USE AT YOUR OWN RISK
Location: Riverside County, about 11 miles southeast of Idyllwild, 120 miles from Los Angeles
Maps
- Auto Club: Riverside County
- Forest Service: San Bernardino National Forest
- USGS Topo: Palm View Peak 7½
- HPS:
Route(s),
waypoints and
explanation of usage
Nearby Peaks: Cone Peak, Palm View Peak, Pyramid Peak, Lion Peak
ROUTE 1
- Distance: 8 miles round trip on trail and use trail
- Gain: 2300'
- Time: 4-5 hours round trip
- Rating: Class 2, moderate
- Navigation: Easy
Original: Dick Worsfold and Maria Harris, November 1973
DRIVING ROUTE 1
- Take I-10 or SR 60 east to SR 79 in Beaumont. Take exit south
to SR 79.
- Go south on SR 79 to the Ramona Expressway. Turn left (east).
- Go east and then southeast on the Ramona Expressway until it ends at
SR 74. Turn left (east).
- Go east on SR 74 to Mountain Center (junction with Idyllwild Highway
SR 243).
- Continue east on SR 74 for 8.7 miles to Morris Ranch Road on the
left at a fire station. Turn left.
- Go north on Morris Ranch Road for 3.7 miles to an iron gate on the
right with a sign "Cedar Springs Trail". Park off the pavement
near this spot.
HIKING ROUTE 1
- From your parking spot, hike down the road to the trailhead (5430').
- Go through the gate. (There are several gates on this trail. Be sure to
close each gate as you pass through it.)
Immediately on the left is another gate. Ignore it. It is another
access to the trail for equestrian riders in the area.
- Continue up the road past a water tank to another gate. The
trail turns left just before the gate.
- Soon you come to another gate. Go through this gate. Here you leave the
fences behind, as this is the National Forest boundary.
- Continue up the road as it becomes a trail and
it begins to climb until you come to another gate. This is not a boundary
but is part of a cattle drift fence. This keeps range cattle out of
selected sections of the National Forest.
- Continue up to a saddle at
6800'-. This is the junction of the Cedar Springs Trail and the Pacific
Crest Trail (PCT) on the Desert Divide.
- Turn right on the PCT and follow
it east and then south until you reach a saddle just southeast of
Pyramid Peak. This is the turnoff for
Pyramid Peak.
- Continue on the PCT about 1/4
mile to a trail on the left marked by ducks. This is the turnoff
for Lion Peak.
- Turn left (east) on this trail and follow it a short
distance up to the top of a ridge.
- Turn left again (north) and follow this
ridge up to its high point.
- Turn right (east) and hike down into the
saddle west of the peak.
- Follow a good, clearly visible ducked and brushed-out
route off to the right as it skirts the base of the hill on its west side
and slowly climbs directly up to the summit. It is not necessary to climb
the large, plinth-shaped rock at the south end of the summit ridge.