to the pack trail. Any idea?

Debra Van Winegarden said...

From my friend Charlie who has pulled this off many times:
Unless you are willing to do some serious rock climbing, there is no way to get around the north end of Missouri Gulch without losing and regaining a couple hundred feet or so of elevation.  When coming from the west, south of Mount Kennedy, stay as high as you can on the grassy slopes. There is little to be gained by going too high where the walking is more difficult. A little east of Kennedy you will reach the top of a well-defined, steep descent into Missouri Gulch. Looking north and east from this point you should see a series of trail fragments wrapping around the north end of the gulch and ending on a 50-foot-wide ramp that ends in a marshy area on the far side. That is your destination. Descend steeply through some brush and loose rock until you are comfortable with the incline. Then traverse around, holding elevation, until you are on the ramp.

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