A rock climber sits on the tiny summit of Mt Cruiser
Jim On Mt Cruiser Summit

Mt Cruiser via Flapjack Lakes—Needle Pass—South Corner (Olympic Mountains, WA)

Trip Date: July 8-9, 2000

Mt. Cruiser Climbing Trip

North Fork Skokomish River
Flapjack Lakes
Mount Lincoln (5868′) attempt
Needle Pass
Mount Cruiser (6104′)

Trip Report Summary

Region: Olympic Mountains (Washington)

Sub-Region: Skokomish – Duckabush Group

Area: Olympic National Park & Mt. Skokomish Wilderness

Starting & Ending Point: North Fork Skokomish River Trailhead near Staircase Ranger Station at end of Lake Cushman Road (Elev. 850 feet)

Way Points: Gladys Divide Trail junction & Madeline Creek & Donahue Creek & Flapjack Lakes (trail hike)

Campsite: Flapjack Lakes (Elev. 3850 feet)

Summit Attempt: Mt. Lincoln (rock scramble to Northwest Face via Northwest Couloir)

Sidetrip: Gladys Divide basin & Needle Pass (trail hike & snow climb)

Summit: Mt. Cruiser (rock scramble & rock climb via Southwest Ridge—South Notch—Cannonhole—South Corner [Route 1] )

Approximate Stats (excluding summit attempt): 18.0 miles traveled; 5700 feet gained & lost.

Approximate Stats (including summit attempt): 20.0 miles traveled; 6900 feet gained & lost.

Mt Cruiser via Flapjack Lakes–Needle Pass–Beta–South Corner – August 2023

Historical Articles & Photos for Mt. Cruiser First Ascent – September 1937

Full Trip Report

By Laura Zimmerman…

Not the best weekend for a high-mountain climb, but we managed to summit Mt. Cruiser in good style! It is an awesome climb – with a little bit of everything. Shall I be so bold as to use one of Beckey’s lines: “distinctly alpine and pure joy!”

Day 1: Trailhead to Flapjack Lakes

Flapjack Lakes trail is wonderfully maintained, with the exception of the slide by-pass, which is a bit rough but still very do-able. The Gladys Divide trail still has some snow patches and lots of blowdown, but it isn’t all that bad. A National Park Service crew was busy maintaining the Black & White Lakes trail.  After reaching Flapjack Lakes (4.0 hours + 3000 feet from TH), Jim headed off on a sidetrip to climb Mt. Lincoln.  He returned several hours later with no summit, having turned around at a 5100-foot headwall.

Day 2: Mt. Cruiser Summit Climb + Exit

Leaving camp in the morning, we headed toward Gladys Pass.  The snow became continuous at about 5500 feet. The snow couloir to Needle Pass (1.3 hours from camp) was mostly soft, but we used crampons for extra security.

Climbing Toward Needle Pass

The scramble approach to the standard route is somewhat defined by boot tread. Even with the swirling marine cloud layer that was our constant companion all day, we managed to find the summit pinnacle. The pillow-lava rock is of exceptionally good quality, and very solid feeling. Make sure you take frequent “back sights” on your approach to the summit pinnacle; it is very easy to get turned around and end up on the wrong ridge, or get fogged in!

Mt Cruiser In Fog

We protected the 5th class pitch using small cams and chocks to #10. There are three bolt locations on the face/ridge, and the second location is actually a double-bolt rappel station of recent installation.  We reached the tiny summit in early afternoon (5.5 hours from camp).

Laura On Mt Cruiser Summit Ridge
Laura On Mt Cruiser Summit

The Olympic Climbing Guide suggests using two 165-foot ropes for the rappel, but we just had one 165-foot rope and managed just fine with a little roped downclimbing from the summit to the rappel station.

We retraced our up-route back to camp and then hiked back to the trailhead in the evening (6.5 hours from summit).  We never did get a view from the summit; it was shrouded in cloud almost the whole time.  So, I guess we just have to go back some day.

Click to enlarge…