Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
- rlown
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Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
Carol Col (Puppet Pass):
GENERAL OVERVIEW: This col provides a cross country route between Mesa or Desolation Lake in Humphrey's Basin and Puppet Lake above French Canyon.
CLASS/DIFFICULTY: Class 1-2.
LOCATION: Sierra National Forest/John Muir Wilderness. HST Map
ELEVATION: ~12,000 ft
USGS TOPO MAP (7.5'): Mount Tom, CA
ROUTE DESCRIPTION: Starting from the inlet of Mesa Lake, you can head up towards the saddle of Puppet Pass. Stay to the right of the Saddle but just left of the dome.
Class 1/2. N-S, hug the obvious wall to the East. Stay out of the boulders that are in the middle.
PHOTOS:
First this:
If you go to the lowest point on the pass, it looks like this. It's kind of a cliff lots of boulders: The Col was named after Carol. I've no Idea why, but there's a plaque there that someone pried off it's mounts with an ice axe. Bad form. We found it in 2010 and put in in a safe place on a rock next to where it was removed.
This is looking up at the WRONG place to come down.. we did 100 yds from the wall id'd below. don't do this.. it looks simple in the pic, but it wasted a good 20 mins.
That wall should be your beacon to a great Puppet Pass crossing.. It's a little gravely 2/3rds the way up but it's a fast trip either way from humphreys to French.
The last shot is from Paris looking back. The red line is approximately where the wall is.
GENERAL OVERVIEW: This col provides a cross country route between Mesa or Desolation Lake in Humphrey's Basin and Puppet Lake above French Canyon.
CLASS/DIFFICULTY: Class 1-2.
LOCATION: Sierra National Forest/John Muir Wilderness. HST Map
ELEVATION: ~12,000 ft
USGS TOPO MAP (7.5'): Mount Tom, CA
ROUTE DESCRIPTION: Starting from the inlet of Mesa Lake, you can head up towards the saddle of Puppet Pass. Stay to the right of the Saddle but just left of the dome.
Class 1/2. N-S, hug the obvious wall to the East. Stay out of the boulders that are in the middle.
PHOTOS:
First this:
If you go to the lowest point on the pass, it looks like this. It's kind of a cliff lots of boulders: The Col was named after Carol. I've no Idea why, but there's a plaque there that someone pried off it's mounts with an ice axe. Bad form. We found it in 2010 and put in in a safe place on a rock next to where it was removed.
This is looking up at the WRONG place to come down.. we did 100 yds from the wall id'd below. don't do this.. it looks simple in the pic, but it wasted a good 20 mins.
That wall should be your beacon to a great Puppet Pass crossing.. It's a little gravely 2/3rds the way up but it's a fast trip either way from humphreys to French.
The last shot is from Paris looking back. The red line is approximately where the wall is.
Last edited by rlown on Wed Jan 21, 2015 10:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
- BrianF
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
Another view from the west at Roget lake, the "wall" is just left of center, click on pic to enlarge
The direction you are moving in is what matters, not the place you happen to be -Colin Fletcher
- RoguePhotonic
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
- rlown
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
The boulders in the middle are not stable. Maybe for you Rogue, but not for the 20 somethings that were moving large boulders around on their way down. I was at Puppet lk listening to this and it concerned us. That's a long way away to hear boulders shifting and shouts.
I didn't find it pleasing when i missed the route the first time, as we had to do some air work to get to the wall.
I didn't find it pleasing when i missed the route the first time, as we had to do some air work to get to the wall.
- RoguePhotonic
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
I must have taken the right way. I was happy about how stable and easy it was to climb down them.
- acvdmlac
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
I day-hiked from L Lake to top of Carol pass last September, it was fun with great views and worth the trip. Hugging the East/left-hand wall was very helpful advice for most of the way up, but the wall ends in jumbled, steep out-cropping that blocks the way if one wants to avoid Class 3 scrambling straight up and over it.
We first explored to the left/East, towards a chute that would have topped out well up the slope towards Star Peak, but after half an hour descended and re-grouped at the top of the wall. We were with my 80-year old step-dad so I was trying to keep it extra safe, but of course, mountain goat that he is, he was the one that found a way to keep it mostly Class 2 by bearing instead towards the right, in the direction of the main boulder field described above, and then arcing back left and up around a few sloping ledges to a short diagonal chute that was concealed from below, and that slanted left up to the top/low point in the pass, where we found the plaque. The location of the low point turned out to be along the line of the wall below, but again, not visible from below. In other words, from below, look up the line of the wall and it points straight to where the pass is hidden.
Heading back down, I found it safe and at times necessary to use my hands not just for balance to control descent around the ledges and down to the wall, and we were just carrying day-packs. While the south side is a Class 1, I would call the north side a Class 2+.
We first explored to the left/East, towards a chute that would have topped out well up the slope towards Star Peak, but after half an hour descended and re-grouped at the top of the wall. We were with my 80-year old step-dad so I was trying to keep it extra safe, but of course, mountain goat that he is, he was the one that found a way to keep it mostly Class 2 by bearing instead towards the right, in the direction of the main boulder field described above, and then arcing back left and up around a few sloping ledges to a short diagonal chute that was concealed from below, and that slanted left up to the top/low point in the pass, where we found the plaque. The location of the low point turned out to be along the line of the wall below, but again, not visible from below. In other words, from below, look up the line of the wall and it points straight to where the pass is hidden.
Heading back down, I found it safe and at times necessary to use my hands not just for balance to control descent around the ledges and down to the wall, and we were just carrying day-packs. While the south side is a Class 1, I would call the north side a Class 2+.
- rlown
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
yeah. coming up from the north, at the top, you have to step 15' to your right and then it's just up and over. Even with a 45lb pack. I rated it at a 2 because even with hands on rock, it didn't seem that hard. No air below you to make the move. It wasn't a 3. Hell, Star col is a 3 and scary the number of times i felt at risk. Had to lower packs there to feel safe on Star.
Appreciate your input on it. Heck, I'd be really happy if i was 80 and able to do it!
I intend to take some epoxy and put that plaque back on it's spot. That spot was carved into the rock about 25' West and some idiot pried it out. Did you move the plaque? Last i found it, i nested it in a rock crag near it's intended position. Someone reported they moved it since. We found it below it's original mount. slightly bent by what appeared to be an ice axe.
Appreciate your input on it. Heck, I'd be really happy if i was 80 and able to do it!
I intend to take some epoxy and put that plaque back on it's spot. That spot was carved into the rock about 25' West and some idiot pried it out. Did you move the plaque? Last i found it, i nested it in a rock crag near it's intended position. Someone reported they moved it since. We found it below it's original mount. slightly bent by what appeared to be an ice axe.
- tomba
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
I was there few days ago. The plaque was lying down in the lowest spot of the pass. In August 2011 I think it was still attached in its spot.
- LMBSGV
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
I went over in late July last year after camping at Elba Lake. I found rlown’s original post to be nearly perfect. The one issue I had were I have short legs and I’m 5 feet 7 inches so a couple of the small cliffs in the chute required tossing my trekking pole up and then pulling myself up.
A little below the top (about 20-30 vertical feet), there were two choices–-go up left or up slightly right. I first went left since that looked easier, though my instincts were telling me that the other way was probably better. As usual, my instincts were correct. I went up left 10 feet and realized this was a mistake, though if I’d been without a pack, I might have gone ahead that way. So I made my way back down and went slightly right and up and was soon at the top. There was one part that required another toss up the trekking pole and pulling myself up–-no big deal.
The plaque was where Tomba saw it, so I guess it hasn’t been moved recently (unless, of course, it’s been moved and then put back). Russ, if you can put it back where it belongs, I look forward to someday returning and seeing it properly commemorating Carol.
A little below the top (about 20-30 vertical feet), there were two choices–-go up left or up slightly right. I first went left since that looked easier, though my instincts were telling me that the other way was probably better. As usual, my instincts were correct. I went up left 10 feet and realized this was a mistake, though if I’d been without a pack, I might have gone ahead that way. So I made my way back down and went slightly right and up and was soon at the top. There was one part that required another toss up the trekking pole and pulling myself up–-no big deal.
The plaque was where Tomba saw it, so I guess it hasn’t been moved recently (unless, of course, it’s been moved and then put back). Russ, if you can put it back where it belongs, I look forward to someday returning and seeing it properly commemorating Carol.
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- acvdmlac
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Re: Carol Col (Puppet Pass)
Yes, the exposure wasn't enough to rate it Class 3. Going hands-free would have been challenging and risky, but it wasn't scary like Star Col looked, it just took a little time and route-finding caution. Yeah I'll be happy too if I'm able to go over Class 2 12,000' cols in my eighties!rlown wrote:yeah. coming up from the north, at the top, you have to step 15' to your right and then it's just up and over. Even with a 45lb pack. I rated it at a 2 because even with hands on rock, it didn't seem that hard. No air below you to make the move. It wasn't a 3. Hell, Star col is a 3 and scary the number of times i felt at risk. Had to lower packs there to feel safe on Star.
Appreciate your input on it. Heck, I'd be really happy if i was 80 and able to do it!
I intend to take some epoxy and put that plaque back on it's spot. That spot was carved into the rock about 25' West and some idiot pried it out. Did you move the plaque? Last i found it, i nested it in a rock crag near it's intended position. Someone reported they moved it since. We found it below it's original mount. slightly bent by what appeared to be an ice axe.
I don't remember exactly where the plaque was, but my memory it was fixed to rock, not lying loose. Thanks to those who maintain and what's up with those who take the time to deface?
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