Beauty & Becker Lakes, Beartooth Mountains, Wyoming (8-11-12)

Day 4 of Lupe’s 2012 Dingo Vacation to the West Coast

The clouds were gone and the rain had stopped when Lupe woke SPHP up in the Honda Element.  Despite having slept sitting up, SPHP felt pretty good.  Lupe, of course, felt great.  She’d slept very comfortably on a pile of pillows and blankets in the back of the Element.  Lanis was still asleep in the driver’s seat getting his beauty rest.

Lupe and SPHP got out to greet the day, and take a look at the fabulous view of Pilot (11,699 ft.) and Index (11,240 ft.) Peaks from the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone River.  Despite the cloudless sky, there was a haze in the air that kept the view from being as crisp as it might have been.  Only days later did SPHP realize that the persistent haze was due to huge wildfires burning in Idaho.

Pilot (L) and Index (R) Peaks from the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone.
Pilot (L) and Index (R) Peaks from the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone.

Pilot & Index Peaks, WY 8-11-12While Lanis continued getting 40 winks, Lupe and SPHP went across to the S side of the Beartooth Hwy and took a stroll up a very grassy little valley.  Lupe was happy barking at squirrels in the forest along the edges of the valley.

Returning to the Element, Lupe and SPHP woke Lanis up.  Time to get a move on!  New adventures and explorations awaited!  Lanis drove E on the Beartooth Highway.  E of the junction with the St. Joseph Scenic Byway, the Beartooth Hwy wound up to an overlook with a view toward the huge canyon to the S.

Lanis at the overlook. Yes, that's Pilot and Index Peaks again in the distance on the R.
Lanis at the overlook. Yes, that’s Pilot and Index Peaks again in the distance on the R.
Looking S across the huge canyon that the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone flows through.
Looking S across the huge canyon that the Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone flows through.

It turned out that in the few minutes Lanis and SPHP were admiring the view, Lupe had found another way to entertain herself.  She was very industriously, though unsuccessfully thus far, trying to dig marmots out of their holes in the ground.  It was hard work, but Lupe was pursuing it with great vigor and enthusiasm.  SPHP had to hustle her into the Element before there was trouble.

Lanis drove on to the Top of the World Store.  The Element was in need of fuel.

Looking WNW at Beartooth Butte from Hwy 212 at the Top of the World Store.
Looking WNW at Beartooth Butte (10,514 ft.) from Hwy 212 at the Top of the World Store.
The Top of the World Store along Beartooth Hwy No. 212.
The Top of the World Store along Beartooth Hwy No. 212.
Lupe waits while the Element gets fueled up.
Lupe waits while the Element gets fueled up.
Lanis props up the Top of the World Store sign.
Lanis props up the Top of the World Store sign.  Or is it the other way around?

A little over a mile E of the Top of the World Store was a turn to the N to the Island Lake campground.  Breakfast was enjoyed at a picnic ground overlooking Island Lake.  At over 9,500 feet elevation, Island Lake was already in alpine territory.  It was going to be a great starting point for Lupe’s first exploratory trek into the Beartooth Mountains.

Island Lake in the Beartooth Mountains. Photo looks NNW.
Island Lake in the Beartooth Mountains. Photo looks NNW.
Cheerios and blueberries!
Cheerios and blueberries!  Alpo for Lupe.

After breakfast, Lupe, Lanis, and SPHP took the Beartooth High Lakes trail heading N along the W side of Island Lake.  There were gorgeous wildflowers everywhere.  The trail was in good shape and easy to follow.  There wasn’t much elevation gain or loss.  Around each bend was another delightful scene of alpine splendor.  The trail went past Island Lake, Night Sky Lake, and then a series of smaller lakes.

Looking N along the Beartooth High Lakes trail.
Looking N along the Beartooth High Lakes trail.

Wildflowers in Beartooths, WY 8-11-12Wildflower near Island Lake, Beartooths Mountains, WY 8-11-12

Lonesome Mountain looms in the distance beyond a pond in the Beartooth Mountains. Photo looks NNW.
Lonesome Mountain looms in the distance beyond a pond in the Beartooth Mountains. Photo looks NNW.

Wildflowers in the Beartooth Mountains, WY 8-11-12After a while, the trail turned S and went down a hill to Beauty Lake.  The intention hadn’t been to come here.  Somewhere just upstream, SPHP had lost the Beartooth High Lakes trail and wound up on the Beauty Lake trail.  It really didn’t matter.  Lupe was on a first time exploration of the area.  Everything was new and exciting no matter which way she went.

Beauty Lake was large, and looked deep compared to most of the other lakes Lupe had been by so far.  It was in a very pretty setting.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP climbed up on a rocky knob along the NE side of the lake that provided a nice viewpoint.  By now, it was time for a lunch break.  Lupe played among the rocks and trees.

Soon it felt so warm out, SPHP considered taking a dip in the lake.  The water felt pretty cold, though.  Only Lupe was actually brave enough to enter the water.  Even she just waded around close to the shore.

Looking W across Beauty Lake.
Looking W across Beauty Lake.
Looking S.
Looking S.
Don't tell me you're going to chicken out on me again, SPHP! The water is fine, really! You'll be numb soon enough!
Don’t tell me you’re going to chicken out on me again, SPHP! The water is fine, really! You’ll be numb soon enough!
Lupe wades around in the cold waters of Beauty Lake.
Lupe wades around in the cold waters of Beauty Lake.

The only map of the area that Lanis and SPHP had was a very simple tourist map called “Wayfinding on the Beartooth All-American Road” that Lanis had picked up at a visitor center in Cooke City.  It showed that the Beauty Lake trail would take Lupe back to the Beartooth Highway close to Beartooth Lake, which was miles from the Honda Element.  SPHP didn’t want to go that way.

The map also showed that the Beartooth High Lakes trail continued NW across a stream near the N end of Beauty Lake.  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP went a short distance back N to where a very lovely stream flowed down to Beauty Lake.  Searching for the Beartooth High Lakes trail on the other side of the stream revealed nothing.  There were lots of beautiful wildflowers, but no continuation of the trail was in sight.

Not ready to give up, Lupe, Lanis and SPHP followed the stream for a little way up a small canyon.  There were more rocks and wildflowers, but again, no trail was found.  The going got progressively more difficult.  Lanis had an exciting time chasing a water bottle he dropped in the creek back a considerable distance downstream before he was able to retrieve it.

The stream N of Beauty Lake. Photo looks S.
The stream N of Beauty Lake. Photo looks S.
Lanis looking for the rest of the Beartooth High Lakes trail. Not really finding it. Lots of flowers blooming by the stream, though!
Lanis looking for the rest of the Beartooth High Lakes trail. Not really finding it. Lots of flowers blooming by the stream, though!

Wildflowers along stream N of Beauty Lake, Beartooth Mountains 8-11-12

Lupe supposedly looking for the trail. SPHP suspects she was really looking for squirrels.
Lupe supposedly looking for the trail. SPHP suspects she was really looking for squirrels.

Lupe near stream N of Beauty Lake, Beartooth Mountains, 8-11-12

Lupe thought Lanis was just hilarious trying to catch that water bottle!
Lupe thought Lanis was just hilarious trying to catch that water bottle!

Hmm, maybe the tourist map wasn’t terribly accurate?  Lupe, Lanis and SPHP left the stream, and followed the Beauty Lake trail farther back up the hill looking for a junction with the Beartooth High Lakes trail.  As it turned out, there was a trail junction up there!

Lupe, Lanis and SPHP headed N on this new trail.  None of them realized this wasn’t the Beartooth High Lakes trail either.  Again it didn’t matter.  The new trail was in good shape, and went into even more beautiful country!

The new trail soon headed N between Mutt & Jeff Lakes, which are very close together and connected by a stream that flows down to Mutt Lake (not pictured to the L of this photo). Jeff Lake is seen beyond Lanis. The trail continued across the rocks seen on the far side of Jeff Lake, and on up a hill through the gap to a little pass. In the pass there was a mucky pond and rocks to scramble around. Photo looks N.
The new trail soon headed N between Mutt & Jeff Lakes, which are very close together and connected by a stream that flows down to Mutt Lake (not pictured to the L of this photo). Jeff Lake is seen beyond Lanis. The trail continued across the rocks seen on the far side of Jeff Lake, and on up a hill through the gap to a little pass. In the pass there was a mucky pond and rocks to scramble around. Photo looks N.
The mucky little pond in the pass N of Jeff Lake. Photo looks S.
The mucky little pond in the pass N of Jeff Lake. Photo looks S.

The new trail went N, passing by a couple of ponds.  Then it went down a short hill to go between two lakes (Mutt & Jeff) that were very close together.  A broad stream flowed gently between the lakes, and required some rock hopping to get across.  Beyond the stream, the trail went across a boulder field on the NW side of Jeff Lake, before continuing up a hillside to a relatively low gap between mountains.

In the gap was a mucky pond and some boulders to work around.  The trail then went gradually downhill.  Before too long, there was a view of the S end of a gorgeous lake.  Unknown to Lupe, Lanis and SPHP at the time, this was Becker Lake.

Becker Lake is a fairly large, long lake extending N/S.  The S end is the largest, and tucked in against big rock walls and hills.  The N end is narrower, and more out in the open.  The trail did not go down to Becker Lake, but stayed well above it to the E.  For a while, the trail went completely out of sight of the lake, but the lake eventually came into view again farther N.

Part of the S end of Becker Lake comes into view. Lonesome Mountain is seen in the distance on the R.
Part of the S end of Becker Lake comes into view. Lonesome Mountain is seen in the distance on the R.
Lupe explores the forest near the trail.
Lupe explores the forest near the trail.

Lupe in the Beartooth Mountains, WY 8-11-12

This big tree scarred by lightning was near the trail.
This big tree scarred by lightning was near the trail.
Lanis' moss and lichens photo of the day!
Lanis’ moss and lichens photo of the day!
While out of sight of Becker Lake, the trail passed by the W shore of this little pond. Photo looks N.
While out of sight of Becker Lake, the trail passed by the W shore of this little pond. Photo looks N.
Looking SW across Becker Lake.
Looking SW across Becker Lake.
Part of the high ridge to the E of Becker Lake.
Part of the high ridge to the E of Becker Lake.
Lupe nears the N end of Becker Lake. Photo looks NNW toward Lonesome Mountain (R of center).
Lupe nears the N end of Becker Lake. Photo looks NNW toward Lonesome Mountain (11,399 ft.) (R of center).

Wildflowers near Becker Lake, Beartooth Mountains, WY 8-11-12Lupe, Lanis and SPHP followed the trail N past Becker Lake.  The trail was now passing along the E side of a creek coming down through a broad grassy valley.  A woman coming down the trail said this part of the trail was in Montana!

Lupe, Lanis and SPHP continued on a little way, but it was close to 5:00 PM now.  It was soon time to turn around and head back to the Honda Element at Island Lake, before it got too late.  Lupe’s route back included everything except the side trip to Beauty Lake again.  She had a wonderful time sniffing and exploring the entire way back.

Going to Beauty and Becker Lakes was one of the most glorious days Lupe had ever spent in the mountains anywhere.  This day was a real highlight of her 2012 Dingo Vacation!Flowers near the trail E of Becker Lake, Beartooth Mountains, WY 8-11-12

Don't forget to sniff the air!
Don’t forget to sniff the air!

Wildflowers in the Beartooth Mountains, WY 8-11-12

Going back down from the little pass toward Jeff Lake near the end of the day.
Going back down from the little pass toward Jeff Lake near the end of the day.  Photo looks S.
Looking NNW back across Island Lake toward the high country where Lupe had such a great time in the Beartooths.
Looking NNW back across Island Lake toward the high country where Lupe had such a great time in the Beartooths.

Links:

Next Adventure                     Prior Adventure

Lupe and SPHP returned on subsequent Dingo Vacations in 2013 & 2014 to explore farther into Montana N of Becker Lake.  Click on the red links below to view Lupe’s other posts about this stunning part of the Beartooth Mountains:

The Journey to Two Bits Lake, Beartooth Mountains (7-12-13)

Sky Pilot Lake, Beartooth Mountains of Montana (7-17-13)

Lonesome Mountain in the Beartooth Mountains of Montana (8-3-14)

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s 2012 West Coast Adventure IndexDingo Vacations Adventure Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.

Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 113 – The Search for Thrall Mountain (1-1-15)

Lupe was very surprised – and enthusiastic, when on the very first day of 2015, SPHP suggested another Black Hills, SD Expedition.  Just yesterday, Lupe and SPHP had gone on Black Hills, SD Expedition No. 112 to New Year’s Eve Peak (6,046 ft.), Lupe’s last expedition of 2014.

However, the weather was cooperative, and SPHP figured nothing helps break the sadness of the passing of another year like a good start to the next one.  So, on New Year’s Day 2015, at 11:02 AM (38°F), SPHP parked the G6 at the Pactola Reservoir Visitor Center along Hwy 385 near the S end of the dam.

Lupe arrives at Pactola Reservoir to start out New Year 2015 right with one of her Black Hills, SD Expeditions. Pactola Reservoir is the largest lake in the Black Hills.
Lupe arrives at Pactola Reservoir to start out New Year 2015 right with one of her Black Hills, SD Expeditions. Pactola Reservoir is the largest lake in the Black Hills.

Lupe at Pactola Lake, 1-1-15Lupe’s peakbagging goal for the day was Thrall Mountain (5,091 ft.).  Thrall Mountain didn’t seem like a very ambitious goal, since it lies just a little over 2 miles E of Pactola near Johnson Siding.  Even on a short winter day, Lupe should have plenty of time to romp in the snow, and still make her goal.

Lupe and SPHP started out crossing Hwy 385 to the E.  Right away, Lupe turned S to climb a forested ridge, which soon ended near McGurdy Gulch.  Lupe and SPHP came down off the ridge to follow USFS Road No. 165.1B heading SE up McGurdy Gulch to a saddle at the highest point on the road.  From there, Lupe left the road and turned NE, still climbing through a snowy forest to reach a couple of minor high points of similar elevation.

Wandering NE, Lupe and SPHP came to a Centennial Trail No. 89 marker.  With the trail hidden under up to 6″ of trackless snow, if it hadn’t been for the marker, SPHP wouldn’t have known the trail was there.  Lupe and SPHP were somewhere in the saddle area between Tamarack Gulch to the N, and Gold Standard Gulch to the SE.  Thrall Mountain was still close to 2 miles to the NE.

Lupe and SPHP crossed Centennial Trail No. 89 intending to continue NE, but soon steep terrain in that direction forced Lupe more to the E in order to stay on relatively high ground.  The going was somewhat slow in the snowy forest for SPHP, so when Lupe came to a road heading ESE, Lupe and SPHP took it, even though it was losing elevation slowly.

SPHP didn’t immediately realize the road was USFS Road No. 727.1A.  It was taking Lupe down into Gold Standard Gulch.  It wasn’t until a little later on when SPHP noticed another Centennial Trail No. 89 marker off in the forest about 25 feet S of the road, that SPHP realized Lupe was in Gold Standard Gulch.

Lupe was actually not far from where she needed to go to reach Thrall Mountain.  She just needed to get across the ridge to the NE and over to the upper end of Powerhouse Gulch, which wouldn’t have been hard to do.  However, SPHP made a major mistake and did not check the maps.  Lupe and SPHP continued on down Gold Standard Gulch, which gradually turned more to the S, taking Lupe farther away from Thrall Mountain.

When Prairie Creek entered Gold Standard Gulch from a side valley, the going got tougher.  The road forded Prairie Creek 4 or 5 times.  Prairie Creek isn’t very big, just a few feet wide and only a foot or two deep most places.  Ordinarily, crossing it is easy, but the creek was lightly frozen over.  It wasn’t possible to see where or how deep the water was, and the banks were slippery and hidden by snow.

The ice over Prairie Creek barely supported Lupe’s weight.  At one of the crossings, she almost got dunked twice before she could leap to safety, as the ice cracked and sank beneath her.  SPHP had to search for particularly narrow sections of the creek in order to cross without getting wet.  Tromping through the snow with soaking wet feet wouldn’t have been a good thing in January.

When Prairie Creek reached Brush Creek at USFS Road No. 772.2, SPHP finally checked the maps.  A lot of time had gone by, and Lupe was still nearly 2 miles away from Thrall Mountain, which was now almost due N.  Lupe was hardly any closer to Thrall Mountain than she had been at the very start of the expedition at the Pactola Reservoir Visitor Center!  SPHP now realized what an error it had been to follow Gold Standard Gulch so far.  Lupe and SPHP went E a short distance toward gentler terrain before leaving the road to turn N.

Lupe and SPHP wandered NNE through the forest.  Along the way, Lupe came to a couple of unidentified minor roads which she followed for short stretches before they turned off in wrong directions.  The terrain wasn’t very steep, and Lupe had fun roaming the snow-filled forest.  Lupe and SPHP crossed another mysterious snowy road (probably No. 772.1E) to reach the top of a small ridge.  On the other side, the land dropped off steeply.  There was a view to the NE.  Nothing in that direction looked high enough to be Thrall Mountain.

Lupe and SPHP followed the small ridge NW.  Occasionally there was a glimpse through the trees of a high point to the N that barely stuck up over some intervening hills.  That high point was probably Thrall Mountain, but it was hard to tell for certain.  The ridge ended.  Lupe and SPHP had to backtrack a little bit, and turn SW to start dropping down into a draw.  The draw led Lupe NW and then N, losing elevation the whole way.

Down in the draw, there were faint signs of an old abandoned road.  A tangle of dead trees greeted Lupe at the lower end of the draw.  Once past the tangle, the faint road continued until it met up with a better road in a much larger valley the draw fed into.  Time for a break.  Lupe and SPHP shared a chocolate granola bar.  It only made Lupe realize how famished she was.  She followed up the granola bar by devouring most of the Taste of the Wild supply.

SPHP checked the maps.  This big valley was almost certainly Powerhouse Gulch.  In that case, the better road Lupe had just found here was USFS Road No. 772.1.  Lupe and SPHP followed the road NW.  Pretty soon No. 772.1 turned S at an intersection with USFS Road No. 772.1B.  Although No. 772.1 was unmarked at this intersection, there was a marker for No. 772.1B, which continued NW up Powerhouse Gulch.

Lupe was now only 1 mile S of Thrall Mountain!  However, there was a new problem.  The sun, seen only as a faint glow in the overcast sky, was getting lower.  Sunset was at most 2 hours, more likely just 1.5 hours, away.  Although SPHP was confident that there was still plenty of time for Lupe to find and climb Thrall Mountain, it would almost certainly get very dark well before she could get back to the G6, even by the most direct route.

SPHP checked the maps again.  Although they showed No. 772.1B going NW up Powerhouse Gulch, and then continuing on to Tamarack Gulch not too far from Pactola Reservoir, SPHP and Lupe had never been on this road before.  Lots of minor roads in the Black Hills aren’t really as shown on the maps.  It’s not uncommon for them to dead end, be blocked or nearly impassable due to deadfall timber, or have lots of confusing side roads.

There was no sense starting New Year 2015 off by getting lost on a cold, dark winter night.  Expedition No. 112 was just going to have to be chalked up as an exploratory one.  Lupe had gotten close, but she wasn’t going to get to climb Thrall Mountain today after all.  Lupe and SPHP continued NW on up Powerhouse Gulch on USFS Road No. 772.1B.

As it turned out, it was a good decision.  In daylight, Lupe and SPHP didn’t get off on No. 772.1C by mistake where No. 772.1B unexpectedly dropped over an embankment at the intersection, which would have been very easy to do in the dark.  Even with the advantage of daylight, a little farther on SPHP managed to lead Lupe onto a side road.  It eventually dead ended high up on a steep rocky slope.  In the light, it was easy to go back and find the right road.

Lupe on USFS Road No. 772.1B, already W of Powerhouse Gulch on her way back to the G6. There were no other tracks in the snow.
Lupe on USFS Road No. 772.1B, already W of Powerhouse Gulch on her way back to the G6. There were no other tracks in the snow.

Up ahead, the Pactola Reservoir dam came into view.  Lupe and SPHP crossed Centennial Trail No. 89 again, not far from the Tamarack Gulch trailhead.  Lupe pressed on to McGurdy Gulch road, this time farther N than where she had reached it early in the day.  Soon she was climbing up the S end of Pactola Reservoir dam.  She reached Hwy 385 at the top of the dam.  The Pactola Reservoir Visitor Center and the G6 were in view right across the road.

The sun was just setting.  A small break in the clouds allowed the colored rays of sunset to burst through for just a few minutes.  The first day of 2015 was ending.  From a peakbagging standpoint, Lupe’s first expedition of 2015 was a failure.  She never even really saw Thrall Mountain.

Lupe returns to the Pactola Reservoir Visitor Center just in time for sunset on New Year's Day 2015. The beautiful sunset lasted only a few minutes.
Lupe returns to the Pactola Reservoir Visitor Center just in time for sunset on New Year’s Day 2015. The beautiful sunset lasted only a few minutes.

But Lupe had a wonderful day roaming the Black Hills.  She explored many pretty places in the quiet snowy woods she had never been to before, some of which she might never see again.  Best of all, Lupe and SPHP had spent the day together, doing what American Dingoes love to do.  And, of course, Lupe would return to climb Thrall Mountain another day!

Pactola Reservoir and Scruton Mountain (5,922 feet - the highest point just L of the center of photo). The Seth Bullock Lookout Tower is on Scruton Mountain.
Pactola Reservoir and Scruton Mountain (5,922 feet) – the highest point just L of the center of photo). The Seth Bullock Lookout Tower is on Scruton Mountain.

Links:

Next Black Hills Expedition                Prior Black Hills Expedition

Want more Lupe adventures?  Choose from Lupe’s Black Hills Expeditions Adventure Index or Master Adventure Index.  Or subscribe free to new Lupe adventures.