Letterboxing USA - Yahoo Groups Archive

CA - Mt. Shasta - NEW box

1 messages in this thread | Started on 2002-07-06

CA - Mt. Shasta - NEW box

From: Eliza B. (yahoo@moderngypsy.com) | Date: 2002-07-06 01:05:20 UTC-07:00
Name: Eliza B/moderngypsy
box name: Mt. Shasta Views
nearest town: Mt. Shasta
county: Siskiyou

NOTE:
Please check this site for avalanche/climbing information before you
attempt this box. Chances are that it'll only be available in the
summer months (july - october), and even then, may be a dangerous climb.
Please be careful, take water, and know your limits.
http://www.r5.fs.fed.us/shastatrinity/mtshasta/

You will be coming a hair's-breadth from the 10K foot marker that
separates the passless dayhikers from the $15 passholding
mountain-climbers. (You'll be at roughly 9700 feet. Plan for high
altitude, please. Did I mention bringing water? It bears mentioning
again. BRING WATER. The sun is hot when there's little atmosphere
between you and it.)

DIRECTIONS:
Take I-5 to the Mt. Shasta exit and go straight through town to the
Everitt Memorial Highway. You'll be going straight up the mountain past
Bunny Flat.

Bunny Flat can be approached year round via the Everitt Memorial Highway
(county road A10) from the town of Mount Shasta. Sand Flat is near Bunny
Flat and is approached by a side road (41N57) from the highway.

Continue through the Flat for another few winding miles until you get to
the parking area at the end of the road. (If you're at Panther Meadows,
you're not far enough. Keep going.) Park in the lot and dodge around
all the guided climbers getting ready to go to the summit. You can go
to the edge of the picnic area and get some great 360-degree photos of
the whole area on a clear day, too.

At the far end of the lot is the trailhead. If you're going to be
messing around for too long, I'd suggest paying the $15, just in case
you get above the 10K marker and need a rescue or anything. No special
equipment beyond hiking boots and your logbook/stamp/stamp pad combo is
needed for this box, but it's still a good idea to let people know
you're going, just for safety's sake.

CLUES:

Follow the trail up through the avalanche gulch and veer slightly to the
right to scramble over some rocks to a rather large clearing. (About 1K
feet up from the lot.) From here, you can see another mountain in the
distance, over the Shastina saddle. Climb further up, following the
ridge that looks like it might lead you over that saddle.

Eventually, if you keep going up along this ridge and above a snowfield,
you'll be higher than the saddle. This is good. You want to be.

Take a survey of the ridge. See how it angles up along the side of the
mountain toward the lowest (and probably snowless) rounded peak at the
closest side? Follow the line with your eyes down from the top. See
where it levels off after a particularly steep patch? Go there. It's
up a pretty steep rocky scramble.

When you get there, sit down and enjoy the view. It's amazing. You're
nearly at the top of green butte, and you're almost at the 10K marker.
Look around to find three bushes that form a circle/triangle around a
boulder that's larger than all the others here. On the far end (closest
to the ridge's dropoff, but still well within that circle and far from
the edge -- I'm a little scared of heights. :>) is a hole at the base of
the boulder that's covered up with some smaller stones and some twigs.
In that hole is the box!

If you're having trouble, or you anticipate having some trouble with
this box location, I do have some photos available as soon as I can get
them uploaded. Feel free to go in blind until then - the hike is well
worth it for the views alone, much less the stamp. :)

PLEASE USE CAUTION. During winter months, this box may be inaccessable.
It is also an orphan -- I doubt I'll see it much. Please email me at
gypsy@moderngypsy.com if you find it. :)

Have fun, be safe, and box on! :)