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Santa Fe Baldy

Santa Fe Baldy
Santa Fe Baldy with cloud from White Rock.jpg
From the White Rock overlook.
Highest point
Elevation 12,632 ft (3,850 m)  NAVD 88
Prominence 1,982 ft (604 m) 
Parent peak Truchas Peak
Coordinates 35°49′56″N 105°45′29″W / 35.832199494°N 105.758073833°W / 35.832199494; -105.758073833Coordinates: 35°49′56″N 105°45′29″W / 35.832199494°N 105.758073833°W / 35.832199494; -105.758073833
Geography
Location Santa Fe County, New Mexico, U.S.
Parent range Sangre de Cristo Mountains
Topo map USGS Aspen Basin
Climbing
Easiest route Off-trail hike

Santa Fe Baldy is a prominent summit in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico, United States, located 15 mi (24 km) northeast of Santa Fe. There are no higher mountains in New Mexico south of Santa Fe Baldy. It is prominent as seen from Los Alamos and communities along the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico, but is relatively inconspicuous from Santa Fe, as its north-south trending main ridge line is seen nearly end-on, disguising the size of the mountain. Tree line in the Sangre de Cristos is unusually high (exceeding 12,000 feet (3,700 m) in places) and only the top 600 to 800 feet (180 to 240 m) of the mountain is perpetually free of trees, but several severe forest fires have created bare spots extending to lower elevations. An extensive region of aspen trees on its flanks produces spectacular orange-yellow coloration during the fall that is the subject of many photographic studies.

Santa Fe Baldy rises in the Pecos Wilderness within the Santa Fe National Forest, on the water divide between the Rio Grande and the Pecos River. The western slopes are drained by the Rio Capulin and the Rio Nambe, both flowing to the Rio Grande. The eastern side of the mountain consists of two small cirques, one containing Lake Katherine, one of the highest lakes in New Mexico at elevation 11,745 feet (3,580 m). Lake Katherine was given its name by theoretical physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer

The peak is accessed by Trail 251, the Skyline Trail, which climbs to a saddle about 1,000 feet (300 m) below the summit; the remaining distance is covered by a steep unofficial trail along the ridgeline. Under good conditions the summit is a simple "walk-up" climb, but the Sangre de Cristos are unusually prone to lightning, and during the summer months, the wise hiker is off Santa Fe Baldy and other high summits in the range by noon, to avoid afternoon thunderstorms.


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Wikipedia

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