WY WY - Austin King, 22, Yellowstone National Park, Eagle Peak, 17 Sept 2024

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Found this website of some of the registered summits of Eagle Peak Wyoming. Probably not all, just what is reported to this website.


It says there was a hiker, Peter Gram, would summitted Eagle Peak on the day that SAR efforts began on September 21st. Is that possible?

I guess they are checking and contacting everyone had a back country permit and was in the area in the week that Austin went missing?
 

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Found this website of some of the registered summits of Eagle Peak Wyoming. Probably not all, just what is reported to this website.


It says there was a hiker, Peter Gram, would summitted Eagle Peak on the day that SAR efforts began on September 21st. Is that possible?

I guess they are checking and contacting everyone had a back country permit and was in the area in the week that Austin went missing?
That's a different mountain. There are two different ones in Wyoming with the same name. The one you linked to is in the SE part of the state and is 9172 feet high. (There's even a third, called Lost Eagle Peak.)

The one in Yellowstone is 11,364 feet high. Peakbaggers doesn't show any 2024 ascents for it: Ascents of Eagle Peak - Peakbagger.com

Edited to add:
Here's an excerpt from a 2013 trip report for the Yellowstone mountain from the Peakbaggers site.
We spent a short while on the cold, windy summit and then began our descent. It should be noted that it is impossible to see the exit point from the lava tube until you are virtually standing next to the hole. Some temporary flagging might be a good idea as you leave the lava tube on your way up to the summit. Not finding the lava tube on your descent would be problematical to say the least.


I've seen several different reports that note how tricky it is coming back down from the peak (all from experienced climbers), and it would be doubly so at dusk.
 
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I was curious what this ‘keyhole’ or ‘lava tube’ in the route looks like. I hope it’s okay to post these photos from the attached blog and description of the route. Certainly gives me the willies just looking at it.

 

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That's a different mountain. There are two different ones in Wyoming with the same name. The one you linked to is in the SE part of the state and is 9172 feet high. (There's even a third, called Lost Eagle Peak.)

The one in Yellowstone is 11,364 feet high. Peakbaggers doesn't show any 2024 ascents for it: Ascents of Eagle Peak - Peakbagger.com

Edited to add:
Here's an excerpt from a 2013 trip report for the Yellowstone mountain from the Peakbaggers site.
We spent a short while on the cold, windy summit and then began our descent. It should be noted that it is impossible to see the exit point from the lava tube until you are virtually standing next to the hole. Some temporary flagging might be a good idea as you leave the lava tube on your way up to the summit. Not finding the lava tube on your descent would be problematical to say the least.


I've seen several different reports that note how tricky it is coming back down from the peak (all from experienced climbers), and it would be doubly so at dusk.
My husband is obsessed with Peakbaggers, it’s a great resource for people who like to summit mountains. I was shocked when he told me last week there are only 8 trip reports of Eagle Peak.

Eagle Peak has 23 people ever summiting on that website. Certainly everyone does not log their summits on that site, but many who would be drawn to a technical, obscure mountain would also log their summit.

As a comparison, there would be more than 23 per hour at busy times on Mt. Whitney.

There are many sad aspects to Austin’s situation, but I am very afraid if they could not find him during this search & rescue, it could be hard to find him at any time.

Geraldine Largay’s disappearance on the Appalachian Trail was brought up earlier on this thread. She was found years later, yet there are 3 million visitors to the AT every year, so other hikers or hunters were nearby to find her. There are few people out there to find Austin.

I hope Austin is found today. I will always be waiting for his return and I feel deeply for his family.

My opinion/my experience

 
I was curious what this ‘keyhole’ or ‘lava tube’ in the route looks like. I hope it’s okay to post these photos from the attached blog and description of the route. Certainly gives me the willies just looking at it.

Pictures were great, and your writing was even better. Thank you.
 
I was curious what this ‘keyhole’ or ‘lava tube’ in the route looks like. I hope it’s okay to post these photos from the attached blog and description of the route. Certainly gives me the willies just looking at it.


In a different video @Snoopster posted early in the thread, the two hikers decided they wouldn't be able to make it through that narrow opening. They knew people used it previously but mentioned that maybe it had changed or narrowed over time. They also said they looked around and found a different route to get up that last bit. Not sure when that hike took place but it was posted about a year ago.

Starting around the 12 minute mark, he talks about finding the lava chute.


Post in thread 'WY - Austin King, 22, Yellowstone National Park, Eagle Peak, 17 Sept 2024' WY - WY - Austin King, 22, Yellowstone National Park, Eagle Peak, 17 Sept 2024
 
Eagle Peak has 23 people ever summiting on that website. Certainly everyone does not log their summits on that site, but many who would be drawn to a technical, obscure mountain would also log their summit.

I've been curious about how many people summit Eagle Peak. Here's a report from September 2000.

We were the fourth group of the year, and about hundredth in 20 years.

Then in August 2014, someone took a photo of a page from the register.
1728060380435.png 1728060402257.png

The page shows three groups summiting in one week. Maybe that's anomalous. Or perhaps the peak has gotten more popular over time, especially with the availability of online trip reports so others know how best to plan their route.

Still, even three ascents over a week is a tiny number compared to other, more accessible climbs. And that's during August, at the peak of the season (no pun intended). I would think by mid-September there'd only be a couple of attempts, at most.
 

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