I want to get to the top of some higher mountains this year, so I've been hiking a fair amount, getting in shape, and needed a "shake down" hike to build up my endurance. Grandeur Peak lies between Parleys Canyon and Millcreek Canyon in the Wasatch on the east side of Salt Lake County. It tops out at 8300 feet, so that was a decent workout.
You'd think that by May, you could count on decent weather. Well, this hike started with some rain, and by the time I got to the summit I was waist deep in snow drifts. Definitely worth the view at the top, but I took the western route down, and my "wheels" were NOT happy with me by the time I got down to Wasatch Drive. It's about 3000 feet of vertical, since I started in Rattlesnake Gulch about 2 miles up Millcreek.
The weather ws really lousy on the hike up, so I didn't take any photos, but on the top it cleared up and I got a few decent pix.
Looking west down I-80 as it heads toward the north end of the Oquirrh Mountains with the southern tip of the Great Salt Lake & Stansbury Island, with the Cedar Mountains and Skull Valley in the distance:
Looking north, you can see the Radar towers at Francis Peak above Farmington in the middle in the distance:
Oquirrh Mountains, Kennecott smokestack (ahhhh, industry!), the GSL, Tooele Valley, Stansbury Mountains, Skull Valley and Cedar Mountains in the distance. To the left you can see the "C" on the mountain for Cyprus Highschool:
Looking south, along the western slope on the way down, Mount Olympus makes it known it is 1400 feet taller (at 9700 feet MSL), with an abrupt granite north wall:
Looking northwest, the ridgeline headed down, with Rice Eccles Stadium, the Utah State Capitol, LDS Hospital and Antelope Island in the distance:
Another shot of Olympus.
Grouse:
You'd think that by May, you could count on decent weather. Well, this hike started with some rain, and by the time I got to the summit I was waist deep in snow drifts. Definitely worth the view at the top, but I took the western route down, and my "wheels" were NOT happy with me by the time I got down to Wasatch Drive. It's about 3000 feet of vertical, since I started in Rattlesnake Gulch about 2 miles up Millcreek.
The weather ws really lousy on the hike up, so I didn't take any photos, but on the top it cleared up and I got a few decent pix.
Looking west down I-80 as it heads toward the north end of the Oquirrh Mountains with the southern tip of the Great Salt Lake & Stansbury Island, with the Cedar Mountains and Skull Valley in the distance:
Downtown SLC, with Antelope Island in the distance, and Lakeside Mountains and even Carrington Island in the far distance on the right:
Looking south, along the western slope on the way down, Mount Olympus makes it known it is 1400 feet taller (at 9700 feet MSL), with an abrupt granite north wall:
Looking northwest, the ridgeline headed down, with Rice Eccles Stadium, the Utah State Capitol, LDS Hospital and Antelope Island in the distance:
Another shot of Olympus.
Grouse:
Last shot of SLC, with Antelope Island in the background:
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