Bennett Peak – 13,203 and Sheep Mountain – 12,492

RT Length:  6.91 miles

Elevation Gain: 2451’

I started at 5am from the South Fork Trailhead, at the end of 28 and Trail 702.  The road was a well maintained dirt 2WD road, with about 5 parking spaces at the trailhead.

Instead of taking the trail, I followed the road that had been blocked off

This road eventually became a trail.  I followed that trail northwest to the stream crossing

The I was able to cross by hopping across the rocks and jumping a few feet at the end.

A trail picked up on the other side, but quickly dissipated.  To combat this, I just kept heading north-northwest up the basin, towards the gully I could see ahead of me to the northeast (I know that sounds contradictory, but I had to make my around the trees to get there.  If you’re doing this in the daylight, the gully should be obvious above the trees).

After hiking a total of .81 miles, I came to South Rock trail, turned left, and followed it about 20 yards to a small stream crossing and a ravine.  I turned right, and followed the ravine to the gully, staying in what looks like an avalanche runout.

This is the route I took up the gully.  This was easy to navigate, all class 2.  I just kept heading north.

Here are some pictures of the route

At the top of the gully I headed northwest, which included a lot more class 2 ascending on grassy tundra

I eventually came upon an ATV road, and followed that to the summit

I summited Bennett Peak at 6:45am.  It was 2.37 miles to the summit from where I parked.

Bennett Peak: 

My next objective was Sheep Mountain, but I wanted to take the ATV road to get there, so I headed back south, the way I’d come in, towards the road.

Here you can see the road below I was aiming for

When I made it to the road I turned right, and followed it southwest to the Bennett/Sheep saddle

As you can see, this was an easy descent to the saddle

I hiked down to an open gate at the saddle, walked through it, and ascended the ridge

Here’s my route

And some pictures of the class 2 ridge covered in tundra

And the false summit

Here’s the real summit

There was no summit register.  It was 1.6 miles from Bennett to Sheep

I summited Sheep Mountain at 8am

Sheep Mountain: 

Here’s a look back in the route from Bennett Peak to Sheep Mountain

And the route I took up the gully to the summit of Bennett, and over to Sheep

I turned and headed back towards the Bennett/Sheep Saddle.  Specifically, to that open gate

Once at the gate, I turned right and followed Trail 700 back towards the gully (I’d noticed it on my way up, and thought it would be a convenient way back down).  You could also take it to the saddle and summit that way.

It actually became a nice trail

When I made it back to where I’d ascended the gully, I turned right and followed it south, and then southeast,  back down to the road

This was a drainage, and very marshy

I turned left at the road, and followed it for about 20 yards before turning off the road and heading back down to the creek.

There are a lot of game trails here, but they aren’t all consistent

I crossed the creek again, which was a little more difficult with the rising temperatures and rising water level

I then picked up the trail on the other side, and followed it south back to my truck

I made it back to my truck at 9am, making this a 6.91 mile hike with 2451’ of elevation gain in 4 hours.

On to the next trailhead!

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Author: Laura M Clark

Laura has summited over 500 peaks above 13,000' solo, including being the first woman to solo summit all of the Colorado 14ers, as well as the centennials. After each hike, she writes trip reports for each one and publishes them on her blog, which is read by fans all over the world. Author of Wild Wanderer: Summiting Colorado’s 200 Highest Peaks, which is available to purchase on Amazon.

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