On Wednesday, March 6, I joined the Southern Arizona Hiking Club (SAHC) for a climb of Picketpost Mountain, a peak rising to the west above Superior, Arizona. Picketpost Mountain has only 4375 feet of elevation but 1455 feet of topographic prominence, making it the 160th most prominent peak in Arizona.
From US Highway 60 the mountain appears surrounded by high cliffs and steep, narrow gullies. I have wanted to visit it since Linda and I visited the nearby Boyce Thompson Arboretum State Park a few years ago.
John Ohm led the outing. He plans to complete the list of SAHC Emblem Peaks this spring. I hope to eventually visit all of them as well. So I was pleased to join him and the others on this outing. I expected a fun day on a beautiful peak.
The climbing route starts heading south from the Picketpost Mountain Trailhead on the Arizona National Scenic Trail. It continues on the Picketpost Trail that heads up into a steep drainage that carves a cleft in the cliffs guarding the mountain. I call this cleft the Northwest Gully.
We encountered some scrambling up the Northwest Gully but the rock was generally firm and the exposure was moderate. The trail was marked by cairns and it was usually obvious. But there were a few variations to choose between.
The trail eventually reached more open ground and led to the summit plateau and the open and scenic summit.
A benchmark, metal bench, and mailbox decorated the summit. Here we had plenty of room to relax and enjoy the views. I especially enjoyed viewing Pinal Peak, El Capitan Mountain, and Mount Turnbull to the east, all of which I have visited in years past.
John celebrated summiting his 300th SAHC Peak on Picketpost Mountain and will receive club recognition for that. I wonder if John will be eventually tempted to visit 400 of them. Some club members have.
After lunch we descended the same route with a few variations. From above the gully to the northwest I viewed Superstition Ridge which I visited last year. Weaver’s Needle rises to the east of it, an impressive tower that someday I hope to climb. The descent down the gully required some routefinding and we encountered and avoided a few cliffs. The rock was stable and fun to descend.
Picketpost Mountain was a fairly short climb, but the experience was fun and very scenic and I expect to return someday.
Bill Dube says
What an no mailbox shot? Thank hike got me in 2017 did not make it to the top. In fall of 2018 I did, but not smart. Taught me never climb again alone. Luckily back in one piece. Every year people get hurt on that climb. I loved that you all did it the smart way to the top of Picket Post. Called my mom from there as I finally got coverage on my phone at the top.