The Beacon at 60

scatman

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Joined
Dec 23, 2013
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I had planned to post this hike in the Members of Backcountrypost.com, but after finishing the hike, I knew I had to create a trip report instead. There are some unwritten rules here at BCP, and one of them is if you see a snapper, a rattler, or a grizzler, then you must write up a trip report. It is just understood.

Sometimes you head out on a hike or backpacking trip, and everything just falls into place. That's what happened on my hike up Beacon Hill (Mount Wire) with Sheila today.

First off, the wildflowers were spectacular. From the vetch down low to the mule-ears up top, it just never stopped. I don't think I've ever seen such abundant flowers on Beacon as I did today. Normally, I have given up the foothill hikes by June, but Sheila is gradually getting her heel back to normal and Beacon Hill was the next step in her recovery and I'm gald we did.

Second, we ran into a den of rattlesnakes on our way down which was way cool. I must have taken one hundred pictures of them. And their rattles going off was like a symphony.

Third, I was able to make it to the top of the old airplane beacon on the summit of Wire. It was a bot challenging as my knees weren't bending like they should, probably due to the hike up Olympus last week.

And fourth, I think I ran into some black bear scat on the way down. Not sure what else it could have been.

The camera rotation continues with the canon Rebel T5i, which was released in 2013.

Anyway, here are some shots from a fantastic day on Beacon Hill. You might want to pull up a chair, pop some popcorn, and enjoy the wildflower, particularly vetch, show.

01.jpg
We hit the trailhead about 8:30 am

02.jpg
Yarrow

03.jpg
Spider milkweed

04.jpg
Toadflax

05.jpg
06.jpg
08.jpg
Various vetches early on

07.jpg
Some funky clouds above Red Butte

09.jpg
A spider (Desert Grass Spider) awaits its prey

10.jpg
Yellow salsify

11.jpg
Lewis flax

12.jpg
More yarrow

13.jpg
14.jpg
A bumble bee (Nevada Bumble Bee) on some vetch

15.jpg
Fireweed

16.jpg
Hookers onion

17.jpg
More salsify

18.jpg
More vetch - get used to it. :)

19.jpg
Sulphur buckwheat

20.jpg
Some beat up arrowleaf balsamroot

21.jpg
The trailhead is down by the new building (green) being constructed in Research Park

22.jpg
Getting a good look across the valley, or Pretty in Pink the sequel. :D

23.jpg
Blue flax

24.jpg
Hoary pincushion

25.jpg
Wasatch beardtongue

26.jpg
The Mount Wire trail

27.jpg
A geranium

28.jpg
A Rocky Mountain dwarf sunflower

29.jpg
Lupine

31.jpg30.jpg
Woods roses

32.jpg
36.jpg
More lupine

33.jpg
Geraniums

34.jpg
Larkspur

35.jpg
Wasatch beardtongue

37.jpg
A ladybug

38.jpg
More hookers onion

39.jpg
A lizard

40.jpg
More beardtongue

41.jpg
Rocky Mountain dwarf sunflowers

42.jpg
Am inchworm maybe?

43.jpg
More dwarf sunflowers

44.jpg
A Lazuli Bunting

45.jpg
Beautiful vetch

46.jpg
Lupine, mule-ears and dwarf sunflowers

47.jpg
Mountain ninebark

48.jpg
A swallowtail

49.jpg
Sheila among the mule-ears

50.jpg
Lewis flax

51.jpg
Vetch and mule-ears

52.jpg
Another wild rose

53.jpg
A blue butterfly

54.jpg
A horned lizard

55.jpg
Mule-ears line the trail

56.jpg
Hawksbeard

57.jpg
And of course more vetch

58.jpg
Me, underneath my favorite Mountain Mahogany tree

59.jpg
Approaching the beacon

60.jpg
Mule-ears

61.jpg
More larkspur

62.jpg
A few leafed pea (wild pea)

63.jpg
The only nice bunch of balsamroot that I saw on the entire hike, located just below the summit

64.jpg
The beacon

65.jpg
66.jpg
The beacon at 60! :D Or maybe :moses:

66b.jpg
This lady was taking a picture of her dog, overlooking Emigration Canyon, with her new Fuji camera

67.jpg
View into red Butte Canyon, with Grandview peak in the far distance

68.jpg
View up Emigration Canyon

69.jpg
From the top of the beacon

70.jpg
View south of the Wasatch Front

71.jpg
The Beacon benchmark

72.jpg
The Canon Rebel T5i

73.jpg
Prickly pear cacti almost ready to bloom

73b.jpg
Another horned lizard as we start back down

73c.jpg
More Sulphur buckwheat

74.jpg
Wasatch beardtongue

75.jpg
Mountain mahogany

76.jpg
Is this bear scat? @Outdoor_Fool help!

77.jpg
Juniper tree

78.jpg
Thistle

79.jpg
80.jpg
81.jpg
82.jpg
Sego Lilies. We expected to see these on our Van Cott Loop hike two weeks ago, but didn't.

83.jpg
Spreading fleabane

84.jpg
And what do we have here?

85.jpg
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87.jpg
88.jpg
89.jpg
90.jpg
91.jpg
92.jpg
93.jpg
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95.jpg
96.jpg
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98.jpg
99.jpg
A group of at least six rattlesnakes along a rocky outcrop. Perhaps this is their den? Pretty cool!

100.jpg
Sheila, making her way off of Beacon Hill

101.jpg
102.jpg
A magpie posed for me

103.jpg
See the Sube way down there?

104.jpg
Looking for Pennywise. :roflmao:

105.jpg
Time to donate again at ARUP

106.jpg
A combo pizza for dinner

107.jpg
And a Big Bad Baptist Old Fashioned Imperial Stout to was it all down. I didn't particularly like this flavor. :(


The End.
 
The Canon Rebel T5i takes some nice pictures. ;)

I will be able to sense @wsp_scott squirming as he looks at your rattler pictures.

Looks like a great day! I think you should have your bikini pose and likeness cast into a miniature bronze figurine. You could then proudly place it in your front yard to be used as a sundial. Or you could mount it on the hood of the Sube. :D
 
I concur with the bronze figurine for the sube! hahaha

Holy Snakes! was this right off the trail?

And I never knew Lazuli Buntings existed. When I think about birds and birdwatching, I am reminded of one of many different comedians, but this one especially by Gabe Rutledge. "I calculate I am exactly two years from caring about birds..." :roflmao:

 
The Canon Rebel T5i takes some nice pictures. ;)

I will be able to sense @wsp_scott squirming as he looks at your rattler pictures.

Looks like a great day! I think you should have your bikini pose and likeness cast into a miniature bronze figurine. You could then proudly place it in your front yard to be used as a sundial. Or you could mount it on the hood of the Sube. :D

It does take good pictures.

The Sube is ready for a big road trip!
 
I concur with the bronze figurine for the sube! hahaha

Holy Snakes! was this right off the trail?

And I never knew Lazuli Buntings existed. When I think about birds and birdwatching, I am reminded of one of many different comedians, but this one especially by Gabe Rutledge. "I calculate I am exactly two years from caring about birds..." :roflmao:


No, I take a game trail off the northwest ridge of Wire. There is a small rocky part along the ridge where the rattlers were at. So cool to see them that it made my day.

It actually starts a few years earlier with the wildflowers, then comes the birds! :D
 
Too many snakes, not enough bears, flowers ok :)

The flower part started for me a couple years ago, I guess birds are next. When does caring about scat show up?

I can't believe your wife stood around and took pictures of you posing, mine would have pretended not to know me and quickly walked away :)
 
I had planned to post this hike in the Members of Backcountrypost.com, but after finishing the hike, I knew I had to create a trip report instead. There are some unwritten rules here at BCP, and one of them is if you see a snapper, a rattler, or a grizzler, then you must write up a trip report. It is just understood.

Sometimes you head out on a hike or backpacking trip, and everything just falls into place. That's what happened on my hike up Beacon Hill (Mount Wire) with Sheila today.

First off, the wildflowers were spectacular. From the vetch down low to the mule-ears up top, it just never stopped. I don't think I've ever seen such abundant flowers on Beacon as I did today. Normally, I have given up the foothill hikes by June, but Sheila is gradually getting her heel back to normal and Beacon Hill was the next step in her recovery and I'm gald we did.

Second, we ran into a den of rattlesnakes on our way down which was way cool. I must have taken one hundred pictures of them. And their rattles going off was like a symphony.

Third, I was able to make it to the top of the old airplane beacon on the summit of Wire. It was a bot challenging as my knees weren't bending like they should, probably due to the hike up Olympus last week.

And fourth, I think I ran into some black bear scat on the way down. Not sure what else it could have been.

The camera rotation continues with the canon Rebel T5i, which was released in 2013.

Anyway, here are some shots from a fantastic day on Beacon Hill. You might want to pull up a chair, pop some popcorn, and enjoy the wildflower, particularly vetch, show.

View attachment 142099
We hit the trailhead about 8:30 am

View attachment 142100
Yarrow

View attachment 142101
Spider milkweed

View attachment 142102
Toadflax

View attachment 142103
View attachment 142104
View attachment 142105
Various vetches early on

View attachment 142106
Some funky clouds above Red Butte

View attachment 142107
A spider (Desert Grass Spider) awaits its prey

View attachment 142108
Yellow salsify

View attachment 142109
Lewis flax

View attachment 142110
More yarrow

View attachment 142111
View attachment 142112
A bumble bee (Nevada Bumble Bee) on some vetch

View attachment 142113
Fireweed

View attachment 142114
Hookers onion

View attachment 142115
More salsify

View attachment 142116
More vetch - get used to it. :)

View attachment 142117
Sulphur buckwheat

View attachment 142118
Some beat up arrowleaf balsamroot

View attachment 142119
The trailhead is down by the new building (green) being constructed in Research Park

View attachment 142120
Getting a good look across the valley, or Pretty in Pink the sequel. :D

View attachment 142121
Blue flax

View attachment 142122
Hoary pincushion

View attachment 142123
Wasatch beardtongue

View attachment 142124
The Mount Wire trail

View attachment 142125
A geranium

View attachment 142126
A Rocky Mountain dwarf sunflower

View attachment 142127
Lupine

View attachment 142129View attachment 142128
Woods roses

View attachment 142130
View attachment 142134
More lupine

View attachment 142131
Geraniums

View attachment 142132
Larkspur

View attachment 142133
Wasatch beardtongue

View attachment 142135
A ladybug

View attachment 142136
More hookers onion

View attachment 142137
A lizard

View attachment 142138
More beardtongue

View attachment 142139
Rocky Mountain dwarf sunflowers

View attachment 142140
Am inchworm maybe?

View attachment 142141
More dwarf sunflowers

View attachment 142142
A Lazuli Bunting

View attachment 142143
Beautiful vetch

View attachment 142144
Lupine, mule-ears and dwarf sunflowers

View attachment 142145
Mountain ninebark

View attachment 142146
A swallowtail

View attachment 142147
Sheila among the mule-ears

View attachment 142148
Lewis flax

View attachment 142149
Vetch and mule-ears

View attachment 142150
Another wild rose

View attachment 142151
A blue butterfly

View attachment 142152
A horned lizard

View attachment 142153
Mule-ears line the trail

View attachment 142154
Hawksbeard

View attachment 142155
And of course more vetch

View attachment 142156
Me, underneath my favorite Mountain Mahogany tree

View attachment 142157
Approaching the beacon

View attachment 142158
Mule-ears

View attachment 142159
More larkspur

View attachment 142160
A few leafed pea (wild pea)

View attachment 142161
The only nice bunch of balsamroot that I saw on the entire hike, located just below the summit

View attachment 142162
The beacon

View attachment 142163
View attachment 142164
The beacon at 60! :D Or maybe :moses:

View attachment 142165
This lady was taking a picture of her dog, overlooking Emigration Canyon, with her new Fuji camera

View attachment 142166
View into red Butte Canyon, with Grandview peak in the far distance

View attachment 142167
View up Emigration Canyon

View attachment 142168
From the top of the beacon

View attachment 142169
View south of the Wasatch Front

View attachment 142170
The Beacon benchmark

View attachment 142171
The Canon Rebel T5i

View attachment 142172
Prickly pear cacti almost ready to bloom

View attachment 142173
Another horned lizard as we start back down

View attachment 142174
More Sulphur buckwheat

View attachment 142175
Wasatch beardtongue

View attachment 142176
Mountain mahogany

View attachment 142177
Is this bear scat? @Outdoor_Fool help!

View attachment 142178
Juniper tree

View attachment 142179
Thistle

View attachment 142180
View attachment 142181
View attachment 142182
View attachment 142183
Sego Lilies. We expected to see these on our Van Cott Loop hike two weeks ago, but didn't.

View attachment 142184
Spreading fleabane

View attachment 142185
And what do we have here?

View attachment 142186
View attachment 142187
View attachment 142188
View attachment 142189
View attachment 142190
View attachment 142191
View attachment 142192
View attachment 142193
View attachment 142194
View attachment 142195
View attachment 142196
View attachment 142197
View attachment 142198
View attachment 142199
View attachment 142200
A group of at least six rattlesnakes along a rocky outcrop. Perhaps this is their den? Pretty cool!

View attachment 142201
Sheila, making her way off of Beacon Hill

View attachment 142202
View attachment 142203
A magpie posed for me

View attachment 142204
See the Sube way down there?

View attachment 142205
Looking for Pennywise. :roflmao:

View attachment 142206
Time to donate again at ARUP

View attachment 142207
A combo pizza for dinner

View attachment 142208
And a Big Bad Baptist Old Fashioned Imperial Stout to was it all down. I didn't particularly like this flavor. :(


The End.
Love that flower colored camo kilt!
 

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