VDC has been haunting my dreams over the last several years. It once was a long, but easy hike from Botchers Gap, but fires and erosion have closed access roads and trail maintenance within the Ventana Wilderness. In the few short years since the closure the vegetation has devoured much of the trail, and per the sparse trip reports available, all trails which lead to the summit are either lost or impassible. This led us to attempt the idea of approaching from the drain. This was a grueling task which had us first climb over Post Summit, Cabezo Prieto and Kandlbinder before we could climb the class 4 chute up to the summit of VDC. There is a lightly flagged use trail from the summit of Cabezo Prieto to our camp where we were able to access water by descending into the headwaters of the Little Sur River. The next day we climbed 1400 ft to Kandlbinder, dropped ~1700 ft into the drain and then climbed ~1900 ft to the summit of VDC. The only way back to camp had us retracing our steps, which meant climbing back down into the Drain before climbing Kandlbinder once more. We climbed to the Ventana first, then followed the brushy ridge south towards Kandlbinder, then dropped back down to camp as the sun set. The next day we hiked out which meant climbing over Cabezo Prieto and Post Summit once more. Lots of poison oak, ticks and rough bushwhacking. Roughest country in the state

Other peaks climbed on this trip

scott

That looks grueling, what an effort. The wilderness around there is so dry, dense, and everything is sharp. Reminds me of Steinbeck's short story Flight.

seancasserly

The two hardest hikes I've done in California were Pinyon Peak and Ventana Double Cone, which are both within the Ventana Wilderness. Their low elevations are very misleading. It's a very unhospitable place, and it is truly remote.