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Geography
| Mt. Haggin   | 
| Page Type: Mountain/Rock Location: Montana, United States, North America Lat/Lon: 46.08711°N / 113.0963°W Activities: Hiking, Scrambling Season: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter Elevation: 10607 ft / 3233 m | Page By: rmick25 Created/Edited: Sep 3, 2009 / Nov 6, 2009 Object ID: 549168 Hits: 312  Loading... Page Score: 31.99% - 3 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
OverviewMt Haggin is a 10,607 foot peak overlooking the little city of Anaconda, Montana, on the west slop of the Great Divide. It was named for a principal in the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, James Ben Ali Haggin. Like most of the peaks in the area, you can bag it by scrambling--no technical climbing required.Getting There-To approach from the town of Anaconda take Highway 1 into town to Evergreen st. turn right if coming from West and left if from East. -Continue to end of road to Stumptown Rd.
-Park in church parking lot (46.08.09.39N, 112.15.12.95W) on west corner near Fifer Gulch. I did this in winter and this was the logical place to park because the access road is gated. There is a warning sign saying no camping at Hearst Lake. I along with many others have though with no trouble.
-From the church(5,430ft) hike 1.5 miles on road till jct. and tree line stay straight on road.
-Continue on the old forested road 4.1 more miles to Hearst Lake.
-From the west side of the lake follow the faint trail .6 miles to the prominent NE gully(8720ft) that separates Hearst and Haggin Lakes. There is a wire cable that parallels the trail.
-Continue 1 mile on the rounded ridge to the summit.
-Return the way you came
14.4 miles roundtrip with 5,150ft. of elev. gain
-The other approach is made from a subdivision on the east side of the mountain near Mill Creek.
-The road winds high up the ridge to tree line. We parked the truck (a four wheel drive is needed) and followed a trail along the ridge to the summit.
-The summit ridge is very long covering several miles, but is a much
faster way to the summit than going up through Hearst Lake.
Red TapeThere is a sign stating you are not allowed to camp at Hearst Lakes. Stay on access road and trails because there is some private land nearby. CampingLong day hike. So I recommend camping at Hearst Lake (there is a sign saying not to camp here though at the trailhead) or at tree line near an old cabin(8,800 between Hearst lake and the pass towards Haggin Lake probably the safer choice.Flora and Fauna Trees:
-Aspen and Lodgepole make up he lower treeline.
-The upper treeline is dominated by Alpine Larch (Larix lyalli), a graceful, slow-growing, long-lived conifer that loses its soft, feather needles in fall-winter.
-Sadly, the other dominant tree -- Whitebark Pine (Pinus albicaulis) -- are dying out, killed by a blister rust
Whitebarks are being considered for an Endangered Species Act listing. Their cones bear pine nuts and are an important food source for black and grizzly bears.
It's happened before. The subalpine area is dotted with the skeletons of other great trees killed by a human-introduced pathogen c. 1900. How much of our ecosystem can we afford to destroy?
Flowers:
-The hike in traverses a mile or so of parkland, with Blanketflowers (Gaillardia aristata)
-As you enter the lower treeline of aspen and lodgepole (where there it's higher with more moisture than the parks), there are Woods Rose (Rosa woodsii)
-Yellow Columbine (Aquilegia flavescens; some with a pink tinge)
-Along the woodland creeks, Mountain Bluebells (Mertensia ciliata)
-And in the scree, Mountain Gooseberry (Ribes montigenum)
-Alpine Lousewort (Pedicularis sudetica var scopulorum; ugly name, gorgeous flower)
-Cushion Phlox (Phlox pulvinata)
-Mountain Sorrel (Oxyria digyna)
Special thanks to SP member, Montanaboy for additional information Images
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