Forum Index > Trip Reports > Tiffany Mountain, 9/3/11
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Aubrey
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Joined: 29 Aug 2011
Posts: 24 | TRs | Pics
Location: Bellingham
Aubrey
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PostMon Sep 19, 2011 12:00 pm 
Summit Elevation: 8,242’ Date Climbed: 9/3/11 Round-trip Distance: 6 miles Total Elevation Gain: 1,750’ After climbing Trappers Peak on 9/2/11 ( https://www.nwhikers.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=7994148 ), my wife and I decided to take things a little higher and drier. And mellower. So we set our sights on Tiffany Mountain, which is on the eastern edge of the North Cascades in the Tiffany Highlands, just northeast of Winthrop. I like to climb mountains for many reasons. One of them is for the challenge. But sometimes it’s nice to just hike something that’s relatively easy and tame. And even though it might still be a good workout, I find it mentally relaxing. Bovine blockage on the drive to the trailhead:
Portion of the road to the trailhead (that 2006 wildfire must’ve been massive):
It’s amazing to think that, not too far west of here, glaciers and year-round snowfields cover the ground lower than this trailhead:
The east side of the North Cascades is so different from the west side. I couldn’t believe how dry it was, and the fine dirt was so ashy and lunar-like that it plumed up after each step. Having recently moved to Washington from Colorado, I was amazed by how similar this area resembled the foothills of Colorado’s Front Range, especially the area just west of Fort Collins.
Tiffany’s massive baby bump before us:
The weather was awesome. It was sunny and warm with a barely perceptible breeze. We could only hear singing birds and buzzing bees. It was impossibly peaceful and the views were incredibly serene. The trail was easy to follow and it climbed gently. The only challenge was the altitude. Because we live at sea level now, we could definitely feel the lack of oxygen.
One hour and twenty minutes after starting, we crested the broad summit. We had it all to ourselves, along with a crystal-clear, 360-degree view. Here was our view to the south:
view to the south from Tiffany Mountain
view to the south from Tiffany Mountain
Not only was the summit broad, but it was also long, with a steep and cliffy north face. Jen on the eastern edge of the summit:
Tiffany Mountain summit
Tiffany Mountain summit
Another multi-photo pan of her on the eastern edge of the summit (looking east):
Tiffany Mountain summit, looking east
Tiffany Mountain summit, looking east
Found these two benchmarks on the summit:
Tiffany Mountain summit
Tiffany Mountain summit
Mount Baker even popped its head out. From this angle, you get a good view of Sherman Peak (point on the left), Sherman Crater (grey depression just to the right of Sherman Peak) and Grant Peak (dark rock on the summit, Mount Baker’s highest point):
zoomed-in shot of Mt Baker from Tiffany Mountain
zoomed-in shot of Mt Baker from Tiffany Mountain
Me on the summit:
Tiffany Mountain summit
Tiffany Mountain summit
Vertical pan, peering over Tiffany’s steep, northern edge (you can see a tarn 1,000 feet below):
Steep northface of Tiffany Mountain
Steep northface of Tiffany Mountain
And here’s an 11-photo pan that I took of the North Cascades from Tiffany’s summit (southwest to northwest):
11-photo pan from Tiffany Mountain
11-photo pan from Tiffany Mountain
Jen pondering the remoteness of the region from the western edge of the summit:
Tiffany Mountain summit
Tiffany Mountain summit
A rough look back on our route:
We spent a good 45 minutes on the summit and enjoyed every minute of it. Right before heading back down, another couple passed us on the top, and they were the first people we had seen all day. Heading back down through the charred forest:
Less than an hour after leaving the summit, we were back at the trailhead. Dirt-tanned legs and all:
dirt tan
dirt tan
After that hot and dry hike, we found an oasis on the drive back to Winthrop: The Methow Valley Ciderhouse. The apple orchard:
Methow Valley Ciderhouse apple orchard
Methow Valley Ciderhouse apple orchard
Our hard cider samplers:
Methow Valley Ciderhouse sampler
Methow Valley Ciderhouse sampler
Even though I appreciate hard cider, beer is my passion. And back in Winthrop, while my wife and I enjoyed some Boundary Bay IPAs on a deck, I found a bee that shared my passion.
um, I didn't order honey ale
um, I didn't order honey ale
Rescued bee:
Bee? Wasp? Hornet? Yellowjacket? ...
Bee? Wasp? Hornet? Yellowjacket? ...

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tigermn
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Joined: 10 Jul 2007
Posts: 9242 | TRs | Pics
Location: There...
tigermn
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PostMon Sep 19, 2011 12:35 pm 
Aubrey wrote:
What a great name for a pass (Freezout), and it looks so hot and dry. lol.gif

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pasayten
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Joined: 18 Aug 2011
Posts: 536 | TRs | Pics
Location: Winthrop, WA
pasayten
Class of 65...
PostMon Sep 19, 2011 1:13 pm 
Your beer liking friend is one of our local Bald Face Hornets (Some call it a White Face Hornet) or scientific name of Dolichovespula maculata... Sometimes, when they get too bothersome at our table while at the PUB, I will just buy them their own beer... biggrin.gif You passed right by our house on your way to/from the TH... We are on the East Chewack Rd 0.9 miles north of the Ciderhouse... lol... Richard and Lynn are great neighbors... and a trivia item is that the town name Twisp is from an Okanogan Indian name for wasp or yellow jacket... Glad you enjoyed our little neck of the woods... the dry side... smile.gif

Happy Trails... pasayten
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Tangeman
ride the storm



Joined: 24 Oct 2010
Posts: 485 | TRs | Pics
Location: Cascadia
Tangeman
ride the storm
PostMon Sep 19, 2011 5:33 pm 
Tiffany has such a great view. You can do a loop, too, if you start up the Berhardt "trail", bag Clark Peak, then follow the ridge south of Tiffany to Tiffany, and return via Freezout. I did that loop back in july, it's a good one.

"Civilization is a nice place to visit, although I wouldn't want to live there." My photos
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