The hike from the west
is easiest; the road (Golden Rod
Snyder, no sign) requires
at least 7" clearance and
cautious driving due to
recent washouts
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Context
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Pinto as seen from
Devil's Thumb
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Real Devil's Thumb
to SE
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In 1990, the Board
of Geographic names
inexplicably (without
reference) assigned
the name "Devil's
Thumb" to the conical
peak in back. I suspect
the looked for the peak
(indicated by locals) on
the USGS map, which
is in error (it cuts off
the upper cliffy part
of the mountain), so
assigned the name to
the fake Devil's Thumb.
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The terrain is a mix of smooth
and rough. It's a pluton cut by
feeders for Miocene volcanoes.
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It looks class 1, but the actual BM
peak isn't visible in this shot,
and there are hidden deep valleys
that require elevation loss if
you want to avoid class 3.
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The actual benchmark peak.
There is an azimuthal benchmark
on a previous (more western)
peak, which is actually 2' higher
according to the PID for Pinto BM.
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Not the "real" benchmark, but
this peaklet is actually ~2' higher.
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The originally benchmarked peak.
As near I can tell, there is one brief
3rd class section required for
the summit.
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Spirit Mt at L, Real Devil's
Thumb at R.
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Real summit
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There is a valley, bounded
by cliffs on west side, so one
cannot simply follow the ridge to
the true survey point (view west).
We're are looking at the peak
with the azimuthal benchmark;
descend off the NW side of this
peak and wrap around the N side.
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I think this broken eroded
dike may be related to
Devil's Thumb
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"C" indicates the mystery cairn.
One can climb onto the brown
ridge at this point; I went L a
bit. The alternative is lots
of elevation loss on class 2 talus.
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Surprisingly complex country
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Copper Peak
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slight moon
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Hart Peak at L, Castle CA at R.
The desert was easy walking.
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Devil's Thumb again.
Light area on left of face is
area of our ascent a while back.
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PID, with details about west
peak being higher.
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