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Hawk Mountain
Mountain/Rock
Hawk Mountain 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Alberta, Canada, North America

Lat/Lon: 53.01390°N / 118.0167°W

Activities: Mountaineering

Season: Summer

Elevation: 8375 ft / 2553 m

 

Page By: Dow Williams

Created/Edited: Aug 15, 2005 / Feb 24, 2006

Object ID: 154514

Hits: 1887 

Page Score: 89.66% - 19 Votes 

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Overview

Hawk Mountain is a member of the Colin Range in Jasper National Park, one of four connecting national parks that make up the central Canadian Rockies in Alberta/British Columbia. The mountain was officially named in 1916….you guessed it, because a hawk was seen near its summit by someone official. The first ascent was by Joe Weiss.
Dow Williams Dow Williams Dow Williams
The only published route up Hawk Mountain is the difficult scramble via its south facing west ridge. The most recent edition of the Scrambles in the Canadian Rockies guide book gives inappropriate times for this objective. I completed this route at a marathon pace of 6.5 hours, never veering of course. For 90% of the objectives listed in the book my completion time is well under the lowest estimated time given. However, it states 5-8 hours for completion of this objective. You have a 1.5 hour return approach before you gain any elevation. Hawk Mountain is a 5000’+ ascent objective. Therefore, I can only assume a transposition error in the guide book. A more realistic estimation of round trip completion would be 7-10 hours.

The approach starts at the popular sport climbing area below Morro Peak, 20kms northeast of Jasper. On a clear day you should be treated to views of Mount Robson and Mount Edith Cavell, but on my summit day, fires filled the scene with thick haze. Even so, clean slabby limestone on Hawk Mountain’s spine and higher reaches make this a three star route.

Getting There

Take Highway 16 (Yellowhead Highway) north of Jasper (toward Edmonton) for approximately 20kms and park at the pull out on the right hand side just after crossing the bridge over the Athabasca River.

Red Tape

You will be required to purchase a national park pass as you enter the park. This pass is good for all four national parks. If you plan many visits to Canadian National Parks within one year, you should purchase an annual pass. There are no permit requirements to climb in Jasper National Park, but all camping is regulated. There is also a backcountry permit required if you plan on spending a night in the backcountry versus the town campsites. This can be obtained via the parks website which is included in the camping section below. Park headquarters are located in Jasper and you will drive through the manned kiosks as you enter the park.

This is active grizzly country, therefore, you should always have bear spray on your person. I advise checking with Parks Canada for any area and/or trail closures.

When To Climb

As with most climbs in the Canadian Rockies, the driest time is from June through September. I climbed Hawk Mountain in August and the route was free of snow. There are no published backcountry ski routes on Hawk Mountain, nor would it seem conducive to ski the scramble route.

Camping

Camping near the area is plentiful and varied. I camped in town at the Wapiti Campground. As the name implies, Elk are plentiful. The cost was in excess of $20 per night in 2005. You can go on line at Jasper National Park to pick a camp site and obtain your camping permit. You will also be required to obtain your backcountry permit which is separate, but can be obtained simultaneously if you plan on camping at a backcountry site. Of course those with luxury on their mind can stay at the Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge, one of the finer mountain lodge resorts in the world.

Cocos is good for coffee and lunch but does not open that early. The Bearspaw opens early and offers good coffee, quick breakfast and fresh baked goods. La Fiesta (Spanish Tapas) is a solid place for dinner.

Mountain Conditions

The Jasper National Park website has weather, wildlife reports, trail closures, etc. Outside of the parks web site, Canadian Avalanche Association is also useful, particularly for winter travel.

External Links

Images




""You cannot stay on the summit forever; you have to come down again. So why bother in the first place? Just this: What is above knows what is below, but what is below does not know what is above. One climbs, one sees. One descends, one sees no longer, but one has seen. There is an art of conducting oneself in the lower regions by the memory of what one saw higher up. When one can no longer see, one can at least still know.""   --Rene Daumal   

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