Region
Most climbed route
Highlights
Routes
1 summit • 14.3 km • 633 m gain • 6 hr 14 min
1 summit • 20.6 km • 1,009 m gain • 4 hr 31 min
1 summit • 25.2 km • 1,203 m gain • 7 hr 10 min
1 summit • 6.8 km • 430 m gain • 2 hr 47 min
Latest summits
"24.6km loop with 1,455m gain in 7:10hrs.
A bit windy at open spaces, almost no snow (as usual in the foothills & front ranges).
Solo, in complete solitude.
The best time to do it though in late October or November: no leaves, and no or almost no snow, Powderface trail is still open for traffic. Better to do with 2 cars, or at least a bike. Otherwise it'll be a long 7 km walk. Or half walk, half run - a bit faster, but feels long anyway. " — alexp • Dec 23, 2018
"Solo hike. Found my way to the summit and back. Windy with 5 cm snow and patches of 30 cm drifted-snow at top of peak which both my GPS units said is 2110 m above sea level. Observed a small grove of larch trees, probably Larix lyalli, just north of the summit. Due to conditions and time factors I returned the same way down. (instead of hiking along the ridge crest northward to another summit-point around 2.5 km north-northeast)" — geoffc • Nov 2, 2016
"Parked on Sibbald Creek Trail between the old logging roads went up the one to the east then up the ridge between the two Stoney creek drainages(I took a wrong turn here I meant to come up the left but missed a turn near the start).I angled right till I reached the col avoiding one of the peaks that I meant to come up from the other side. Then up to the smaller peak on the bend of the ridge and then to the summit. I return a different route to reach the other old logging road. Down a ridge west of the smaller peak that lead to the forks of two drainages. One day I'll return and get the other peaks most likely a different route." — Randy • Feb 28, 2016