South
Tarryall Peak
,
11,206', Lost Creek Wilderness,
October 27th,
2007
Our hikes are now getting longer as the days are getting shorter!
After a couple of easy hikes in the last 3 weeks, Tom and I decided we
needed to stretch it out a bit more and he wanted to pick the next objective.
During the week he researched The Lost Creek Wilderness and selected
South
Tarryall
Peak
. The route he chose was the North
Slope Classic route, involving 8.2 RT and 2,766’ elevation gain.
As you can tell from the route map on the Google Earth overlay we almost
practically circled the mountain from the Spruce Grove trailhead.
The final .75 to the summit was trail less and involved bush whacking up
a steep wooded slope with about 6” of snow.
Route:

Once
we knew what our objective was earlier in the week, we invited Don to join us
and he readily accepted. Tom just had to shake a nasty cold to give us the green
light which he did on Thursday. We did not get a mountaineer’s start Saturday
as there was no reason to with settled weather after a cold front had swept
through Friday afternoon. Picking
Don up in
Woodland
Park
at 0830, we continued to the trailhead north of
Lake George
and to the edge of the Lost Creek Wilderness.
I had lived in
Colorado
a combined 5 years and had never been to the closest wilderness area to my
home, so this was a new experience.
Interesting way to start a
hike!
Starting
out from the trailhead, we crossed a stream, walked through a rock tunnel and
ascended the gentle slopes below
South
Tarryall
Peak
on the Lizard Rock Trail. All three
of us had Rhino GPS/ 2 Way radios now and we naturally spread out along the
trail with Tom leading the way occasionally joking or carrying on short
conversations via the radios. We all had camera and I would subjectively rate me
as the worst photographer, Tom as an excellent photographer, and Don as a
professional with a very large camera.
*
Take a moment to look at all three galleries at SMUGMUG:
Bob’s
Smugmug
Tom’s
Smugmug
Don’s
Smugmug
We hiked to a saddle near Lizard Rock and reached the wilderness boundary,
marked by a beautiful sign. At this point we took a right on Hankins
Pass
trail and traversed along the north side of the mountain on snow covered trails.
Don had recently passed his amateur radio “HAM” licensing test and
had brought along his radio on the hike to play with and show me how it worked.
He used a repeater on
Badger
Mountain
by
Wilkerson
Pass
to talk with his friends in
Woodland
Park
and other places during the hike. I
am currently studying for my test.
Don and Tom
Don w/ new radio
Reaching Hankin’s Pass was easy enough and we stopped to have a bite to eat
and determine the best route to the summit as there was no trail. It looked as
though if we went farther east, then south, to reach the ridgeline, the door to
the summit would open. Tom led up
into the wooded, snow covered slopes and he picked a most excellent route,
zigging and zagging up the slope. About a third of the way up, he handed off
duties to Don who cam across some elk tracks to follow up the slope.
Don said since animals have a knack for avoiding deadfall and impassible
thickets, he would just follow the track. After
all, I offered, they do it for living, literally so must be pretty good at it.
Don following the elk hoof prints
We
followed those elk tracks up to within 200’ of the summit until Don turned
right to gain the final ridge to the summit itself.
We were surprised to find that the Hayman Fire has also touched this
mountain, burning all the way up to the summit from the east.
Spread out a bit, we picked our way up through the rocks, each taking a
different path to the summit block ,which was marked with a wooden cross and a
small rock cairn. Tom found the
summit register in a glass bell jar and there was also a surveyor’s marker at
the very top. We snacked, took some
pictures, and Don patched a call through to his wife and Debbie through the
repeater when it was obvious there was no cell coverage.

After about 30 mins we started down, easily following our tracks in the snow
down the steep slope. Back at
Hankins
Pass, we regeared and started down the trail. After traversing the north side of the
peak, we broke out of the shadows to the sunshine and temperatures rose.
The rest of the hike was just the slog back to the trailhead, where we
arrived about an hour later, completing a tour of South Tarryall
Peak
.
Coming
down the trail on the north side...
The guidebook by Gerry Roach had said the round trip was 8.2 miles. My GPS
recorded 9.38 and Tom’s was 10.2. Not
exactly sure which was right but we all knew it was longer than 8.2! We got back
to
Colorado Springs
for the start of World Series and watching the
Rockies
play the Red Socks in game 3.
South
Tarryall
Peak
provides
some stunning scenery, nice trail to within .75 of the summit and 360 degree
views of the area from the top. It
certainly was a nice way to spend a day with friends.
Beta:
8.2 – 9.38 – 10.2 miles RT, Spruce Grove Campground TH, Lost Creek
Wilderness
2766’
elevation gain
5.5
hours
Copyright © 2007 Robert
Broeking All rights reserved
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