Angora Peak (Oregon) Additions and Corrections

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Brian Jenkins

Brian Jenkins - Mar 9, 2015 3:51 pm - Hasn't voted

Little Angora

FYI, there is another pinnacle called Little Angora here. If you look at your map image, it's located where the second "m" in "summit" is where you have typed "Eastern Sub-summit". It goes 5.4 A0 with a hefty jump across a deep cleft/gap in the rock. Will try to post some pics soon.

EastKing

EastKing - Mar 14, 2015 3:32 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Little Angora

Awesome pictures added. Will put on the main page soon.

jdavis

jdavis - Sep 1, 2015 5:57 pm - Hasn't voted

Not so easy

When you reach the end of Archcape Mill Rd (grown over trees) the route to Angora Peak is not as easy to find as you would think. It is a given the Archcap Mill Road stops at where they bulldozed tons of stuff into the road which is now overgrown with trees and doesn't even look like a road.

We were just up there August 2015. We went to the right and this "path" or boot track or trample down took us to a cliff lookout just north of Angora Peak about half a mile. It is labeled in blue on the map above as "wrong path but leads to a view".
For the non-climber and weekend hiker this lookout area is plenty reward instead of scrambling through the mess to the rocks.

There is a makeshift bench on this lookout and a stone shelter behind in the woods that has a 50 gallon drum. The picture I am submitting is of this shack in 2006 when I was up there. It is still there in August 2015.

Jack Kerwin, retired state parks ranger, ran into us up there and has plotted a loop around Angora Peak using pink ribbon. At least the return loop is pink ribbon. Jack lives in Cannon Beach and hikes this area frequently. He said he knew the guy that built the shelter. He had a backhoe (the 50 gallon drum of water) and a key to the gate (Simpson Lumber Company) and he was an ornery cuss who died recently in a fight with his son.

Essentially this shack was for overnight Elk hunting trips. in 2006 there were a lot of elk dropping around that look out and up the road. in 2015 all we saw was bear scat every 30 yards (read: a lot of bear). I will post a picture of the shack and one of the bench. The lookout place is the blue markings on the map above


I am planning on going up with Jack and try to get in via the "Short Sands Crossover Rd" which has no gate (at least on HWy 101 side). The Archcape Mill Road continues around Angora Peak and joins up with an off spring of Short Sands Crossover Ro. called "Short Sands something or other". Just because it's there doesn't mean it is still a road for cars. I see this via Google Satellite close up. Short Sands Crossover starts just up the road from Nehalem and river crossing.

bob carson - Dec 28, 2017 11:50 am - Hasn't voted

Angora Peak, 25 Dec 2017

All these maps are wrong: USGS Arch Cape 7.5’ topo map (1985); Oregon Department of Forestry, NW Protection District (2012); map on smart phone. First, there is no bridge or road leading S from the Sewage Disposal Plant off Highway 101 at the S end of the town of Arch Cape (to quote Bert and I, “You can’t get there from here.”) Second, there is a maze of trails and old roads above 2000’ elevation.

Be sure to study the earlier Summit Post information on Angora Peak, which I did not read until returning. It explains a different route to the summit, probably easier, but hard to find.

We parked at the 2 gates (elevation 500’) at the start of the log road 300 m S of the Clatsop-Tillamook county line. This road leads NE back into Clatsop County past oucrops of Miocene sandstone . At elevation 900’ is a borrow pit (on the 1985 map). At about 400m past the borrow pit, turn N at the junction at elevation 1000’ (this short connecting road is on the 2012 forest map but not on the 1985 topo map). At the next junction (about elevation 1050’) turn NE up a long steady uphill grade in a roadcut of basaltic volcanic breccia (about 15 million years old). At about elevation 1700’ this road winds clockwise and climbs SE.

At roughly elevation 2200’ is a brush barricade, beyond which the road is overgrown, has fallen trees across it, and in places is partially blocked by mass wasting. Although you can follow the trail along and below the abandoned road, don’t! We did, but eventually bushwhacked up a steep slope to an old road on the saddle 700 m W of Angora Peak.

To get to this saddle, look for a trail 20-30 m NW of the brush barricade at 2200’. This narrow trail, marked with limited blue flagging, parallels the road on its SW side for about 10-20 m, then turns uphill and S to join an abandoned road in roughly 200 m. Near this junction is the “hermit’s cabin” (which we did not see). Follow the abandoned road SE to the saddle 700 m W of Angora Peak.

From this saddle, Summit Post describes a different route to the summit of Angora Peak. We proceeded SE on the abandoned road to where pillow basalt is present in the volcanic breccia. From a benchmark in a small rockpile with blue paint the road continues E along the S side of Angora Peak.


Angora Peak summit, Revenge of Angora, and Little Angora (Pinnacle) from W to E (view E from abandoned road on S side of Angora Peak summit ridge).

On the topo map the N side of the peak appears to have the gentlest slope, so we continued E on the abandoned road to the junction between Angora Peak and Little Angora (Pinnacle). Turning N at this junction, we circled counterclockwise around “Revenge of Angora.” Proceeding W to an elevation of 2560’ on the N side, we encountered a place where the entire road had collapsed in a landslide. At this point a break in the cliffs allowed us to scramble S up about 100’ to the ridge crest. I tried to follow the arête-like ridge E to the summit, but was soon cliffed out. In trying to scramble E along the steep slope below the cliffs, I was surprised to see yet another overgrown road about 100’ below. Descending to the abandoned road on the S side of the ridge crest, I followed the gentle ascent E 200-300 m to old orange paint mark on a tree. From there I bushwhacked up about 100’ to the summit.

Bob and Ben Carson

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