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Hiking trails reach the summit from four sides of the mountain, [19] and one can access the Devil's Backbone trail by skipping the Mt. Baldy Notch trail by taking Chair #1 at Mount Baldy Resorts during any season. [20] The trails vary in difficulty, and there are plenty of options for novices as well as experienced hikers.
Mount Baldy is set in the Fishlake National Forest on the boundary that Beaver County shares with Piute County. [2] It ranks as the third-highest peak in the Tushar Mountains, [3] third-highest in each county and 77th-highest in the state. [1] Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains into the Sevier River watershed. [3]
Mount Baldy is a 414 foot (126 m) hill located within the Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge in Polk County, Oregon. A short trail loop operated by the wildlife refuge leads to an observation deck on the summit.
The U.S. Forest Service has closed all trails to Mt. Baldy's peak until December 2025 to help the ecosystem recover from a fire. Hikers are defying the closures.
Mount Baldy is located 19 miles (31 km) southeast of downtown Salt Lake City at the Alta Ski Area in the Wasatch–Cache National Forest. [3] The peak is part of the Wasatch Range which is a subrange of the Rocky Mountains.
The highest elevation, Mount San Antonio (Mount Baldy) at 10,069 feet (3,069 m), [8] rises towards the eastern extremity of the range which extends from the Cajon Pass (Interstate 15) on the east, where the San Gabriel Mountain Range meets the San Bernardino Mountain Range, westward to meet the Santa Susana Mountains at Newhall Pass (Interstate 5).
Mount Baldy (Western Apache: Dził Łigai White Mountain [5] [6]) is an extinct stratovolcano [4] in eastern Arizona in the United States. With a summit elevation of 11,409 feet (3,477 m), the peak of Mount Baldy rises above the tree line and is left largely bare of vegetation, lending the mountain its current name. [ 7 ]
Baldy Mountain (official name), Baldy Peak, Mount Baldy, or Old Baldy is the highest peak in the Cimarron Range, a subrange of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico. It is located in Colfax County, about 6 miles (10 km) northeast of Eagle Nest. It rises abruptly, with 3,640 feet (1,110 m) of vertical relief (in 3 miles/4.8 km), from the ...