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Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan) — Jul. 1, 2022

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
Beware of: bugs, snow & trail conditions
  • Hiked with a dog

2 people found this report helpful

 

Silver Star Mountain via Silver Star creek poses some challenges once you get to the boulder field at 5,200 ft. We'd recommend following the boulder field all the way into the gully where you see a cairn.

Going into the brush too early adds a lot of bushwhacking and time to your ascent. We followed a GPX track that went into the brush early on the way up which doubled our time. Good luck!

Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan) — Jun. 25, 2022

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
4 photos
Beware of: snow, trail conditions

10 people found this report helpful

 

Overnight of Silver Star via Silver Star Creek, 6.25-26.

We parked right along Highway 20 at Silver Star Sno-park which for some reason doesn't seem to show up on Google Maps, but it's right where the highway crosses Silver Star Creek (48.598450, -120.585649). There was even a well-stocked outhouse.

The trail started off surprisingly trail-like, which we enjoyed for the short stretch while it lasted. We were soon launched into a burn zone, complete with lots of fallen trees and unstable terrain. After clambering over multiple charred logs, I soon was a soot-and-tree-sap-covered creature.

Burn eventually gave way to an open rocky area, and then more forest/more burn. We eventually emerged into meadowy basin at around 5000' (it seemed like there might have been some campsites there?) with a good stream, where we drank some sweet sweet water.

Our next mission was trying to ascend a steep stretch into the upper basin. We took a very steep brushy line up and ended up veggie belaying quite a bit. I think we would have done better doing what we did on the way down, which stuck more to a slightly less steep, rocky gully (still quite some bushwhackery involved).

The boulders began in earnest after this, and it was very very slow-going as we scrambled through, over and around them, and on sketchy patchy snow in between them. We eventually dropped down on to solid snow when it seemed like it was continuous, threw on the snowshoes (snow seemed consolidated but we hate post-holing) and made our way to a good campsite at 6400'.

We camped on snow, but there was running water at camp! We had to sort of squeeze under the largest boulder to get to it, but it was great not having to melt snow.

We got ready for our summit push the next morning and donned crampons as the granite spires glowed fiery with alpenglow. The snow slog up towards the Silver Star col was pretty straightforward. We decided to rope up on the glacier for practice although it was in good shape.

We stashed snowshoes and some other gear at the col and headed up the final steep snow climb which had one short section of dirt melted out, before reaching the summit block and the chimney move. Since I have a low spice tolerance, we decided to sling a boulder in the interest of not having anyone fall off the mountain, and my partner led it and belayed the rest of us up (there was an existing slung boulder up there with rap rings).

We enjoyed a glorious bluebird summit, and hung out for a while enjoying the vista of the North Cascades before descending. Since we had the rope, we decided to just rap back down the chimney area and then my partner lowered us down the steepest snow part past that (since we are horribly slow down-climbers LOL) before he climbed down.

We decided to glissade part of the glacier on the way down; the snow lower down had started to soften and was ok for plunge-stepping too.

We left camp pretty late (2pm?), and the slog out took just about forever and was thoroughly painful in my opinion (LOL). Footwear issues on my end made it much more more unbearable than it should have been, but my brain had somehow blocked out the extent of the burn, boulders, unstable ground and fallen trees, combined with the heat of the day (most of the approach is not shaded).

We did try and stay on snow (which was slushy and slippery now) as long as possible for the exit, which I think allowed us to bypass a chunk of the boulder-hopping we had done on the way in.

I have heard rumors that the Burgundy Col approach might be less of a terrain pain, but steeper, so pick your North Cascades poison I guess. Or just save this one for when it has good snow coverage and ski it.

More pics on instagram: @thenomadicartist

Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan) — Jul. 9, 2021

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
4 photos
Beware of: bugs, snow & trail conditions
  • Wildflowers blooming

14 people found this report helpful

 

Climbed Silverstar today, the creek crossing wasn't bad there is a good tree to walk across and the path is marked with cairns although a little overgrown on both sides of the creek. Bugs were relentless until I reached the glacier. Conditions on the glacier were good. Snow is melting quickly there are a couple of spots melted down to bare glacial ice, these can be avoided for now. I had heard from multiple sources about the scramble at the top. I did not find it too bad. It's 3rd class with perhaps the last 8-10 ft being 4th class although it's very solid rock with good holds just a bit exposed. Gear brought ice axe, boots, crampons, stove to melt snow(I heard there was no water past the col). Gear not used; crampons, and stove(I found a runoff stream near the glacier I marked with cairn) 

Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan), Silver Star Creek — Jun. 7, 2021

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
4 photos
Beware of: snow, trail conditions

2 people found this report helpful

 
After suffering through hours of trail finding in the forest over fresh snow, fierce bushwhacking across acres of slide alder, steep snow slopes on head walls and straight-up crampon-walking on the glacier our Mountaineers group made it to the summit block of Silver Star, the ultimate prize.
However it was late, the summit scramble was a mess of rock, snow and ice and the group’s strength was uneven. The leader rightfully decided to call off the summit attempt. I didn’t make it to the top, but I have no regrets or unfinished business as I had already climbed this mountain solo a few years back.
One thing I know though is that I’m never subjecting myself to the torture of attempting the Silver Start Creek route again (or at least not for a long time). The valley is incredibly beautiful but there’s just too much bushwhacking. The Burgundy Col route is much more direct and clear - no bushwhacking, no sketchy head walls, and no side alder, this botanical horror!

Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan) — May. 8, 2021

North Cascades > North Cascades Highway - Hwy 20
3 photos
Beware of: snow, trail conditions

7 people found this report helpful

 

We skiied Silver Star via the creek route this weekend as an overnight trip. 

Snow starts continuously about 500 ft above the road. I tried to ski directly out of the parking lot and that was a mess. 

The glacier is in great shape, brought rope, harness, pickets but didn’t need them. We had to a frame the skis almost the whole climb, so crampons were helpful. 

I thought the scramble to the summit had one spooky move. Climbing in ski boots is spicy! 

Otherwise the skiing was great, and the views are incredible.