Thursday, March 20, 2025

Palo Verde Peak Redux

Hiked: 3/18/2025
Distance: 3.9 miles round trip on dirt road and cross country
Summit Elevation: 1760'
Prominence: 1000'
Elevation Gain: 1382'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 1.1
Round trip time: 3 hours
Recommended water: 48 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Old Palo Verde Road
Difficulty: Moderate (exposed scramble, route finding)

April, 2024 was my first attempt to climb Palo Verde Peak. I turned back at the knife edge ridge, still a little shaken from stepping directly over a rattlesnake in the approach gully. I had run out of risk taking brain juice for the day. On the bright side, I had solved all the route finding problems and other obstacles to that point. I felt like the second attempt would be easier. Ben was dealing with a knee injury and thought the steep, loose rocks might exacerbate his injury, so I was solo again. The morning was cool and I saw a herd of mule deer on the drive. A wild burro was running with the pack. I tried to get good photos, but I only had a few seconds before they ran out of sight.

Palo Verde

The burro is in the middle of the pack

I parked when I hit a complete washout on the Old Palo Verde Road. It might be possible to get closer to the trailhead coming up from the south. I tried to take a shortcut to the ascent gully, but cliffed out. I was very mindful of snakes as I went up the gully. The top section was as loose and miserable as I remembered. I improved the route slightly by clinging to larger rocks away from the wall. I reached the main ridge, then went over the top and scrambled down above the saddle. As before, a 12' class 3 chute below a cave allowed me to reach the saddle. A large cairn marked where to climb up on the other side. I traversed a little right for the next class 3 section. At this point, the ridge proper turns into high, vertical slabs that can be bypassed on the right. This brought me to the knife edge section.

Looking down, about half way up the gully



Chute down to the saddle

Other side of the saddle


I dropped my pack and pole, then crept slowly onto the knife edge. The wind was gusty, up to 25mph. That's why I left the drone in the truck. I favored the left side where possible since a fall on that side would leave me slightly less dead. There was a class 3 down climb at the end on good rock, then a short walk to the summit. After waiting a year for the second attempt, I was quite elated. The views were inspiring. A tall, broken flag pole had fallen down and looked unfixable. An ammo box held a tattered US flag and two registers: a small paper register and a fancy hand made register in a leather tube. It seemed the leather register was left by the Banks family, who recorded their ages as well as their names. I was two years older than the Banks' family patriarch, making me (probably) the oldest hiker to climb Palo Verde so far. I loved this mountain.

Knife edge


Looking back at the knife edge section




Fancy leather register


Back to the saddle crossing


Final look back


Google Maps not showing the GPS track accurately

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