Friday, October 10, 2025

Mill Peak

Hiked: 10/8/2025
Distance: 2.8 miles round trip on dirt road and use trail
Summit Elevation: 6691'
Elevation Gain: 680'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.5
Round trip time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Recommended water: 24 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Keller Peak Road
Difficulty: Easy

The last stop of the day was Mill Peak (HPS #140). I hadn't done much research on it, but I did read a report where someone had to bushwhack to the summit. I brought my loppers just in case. The trail started at a turnout on Keller Peak Road and descended down a dirt road. The road then climbed up toward Mill Peak which was not visible through the forest. When I came to a fork, I took the upper road. After a mile or so, I spotted a cairn that marked the use trail. The use trail went through freshly cut brush, mostly whitethorn. What encroached on the trail were soft ferns. The brush grew up to twice my height and I didn't see the summit block until I was within 50' of it. The moat of whitethorn around the summit area gave it a very San Sevaine feel. The summit block was easy and a register was in a large plastic jar. Mill Peak was quite popular based on the number of entries. Views were OK, but blocked in several directions by trees. I dug out the loppers on the way out and cut some whitethorn and ferns. I left it a little better than it was, but the people before me had done the hard work. It was an easy but productive day. I checked four HPS peaks off the list.

Start beyond the gate


Use trail


Summit




Keller Peak and Slide Peak

Hiked: 10/8/2025
Distance: 4 miles round trip on road and firebreak
Summit Elevation: 7882' (Keller), 7846' (Slide)
Prominence: 1050' (Keller)
Elevation Gain: 815'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.6
Round trip time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Recommended water: 24 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Keller Peak Road
Difficulty: Easy

It was a circuitous drive from Constance Peak to Highway 330 and Keller Peak Road. The road was paved and pothole free all the way to the locked gate below the summit. I parked at the turnout outside the gate and started another circuitous hike on the road to the back side of Keller Peak (HPS #75) and eventually the summit. I left my pack in the truck for Keller. It was probably less than a half mile as the crow flies from where I parked, but the landscape had been savagely burned. I was in no hurry and didn't want to leave looking like a chimney sweep so I stuck to the road. There were two towers on top that looked roughly the same height. One was a comm tower and the other an abandoned fire lookout. The high point was where the fire lookout was. I jogged up to get a waypoint, but the lookout itself was fenced and signed as no access. It didn't look sturdy enough for people anyway. From Keller, I got to look down on Constance and across to Slide Peak (HPS #77).


Fire lookout

Comm tower


When I got back to the truck, I grabbed my pack and walked a few hundred feet down the road to a firebreak that led to Slide. There was use trail on the firebreak and it looked as if it had been cleared within the last year. A couple of ski lifts ran up to the summit. The firebreak connected with a dirt road that took me the rest of the way to the summit. When I got there, it was clear the ski lifts and runs had been abandoned. A few antennae on the summit were still powered and operating. Behind the boarded up buildings was small pile of boulders that was the high point. After a careful search, I didn't find a benchmark or register. I returned to the truck and prepared for my final hike on Mill Peak.

Firebreak toward Slide Peak



Summit rocks




Thursday, October 9, 2025

Constance Peak

Hiked: 10/8/2025
Distance: 1.2 miles round trip on trail
Summit Elevation: 6645'
Elevation Gain: 833'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 0.6
Round trip time: 50 minutes
Recommended water: 16 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free on Forest Road 1N12
Difficulty: Easy

I had a little work to do in the morning so got a late start. Forest road 1N12 had been closed for over a year due to fire damage so I was relieved to find the gate was open. The road was a good shape with neither high clearance nor 4x4 needed. The trailhead for Constance Peak (HPS #142) was just over a mile up the road at a wide turnout. I got started at 11:15 AM. The trail started directly up a steep slope on the right. It was slightly overgrown with dead weeds, but they didn't impede following the trail. The summit came into view atop the ridge. After climbing a couple of intermediate bumps, I reached the top. The benchmark was stamped GLEN. I also found a metal container with the register, a metal triangle post, and a wooden sign. Views exceeded my expectations, though it was smoggy across the Inland Empire and the Angeles National Forest. Constance sat in the shadow of San Bernardino Peak, blocking views of the long ridge to San Gorgonio. I got a good look north at Keller Peak, my next goal for the day. The descent was uneventful and I drove off toward Highway 330 and Big Bear.


Constance Peak ahead

Keller Peak behind the summit, San Gabriel mountains distant left

Gerhardt Peak (front) and San Bernardino Peak (back)

Santa Ana mountains on the horizon





Friday, October 3, 2025

Cedar Mountain, Oak Glen Peak, and Wilshire Peak

Hiked: 9/26/2025
Distance: 11.3 miles round trip on trail, use trail, and cross country
Summit Elevation: 8340' (Cedar), 8428' (Oak Glen), 8680' (Wilshire)
Elevation Gain: 4530'
Elevation Gain (in Empire State Buildings): 3.6
Round trip time: 8 hours 20 minutes
Recommended water: 128 oz.
Parking/Fees: Free at Pilgrim Pines Camp
Difficulty: Strenuous

There are seven HPS peaks along the Yucaipa Ridge, counting Galena. I had climbed five of them on previous hikes, and now I was going after the two middle peaks: Cedar Mountain (HPS #57) and Wilshire Peak (HPS #41). Between the two was Oak Glen Peak, almost unavoidable on the traverse. The closest approach was from the Pilgrim Pines Camp, a private organization. I contacted their office and got permission to hike the trail that goes up to Cedar Mountain, sometimes called the Ford Canyon trail. It has been unmaintained after multiple fires and much of lower trail washed away. I headed for the upper camp where a nice single track runs west before a dead end. I passed a use trail connector to the Ford Canyon trail and back tracked to find it. I was only on the remains of the trail a few hundred feet before losing it and heading straight up. I picked my way up the steep slope through a mix of whitethorn, brush, and burned trees. A thousand feet up the ridge, I found remnants of the trail again, but it was hard to follow. There were a few rocky class 3 sections and a lot of hand use getting up the loose dirt. I gained almost 3000' in the first two miles, slow as molasses, then the slope eased up as I approached Cedar Mountain. Just before Cedar, I found a burned trail junction sign. I didn't find benchmarks on any of the peaks. Cedar had a register from 2011 and there were older registers in the cans. It had poor views except to Oak Glen and Wilshire.


Use trail to connect with the old Ford Canyon trail

Lower trail gone

Back on the upper trail




Cedar Mountain register

Oak Glen Peak and Wilshire Mountain from Cedar

After resting on Cedar, I was able to follow the trail along the ridge as it dropped to a saddle, then up to Oak Glen. Oak Glen had a register and better views. The final push was a 400' gain to Wilshire Peak. Instead of the standard cans, the Wilshire register was in a PVC pipe with a lid. The last group to visit these peaks was in June. Wilshire had fine views of San Jacinto, San Gorgonio, and everything west of the ridge. While lunching on Wilshire, I contemplated how to get down. I absolutely didn't want to do the down-up-down-up back to Cedar, then face the ugly ridge back to Pilgrim Pines. Instead, I aimed for the Wilshire Peak trail (a dirt road) and would deal with any access issues if someone stopped me. It was easy going down the dirt road. I passed some houses and had to get through a barbed wire fence to reach the lower paved portion of the road. I walked past a homeowner cutting trees along the road with a chainsaw. He didn't notice me until I passed. The chainsaw stopped, but he didn't say anything. Near the bottom, I met another homeowner with another chainsaw. He waved and said I looked like John Muir. No beard, but I took it as a compliment. He asked for my help to load a large tree cut into his truck. Together, we heaved it over the side. Turns out he was a spry 85 years of age, envious of my relative youth at 61. I hope I am as active at 85. I had a few miles of paved road to walk to loop back to my truck, but was glad I descended that way. A half dozen mule deer were milling around the camp, a nice way to end to the day. This was a wrap on Yucaipa Ridge. In hindsight, I probably should have descended the entire ridge from Little San Gorgonio except for Allen Peak, and picked up Allen on a separate hike. Retrospectu est viginti viginti.

Oak Glen summit


Climbing Wilshire

Looking down from Wilshire



Gorgonio from Wilshire


Descending the Wilshire Peak trail


A days work on the walk back