Near Mt. Borah
View from the trail.
Near Mt. Borah
Looking to the east, and the others peaks along the Lost River Range, on the knife ridge after coming down Chicken-Out Ridge
Near Mt. Borah
Looking to the SE at the summit. Congrats, you made it!
Near Mt. Borah
The final drop off of Chicken-Out Ridge.
Near Mt. Borah
View from the trail.

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Hike Trail

Mt. Borah

5.0 (8 Ratings)
Hike and climb to Idaho's high point on this brutally majestic trail.
3.8
mi
Distance
5,354
ft
Gain
strenuous
Difficulty
Geologically SignificantHistoricalViews
Access Issues
If you are doing this at any time except late summer, you'll need appropriate climbing gear (ropes, ice axe, crampons).

Route Details

Flatter
Steeper
3.8mi
Distance
5,354ft
Elevation Gain
101ft
Elevation Loss
45%
Max Grade
12,657ft
High Point
7,405ft
Low Point
Path Type
Point to Point
Description
The grand pinnacle in the Lost River Range and Idaho as a whole is Mount Borah, also referred to as Borah Peak. During the 4 miles up this monolith, you'll almost gain a full mile in elevation (5,200 feet). The first mile is about 1,000 feet of elevation gain and a good warm-up for what lays ahead. Mile 2 is more than double the elevation, at over 2,000 feet of climbing. At about mile 2.2, you are out of the treeline and exposed the rest of the way. Mile 3 starts out fairly flat with a mild incline and then you hit the infamous Chicken-Out Ridge (COR). COR is not to be taken lightly. If people "chicken out," it is usually right at the start or at the end of this 0.25-mile section of scrambling. If you are afraid of heights, do not attempt COR. Do not attempt to bypass COR by dropping down below it. Custer County Sheriffs department and many trail guides warn that the lower west section is where people get hurt and a few decades ago even died. As a rule of thumb, when in doubt, stay on the ridge/spine. At the end of COR is a Class 4 scramble.There will sometimes be a climbing rope there, but it is still doable without a rope. You drop down onto a knife ridge that in early summer will be covered in snow. This can be very dangerous. There is a flat-ish section after COR, and then the final 0.5 miles is straight up to the summit. Stay on the defined trail. After COR, you do not spend very much time on the ridge. The summit is amazing and well worth the price of entry. Record your name in the logbook, snag a picture with the summit flag in the white tube, and prepare to thrash your quads as you blaze back to the trailhead. NOTE: The GPX track I recorded is very accurate, with any variations cleaned up. This is the traditional route. The official Forest Service trail ends at the start of COR, so after that it's the "wild west."

Route Conditions

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Contributors
Jeff Fullmer