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Wheeler in the Sky
Trip Report
Wheeler in the Sky 

Page Type: Trip Report

Location: Nevada, United States, North America

Date Climbed/Hiked: Sep 29, 2008
 

Page By: patssox09

Created/Edited: Oct 12, 2008 / Apr 2, 2009

Object ID: 452378

Hits: 442 

Page Score: 88.01% - 9 Votes 

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Wheeler from 93
 
Wheeler from 93

Wheeler


Having been thwarted by the weather on Saturday, 9/27, I turned my attentions to North Schell peak on Sunday. After summiting I drove back to Baker and enjoyed a few hours of R & R before settling in early. My reasons for a relatively early start the next morning were twofold: I wished to avoid the afternoon thunderstorms, and I intended to make some good progress on my drive back to Boston, which would begin the moment I returned to my car.


Wheeler from overlook


Despite this new determination, I lazed around and checked out probably an hour later than scheduled. The sun rose behind me, above Notch Peak to the East in Utah as I drove the National Park road up to the trailhead. The air was crisp, cool, and comfortable, and like most of my other hikes this trip, the Fall aspens were in full bloom. The difference here on Wheeler was that they were much more abundant, especially along the road leading to the trailhead, and the early morning sun gave their yellow hues that extra little tint of radiance.

The Wheeler Peak Trail is excellently maintained, making for a very easy ascent, and in my opinion is one of the best trails I’ve had the privilege to tread upon. It would be a great introductory hike for an outdoors novice if it weren’t located so far away from anything and everything resembling even the farthest outposts of modern civilization. The magnificent Jeff Davis/Wheeler cirque peeks at you behind the aspen leaves for the first few stretches of the hike, then reveal itself in its full glory as the trees give way to some open meadows a little more than half a mile in.


Wheeler


If you start at the Wheeler Peak trailhead (as opposed to the campground trailhead, which is farther down the road and involves a few hundred feet of additional elevation gain), it is approximately a mile before you reach the Alpine Lakes Loop Trail. Follow the signs for Wheeler to take a left. You stay on the Alpine Lakes Trail for about 0.2 miles before another sign prompts you to take a sharp right. From here the next stop is the summit.

 
Bald Mtn

 
Cool shadow


The trail traverses around some open meadows before crossing the last grove of evergreens and reaching timberline for good. You eventually gain the saddle between Wheeler and its neighbor to the north, Bald Mountain. It then heads up the broad slope as Wheeler disappears from view. A few hundred feet later, the peak reappears, and after some more climbing you reach a flat plateau area. You can see the final part of your hike in front of you, straight up a steep ridge to the summit. The trail switchbacks smartly along this ridge without even hints of unpleasant looseness and pretty soon you find yourself on top.

 
First view of Wheeler
 
Wheeler



As I ascended a last section I noticed a hiker quickly gaining on me from below. I was somewhat dismayed, as after a few weeks of hiking I felt that I was, for a change, in halfway decent shape, and was making a good pace up the mountain. He finally caught up as I was taking a rest right below the summit. He was actually in week nine of a TEN week vacation, and we chatted a bit. It was here, about a hundred feet before the LAST summit of my trip, that I finally found a clear understanding of the concept of the rest step, a concept first brought to my attention in the "Mountaineering" book most of us are familiar with, but one whose technical aspects evaded me until now. I eagerly tried out this new skill for that last hundred feet of climbing; hopefully I will be able to put it to use in future climbs.

The summit of Wheeler is actually a fairly thin ridge. The highpoint is on the western side, towards US 93. Some yards away to the east is a lower summit cairn, and this is where you get your views of the spectacular Jeff Davis cirque. I felt a little uneasy with the vertigo above Wheeler’s north face, and didn’t dare step near the edge.

 
Me scared

 
South

 
West

 
SW

 
Jeff Davis
 
North Schell Peak



North towards Moriah



We descended, and the solo hiker, who had come up from the Wheeler Peak Campground, decided to take a shortcut back through the scree fields back to the park’s designated Bristlecone area, where he could link back up with the Campground. I had had enough of scree and talus for one trip, and decided to follow the trail back to my car. (Did I mention how remarkable this trail is? It is extremely well maintained all the way to the summit, never loose at all...I've already mentioned that).


Searching for a shortcut


Wheeler


About 1500 feet below the summit I crossed paths with several parties ascending the peak. The weather was turning at this point, so they probably got a little wet as they neared the summit. I felt a few drops of rain on the way down but nothing major.


 


 



Before I reached my car, I was rewarded with the sight of a herd of about 7 deer grazing just a few feet off the trail. All in all, it was a pleasant hike, very easy, on a good quality trail, in which I probably made the best time of my life, speed and endurance wise, up a mountain. After all that had happened on this vacation, it was a good way to end it. Now for the long drive to Boston, and the long wait to next summer.



Deer on the trail

Wheeler enshrouded



Some interesting pictures of Lehman Caves from a few days before:


Lehman Caves

Lehman Caves

Lehman Caves

Images



Comments

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Viewing: 1-3 of 3

imzadiBEAUTIFUL

Voted 10/10

Wonderful pictures!! There isn't a lot needed to be said when you have pictures like this.

And, seeing those deer...perfect ending (plus, sounds like YOU didn't get wet :)
Posted Oct 17, 2008 10:16 am

NoonduelerI agree!

Voted 10/10

You give a good sense of what the hike is like in the pics alone.
Posted Mar 3, 2009 12:12 am

patssox09Thanks!

Hasn't voted

Thanks! I was lucky to be on the mountain on a good day in the middle of a good season. Perhaps it's fortuitous that this mountain lies so far from civilization, else it would be popular to the point of its own hazard.
Posted Apr 2, 2009 11:46 pm

Viewing: 1-3 of 3


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