Approach
From the parkinglot at the NE end of Convict Lake, head directly up the slopes on the lakes SE side. The first part is quite steep and sandy, but this eases after 400 ft of climbing. There is an inlet to the lake that comes the south, draining the east side of Mt. Morrison. Follow the same direction as the creek, but stay high on the ridge to the left (east). The creek is a jumble of boulders, whereas the ridge has firmer footing.
The hiking here is often hot - there is no shade, and much scrub. After two miles the canyon turn to the right, closer to Mt. Morrison's east side. Follow this to a small tarn, then head west, bringing you abreast the East Slope.
Route Description
There are several routes you can take to the summit that remain class 2. The easiest route seems to be on the right side of the East Slope. A buttress splits the east route, the left side being a wide bowl, and the right side is more a chute/slope. There is a faint use trail that helps in climbing much of the steep, loose sand and scree on the right side. Eventually you'll need to cross over the buttress to the left and climb the remaining distance up the wide bowl.
Alternatively, at the base of the East Slope you can continue south a short ways and enter the bowl directly from the bottom. The lower half is steep and requires some (not so difficult) route-finding to keep it class 2. But the rock is very loose here, and the going is slower going this way than sticking to the right side.
Essential Gear
None.
Miscellaneous Info
If you have information about this route that doesn't pertain to any of the other sections, please add it here.
Bob Burd - Jun 4, 2006 1:57 am - Hasn't voted
Re: Tobacco Flats Sheep 4x4 RoadWhich is "Little Morrison"? Is that between Morrison and Mono Jim? Thanks for the additional info. I remember wondering if there was a way to drive up there when I was passing by it. Also, is the road good enough for all vehicles, or is 4wd needed?
BobD3 - Jun 26, 2016 7:51 pm - Hasn't voted
approach description"stay high on the ridge, the creek is a jumble of boulders". I followed the creek bed up to the first trees (9300 ft.) and found nothing but flat rock and firm footing the whole way. No boulders anywhere. Perhaps the most enjoyable part of the route was here.