9/27/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 9/28/2024, By: kieranjsmith Info: Hiked Crestone Peak from the 2WD South Colony Lakes TH on Friday. There was a good amount of snow on the north side of Broken Hand Pass. I made it up and down without spikes but I think they would have made it safer and quicker. The snow had softened by the time I first got there (12:30pm), but I still slipped a few times and I can imagine it would be slicker in the morning. Water running down half of the red gully, but the left half (climbers left) was clear and dry. I met folks who said that the Needle was similarly dry, but I cant say from personal experience. |
|
9/8/2024 Route: Crestones Traverse Posted On: 9/9/2024, By: constipated_pete Info: Fantastic conditions -- a bit of water running down the center of the red gully on the peak, full summer conditions otherwise. The red gully was a party on Sunday, a large group was celebrating a finisher (at 77?? very impressive) Wind moved around in weird ways once we got up near the black gendarme but it calmed down for the money pitch up the headwall. One party far in front of us on the traverse but once we broke off to start the traverse we didn't see anyone else until we were back down at South Colony lake. Absolutely fantastic route. The red gully is fun and straightforward. The traverse is not terribly interesting until you get to the needle but all the moves are secure and there's an amazing build up towards the headwall, which gets steeper and steeper until you suddenly top out. Bill's route description is spot-on. I was very glad to have previously climbed the standard route on the needle, the descent is confusing and unintuitive (especially the notch at photos 11/12) even for experienced 14er climbers. |
|
9/2/2024 Route: Crestones Traverse Posted On: 9/3/2024, By: durkan Info: Some water flow low in the Red/Bacon Gully ascending Crestone Peak. Dry and well-cairned across the traverse. Saw one climber lose a rock on the headwall while ascending the Needle, so definitely check all those holds. I personally never ascended the East Gully for Crestone Needle, so descending it after the traverse was done so cautiously. (2nd time up Crestone Peak) |
|
8/30/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 8/31/2024, By: The_Ramp Info: Despite a significant rain and hail storm on Thursday night (8/29) at the South Colony Lakes TH, route was completely snow and ice free. Plenty of water in the red gulley though (all very avoidable) and trail through willows around Cottonwood Lake was muddy in spots. |
|
8/28/2024 Route: Crestones Traverse Posted On: 9/3/2024, By: chelsluckb2 Info: Hiked this on 8/28. There is a good amount of water in the red gully going up Crestone Peak. It is mostly avoidable but definitely more than a trickle. The traverse is very well cairned, so if you study the pictures and keep an eye out for cairns, you shouldn't have much trouble. The hardest part for me was the class 5 move, but I made it up ok. The final headwall was awesome climbing but in my opinion, a little overhyped in terms of difficulty. I did the north ridge of Kit Carson several weeks prior, and I found it comparable to a much shorter version of that. Slightly steeper but over before you know it. I decided to go down the east gully direct on the needle to avoid any confusion with finding the crossover. Doing it this way made the route finding quite easy. There is a proper class 4 downclimb around the dihedral, but if you are good with that I recommend the east gully direct. Overall the hike was awesome. A lot of the traverse is fairly tame but all of the climbing was a blast and you can't ask for better rock quality. |
|
8/17/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 8/17/2024, By: Istoodupthere Info: Perfect day. Summited around the same time as about 20 other people. Plenty more before and after me. I enjoyed the climbing. Especially the gully between about 13,000 and 13,400 which is good solid rock. Above that it gets looser but there is usually good rock where its needed. I watched a football sized rock almost smoke a guy above me. Wear a helmet and be aware of your steps and those below you. Its a relentless climb up and down the red gully. Then going over Broken Hand Pass on the way back is miserable. I felt the climbing itself was a bit easier than expected but the 7 miles round trip from my camp site near the trail split was physically more demanding than I expected. Met a handful of really cool people. A few others I could do without. It was a beautiful Saturday in August though so to be expected. Thanks to Alysha and Allie for driving me back to the 2wd trailhead. You handle that road like a champ Alysha! |
|
8/5/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 8/7/2024, By: notidealbutfine Info: Had a nice day ticking Crestone Peak, NE Crestone, E Crestone, Crestone traverse, then summit of the Crestone Needle. All routes are full summer conditions, just a little water running down the red gully. Beautiful climbing day. Back at the lake at 1:30pm and got rained/hailed on back to the car. |
|
8/3/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 8/5/2024, By: James Dziezynski Info: Red Gully is in great shape; no snow and only a trickle of water down the middle. Great conditions. |
|
7/27/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 7/28/2024, By: sean23 Info: Perfect conditions. No snowfields, and you can navigate around the stream in the lower gully. The mosquitoes are bad at camp but fine once you begin climbing. |
|
7/15/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 7/16/2024, By: AsTheDuke Info: Basically summer conditions. No ice axe or traction required. Lower Red Gully has a small waterfall running through it. Upper Red Gully has a snowfield that can be passed on climber's left between the rocks and the snowfield. Worst mosquitos were by Cottonwood Lake and above Lower South Colony Lake. A little hazy as of 7/15 due to wildfire smoke, but not to the point it worsens the views significantly. |
|
7/14/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 7/15/2024, By: jway2952 Info: Incredible night/day in the mountains. Yeah, the mosquitos are eat-in-your-tent brutal, but not if you're haulin ass up these beautiful peaks! Sunny, but hazy from wildfire smoke. Summer conditions from the trailhead (4WD Lot with a lifted 4Runner) up, across, and down both peaks (Peak to Needle). Broken Hand Pass sucks. The traverse is not difficult if you have virtually any climbing experience and ended up being a delightful way to avoid regaining a ton of elevation with pretty simple routefinding. After spending a week in the Elks, it felt like a climbing gym out there. Took me about an 1:30 to get to camp Saturday night. Then, with a 6 am start, 2:15 up, 1.5 across, and 2 hours down to camp followed by an hour of hiking out. |
|
6/26/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 6/26/2024, By: haydenhogoboom Info: Climbed Crestone Peak via the red gully today (6/26). As previous trip reports stated, ice axe + traction are required right now. There are two unavoidable & steep snowfields in the upper portions of the red gully, as well as steep snowfields on the ascent to broken hand pass (east side). |
|
6/26/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 6/26/2024, By: greenonion Info: Mosquitoes are HORRENDOUS at Cortonwood Creek TH approach. Could be a deal killer if not ready. Swarmed my vehicle windows trying to get in. |
|
6/25/2024 Route: Crestones Traverse Posted On: 6/28/2024, By: Cadorade4403 Info: Broken hand pass is great going up in the morning, had spikes and an axe and flew right up it. Coming down anytime after sunrise is a nightmare. Slow stepping backwards, super soft but doable if you take your time. The red gully, as everyone has said, is full of snow the entire way up. We were able to stay out of it entirely by staying climbers left. If you stay about as far left as possible without hitting class 5 climbing, you can keep it to a manageable class 4 but it just about doubled the time up the gully compared to past climbs. To get to the traverse, there is a small break in the snow right where you need to crossover the gully on the way down. The traverse is in complete summer conditions, as is the way down the needle. Definitely doable, but make sure you have the appropriate gear and be prepared for a long day. |
|
6/23/2024 Route: South Face Posted On: 6/24/2024, By: andy_schlichting Info: Here's my report from this weekend that included Obstruction Peak, Kitty Kat Carson, Columbia Point, Humboldt, Crestone Peak, and Northeast Crestone... Packed in Friday evening to South Colony Lakes and ran into a big thunderstorm about half way up the trail. I parked 0.8 miles below the 4WD trailhead in a Subaru Crosstrek--not sure if it's just me, but this road seems worse than in years past. It was an absolute adventure just to get there. A big wind and rainstorm hit about 7:30 pm and lasted for about three hours. I suspect this was the precursor for yesterday's mosquito infestation... Saturday morning hiked up Obstruction Peak, KKC, and Columbia Point. Summer conditions all the way. Sticking to ridge-direct after reading the Humboldt saddle works really well. You can keep it at class 2 this way, albeit with some exposure. Nothing to report on Obstruction--that's a really easy class 1 peak after that ridge. The descent to the saddle with KKC is just a choss pile, but mostly stable rock. Ascending KKC was fun. The rock was still wet from Friday's rain and that made it a bit more challenging when we chose to stay in the middle of the gully and climb the class 3 rock band. Descending, we stuck more to the ridge (skier's left) and nothing exceeded class 2 over there--it's just steep. Once we made it back to the Humboldt saddle, we decided to head up there (that's a new 14er for my sister, who was my partner for the weekend). Nothing to report here except there are SO many marmots up there. I don't think I've seen more marmots anywhere else in this state. I will say I forgot that route finding is a bit challenging about half way up Humboldt. We missed a cairns somewhere and ended up cliff'd out on on the left side of the summit and had to traverse back around to the ridge direct and right side of the summit to find the trail again. When in doubt, go right on Humboldt. Sunday we headed up Crestone Peak. Ice axe and crampons are a MUST on Broken Hand Pass. Very helpful for the ascent in the pre-dawn hours, but absolutely needed for the afternoon descent. We watched two climbers have a difficult adventure heading down behind us on the soft snow with just microspikes and an axe. Right now, there's a fun, sporty/mixed move to get off the snow and onto the rock feature on the pass. It's easier than it looks--just stem the rock and the snow. On the Cottonwood side, it's summer conditions, but crampons and an axe are really helpful on Crestone Peak. Lots of snow in the gully still and it's a lot of effort to avoid it. The first snow sections takes you to a waterfall with a short, steep mixed ice section. If you choose this route, you'll have a class 3/4 narrow gully to climb (roughly 100-200 feet long) to then traverse back into the red gully for the final 600 feet of snow to the saddle. The snow near the rocks at the top of this section was really soft. I added Northeast Crestone to this and that was super fun, but a bit sketchy. There's some snow in the north couloir down to the saddle that I planned to use my crampons and axe for, but needed to downclimb a bit of class 3/4 to get to the snow and decided to just downclimb the rest and stay off the snow. There are some low class 5 moves going down/back up this couloir if you stick to rock. Northeast Crestone itself was mostly class 3/4 with maybe a couple class 5 moves that I was able to avoid on the descent, but it can be very exposed. This completed my Crestones massif summits :) I cannot understate how bad the mosquitos got on Sunday. They were mostly fine on Friday and Saturday and it's like all the rain from Friday breeded a million mosquitos by Sunday. I grew up in Minnesota where we joke that the state bird is the mosquito and I have honestly never in my life been attacked like I was on the Sunday--continuously from Cottonwood Lake, to the top of Broken Hand Pass, and all the way down back to the car. TL;DR--bring crampons and an ice axe for Broken Hand Pass and Crestone Peak, and do not forget bug spray. |