| Monte Verita Mountain/Rock |
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| Page Type: Mountain/Rock Location: Idaho, United States, North America Lat/Lon: 44.07072°N / 115.04288°W County: Boise Activities: Hiking, Mountaineering, Mixed, Scrambling Season: Summer Elevation: 10102 ft / 3079 m | Page By: SawtoothSean Created/Edited: Sep 5, 2008 / Sep 9, 2008 Object ID: 439370 Hits: 1470  Loading... Page Score: 90.69% - 38 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
Overview
Monte Verita is one of the few non technical peaks in one of the most
spectacular areas of the Sawtooths. Collectively, the region from
Grandjean Peak southeast to Packrat Peak (and including the Baron Spire
extending ridge) is called the Monte Verita Group or Monte Verita Ridge.
This area is the closest thing Idaho has to the
Cirque of the Towers in Wyoming's Wind River Range. While perhaps not quite
as tall and clean, the Monte Verita Ridge has tougher access and therefore far
less visitors. Consequently, far less information on the peaks and towers exist.
This small section of the Sawtooths easily contains Idaho's most difficult
collection of peaks, pinnacles, and gendarmes.
There's at least 25 named peaks and rock towers along the Monte Verita 5 mile
ridgeline and 20 of these peaks require class 5 climbing. The remaining 5 are
all rated Class 4. While many of these towers do not appear on the USGS
1:24000 quad, Monte Verita Peak does. There's some debate though, whether the
placement of this name was to represent the ridgeline or the high point near
where the label appears. There is an accepted high point called Monte
Verita Peak, but it is just the highest of several small rock towers along a
section of this ridge.
Monte Verita roughly translates to "mountain of truth" and given it's
spectacular location the aptly named peak has some of the more unique and
spectacular views of nearby
Warbonnet Peak,
Baron
Spire, and
Packrat Peak to name just a few. These peaks are seldom visited, in part,
because they aren't even visible until one travels about 10 miles by foot on the
nearby trails. Most climbers, especially those visiting from other areas, opt
for climbing on the Elephant's Perch or the Finger of Fate. But those
seeking to scratch beyond the surface of climbing opportunities will discover
the classic
Warbonnet climbs or the
18 pitch
Baron Spire climb in this area. For those looking to leave the rope
home, Monte Verita Peak offers a classic, airy, and easy Class 4 scramble.
See
The Complete Sawtooths List for every named rock tower, pinnacle,
and unnamed mountain of note.
Routes
East Face (Class 4)-
this route provides the easiest ascent, and it starts at one of the most
spectacular lakes in the Sawtooths, Upper Baron Lake. From the southwest
edge of the lake, follow a gully between a tree covered area and a stacked
boulder field southwest for about 2/3 of a mile to around 9010 feet. From here,
skirt south of some steeper slopes that make up the prominent and sheer NE
towers that sit above Baron Lake. Turn north and find the only non technical
slot that leads to the northeast ridge proper. The slot narrows, but never
becomes more than easy class 4. Just under the NE ridge, a sheer smooth cliff
blocks your way. Turn more toward the west and climb over mostly solid slabs and
rocks to the summit ridge. There are at least 4 prominent rock towers on
this spectacular ridge and route finding is crucial here unless you want to
visit them all. The northern most tower is called the Perforated Pinnacle.
The high point of Monte Verita Peak is the southern most pinnacle that hides
behind another tower just north of it. This tower is just a few feet shorter
than Monte Verita Peak. To access the true high point tower, scramble
southwest over solid smooth slabs and just east of the ridge. Find a small notch
and reach up to touch the highest point. The last sections are the most exposed,
but the rock is really solid. Look for the newly placed summit canister
and small cairn (09/08). As of this writing there was no sign of prior
ascent.
From the Grandjean Trailhead:
12.1miles and
5902 feet gain (one way)
From the Redfish Lake Trailhead: 13.3miles and
5849 feet gain (one way)
(you can utilize the expensive and often unreliable shuttle boat and save 5
miles)
Getting There
Approach
Grandjean Approach
To access the Grandjean Trailhead, drive ID-21 from Boise past Lowman and look
for the well marked Grandjean turnoff sign well before Banner Summit.
Follow the Grandjean dirt road for 7 miles to the trailhead next to the
campground. Follow the Baron Creek trail for 1.4 miles where you'll turn east
into the lower sections of Baron Creek. You'll pass underneath
Grandjean Peak close to where you'll take the main Fork of Baron Creek
southeast. Continue gently uphill past the drainage turnoffs for
Baron
Peak,
Moolack Mountain, and
Tohobit Peak. Near mile 8 you'll see Baron Falls Tower, a challenging
rock climbing face of rock. Soon you'll be switching back underneath the massive
Mt. Ebert and next to Baron Falls. Once atop the falls the grade eases and
becomes more alpine as you wind your way past the Baron Lakes.
Redfish Approach
From the Redfish Creek area follow the trail past
Goat Perch and
Mt.
Heyburn to Flatrock Junction. From here the trail turns off and climbs up to
Alpine Lake and just underneath
The Eagle's Beak, one of the best intro technical climbs in the range. Climb
past Alpine Lake up to Baron Pass and descend to Upper Baron Lake.
Check the road
conditions at: Idaho Transportation
Department
Conditions and Season Conditions may vary greatly. Access is typically from June to October.
Snow may linger all season long, and it may snow any time of year except July.
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