Sloan Summits: Canine Crag and Ecru Peak

pics by Harlan W. S.
Jan 30, 2010

 

Earlier in the week I had been to Sloan Canyon, Nevada, and seen these neat crags. I passed by the base and didn’t see an easy route. Five days later I came back with CP and DB, prepared for a semi-technical assault… and CP saw a class 2 route!  I couldn’t quite believe him, so we took a creepy route up the west ridge… then took the class 2 way down! If CP hadn’t been there, I probably would have risked life and limb on the class 4-5 south side. 

 

My ankle is still on the mend; I’m a lot more cautious now, and do less jumping!

 

crag-from-sutor

Canine Crag as it appeared from the

W side of Sutor, 5 days before.  Potosi in back.

sc

The magenta route is our path Jan 30.

The red is my path Jan 25.

 

IMG_6131

DB climbs directly up the face of the

Slick dryfall.  Sticky rubber?

Nope, she was in tennis shoes with

worn-flat soles.

 

 

 

 

IMG_6135

DB and CP harness-up for the west ridge.

We start up a chimney behind CP.

At one point I saw a 500-lb boulder

above me, resting on a fist-sized rock.

Nominally the route was class 3, but you had

to climb it class 4 to avoid dicey holds.

 

IMG_6136

After topping the bad stretch on the

west ridge, I looked over and saw the very

class 2 ramps CP had seen on the way

up.  Oops.  But it’s creepy class 2, with

large, unpruned boulders ready to tumble.

 

IMG_6139

 

 

 

IMG_6142

IMG_6145

Like many sharp desert peaks, there is

no room to back up and get a good

perspective of the drop off each side.

IMG_6146

Why did we name it Canine Crag?

 

 

 

IMG_6148

IMG_6169

Black Mountain in back.  I could have

gotten much more dramatic self-timed

shots, but my desire to live trumped.

IMG_6170

As we descend slightly N of the peak,

I look back at the last class 2 ramp.

 

 

 

IMG_6171

Class 2, but helmets are in order.

IMG_6173

Now we’re looking E, traveling up the W

peaklet (Feline Fang?)

IMG_6178

Here we are on top of Feline Fang,

looking W to Ecru Peak.

 

 

 

IMG_6179

View E back to Canine Crag.

IMG_6181

DB laughs at my request to pose.

IMG_6184

Feline Fang too has a creepy class 2

set of ramps down.

 

 

 

IMG_6189

View E to Feline Fang.

Ecru has a quasi-knife edge

IMG_6190

The quasi-knife edge.

IMG_6193

A 5’ cave and arch.

 

 

 

IMG_6194

OK, maybe a bit of class 3.

IMG_6196

IMG_6197

View back E. Canine Crag is hidden behind

Feline Fang.

 

 

 

IMG_6200

 

IMG_6203

The “M” resort is visible in distance at R.

We picked the name Ecru as sort of a joke;

we were jaded with all the peaks named

“White,” Black,” “Brown,” etc.

IMG_6206

Potosi in back.

 

 

 

IMG_6210

The NE side of Ecru had some

interesting formations.

IMG_6224

While DB and I rested, CP scurried over.

He decided these mini-crags were far

too nasty for our modest equipment.

IMG_6225

Heading back E, past old channel-fill

conglomerates.

 

 

 

IMG_6227

Looking up; Canine Crag at L,  with the

class 2 route shown as a dashed line, the

ridge route shown as dots.

IMG_6230

More petroglyphs, of course.

IMG_6231

 

 

 

IMG_6232

IMG_6233

IMG_6235

 

 

 

IMG_6236

IMG_6237

Over the last significant (still small) dryfalls.

Desert hiking is desolate and stark,

but there are advantages –

like no significant brush!