Colorado 14,000-foot PeaksRanked Peaks have 280 feet of Clean ProminenceShowing Dave Goodell's first Winter ascent dates for climbed peaks (0 out of 53, or 0%)Rank | Peak | Elev-Ft | Prom-Ft | Range (Level 4) | Isol-Mi | Ascents | Ascent Date |
---|
|
4. | Blanca Peak | 14,345 | 5326 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 103.4 | 350 | | 29. | Capitol Peak | 14,130 | 1730 | Elk Range Area | 7.4 | 208 | | 12. | Castle Peak | 14,265 | 2345 | Elk Range Area | 20.9 | 327 | | 34. | Challenger Point | 14,081 | 281 | Sangre de Cristo Range | .2 | 234 | | 18. | Crestone Needle | 14,197 | 437 | Sangre de Cristo Range | .4 | 249 | | 7. | Crestone Peak | 14,294 | 4534 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 27.4 | 247 | | 41. | Culebra Peak | 14,047 | 4807 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 35.4 | 185 | | 42. | Ellingwood Point | 14,042 | 322 | Sangre de Cristo Range | .5 | 229 | | 9. | Grays Peak | 14,270 | 2750 | Front Range | 25.0 | 1144 | | 40. | Handies Peak | 14,048 | 1888 | San Juan Mountains | 11.1 | 408 | | 37. | Humboldt Peak | 14,064 | 1184 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 1.4 | 298 | | 52. | Huron Peak | 14,003 | 1403 | Sawatch Range | 3.2 | 450 | | 23. | Kit Carson Mountain | 14,165 | 1005 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 1.3 | 229 | | 5. | La Plata Peak | 14,336 | 1816 | Sawatch Range | 6.2 | 491 | | 44. | Little Bear Peak | 14,037 | 357 | Sangre de Cristo Range | .9 | 179 | | 15. | Longs Peak | 14,255 | 2940 | Front Range | 43.6 | 819 | | 24. | Maroon Peak | 14,156 | 2316 | Elk Range Area | 8.0 | 199 | | 36. | Missouri Mountain | 14,067 | 827 | Sawatch Range | 1.3 | 342 | | 10. | Mount Antero | 14,269 | 2503 | Sawatch Range | 17.7 | 351 | | 18. | Mount Belford | 14,197 | 1317 | Sawatch Range | 3.3 | 509 | | 38. | Mount Bierstadt | 14,060 | 700 | Front Range | 1.0 | 1074 | | 22. | Mount Bross | 14,172 | 292 | Central Colorado Ranges | .9 | 768 | | 35. | Mount Columbia | 14,073 | 873 | Sawatch Range | 1.6 | 307 | | 28. | Mount Democrat | 14,148 | 748 | Central Colorado Ranges | 1.2 | 886 | | 1. | Mount Elbert | 14,433 | 9073 | Sawatch Range | 670.6 | 1648 | | 33. | Mount Eolus | 14,084 | 1004 | San Juan Mountains | 1.7 | 175 | | 14. | Mount Evans | 14,264 | 2744 | Front Range | 9.8 | 956 | | 3. | Mount Harvard | 14,420 | 2340 | Sawatch Range | 14.9 | 400 | | 8. | Mount Lincoln | 14,286 | 3862 | Central Colorado Ranges | 22.5 | 854 | | 42. | Mount Lindsey | 14,042 | 1522 | Sangre de Cristo Range | 2.2 | 225 | | 2. | Mount Massive | 14,421 | 1941 | Sawatch Range | 5.1 | 571 | | 51. | Mount of the Holy Cross | 14,005 | 2111 | Sawatch Range | 18.4 | 367 | | 26. | Mount Oxford | 14,153 | 633 | Sawatch Range | 1.2 | 391 | | 18. | Mount Princeton | 14,197 | 2157 | Sawatch Range | 5.2 | 430 | | 17. | Mount Shavano | 14,229 | 1619 | Sawatch Range | 3.8 | 464 | | 45. | Mount Sherman | 14,036 | 850 | Central Colorado Ranges | 8.0 | 738 | | 27. | Mount Sneffels | 14,150 | 3030 | San Juan Mountains | 15.7 | 447 | | 16. | Mount Wilson | 14,246 | 4024 | San Juan Mountains | 33.0 | 215 | | 21. | Mount Yale | 14,196 | 1876 | Sawatch Range | 5.5 | 490 | | 30. | Pikes Peak | 14,110 | 5510 | Front Range | 60.6 | 1186 | | 47. | Pyramid Peak | 14,018 | 1618 | Elk Range Area | 2.1 | 186 | | 12. | Quandary Peak | 14,265 | 1105 | Central Colorado Ranges | 3.2 | 1072 | | 46. | Redcloud Peak | 14,034 | 1436 | San Juan Mountains | 4.9 | 341 | | 50. | San Luis Peak | 14,014 | 3113 | San Juan Mountains | 27.0 | 272 | | 31. | Snowmass Mountain | 14,092 | 1132 | Elk Range Area | 2.3 | 184 | | 39. | Sunlight Peak | 14,059 | 379 | San Juan Mountains | .5 | 173 | | 53. | Sunshine Peak | 14,001 | 481 | San Juan Mountains | 1.3 | 314 | | 25. | Tabeguache Peak | 14,155 | 435 | Sawatch Range | .8 | 350 | | 11. | Torreys Peak | 14,267 | 560 | Front Range | .7 | 1016 | | 6. | Uncompahgre Peak | 14,309 | 4277 | San Juan Mountains | 85.0 | 389 | | 49. | Wetterhorn Peak | 14,015 | 1615 | San Juan Mountains | 2.7 | 291 | | 48. | Wilson Peak | 14,017 | 857 | San Juan Mountains | 1.4 | 230 | | 32. | Windom Peak | 14,087 | 2167 | San Juan Mountains | 26.3 | 199 | |
Front Runners List: Click to see list completion progress by climbers that log their climbs using Peakbagger.com. Multiple Ascents Grid: Click for a grid showing all of Dave Goodell's ascents of peaks on this list (including up to 10 rounds of repeats). Compare Climbers: Click to compare ascents of up to 5 climbers working on this list.
List DescriptionThe Colorado Fourteeners are one of the best-known peakbagging lists in the world. Every single Rocky Mountain summit rising to over 14,000 feet lies in the arbitrary rectangle of Colorado, and these summits that cross the magic threshold have become iconic landmarks of the state. Maps and atlases try to show as many of these peaks as possible, road signs point them out to car travellers, and the hikes to summits of fourteeners are thronged on summer weekends.
The popularity of this peakbagging pursuit is easy to understand. 53 or 54 peaks is not too many, but enough to make it a real project. All but about eight or so of the peaks are just walk-up hikes, and the difficult ones are not a problem for experienced scramblers. In summer there are few, if any, snowfields to contend with, and afternoon thunderstorms are the major weather hazard. These summits are all among the highest in the United States, too, giving this list high appeal to those who like simply to be above it all.
Carl Blaurock and Bill Ervin were the first to climb all the fourteeners in the 1920s, based on the surveys at that time. Recently, climber number 1000 completed the entire list, based on the records of the Colorado Mountain Club.
As with many famous threshold-based peak lists, there is ongoing debate over which summits belong on the list. Above, summits are ranked if they have 280 feet or more of clean prominence (300 feet of interpolated prominence), giving us a consistent list with 53 summits. Traditionally, El Diente and North Maroon Peak are included on most versions of Colorado Fourteener lists, mainly because of the difficulty of traversing the ridge to these peaks despite a low saddle rise from their nearest higher neighbors. Also, Challenger Point has long been left off traditional lists, and Ellingwood Peak was in a similar situation not too recently.
If you include El Diente and North Maroon, and you want a strict prominence cutoff, then Northwest Massive (and perhaps South Elbert) must also be included on your list.
Of course, it is up to the climber to decide which peaks to climb. You can pick a rigid prominence cutoff that fancies you, use an official club list, use an isolation cutoff, or just climb the peaks that inspire you the most.
Selected Guidebook(s) for this List Colorado's Fourteeners: From Hikes to Climbs (Roach) Dawson's Guide to Colorado's Fourteeners, Vol. 1: The Northern Peaks (Dawson) Dawson's Guide to Colorado's Fourteeners, Vol. 2: The Southern Peaks (Dawson) A Climbing Guide to Colorado's Fourteeners (Borneman, Lampert)
Caution: These books feature many of the peaks on this list, but may not have information on all of them.
Map Showing Location of Peaks = Peaks climbed by Dave Goodell = Unclimbed peaks Click on a peak to see its name and a clickable link.(Map only shows peaks ranked by clean prominence)
|
This page has been served 1248880 times since 2004-11-01.
|