| The Beargrass bloom has begun |
| Gordon Whirry and Mark Hertenstein on the descent from the summit |
| Tons of Jones Columbine along the ridge line |
| I was delighted to reach the top |
I hadn't done anything in the Front since last summer, so Friday's climb of Mount Wright in the Rocky Mountain Front/Bob Marshall Wilderness was quite the treat.
Yes, it's dry in the foothills, but Wright, one of the Front's tallest peaks at 8,885 feet, was still sporting its "collars" of snow at the top.
The spectacular view from the top revealed pretty good snow, particularly looking back to the west where Silvertip Mountain was well covered.
I maintain that the view from the top of this mountain are among the best in the Rocky Mountain Front, stretching to the Swan Range on the west, and looking directly into Glacier National Park on the north. To the east one can clearly see West, Gold and East buttes in the Sweetgrass Hills.
The trailhead is located on the West Fork of the Teton River, which was hammered by a 2007 wildfire that left timber scattered in burnt heaps on the mountainsides like pickup sticks. The west facing slopes on the Front have not recovered yet, scorched by the fire's intensity.
I've been climbing this mountain, a 7.4 miles roundtrip with a cumulative gain and loss of about 3,600 feet, since 1981. The gulches adjacent to the mountain are often snow filled early in the season, and the melt creates handsome waterfalls.
For the first time since I've been climbing, the trail is clear of deadfall, which we used to scramble over.
A real treat are the wildflowers along the trail. Thes white/cream colored flowers were out in full force --- the white pinstamen, the Sego lily, anemonie, the globe flowers. We saw three beargrass in full bloom and the deep purple silky and spiky phacelia and sticky geranium.
I was surprised by the Jones Columbine bloom along the Mount Wright ridgeline. It was the best I've seen there.
How fortunate that this year we were able to see two separate Jones Columbine blooms --- the other at its peak on the top of Kings Hill Mountain in the Little Belts nearly a month ago.
Another surprise was how well my eyes are working after cataract surgery. What particularly struck me were the deep, vibrant blues in the alpine Forget-Me-Not flowers. I guess I've been missing out all these years without realizing it.
This was another step in my recovery. The foot worked beautifully.




