Bat Mountain traverse (Funeral Mountains)

fossana

Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2018
Messages
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86682

Intro
Last winter I was looking for early season peak bagging opportunities and came across
Harlan Stockman's trip report for Bat Mountain in the Funeral Mountains with photos of a tantalizing ridge traverse that chained the 2 main Bat peaklets. The winds ended up being bad on my original trip date, so when I had to pick up a bathroom vanity in Vegas, I decided to detour there afterward to do the climb. Harlan ended up avoiding the harder portion traverse, but Bob Burd hadn't. I'm familiar with Bob's technical climbing ability, so it seemed doable in my book.

Logistics
Permits: no
Water: no
Start/end: roadside parking along Hwy 190 (shoulder or dirt lot)
Mileage: ~10?
Navigation: No trails. Bring a topo map +/- GPS.
Reference:
Bob Burd's TR, HW Stockman's TR

Approximate Route

86707

Trip Report
It was in the 30s when I left my van and the route Bob had taken to the ridge line (W Gully) was in the shade. Instead I opted for the traditional route Harlan has indicated on his map, which ascends a second class narrowing gully. The Mojave desert vegetation was sparse and the ground was covered with mostly limestone gravel, so the walking was fairly easy to the mouth of drainage. Once in the drainage the larger rocks contained interesting fossils and there were dried coyote melon/gourds (Cucurbita palmata) in the wash. I was happy to be mostly in the sun. The climb to the summit was uneventful and straightforward. The colors and undulations of the surrounding landscape were amazing.

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As I distanced myself from the S Bat summit, the knife-edged ridge came into view. According to Bob's write-up, at one point the route bypassed a gendarme on the improbable NW side of the ridge. I wasn't 100% sure which gendarme that was, but there were desert bighorn trails to guide the way. The detour came early on. Next the fun scrambling began. The rock was grippy limestone, fractured but not horribly chossy, and no harder than class 4. The sections that looked improbable from a distance turned out to doable. The ridge gave way to slabs for the final push to the N Bat summit.

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From the N Bat summit I had 2 options: to the steeper NW, which involved routefinding challenges; or to the SE, which was easier and more straightforward. I chose the latter. I dropped down the slabs then into an obvious drainage, which ended in an easily bypassable, but high waterfall. The sides of the drainage grew steeper, so I stayed to the left until I could eventually drop back in. The route back was somewhat out of the way since one has to skirt the southern arm of the Funeral range. I eventually made it back and headed home.

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Those are awesome looking mountains as you drive towards/from Furnace Creek. Especially that pic you took looking back. Been wanting to get up on those since Eagle Mtn. Thanks for sharing it. I probably would like your start to Bob Burd's. Did the face of the peak east of N. Bat look fifth class? It looks from the valley floor to be a different rock than the limestone. I've been surprised the peakbagger elite have left it alone.

John
 
Did the face of the peak east of N. Bat look fifth class? It looks from the valley floor to be a different rock than the limestone. I've been surprised the peakbagger elite have left it alone.

If you mean the blobby red ridge/peak directly E of N Bat, the rock didn't look so hot from a distance. I read something about a clay mine in that area, so I would expect it to be soft.
 
If you mean the blobby red ridge/peak directly E of N Bat, the rock didn't look so hot from a distance. I read something about a clay mine in that area, so I would expect it to be soft.

Yep, that's the one. I wondered why it wasn't a third summit in the traverse, thanks. I wasn't paying close enough attention to the other photos but i see it now in pic 1291.
 
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