Crestones
The Crestones are a group of four 14,000 foot (4,268 m) peaks (fourteeners) in the Sangre de Cristo Range above Crestone, central southern Colorado, comprising:
- Crestone Peak (14,294 ft, 4,357 m)
- Crestone Needle (14,197 ft, 4,327 m)
- Kit Carson Mountain (14,165 ft, 4,317 m)
- Humboldt Peak (14,064 ft, 4,287 m)
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Snow is usually mostly melted by early July. Climbers can expect afternoon rain, hail, and lightning from the seasonal monsoon in late July and August.
Climbing
- For climbing details, see the individual peaks' articles, and their references therein.
- Crestone Peak and Crestone Needle are rock scrambles (Class 3) with some exposure; Crestone Peak has significant rockfall danger.
- Kit Carson Mountain is a walk-up (Class 2), but only if the correct route is carefully followed; it has claimed more lives than Crestone Peak or Crestone Needle. Challenger Point (14,081 ft, 4,292 m) and Columbia Point (13,980-foot (4,261 m)) are sub-peaks of Kit Carson Mountain.
- Humboldt Peak is the easiest of the four, with a straightforward walk-up route. Sometimes Humboldt is not included in the term "The Crestones."
Broken Hand Peak, 13,573 ft (4,137 m), southeast of Crestone Needle, is included within the official name "Crestone Peaks".[1] Mount Adams (13,931 ft, 4246 m) is a notable peak just to the north of the Crestones, and is quite rugged.
Note that Crestone Peak and Crestone Needle are somewhat more technical climbs than many Colorado fourteeners; caution is advised. About one person per year is killed on the Crestones; occasionally, they are skilled mountaineers.[2]
See also
- Geography of Colorado
- Mountain ranges of Colorado
- Mountain peaks of Colorado
- Mountain passes of Colorado
- Mountain ranges of Colorado
- Outline of Colorado
- Index of Colorado-related articles
Notes
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Crestone Peaks or Crestone Group
- "Plano mountaineers fall to their deaths in Colorado", article by Matthew Haag in The Dallas Morning News, August 3, 2010, accessed January 16, 2018
External links
- The Crestones on TopoQuest
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Crestone Peaks or Crestone Group
- Well illustrated trip report of climbs of Crestone Needle and Crestone Peak via Broken Hand Pass
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