
| Took about 2 hours longer than I budgeted for because of the navigational challenges this 'unlabeled' peak presented.
A little chilly and a bit breezy as I bebopped towards the Prospector's Trail off Butterfly's south ridge. Once I topped the ridge that is where my confusion began. The key to this modified HPS Route 2 is to stay on the Prospector's Trail until you see a dark wooden sign that says "Prospector's Trail ->" about 10 feet high on a tree at about 5800+ feet. When you spot this sign, pick up a faint trail heading east (your right) which runs into the 4WD road that heads "north then east then southeast" and terminates at the "corral" and the "U-turn" Deb describes.
My mistake is I started dropping off the ridge almost immediately following brushy gullies and a few class 3 problems until I reached a large abandoned mine. From there I picked up a 4WD road and headed north that I thought was the one in the directions. It was not. However, it led me to the corral that Deb describes and after a bit of indecision about whether the U-turn lies north or south of the corral, I realized the U-turn is just north. From there, the trail is obvious as it heads NE thru the valley and climbs to the PCT junction. Take a right U-turn south along the PCT for about 50 yards, thru the gate and then take the left fork. This trail heads S/SE and up through the two prominent saddles (plus a minor one) to the western flank of Ken Point. Once you near the first saddle, you will finally catch your first glimpse of Ken Point's summit which until here is hidden from view.
I found no duck marking a use trail, but the brush is a bit sparse and no more than knee high so it's easy to pick through. The views east were amazing, but to the west they were obscured by advancing clouds. I had a nice view of Pine Mountain #1 and Devil's Rockpile to the north also.
From my approach, the twin 6300+' peaks west of Ken Point block the view of your goal most of the way. I mistook these as Ken Point and its false summit until I reached the 'second' saddle due to cloud cover. If you couple this with the fact that Ken Point is not labeled on most maps (despite the summit benchmark) it can make for some navigational challenges. I tagged Butterfly last year which is why I used this approach, had I summited Butterfly again, I probably would have avoided the problems on the ridge and valley. Ken Pt is a worthwhile summit and I'm glad I checked this box!
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