Executive summary by darmansjah
Kings Peak is the highest
peak in the U.S. state of Utah, with an elevation of 13,528 feet (4,123 m).
It lies just south of the spine of the central Uinta Mountains, in the Ashley
National Forest in northeastern Utah, in north-central Duchesne County. It lies
within the bounds of the High Uintas Wilderness. The peak is approximately 79
miles (127 km) due east of central Salt Lake City, and 45 miles (72 km) due
north of the town of Duchesne.
There are
three popular routes to the summit; a scramble up the east slope, a hike up the
northern ridge, and a long but relatively easy hike up the southern slope. The
peak was named for Clarence King, a surveyor in the area and the first director
of the United States Geological Survey. Kings Peak is generally regarded as the
hardest state highpoint which can be climbed without specialist rock climbing
skills and/or guiding. The easiest route requires a 32 plus mile hike, much of
it over boulder fields.
Hard to say if it is the best trail I have ever hiked, but it's certainly a
classic that I enjoy doing every few years—Kings Peak via Henrys Fork to
Gunsight Pass to Anderson Pass with a scramble along the ridge to the summit.
The country is sublime, big, and quintessentially western. It is a large,
ascending open valley that is littered with lakes and ponds. The landscape
couldn't be more beautiful, with stands of isolated timber, alpine meadows, and
an array of Nirvana-like camp spots to be enjoyed far from the proximity of
others. There is flowing water all the way to Anderson Pass, less than 1,000
feet below the spectacular, airy summit, and the view of the High Uintas
Wilderness with its peaks, ridges, and valleys goes on as far as the eye can
see. The trail that takes you just about to the summit of Utah’s highest peak
is just two hours from Black Diamond’s front doors in Salt Lake City, yet it
feels as if you are in the Flathead wilderness of northern Montana. The trip
will be a biannual part of my life ... until my knees seize up. —Peter
Metcalf
Length: 28.8 miles
The Details: Utah’s red rock canyonlands and powder-filled
Wasatch Range get all the attention, while the quiet Uintas in the northeast
corner of the state are where the locals slip away to play in the heat of
summer. Made up mostly of sedimentary rocks, the 100-mile-long range runs east
to west rather than north to south, like most ranges in the Rockies. It’s
also home to the state’s highest peaks, formed when colliding tectonic plates
pushed up primordial ocean bottom and basins filled with wildflowers and blue
alpine lakes.
The tallest mountain in Utah, 13,528-foot Kings Peak is a fairly easy state
high point to attain. The hardest part of the climb is the long approach from
the Henrys Fork Campground, which includes 5,252 feet of elevation gain. Most
hikers spend a night or two camped on the trail; Dollar Lake is the most
popular spot to pitch a tent. It’s not a technical route, however, with a
short, short steep scramble up a 1,000-foot chute at Gunsight Pass standing out
as the only difficult bit and a long scramble to the summit offering wide-open
views of the high peaks.
When to Go: September is best, when snows have melted and
the weather has stabilized.
About Metcalf: Black Diamond equipment was founded in 1989
when Peter Metcalf, along with friends, customers, and other employees, bought
Chouinard Equipment from Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard. Metcalf has kept the
brand successful and dynamic: BD has remained at the top of the technical
climbing gear game, turned into an award-winning freeski manufacturer, opened
divisions in Switzerland and China, and acquired Gregory Mountain Products and
POC. It went public in 2010, and acquired avalanche-safety manufacturer PIEPS
last fall. But that success hasn’t watered down Black Diamond’s core climber
credibility. Metcalf himself is an accomplished climber and former oil-field
wildcatter who also has had the guts to take on the government in BD’s Utah
home base when he disagrees with how the state wants to manage public lands
where climbers roam.
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