Cucamonga Peak Overnight - Snowing in May?!

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  • Опубліковано 7 вер 2024
  • Camped overnight on Cucamonga Peak and hiked up Bighorn Peak and Ontario Peak the next day. I woke up in the morning thinking I had been transported back in time to Canada in the winter. How lucky we were to experience this kind of beauty in Southern California in May. You have to see it to believe it.
    **GEAR**
    Packed Items (Baseweight): 19.4lbs
    Worn Items: 3.1lbs
    Carried Items: 1.8lbs
    Consumables: 8.1lbs
    Total Pack Weight: 27.5lbs
    -Pack-
    Sierra Designs Flex Capacitor pack
    Outdoor Research 15L dry sack
    Trash compactor bag
    Daiso day pack / food bag
    Plastic bag
    Ziploc sandwich bag
    -Clothing & Footwear-
    Tops
    Sierra Designs Long Sleeve Pack Polo
    Sierra Designs Ultralight Trench
    Patagonia Nano Air puffy jacket
    Mountain Hardwear Ghost Whisperer puffy jacket
    Uniqlo down jacket
    Bottoms
    Mountain Hardwear Mesa II pants
    ExOfficio Give-N-Go boxers
    SmartWool Merino NTS 250 baselayer bottoms
    Marmot Precip rain pants
    Footwear
    Altra Lone Peak 3.0 trail runners
    Outdoor Research Sparkplug gaiters
    Darn Tough Ultra Light Crew socks
    Darn Tough Ultra Light 1/4 socks
    Black Diamond Contact Strap Crampons
    DIY Crampon bag (2x plastic pouches, 1x transparent bag)
    Thermal insoles
    Defeet Wool-e-ator socks
    Puma grey crew socks
    Glasses, Hats, & Gloves
    Contact lenses
    Rewetting drops
    Scattante bliss sunglasses
    Ultimate Direction Desert Hat
    Louis Garneau long cycling gloves
    Trekmates Mountain Lite mittens
    Canadian buff
    SmartWool Merino NTS 250 beanie
    Trekking Poles
    Leki Micro Vario Ti COR-TEC poles
    -Shelter & Weather Protection-
    Sierra Designs High Route tent fly
    Sierra Designs Night Glow
    Sierra Designs tent stuff sack
    MSR Groundhog 7.5" Y-stakes
    DAC 6" J-stakes
    Sierra Designs stake stuff sack
    Polycryo 9'x3.5' groundsheet
    -Sleep System-
    Enlightened Equipment Revelation 10F quilt
    Enlightened Equipment Hoodlum 0-20F
    Enlightened Equipment quilt straps
    Enlightened Equipment stuff sack
    Therm-a-rest Neoair XTherm pad & pump sack
    MEC Air Pillow & stuff sack
    Ear plugs
    -Cooking Gear-
    Storage
    Soto mesh bag
    Pots
    Soto 1L hard-anodized aluminum pot
    Soto 500mL hard-anodized aluminum pot
    Stoves
    Soto Amicus canister stove
    Fuel Containers
    Isobutane canister, 8 fl oz MSR
    Other
    Snow Peak titanium spork
    Scrubbing sponge
    Aluminum windscreen
    -Hydration-
    Smart Water 1L bottle
    Platypus Soft Bottle 1L
    Nalgene On The Fly 650mL bottle
    Aquatabs water purification tablets, 20L
    -Essentials-
    Navigation & Safety
    Garmin Fenix 3 GPS watch
    ACR ResQLink+ PLB
    CAMP Corsa Nanotech ice axe
    Blue carabiner
    Victorinox swiss army knife
    FOX 40 whistle
    UST 7 stormproof matches & striker
    Sun & Bug Protection
    Neutrogena SPF 100 sunscreen
    Lip balm
    Electronics & Photography
    iPhone 7 Plus
    Energizer Vision HD+ Focus (incl. 3 AAA)
    Spare AAAs, alkaline
    GoPro Hero 4 Silver
    GoPro tripod adapter
    GoPro blue screw
    GoPro spare batteries
    Pedco Ultrapod
    First Aid & Repair
    Leukotape + Sharpie
    Bandaids
    Tegaderm
    Ibuprofen, 200mg
    Acetaminophen, 325mg
    Diphenhydramine 25mg
    Imodium (Loperamide HCl)
    Antibiotics, 0.9g bacitracin zinc
    Alcohol swabs
    Kinesio tape
    Petroleum jelly
    Vaseline lotion
    Salt
    Sewing needle + thread
    Nitrile gloves
    Duct tape
    Tenacious tape
    Tear Aid, Type A
    CELOX 2g clotting powder
    Hygiene
    Long handle toothbrush
    Mini toothpaste
    Toilet paper squares
    Purell
    Multipurpose Utility
    Paracord, 40'
    Friendly Swede white ditty sack
    Velcro strips
    Therm-a-rest Z-Seat
    Ziploc bag with ID, credit card, cash, keys

КОМЕНТАРІ • 37

  • @lopezexplora
    @lopezexplora 9 місяців тому +1

    That’s the coolest video of Cucamonga Peak!!
    Thank you for sharing 🥾🥾

  • @monaliza8559
    @monaliza8559 3 роки тому

    Wow!. So magical.

  • @johnprisk
    @johnprisk 4 роки тому +2

    I must have watched this one a dozen times over the course of the last couple of years, and it just keeps getting more beautiful every time I see it. The scenery is stunning and the snow, clouds and fog are spectacular. Thank you for sharing 👍👍👍

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  4 роки тому +1

      FigBoot29 Thanks for being a long time viewer!

  • @dominicwhite6218
    @dominicwhite6218 Рік тому

    This video should be called "Why it's Better to Hike Alone."

  • @Frenchylikeshikes
    @Frenchylikeshikes 2 роки тому

    I'm considering doing this one maybe next April...Unless there is indeed snow, in which case I'll wait.

  • @monaliza8559
    @monaliza8559 5 років тому +1

    Winter Wonderland. Wow!, Great video. Thank you for sharing.

  • @TubaSolotheHiker
    @TubaSolotheHiker 7 років тому +4

    Dude! What an insanely cool adventure..good stuff!

  • @leenagreyson3259
    @leenagreyson3259 6 років тому +1

    The view when you opened your tent in the morning - magical!! Your footage is stunning.

  • @vinnie9762
    @vinnie9762 7 років тому +1

    Cool meeting you and your friends Jimmy. Very informative videos for beginners like me.

  • @chingona322
    @chingona322 4 роки тому

    Thanks for the awesome video. Looks beautiful there with snow. You guys are very brave.

  • @joshuaguzman2168
    @joshuaguzman2168 5 років тому

    Great Video!!! Thanks for sharing! 👍

  • @Sharethastory
    @Sharethastory 4 роки тому

    What time Did you arrive and how long did it take you to get up there?

  • @sonofamountain2862
    @sonofamountain2862 7 років тому

    awesome video!

  • @shupingyin8082
    @shupingyin8082 7 років тому

    this is absolutely beautiful vid. I watched it a couple of times. I'm going up there tomorrow, camp for the first time. hope all is good though

  • @kingssolarcleaning8680
    @kingssolarcleaning8680 7 років тому

    great video

  • @stevievgoku
    @stevievgoku 7 років тому

    Badass video tripod jimmy 🤗🤗❄️🏔☃️

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому +1

      That is catchy, I must say...

  • @bornagainluis
    @bornagainluis 7 років тому +1

    Nice!

  • @developingdaddy
    @developingdaddy 7 років тому

    Great video, it was nice to meet you on the summit!

  • @choykwan
    @choykwan 5 років тому

    When is the hiking dates? May 6(Sat.) & 7(Sun.)? What a precious video! At least, once in a decade weather condition.

  • @busmalo82
    @busmalo82 7 років тому

    nice meeting you on trail. sweet video too. its mauricio here... we chatted for a lil bit towards the end of trail

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому

      busmalo82 Glad you found this video, Mauricio! It was nice meeting you on the trail

  • @freedriss1237
    @freedriss1237 7 років тому +1

    Wonderful video! How long did it take to hike both peaks?

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому +2

      It took us about 4 hours to get up to Cucamonga Peak, then we left camp around 9:15am and summited Bighorn around noon. We got to Ontario peak at 2pm and then got back to the trailhead at about 4:30pm.

    • @freedriss1237
      @freedriss1237 7 років тому

      Keep posting these inspiring videos. Great job!

  • @elvay6847
    @elvay6847 7 років тому +2

    So they climbed up the mountain at 2am in the snow. That means they had to have had a flashlights and/or headlamps. So how in the hell did they manage to step on your tent? Were they blind? I mean the top of Cucamonga is pretty huge and they made it a point to come right to where you were and ruin your tent. Even if the corners were covered in the snow, they would still see the tent and common sense should have said "walk around the tent and guy lines". I'm sorry, but I would have lost my shit. /rant. Great video man. Such a cool journey, and in May to boot! Subscribed.

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому +1

      Instant replay at 8:57
      I didn't find out until I hung up the tent to dry, and I will confess that my initial reaction was disbelief. After giving it some thought, I figured the damage was in a non-critical area and could've been worse. You never know what will happen up on the mountains, huh?

    • @elvay6847
      @elvay6847 7 років тому

      Perhaps it was a small price to pay for an otherwise amazing adventure I guess :-)

  • @martinpugh9700
    @martinpugh9700 7 років тому

    How's the pack holding up? Ordered mine but they've lost it in their system! Over a week and still hasn't shipped! Oh well.

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому +2

      That's too bad! Hopefully you get it soon. The pack is holding up just fine -- nothing interesting to report yet. The top lid zipper still worked despite all the frozen rain (I forgot to lower the storm flap...oops).

  • @shupingyin8082
    @shupingyin8082 7 років тому

    Were you cooking inside of the tent? Does that give you condensation? I won't cook outside when it is that cold. No choice i guess.

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому

      I was cooking inside of the tent because it was windy and there were all types of precipitation. No lingering condensation because the wind helps keep the tent well ventilated (I unzipped part of the wall to add more airflow). If it weren't windy and just rainy, I would porch my tent door and cook under that.

    • @louisehiker9246
      @louisehiker9246 7 років тому

      Hiking Nerd, do you worry about catching your tent on fire?

    • @HikingNerd
      @HikingNerd  7 років тому +1

      Not at all. The flame is well controlled and the windy/cold conditions reduce the likelihood of combustion. I also feel the fabric nearest the stove from time to time just to check on the temperatures, and on this trip it was cooler than if the fabric was exposed to sunlight.
      Also, the tent adheres to a flame retardant standard (CPAI-84) where a flame is put under the fabric and they measure how well it resists becoming a big flaming sheet of fabric. It's an old standard and the chemicals added for flame retardancy are being studied for health effects.
      Even if this tent didn't pass any FR standard, I'm not concerned. I'm very cognizant that there's an open flame in my tent and I make sure I don't knock my stove over. The same way that when I'm walking on a ledge near a steep drop off, I make sure I don't fall off the ledge.