Plan with
Confidence
Path Type
There and Back
From the trailhead, the Broads Fork Trail #055 ascends through a pretty forest as it goes toward the Broads Fork drainage. The trail at this point is well-maintained, although still steep in most sections. About a mile from the trailhead, the trail crosses a footbridge right by a very pretty cascade. About another mile from the bridge, the trail comes out into the glacial valley with great views of O'Sullivan and Dromedary peaks, as well as a couple of beaver ponds (with a weird log crossing in there as well). The trail continues, although (at least in early summer) it gets faint and sometimes covered by snow at this point. Eventually, at about 2.5 miles from the trailhead, the trail starts to get really steep as it starts to carve through the giant talus pile that sits at the head of this cirque, and the trail completely disappears at some points under the snow and talus. The objective is clear, though: get to the head of the cirque, at the saddle just below O'Sullivan Peak, so even without a trail it is easy to keep sight of where you need to go. After getting to the saddle, the "trail" goes back behind the rocky ridge that leads to Twin Peaks and follows below the rocky ridge until reaching a steep couloir. It then goes up the couloir, where the real trail reappears for the last few hundred vertical feet to reach the top. The views from the top of Twin Peaks are incredible in all directions. To the west is the Great Salt Lake and the Salt Lake Valley; to the north are other sections of the Wasatch Range like Ben Lomond and Ogden Peak; to the east are the rest of the peaks along the ridge that divides Big and Little Cottonwood Canyons, and to the south are the amazing cirques and aretes of White Pine Canyon, Red Pine Canyon, Maybird Gulch, as well as the Pfeifferhorn. The views are absolutely breathtaking, especially in the early summer when snow still lingers in the higher parts of the Wasatch Range.
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