Page Type: | Mountain/Rock |
---|---|
Lat/Lon: | 45.05339°N / 110.00992°W |
Activities: | Mountaineering, Scrambling |
Season: | Summer |
Elevation: | 10479 ft / 3194 m |
Wolverine Peak isn't a technically difficult peak to climb in typical summer conditions, but it checks a lot of boxes for Yellowstone-area mountaineers and others who seek something more than crossing a name off a list:
Just east of Cooke City, turn onto the dirt road for Daisy Pass. You can drive to either Daisy Pass or Bull of the Woods Pass (both are about 5 miles from the pavement), and you will need high clearance for either. The road to Bull of the Woods Pass is rough and steep in places and will require 4wd; although the approach from Daisy Pass is a little longer, you should not need 4wd unless conditions are wet or snowy. There is also a road connecting Daisy and Bull of the Woods. When clear of snow, it, too, is an easier alternative to the road up to Bull of the Woods.
You will have to first climb Miller Mountain, and, unless the snow is melted out, its false summit.
From the pass, follow the ridgeline, surmounting or bypassing obstacles as necessary. It is not necessary to climb the false summit directly south of the pass if the snow is gone or if you have the equipment and experience for traversing steep snow slopes.
There will be some Class 3 terrain, but you should be able to avoid anything harder than that. However, beware crumbly rock. It's the norm in these mountains.
From the summit of Miller, descend west to a basin beneath Sunset Peak. Follow goat trails whenever you can. Expect some scrambling, but nothing too bad. It is, however, less direct and more challenging than it looks on a map or from Miller's summit.
Now ascend slopes to the Sunset summit. When I climbed it, it was early July and there was a snowfield going almost all the way up, so I took that over loose Class 2-3 terrain.
From the Sunset summit, descend to a broad, obvious saddle. Once again, this is trickier than it looks from above, but it isn't hard. Just look for the breaks and follow them.
Finally, head up slopes that are steep but should be technically easy when they are snow-free. In early July, having ice axes turned out to be a good idea because we encountered a short vertical headwall of snow that required kick-steps and ice axes to surmount.
Enjoy the summit. The views are the kind that make you want to stay.
On our descent, we found a way down into the basin below and then to Daisy Pass, where we had parked because snow was blocking the way to Bull of the Woods Pass. That route was more direct and did reduce overall elevation gain, but it is for experienced route-finders only because it snaked its way through cliffs that were impassable just about everywhere else. At the time we did it, quite a lot of snow travel was involved, and we needed our ice axes.
There are some private mining claims about; try to avoid them.
This is grizzly country.
Summer and early fall are best. Because of heavy ATV and snowmobile usage around Cooke City, the passes may be accessible in winter.
Plenty of dispersed camping.