Bohemia Mountain and Fairview peak are adjacent to each other and make a good activation pair. They are nearly 6000' ASL and are among the highest W7/WV summits. The views from the top of either one are wonderful. Bohemia is the higher of the two and is a moderately easy hike, while Fairview is a drive up with a fire lookout on top. My wife, Christina, accompanied me on these two activations on Wednsday, July 11, 2011.
Activation Reports
Decided to kick it up a notch this time, (but only one notch) and do a 4 pointer. But feeling a bit lazy I went looking for a 4-pointer that I could reach without a really long hike. Gold Mountain, just east of Darrington, fits the bill. I headed north from downtown Darrington on SR530, and then east on Sauk Prairie Rd. After a couple miles, turned south on FS24 (pretty good gravel road), and after 4 or 5 miles turned right on FS2420 (OK gravel road with a few potholes to dodge).
A six-point SOTA on a Wednesday? You bet! The July 4th holiday made for a nice mid-week excursion to the hills to one of Washington's fourteen Goat Mountains. This one was twelve miles north of Mt. St. Helens.
After getting stopped at a closed forest road in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest, we rerouted and arrived at the trailhead for Goat Mountain Trail #217 a little late. As soon as we stepped out of the Jeep, we knew that we were in for a bloody battle against the "skeeters." I think I was a pint low before I even started climbing.
A good dirt/gravel goes all the way to the top. There is a small radio tower, container and photo cell structure. Park somewhere down the hill and make the final hike to the top. There is good cell coverage and I was able to self spot. The top is forested so the view is through trees to the Sisters and Mt. Bachelor to the north.
I did not spend a lot of time at the top since the mosquitos were out in force.
This is an easy 6 pointer but remember to bring your bug spray if you are there in summer.
Stats:
6.8 miles roundtrip
1761 ft elevation gain
Start elevation: 3463 ft
End elevation: 4962 ft
This is probably the easiest summit to locate in Idaho. It is a volcanic dome that rises 2500 feet in the middle of the Snake River Lava Plain. You can't miss it. I accessed it from the ARCO approach, a drive of about 20 miles across a dusty BLM desert road which brought me to the base. Here I unloaded my ATV and rode up the summit trail which is 5 miles one way. A really fine and popular ATV trail ride. The trail ends at the very peak where there is a viewing platform and stinky outhouse.
This was really a spur-of-the-moment thing. I saw the weather was going to be great on Friday, cleared a day off with the boss, and checked over my "portable station": My NorCal NC-20, EFHW tuner and 34' of wire. Cobbled up a Li-ion battery, and looked over some summit possiblities. I settled on West Tiger as not being too far away, or too ambitious for a first attempt. (But I wanted to do more than a 1-pointer!) So I put an alert on SOTAwatch, and set 11:00am local as a start time.
As we headed back from Lakeview Peak earlier in the day, Taylor and I took a detour to go by Bandwidth Mountain. This two-point summit is not significant enough to have an official name, but like many in the Washington SOTA database, it has been assigned a cute amateur-radio name to avoid a simple numbering system. Our outdated topo map software showed a road leading in the direction of the summit, but stopping a couple miles short. However, some satellite reconnaissance ahead of time showed that the road actually went much farther, to just below the base of the summit.