TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
- dubik99
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TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Many people have done North to South Lake loop so this report is focused on the Keyhole Pass, for which I was not not able to find much information prior to the trip, and some of what I found was not exactly right.
My daughter and I did a North to South Lake loop July 21-26, 20014. We drove up from LA early Monday morning to Rainbow Pack Outfitters at the South Lake, met up with our pre-arranged shuttle driver (Lindsey with a pickup truck), parked our car at the South Lake TH, and got a ride to the North Lake. We were hiking by 1 pm and were at Muriel Lake by 4:30 pm.
The next day we headed up to the Lost Lakes Basin from Muriel Lake. If you hang to the left the talus is not bad.
Fairly soon we were at the top of the slope and were looking at the lower Lost Lake and the next talus slope beyond it. There is even a clearly visible trail through the scree on the left side of the lake Beyond that, at the top lakes, it's talus, but we did not find it too bad. At this point the the pass came into full view. The issue was which notch to aim for. We had two pieces of information:
The close up picture of the pass http://www.thebackcountry.net/bb/viewtopic.php?t=684" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; in snow and GPS coordinates of the pass from http://donsnotes.com/places/california/ ... basin.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;. From the picture we figured it was the right-most notch, but once we got close, the GPS coordinates (using Gaia GPS on an iphone) pointed to the middle notch and so we headed there. Once we got there, there was no keyhole. A perfectly good crossing with a way down, or not, to the other side, but no fabled keyhole The good thing is that the ridge is passable from notch to notch and we quickly found The Keyhole at the rightmost notch, The correct coordinates for the actual Keyhole, according to my Gaia GPS, are 37.21495 and -118.68829.
As Siecor says, there is a short Class 3 section right after you get through the hole. It's not difficult, but slightly dangerous as a fall would be noticeable. We traversed to the right and then climbed down a crack with good holds. A more skilled climber might be able to go straight down.
The rest of the way down was pretty straightforward. We made a mistake of cutting to the left a bit too soon and ended up on steep ledges. A better way would be to go straight down and even a bit to the right (West) all the way down to the lake and then skirting the lake to the left, as the path along the lake is perfectly clear.
This is the view of the Southwest side of the pass Beyond that the way to Darwin Bench is pretty straightforward, but with tedious talus. The last lake, Lake 11540, presented us with a dilemma: take the short way around the steep East side or the long way around the West side. We chose the West side as we were pretty tired by then and were no longer looking for adventures. The West side does get choked off by steep rock right before the outlet, so tired us had to retreat a bit and go higher. The rock was probably passable, but at this point we were not in the mood for climbing anything with a significant drop with, by now heavy, backpacks on our backs.
After this last obstacle, the Darwin Bench is an easy descent down a gentle outlet of Lake 11540.
The rest of the trip was the usual trail trip which we shared with a multitude of JMT people and regular North-to-South-Lake-loopers. The only thing of note is that there is no fish in Wanda lake (frog restoration) and if you come up to Wanda Lake from below, take the first good camping spot that you see. We did and were very fortunate as later many people came by on further only to come back and pitch their tends around our area. Apparently there weren't any good spots further on. It was quite a change to all of a sudden have so many neighbors. But that's JMT.
My daughter and I did a North to South Lake loop July 21-26, 20014. We drove up from LA early Monday morning to Rainbow Pack Outfitters at the South Lake, met up with our pre-arranged shuttle driver (Lindsey with a pickup truck), parked our car at the South Lake TH, and got a ride to the North Lake. We were hiking by 1 pm and were at Muriel Lake by 4:30 pm.
The next day we headed up to the Lost Lakes Basin from Muriel Lake. If you hang to the left the talus is not bad.
Fairly soon we were at the top of the slope and were looking at the lower Lost Lake and the next talus slope beyond it. There is even a clearly visible trail through the scree on the left side of the lake Beyond that, at the top lakes, it's talus, but we did not find it too bad. At this point the the pass came into full view. The issue was which notch to aim for. We had two pieces of information:
The close up picture of the pass http://www.thebackcountry.net/bb/viewtopic.php?t=684" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; in snow and GPS coordinates of the pass from http://donsnotes.com/places/california/ ... basin.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;. From the picture we figured it was the right-most notch, but once we got close, the GPS coordinates (using Gaia GPS on an iphone) pointed to the middle notch and so we headed there. Once we got there, there was no keyhole. A perfectly good crossing with a way down, or not, to the other side, but no fabled keyhole The good thing is that the ridge is passable from notch to notch and we quickly found The Keyhole at the rightmost notch, The correct coordinates for the actual Keyhole, according to my Gaia GPS, are 37.21495 and -118.68829.
As Siecor says, there is a short Class 3 section right after you get through the hole. It's not difficult, but slightly dangerous as a fall would be noticeable. We traversed to the right and then climbed down a crack with good holds. A more skilled climber might be able to go straight down.
The rest of the way down was pretty straightforward. We made a mistake of cutting to the left a bit too soon and ended up on steep ledges. A better way would be to go straight down and even a bit to the right (West) all the way down to the lake and then skirting the lake to the left, as the path along the lake is perfectly clear.
This is the view of the Southwest side of the pass Beyond that the way to Darwin Bench is pretty straightforward, but with tedious talus. The last lake, Lake 11540, presented us with a dilemma: take the short way around the steep East side or the long way around the West side. We chose the West side as we were pretty tired by then and were no longer looking for adventures. The West side does get choked off by steep rock right before the outlet, so tired us had to retreat a bit and go higher. The rock was probably passable, but at this point we were not in the mood for climbing anything with a significant drop with, by now heavy, backpacks on our backs.
After this last obstacle, the Darwin Bench is an easy descent down a gentle outlet of Lake 11540.
The rest of the trip was the usual trail trip which we shared with a multitude of JMT people and regular North-to-South-Lake-loopers. The only thing of note is that there is no fish in Wanda lake (frog restoration) and if you come up to Wanda Lake from below, take the first good camping spot that you see. We did and were very fortunate as later many people came by on further only to come back and pitch their tends around our area. Apparently there weren't any good spots further on. It was quite a change to all of a sudden have so many neighbors. But that's JMT.
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- giantbrookie
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Neat report on an interesting off trail pass. This makes the Keyhole sound quite a bit better than most reports I've heard.
Since my fishing (etc.) website is still down, you can be distracted by geology stuff at: http://www.fresnostate.edu/csm/ees/facu ... ayshi.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
- Mike M.
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Dubik,
Nice report!
The Keyhole is a fun route. I've been over the pass two times, once solo in 1985 and a second time in 1988 with a group of four. The views from the top of the ridge are fabulous. Either from blind luck or because the pass is fairly well marked on the old 15' map, I had no trouble finding the "keyhole" either time. We passed our packs through the keyhole and zig-zagged down the steep scree field. Steep at first but not dangerously so, even with heavy packs -- the footing was fairly firm. No need to do that dicey traverse.
Here are some pics, scanned from old slides:
Nice report!
The Keyhole is a fun route. I've been over the pass two times, once solo in 1985 and a second time in 1988 with a group of four. The views from the top of the ridge are fabulous. Either from blind luck or because the pass is fairly well marked on the old 15' map, I had no trouble finding the "keyhole" either time. We passed our packs through the keyhole and zig-zagged down the steep scree field. Steep at first but not dangerously so, even with heavy packs -- the footing was fairly firm. No need to do that dicey traverse.
Here are some pics, scanned from old slides:
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- austex
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
1985...Ancient!? I was just out of college. Thanks for the pictures!
- seanr
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
dubik99 and Mike, thanks for posting. I've taken a recent liking to passes that bring challenge, solitude, and additional scenery to my hikes. I probably won't revisit North Lake until another season or year, but was impressed by the scenery on hikes from there earlier this month. Had I done some research while within internet range, I likely would have looped over Alpine Col or the Keyhole on my Lamarck-Darwin Bench hike. My map had those spots labeled and they were beckoning me, but my map was lacking detail. Oh well, exploring the ridge above (NW) Mount Lamarck to make a mini-loop on an out and back was still fun, and I enjoyed hiking over Piute to Goethe Lake on a separate day. I probably saw almost all the views a loop would have provided. Anyway, thanks again for posting the details!
- dubik99
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
1985 and 2014 and the pass hasn't changed a bit
Gee... I was still in college, 30 lbs lighter and my daughter wasn't anywhere near born.
Gee... I was still in college, 30 lbs lighter and my daughter wasn't anywhere near born.
- maverick
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Hi Dubik99,
Welcome to HST! Very enjoyable TR and pictures, did this back in the 1984.
Would you please consider doing a write-up on this in our "Cross Country
Passes" section: http://highsierratopix.com/community/viewforum.php?f=31" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Thanks
Welcome to HST! Very enjoyable TR and pictures, did this back in the 1984.
Would you please consider doing a write-up on this in our "Cross Country
Passes" section: http://highsierratopix.com/community/viewforum.php?f=31" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Thanks
Professional Sierra Landscape Photographer
I don't give out specific route information, my belief is that it takes away from the whole adventure spirit of a trip, if you need every inch planned out, you'll have to get that from someone else.
Have a safer backcountry experience by using the HST ReConn Form 2.0, named after Larry Conn, a HST member: http://reconn.org
I don't give out specific route information, my belief is that it takes away from the whole adventure spirit of a trip, if you need every inch planned out, you'll have to get that from someone else.
Have a safer backcountry experience by using the HST ReConn Form 2.0, named after Larry Conn, a HST member: http://reconn.org
- dubik99
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Maverick, it's done.
I'm glad to contribute to something I've been using.
I'm glad to contribute to something I've been using.
- Mradford
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Re: TR: North to South Lake via Keyhole Pass
Such a cool pass. Thanks go posting some good info on it!
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