Golden Bear Peak – 13,005 and Hagar Mountain – 13,246

RT Length:  7.82 miles

Elevation Gain:  2760’

I parked behind some semis at the I-70 MM 213 Westbound Chain Station and was on the trail at 6:20am.  I started by taking a paved service road northeast.

The road eventually becomes a dirt road

The dirt road quickly becomes a trail, and this morning that trail was filled with a couple of inches of ice.  The kind that microspikes slip on.  I followed it as it headed northeast into a basin

After hiking for 1.3 miles I came to a service road and turned right to follow the road towards the ridge.

As you can see from further away, this road goes all the way to the ridge. 

However, I did not take the road to the ridge.  The road was full of several feet of snow, but the mountainside only had a few inches of snow, so instead of trenching the route, I headed east towards the ridge.  This is the route I took.

Here are some pictures of the road

At 12160’ I left the trail and headed up towards the ridge

I could now see Golden Bear to my left. 

I gained the ridge, and followed it north to the summit of Golden Bear.  This was all class 2

There was a marker at the summit

I summited Golden Bear Peak at 8am

Golden Bear Peak:

I could see Hagar Mountain to the north

To get there, I continued following this class 2 ridge.  There were a lot of ups and downs, but it remained class 2 (until the last 50 feet of elevation gain or so).  Here are some pictures of the ridge

Now the fun begins.  It’s class 2 to the top of this ridge.  There are a few cairns, but it’s basically choose your own adventure.  I went straight up.  It’s steeper than it looks, so get a good view before you ascend. This is the route I took.

And some pictures of the route up.

At the top I was greeted with a view of the final approach to Hagar Mountain.

To be honest, I hadn’t done a lot of research on Hagar, and was surprised to find the last bit was class 3.  In other words, I didn’t have a helmet. Be sure to bring one!  I dropped my pack, descended a bit to the saddle, and then started climbing up. 

This is again choose your own adventure.  This is the overall route I took.

And some pictures of the scramble

Here’s the actual summit block.  It’s the first one you come to. 

I summited Hagar Mountain at 9:20am          

Hagar Mountain:

From the summit looking north, it seemed as if the next point was equal height to where I was currently, so I scrambled over there too in case any LiDAR issues should arise.

Here’s looking at Hagar Mountain from the second block

I trekked back over to the first block, and found a summit register, so I’m assuming the first block is the true summit.  Now to head back.  I retraced my steps, aiming for the Golden Bear/Hagar saddle.

Here’s the overall route I took back to the basin, aiming for the Golden Bear / Coon Hill saddle

First I headed back down Hagar the way I ascended

After making it to the saddle,  I followed the ridge up to 12830’

At 12830’ I turned and headed southwest towards the saddle.

At the saddle I found an obvious trail and turned left.  This led me back down into the basin and back to the trailhead. 

I made it back to the trailhead at 11:20am, making this a 7.82 mile hike with 2760’ of elevation gain in 5 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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