Thursday, May 22, 2025

Fairview Mountain

Hiked: 5/21/2025
Distance: 3.6 miles round trip on trail
Summit Elevation: 4337'
Prominence: 1007'
Elevation Gain: 1077'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.8
Round trip time: 2 hours
Recommended water: 32 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Mountain View Lane (dirt)
Difficulty: Easy

I discovered Fairview Mountain while looking for a bonus on a desert Iron Mountain trip. I wasn't able to get to it then, but felt it deserved its own trip. It's a popular rock climbing paradise with dozens of sport and trad routes. The main goal was Fairview Mountain itself, but I hauled my rock climbing gear in case I found a route I thought I could top rope. I drove through Apple Valley, following dirt roads north from Cahuilla (Open Street maps named the road from Cahuilla Mountain View Lane). The dirt roads were in good shape, but I'd recommend high clearance. I could have driven a little closer, but didn't realize there was a turnaround at the start of the rock climbers trail. Right away, I met a friendly gopher snake. Leaving it be, I followed the trail that went all the way to the top, though many side trails branched out to the rocks. The formations were vertical and wildly interesting. Just below the summit, I met a red diamond rattler just off the trail, who politely notified me I was too close. Red diamonds are my favorite and she was a beauty. Eight feet was about her radius of concern. If I got closer, the sprinklers turned on. Outside that range, the sprinklers turned off. The encounter slowed my roll a bit as I completed the ascent. I went to the high point first, a class 2 affair about 90' from the benchmark. Then, I went to the benchmark and searched for a register without luck. Comiong down, I looked for sport routes I thought I could handle. The only one I liked was a mile from the truck and I wasn't sure I could anchor a rope behind it. When I got back, I settled for some bouldering near where I parked. I climbed two boulder piles, both going solid class 3, then called it a day. The area reminded me of Joshua Tree. It was a short, but fun day.

Driving in to Fairview Mountain

Friendly gopher snake


Red diamond, my favorite rattlesnake





The high point from the benchmark


You can see the bolts on two sport routes

Bouldering near the truck



Friday, May 16, 2025

Burnt Peak, Little Burnt Peak, Sawmill Mountain, and Sawtooth Mountain

Hiked: 5/15/2025
Distance: 13.4 miles round trip on dirt road and firebreak
Summit Elevation: 5790' (Burnt), 5526' (Little Burnt), 5516' (Sawmill), 5201' (Sawtooth)
Prominence: 2450' (Burnt)
Elevation Gain: 3473'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 2.7
Round trip time: 6 hours 30 minutes
Recommended water: 110 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Forest Route 7N23
Difficulty: Strenuous (combined)

A handful of HPS peaks reside in the northernmost mountains of the Angeles National Forest. My main goals for the day were Burnt Peak (HPS #205) and Sawtooth Mountain (HPS #262). I was prepared for a longer hike if the gate to Forest Route 7N23 was closed, but it was open, allowing time for a couple bonus peaks. I parked at the intersection of 7N23 and Sawmill Mountain Road. The road was smooth and sedan friendly. The PCT also crosses this intersection. First, I headed to Burnt Peak, dirt road all the way. There was another gate on the road to Burnt and I noticed it was unlocked. I could have driven to the top, but I part of my motivation was to log some miles. A few minutes later, a construction worker drove by in an SUV, informing me that a lot of heavy equipment was coming behind him for a project on the Burnt summit. A dozen trucks, including a cement mixer, passed me leaving a dozen dust clouds in their wake. At the summit, I found a strange tower surrounded by what looked like sealed mailboxes. Internet research identified the tower as a Doppler VHF Omnidirectional Range (DVOR) station, part of the FAA's aircraft navigation infrastructure. The central cone and cylinder structure is the main antenna, and the smaller ground-level antennas around it help generate the Doppler frequency shift necessary for precise bearing information. I found no benchmark or register. Nice views from the edges including Cobblestone Mountain in Los Padres.




Burnt summit


Looking south to the San Gabriels

On the way down from Burnt, I left the road for a short cross country maze of small trees and yucca to Little Burnt Peak. Little Burnt had a register, but no benchmark. I also went up a freshly cut firebreak to Sawmill Mountain. I found a metal post half way up and another one on the summit. No benchmark or register. I continued down the other side to a dirt road that took me back to the truck. Round trip stats for Bunrt, Little Burnt, and Sawmill were 6.1 miles, 1335' gain, 2.5 hours. Most of the gain was ahead on Sawtooth Mountain.

Approaching Little Burnt Peak

Looking back at Burnt


Sawmill Mountain on the left

Sawmill summit


I expected most of the hike to Sawtooth to be on a dirt road. I was half right. The rest was on a wide firebreak about 1.5 miles long across rolling hills. Sawtooth itself was not jagged, but the path to get there was. The road gained a couple hundred feet before the firebreak. The first drop on the fire break was 300', followed by 150' up, then the big 600' drop, then 550' up the final firebreak to the flat summit. Looking up the final firebreak was pretty impressive. Photos don't capture being there. The summit held a register in green cans (unusual) but no benchmark. I went 0 for 4 on benchmarks. The prominence of Burnt was more obvious from Sawtooth, and other views were nice. I took a longer break on Sawtooth before facing more than 1000' of gain on the way back. I found the ups and downs kind of fun, making for a solid workout. Stats for Sawtooth alone were 7.3 miles, 2138' gain, 4 hours.

Sawtooth from the truck

Sawtooth from the start of the firebreak




Burnt Peak

Cobblestone on the horizon


The way out

Dust in the wind


Thursday, May 8, 2025

Wye Benchmark

Hiked: 5/7/2025
Distance: 1.6 miles round trip on trail
Summit Elevation: 3651'
Elevation Gain: 465'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.3
Round trip time: 45 minutes
Recommended water: 16 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on service road by I-15
Difficulty: Easy

My third and final hike of the day was Wye Benchmark. It is a noticeable bump at the Cajon Pass, the intersection of I-15 and highway 138. The intersection is always busy, and the gateway to Wrightwood and the northern San Gabriel mountains. There used to be a flag flying on the summit. The trail to Wye starts on a dirt utility road running parallel to northbound I-15. I made an awkward left turn from the 138 over a low curb to reach the road. There were a few shallow mud puddles and some ruts, but I didn't need 4x4. The trail looked like it was used by motorcycles and mountain bikes. It made a wide curve to the ridge behind Wye, then went directly up the north slope. The trail was in good shape all the way. On top, the flag pole was still in place, but it had no flag. There were solar lights aimed at the pole to illuminate it at night. A chained ammo box held a combination of registers and geocache goodies. Looking through the register, it seemed to be a popular hike for firefighters, whose signatures outnumbered those who were not firefighters. I had a great view of Ralston Peak, where I had just been. I wanted to hang out on top a bit, but I must have disturbed a flying ant nest, because I was suddenly swarmed by them. Not just my head, but my whole body was attacked. I was barely able to scribble my name in the register and close it before beating a hasty retreat down the trail. Once I was 50' off the summit, the attack stopped, allowing me mop up the unlucky ants still on my person. Robbed of summit basking time, I walked back to the truck. Because of the location of the access road and the traffic in the intersection, I was forced to get on I-15 north and turn around at the next exit. Since I drive by it all the time, Wye was a nice get.





Wye summit, Ralston Peak in the background



Ralston Peak

Hiked: 5/7/2025
Distance: 2 miles round trip on use trail
Summit Elevation: 4559'
Elevation Gain: 810'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.6
Round trip time: 1 hour
Recommended water: 16 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on shoulder of Lone Pine Canyon Road
Difficulty: Easy

Ralston Peak is a prominent bump not far from Mormon Rocks. It was the second short hike of the day. I parked on the shoulder of Lone Pine Canyon Road and crossed over to start. There were two ridge options. A direct, very steep ridge that led more directly to the summit, and a longer east ridge. I opted for the longer ridge since it looked more open. Brush was light and generally avoidable. The bottom half of the mountain had a lot of poodle dog bush and it was hard to completely avoid. Early on, I found three metal poles with no apparent purpose. A good use trail appeared on the ridge and went all the way to the top. At the false summit, I found a metal triangle marker. The summit had another triangle marker, but no benchmark. There was a register inside three painted cans. Based on the busy register, the peak was far more popular than I would have guessed. The summit had very nice views of the Mormon Rocks and I-15 stretching to the horizon in two directions.

Ralston Peak, summit not visible



Metal triangle with summit in background


Metal triangle on summit


Looking south

Mormon Rocks

San Andreas Rift Zone