Mt. Yale

Elevation 14,196 feet (4,327 m)

Mt. Yale was named in 1869 by an expedition led by Josiah Whitney, for whom the tallest mountain in the lower 48 US states is named. Mt. Yale is found among the Collegiate Peaks of the Sawatch Range. The first recorded climb of Mt. Yale was made by Whitney and four others on August 18, 1869. Our own ascent was on September 9, 1995.

A2 maintains that Yale has been the toughest of the 13 Fourteeners we have climbed (at that time!); Klaus holds that distinction for Mount Massive. Either way, though no technical climbing is required, the Mt. Yale trail is pretty steep in places; it gains 4,400 feet in about three and a half miles.

We camped at Collegiate Peaks Campground the night before our ascent. Fortunately, the campground was almost deserted, since it was a few days after Labor Day. We had planned on taking the Denny Gulch route described in some places as the easiest, most direct route, but found to our dismay that the trail was closed due to overuse. Fortunately, a small quarter mile hike west on Colorado highway 306 brings you to Denny Creek, where an alternate trail leads its way up to Mt. Yale. (Both trailheads are marked along side of the highway, just west of the campground turnoff.)

We hit the trail at 7:17 am, trudging up a quite steep path leading north from the highway. After a bit, the trail levels out and you glide along, gradually going up Delany Gulch until you reach its head. Then the nature of the trail changes dramatically, as it heads steeply up the side of the gulch till you finally top out just around timberline. A few years ago we would have had to bushwack this section; thankfully, a good trail now exists, though we had to take breaks often because it was so steep.

We reached timberline at 9:20 and encountered the first people we'd seen on the trail that day. Once you get above the trees, you get your first view of Mt. Yale and the approach to the saddle west of the summit. From here (about 13,600 ft.), the trail leads directly toward the saddle.

Once you've made the crest of the saddle, though, you've done the hardest part. Now just follow the ridge southeast to the summit. Actually, we believe the best route to be just to the south of the top of the ridge. Your view isn't as nice as it would be traveling on the top of the ridge, but the going is alot easier (as we found out during our trip down).

We got to the top at noon and shared lunch with three fellows and a dog who'd come up using a longer trail from the east. Bad weather approaching from the west drove us off the summit at 12:30. We scrambled down through the snow as quickly as we could, knowing the danger of lightning above timberline. We found out the following day that someone had been struck and killed by lightning that day on the next peak over, reinforcing how exposed you are when above the trees and how you need to descend to take cover when thunder and lightning threatens to come your way.

We made it back to camp at 4:20 pm.

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