From the E parking lot described in the Davis Peak page Getting
There section, walk a few feet E, cross the highway, and find the
easiest place to start uphill into the woods. It's a pretty
sustained, steep slope (gains about 1800 feet in the first half-mile
and continues like that), forested with the smaller evergreens
typical for rocky, S-facing slopes here, with an understory of salal
and other brush. We did it in winter to minimize the bushwacking.
There is no trail that I know of, and numerous rock outcrops make
navigation important. We made it up without ever having to backtrack,
due partly to careful map study by my partners, partly to blind luck.

An
altimeter might improve your chances. If you start near the curve
here,
hike due N to 2800 feet / 850m elevation, then turn to the NE and
ascend to the point at 4920+ feet / 1500m. Go straight uphill at
about 340 degrees True to Point 5872 / 1790m, where the S ridge will
be obvious.
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We took a variation on the route from the notch. We weren't
impressed with it, but here it is: from our camp in the saddle we
dropped E into the basin under the E side of the S ridge. We
traversed up and N as far as we could go, then turned W and climbed
beside the edge of that Cliff. Luckily, we couldn't see much of it
past the cornices. The problem with this variation – at least
that January – was the short step we had to climb at the turn
from N to W. It was only about 10 feet / 3m, and looked easy, but
everybody ahead of me was taking way too long getting past it. One of
those situations where, from the end of the line, I thought, “What
the #$%^& is taking them so long?!” Then, when I arrived at
it, I found the holds all wrong and the cracks iced-in and asked
myself, “How the #$%^& did they climb this thing?” We
all made it, using ice axe belays, and continued up.
Past that step, the next rope-length or so was steep, exposed
snow, followed by an easy cruise to the summit along broad, wide-open
ridge. The kind of thing where you want to walk sideways and soak up
the views all around – except for that cornice on the right.
On
the return we hiked straight down the S ridge and off the step that
drops into the saddle and our camp. That step had looked formidably
steep from camp – hence the variation – but we descended
it easily on the return. It's as steep and exposed as it looks on the
map, but had all the ledges we needed to get down.
Note: Fred Beckey's guidebook advises that from the 5720+ foot
saddle you “climb 200 ft of slab to the sharp ridge leading to
the summit.” Winter conditions may have made the climb easier
for us, giving us good step-kicking snow above the saddle. The
broad, almost level ridge crest pictured above was the top of the
largest cornices I've been around; in Summer it may be a scramble
among rocks with steep drops on both sides. If you've been on Davis
in spring or summer, please advise the rest of us about what's under
the snow.