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Tenney Crags
Mountain/Rock
Tenney Crags 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Colorado, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 38.80550°N / 104.9261°W

County: El Paso

Elevation: 10093 ft / 3076 m

 

Page By: csmcgranahan

Created/Edited: Apr 16, 2006 / Apr 18, 2006

Object ID: 188601

Hits: 3448 

Page Score: 88.05% - 9 Votes 

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Overview

 
The Five Teners from the summit of Mt. Rosa

The Tenney Crags (10,093’) is located in the eastern foothills of Pikes Peak and is one of five 10,000 foot peaks located between the Ruxton Creek drainage and the Bear Creek drainage. The others are Mt. Garfield (10,930’), Tuckaway Mountain (10,825’), Mt. Arthur (10,807’) and Cameron Cone (10,707’).

The Tenney Crags are an interesting rock playground with numerous rock formations and minor summits. Many of the rock formations are similar to those commonly seen in the Lost Creek Wilderness to the northwest.

The faint Tenney Crags trail is located on the north side of Trail #667 just above the junction with the Bear Creek Trail #666. The Tenney Crags trail and junction is easy to miss and is not located on the Pikes Peak Atlas or any other local topographic maps I have seen. It is located at approximately 38.79438N, 104.92886W. The upper portion of the faint trail is well cairned. There are a few places where it is necessary to scout ahead to find the next cairn but a little care and patience will make this a relatively easy route to follow.

Getting There

Take US Highway 24 West, also known as Cimarron Street, to 8th Street. Go south on 8th Street. Turn right on Cheyenne Boulevard. Continue straight at Cresta Road. When you come to a fork in the road, take the right fork, which is North Cheyenne Canyon Road. The left fork goes to Seven Falls. Follow the road past Helen Hunt Falls and continue up switchbacks until you reach the end of the paved roadway. There is a large gravel parking lot on the left that is the first trailhead for the Tenney Crags – this is the Lower Gold Camp Road trailhead. It is also the only trailhead accessible by vehicle between December and April when High Drive is closed.

If the gate to the one-way northbound High Drive is open, usually from May to November, you can proceed past this parking lot up along High Drive to the Mt. Buckhorn / Mays Peak saddle. At the saddle is a second trailhead, the Captain Jacks, which accesses the Buckhorn Trail #667.

A third trailhead beyond the saddle is located at the last major switchback below the saddle on the left. This trailhead accesses the lower Bear Creek Trail #666.

As can be seen on the Pikes Peak Atlas, all three of these trailheads provide access to the faint Tenney Crags trail located on the north side of Trail #667 just above the junction with the Bear Creek Trail #666. The Tenney Crags trail and junction is easy to miss and is not located on the Pikes Peak Atlas or any other local topographic map I have seen. It is located at approximately 38.79438N, 104.92886W.

For those lucky enough to live or know someone who lives in the private Crystal Park residential area, Tenney Crags is accessible from the north.

Red Tape

There are no permits necessary for this section of Pike National Forest.

When to Climb

The Lower Gold Camp Road trailhead is accessible year round. The two High Drive trailheads are typically closed to vehicles from December to April. The Tenney Crags trail primarily has southern exposure but the approach trails are located in Bear Creek Canyon and could be difficult during the winter months. For the hardy winter hiker the summit is accessible year round.

Mountain Conditions

Check Colorado Springs weather at: Colorado Springs weather

Check conditions on Pikes Peak above 11,000 feet here.

Camping

There is no camping allowed at any of the three trailheads. The saddle to the west of Tenney Crags is relatively flat and would be ideal for backcountry camping – if you want to lug a backpack up to 10,000 feet!

Images

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