Welcome to SP!  -   
 
 MbPost.com -- It's SP for Mountain Biking!
Areas & Ranges·Mountains & Rocks·Routes·Images·Articles·Trip Reports·Gear·Other·People·Plans & Partners·What's New·Forum

East Ridge via Williams Lake
Route
Contribute 
 
Geography
Parents 
Routes
 
East Ridge via Williams Lake 

Page Type: Route

Location: New Mexico, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 36.55030°N / 105.4453°W

Route Type: Scramble

Time Required: Half a day

Difficulty: Class 3+

Route Quality: 
 - 1 Votes
 

 

Page By: truchas

Created/Edited: Aug 18, 2005 / Aug 18, 2005

Object ID: 166354

Hits: 786 

Page Score: 86.15% - 1 Votes 

Vote: Log in to vote

 

Approach


The trailhead begins at the Williams Lake Trailhead. See the "Getting There" section on the main page for directions.

Route Description


Total distance from the trailhead to the summit: Approx. 3.5 miles
Total elevation gain to summit from trailhead: 3600 ft.



Hike 2 miles from the trailhead to Williams Lake. The first mile of the hike is on a rough trail that travels over avalanche paths and glacial moraines. The second mile is quite nice. The trail climbs 1800 ft. to an elevation of 11,000 ft. at Williams Lake.

From the lake or just before reaching the lake, angle southwest (right turn) up towards the east ridge of Lake Fork Peak. The large peak directly south is not Lake Fork, but Unnamed 12,819. Boulder hop over a huge boulder field up and to some tundra below the beginning of the east ridge. Climb up the tundra and begin climbing on the north side of the ridge. The climbing with proper route finding should not be more than class 3+. Climb over 2 subpeaks, the second one requiring routefinding to keep the class at 3. Scramble up the remaining ridge to the summit.

If you choose not to downclimb the ridge, easier routes down exist to the north and to the south but require a lot of boulder hopping and some scree slogging. See map above.

Essential Gear


Other than a good pair of trail runners, no special gear is required. Be off the summit by noon. to avoid afternoon thunderstorms. Beware of avalanche conditions in the winter.



"This is a one line proof...if we start sufficiently far to the left."

© 2006 SummitPost.org. All Rights Reserved.