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Mount_Heyburn Latitude and Longitude:

44°06′03.4″N 114°58′21.8″W / 44.100944°N 114.972722°W / 44.100944; -114.972722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mount Heyburn
Mount Heyburn
Highest point
Elevation10,229 ft (3,118 m) [1]
Prominence561 ft (171 m) [2]
Parent peak Mount Iowa
Coordinates 44°06′03.4″N 114°58′21.8″W / 44.100944°N 114.972722°W / 44.100944; -114.972722 [1]
Geography
Mount Heyburn is located in Idaho
Mount Heyburn
Mount Heyburn
Mount Heyburn is located in USA West
Mount Heyburn
Mount Heyburn
Mount Heyburn (USA West)
Parent range Sawtooth Range
Topo map USGS Mount Cramer
Climbing
First ascent1935
Easiest routeClass 5

Mount Heyburn, at 10,229 feet (3,118 m) is one of the many 10,000-foot (3,050 m) peaks in the Sawtooth Range of central Idaho. Mount Heyburn is located in Custer County and within the Sawtooth Wilderness portion of the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. The town of Stanley is located eight miles (13 km) north-northeast of Mount Heyburn. Grand Mogul, 9,733 ft (2,967 m), and Mount Heyburn are the two signature peaks that frame the southwest end of Redfish Lake (6,547 ft (1,996 m)); all are in the Salmon River watershed. [3]

Redfish Lake and Little Redfish Lake and the visitor services at these locations are only a few miles north of Mount Heyburn. While there are no trails to the top of Mount Heyburn, there are trails around both sides of Redfish Lake, and a boat service that ferries hikers the five miles (8 km) from Redfish Lake Lodge on the north end of the lake to the south end at regular intervals, for a round trip fee of $22. The drop-off point at the south end is a campground at the base of Mount Heyburn. The best time to climb Mount Heyburn is in the summer (July, August, or September); all routes to up Mount Heyburn are class 5.

Mount Heyburn was named for Weldon Heyburn, a U.S. Senator from Idaho from 1903 until his death in 1912.

Images

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Mount Heyburn". SummitPost.org. Retrieved August 9, 2021.
  2. ^ Staff. "Heyburn Mountain". Lists of John. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  3. ^ Sawtooth National Forest (Map) (1998 ed.). Sawtooth National Forest, U.S. Forest Service.

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