I went to the Monument today intent on hiking up Coldwater peak I knew there would be some snow on the upper slopes so I brought micro spikes and yaktrax. The morning was cold as I left the lot at Johnstone ridge. I was the first out and immediately the fragrance of flowers filled the air orange and purples lined the trail.
As I hit the ridge above the Humocks a cold wind hit me and it kept me moving. As I followed the Boundary trail I could see all the spots the other hikers had been TheOtherBob ,Sean and Jo and GraigG and company. Coldwater peak hovered to the east reminding me of another tr. Finally after passing the Harry's Ridge junction the sun began to warm me and this is were the climb begins.
I had no Idea what to expect snow wise I did not take any photos till I topped out on Coldwater. So I will post the Photos from top to finish.
It was spectacular on top calm and clear.
One lonely flower on the top.
St Helens lake.
Spirit Lake.
The trail was thawed out the last couple hundred yards before the top.
Below that was a steep long snow bank I had no boot steps to follow in the snow after the South Coldwater junction. But the snow was soft and I kick stepped never using traction devises.
Heading towards the South Coldwater junction.
It just did not look like there were that many snowfields to cross up there.
Time for cruise control.
Since I retired I put on a few pounds so it was time for a change
I was alone till the Harry's ridge junction on my return then after the Truman Junction it got busy. The closer I got to JRO It was very crowded.
It was a great hike I have not done that one for over four years its just a lot of fun.
Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak 6/19
Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak 6/19
The downhill of the mind is harder than the uphill of the body. - Yuichiro Miura
- sprengers4jc
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: October 22nd, 2013, 11:35 am
- Location: Vancouver, WA
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Great photos and TR of a spectacular area. Every year I say that we are going to get up there, and then I get lazy and say, 'do I really want to drive four hours round trip to do so....?' :/ We just need to do it.
Any guess on the elevation gain and length, along with exposure issues?
Any guess on the elevation gain and length, along with exposure issues?
'We travel not to escape life but for life to not escape us.'
-Unknown
-Unknown
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Thanks for the terrific TR, Roy! I've been thinking of Coldwater as a nice long hike to do for solstice tomorrow, and if the weather looks good, I'm sold!
From the map, looks like starting from Johnston ridge is about a 12 mile RT, and looks like less than 2,000 feet gain? Not bad.
Thanks for the terrific pictures - I am definitely doing this one on a view day.
-payslee
From the map, looks like starting from Johnston ridge is about a 12 mile RT, and looks like less than 2,000 feet gain? Not bad.
Thanks for the terrific pictures - I am definitely doing this one on a view day.
-payslee
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Looks like you had a marvelous day up there! Good to see it melting out so well. Those steep snowbanks just past the saddle and on the way up Coldwater always give me pause. I gotta get back up there while the bloom is on!
Just checked one of my tracks, and from JRO to the peak, it's 6.2 miles with 2350' EG and 835' EL, so up to 13-ish miles and 3200' EG roundtrip without any side trips.
sprengers4jc wrote:Any guess on the elevation gain and length, along with exposure issues?
There are what some people consider to be pretty serious exposure issues in at least two spots along that route - the west side approach to Devil's Elbow and on both sides of the Rock Arch. I'm not one to enjoy tightrope walking, but if you're unphased by "The Vertigo Mile" on Eagle Creek, neither of these will be deal-breakers.payslee wrote:From the map, looks like starting from Johnston ridge is about a 12 mile RT, and looks like less than 2,000 feet gain? Not bad.
Just checked one of my tracks, and from JRO to the peak, it's 6.2 miles with 2350' EG and 835' EL, so up to 13-ish miles and 3200' EG roundtrip without any side trips.
Karl
Back on the trail, again...
Back on the trail, again...
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
A hint the heavy wet snow will ball up and stick to yaktrax , micro spikes and crampons making them more slippery many times than a good tread. That is why I did not use anything.
The downhill of the mind is harder than the uphill of the body. - Yuichiro Miura
- sprengers4jc
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: October 22nd, 2013, 11:35 am
- Location: Vancouver, WA
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
kepPNW wrote:Looks like you had a marvelous day up there! Good to see it melting out so well. Those steep snowbanks just past the saddle and on the way up Coldwater always give me pause. I gotta get back up there while the bloom is on!
sprengers4jc wrote:Any guess on the elevation gain and length, along with exposure issues?There are what some people consider to be pretty serious exposure issues in at least two spots along that route - the west side approach to Devil's Elbow and on both sides of the Rock Arch. I'm not one to enjoy tightrope walking, but if you're unphased by "The Vertigo Mile" on Eagle Creek, neither of these will be deal-breakers.payslee wrote:From the map, looks like starting from Johnston ridge is about a 12 mile RT, and looks like less than 2,000 feet gain? Not bad.
Just checked one of my tracks, and from JRO to the peak, it's 6.2 miles with 2350' EG and 835' EL, so up to 13-ish miles and 3200' EG roundtrip without any side trips.
Great info, Karl. Thanks.
'We travel not to escape life but for life to not escape us.'
-Unknown
-Unknown
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Great day out Tomroy! I am glad you were there!
Some people are really fit at eighty; thankfully I still have many years to get into shape…
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Nice TR, Roy! It looked like it was a good day to get out there and have the peak all to yourself.
Rambling on at Allison Outside
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
The drive is a easy one paved highways its I-5 half the way 70 mph in Washington and the spirit lake Hwy is easy to maintain a 55 mph speed limit.Then the last twenty minutes its hard to stay on the road the views are jaw dropping.sprengers4jc wrote:Great photos and TR of a spectacular area. Every year I say that we are going to get up there, and then I get lazy and say, 'do I really want to drive four hours round trip to do so....?' :/ We just need to do it.
Any guess on the elevation gain and length, along with exposure issues?
The Devils elbow is a quarter mile of trail cut out of a steep face with a wicked drop off and small section of trail switch backing down to the arch is a little airy and that's it when the snow is melted off.
Last edited by Roy on June 21st, 2014, 5:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
The downhill of the mind is harder than the uphill of the body. - Yuichiro Miura
Re: Flowers at Jonstone ridge and a trip up Coldwater peak
Karl were you up at McNeil point yesterday? I almost contacted you to see if you wanted to go there but I thought it was short notice for someone who works. You probably went with stronger hikers than I anywaykepPNW wrote:Looks like you had a marvelous day up there! Good to see it melting out so well. Those steep snowbanks just past the saddle and on the way up Coldwater always give me pause. I gotta get back up there while the bloom is on!
Just checked one of my tracks, and from JRO to the peak, it's 6.2 miles with 2350' EG and 835' EL
Always admire your tracks graphs and interest in these things I have some other hobbies and always seem short on time.
Watch out this place is addictive if you go soon it seems you can bypass the some of steep snow fields but the bush whacking is a few feet from some cliffs in places if you try it.payslee wrote:Thanks for the terrific TR, Roy! I've been thinking of Coldwater as a nice long hike to do for solstice tomorrow, and if the weather looks good, I'm sold!
From the map, looks like starting from Johnston ridge is about a 12 mile RT, and looks like less than 2,000 feet gain? Not bad.
Thanks for the terrific pictures - I am definitely doing this one on a view day.
-payslee
The downhill of the mind is harder than the uphill of the body. - Yuichiro Miura