Taken from 13er North Star Mountain,
1 shows some of the route. Climb to the right end of the dam and drop to the other side -
2. Parallel the lake for a bit and once you're around the first corner, look for a trail that climbs west, away from the lake. There are several social trails along the lake so take your time to find the trail -
3. Near 12,100', the trail angles northwest and enters a basin at 12,300' -
4. Continue north through the basin and locate a gully to the northwest -
5. Climb the left side of the gully, turn right and continue north on talus toward the end of the upper basin -
6. Quandary's west ridge is up to your right but avoid the temptation to climb directly to the ridge. Stay on the left side of the basin and when you reach ~13,100', turn left to exit the basin by ascending rock slabs and possibly snow fields -
7.
Turn right and traverse across a bump to gain the west ridge, just below 13,400' -
8 and
9. Begin hiking east along the ridge and pass some initial difficulties on the right -
10,
11 and
12. Near 13,500', turn left and follow a trail left of the ridge that eventually regains the ridge, near 14,000' -
13 and
14. Once back on the ridge, scramble over or around some bumps (
15 and
16) and continue along the ridge to a prominent point which has a steep, dirt gully -
17. Drop into a notch and climb the dirt gully to regain the ridge crest.
Continue scrambling along the ridge to reach a small wall with a vertical crack -
18. Drop a bit and climb Class 3 rock near the crack. Once back on the ridge crest, the crux of the route soon comes into view - a wall which blocks easy passage to the summit -
19. First, downclimb to the left or right and continue along the left side of ridge to reach the base of the wall. The easiest way up is to climb the center of the wall, as seen in
19. The lower portion is fairly straightforward but you're soon faced with steep rock. Pick your line and regain the ridge. Taken from the top of the crux,
20 looks back along the ridge. The show is over; Continue 0.1 mile to the summit -
21. Instead of descending via the west ridge, many climbers choose to descend the Cristo Couloir (South Gully) route. Even if the snow is gone in Cristo, you can carefully descend along the west side of the couloir.