
Trailhead by quartzite outcrop (view northwest). |
Overview
This interesting, 4.25-mile off-trail route runs up long,
gentle sandy washes and steep, rugged ridges to the summit of
McCullough Mountain in the South McCullough
Wilderness Area.
From the trailhead, this route runs north over a low ridge to
a sandy wash that is followed high into the mountains. Ridgelines then
lead to a saddle on the crest of the range. From the saddle, the route
drops into a wash on the west side of the crest that is followed
upstream as it curves around beneath the summit. Sidehills lead to the
summit.
Link to map or elevation profile. |

North side of ridge above wash (view northwest). |
From a distance, the McCullough Mountains look old, soft, and
rounded, but these ancient metamorphic mountains harbor very complex
terrain (they have been faulting and weathering for 1.7 billion
years!), so this is not simply hiking up washes and ridges to a high
point; it is, however, a good adventure in orienteering. The route
starts at the upper edge of the Mojave Desert Scrub (Upper Sonoran Life
Zone) and climbs into a Pinyon-Juniper Woodland (Upper Sonoran Life
Zone) with some stately old California Junipers near the summit. On the
ridges, the trees, mats of pricklypear cactus, and banana yucca make
for considerable winding around and slow, careful going. Despite the
relatively low summit (7,026 ft), the peak towers over the surrounding
landscape and the views from the ridges and summit are spectacular.
Watch Out
Other than the standard
warnings about hiking in the desert, ... this is a fairly safe hike. The
ridges and sidehills are steep with
loose rocks, but there are no cliffs or other unusual obstacles. The
rocky outcrops look like good rattlesnake country, but unfortunately I
saw none. The major concern on this hike is the loose footing among
dense yucca and pricklypear cactus. |

Open wash (view northwest). |
While hiking, please respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. This hike goes into the South
McCullough
Wilderness Area,
so pay particular attention to respecting the land. This hike runs
off-trail where nobody will find you, so be sure to bring the 10 Essentials.
Cell phones work from ridges high on the east side of the crest, but I
could not call out from the summit or ridges where I could see down the
west side of the mountains.
Hiking Guide
Getting to the
Trailhead
This hike is located up in the McCullough Range, about 1.5
hours southeast of Las Vegas between Searchlight and Primm. Under the
best of conditions, the access road does not require 4-wheel drive
(WD), but there is a steep hillside and two long, sandy washes. I drove
it in 2-WD, but with the comfort of knowing that I could shift into
4-WD at any time. |

Knob on ridge (view north from wash). |
From town, drive south on Highway 95 to Searchlight (Site 1).
In downtown Searchlight, turn right onto Nelson Road (Highway 164) and
drive west for 8.1 miles to a dirt road marked only by a stop sign on
the north (right) side of the road (Site 2). A broken windmill stands
about 200 yards up the dirt road. The turnoff is 1.2 miles west of
Walking Box Ranch Road, which has a road sign. Turn right onto the dirt
road and drive north for 4.4 miles to a fork in the road (Site 3).
Curve to the left and drive west for 1.1 miles to an intersection with
a powerline road (Site 4). Up to this point, the road has been fairly
smooth and gentle.
Alternatively, from town, drive south on Interstate-15, past
Primm, to Nipton Road (Site 5). Exit the Interstate and turn left onto
Nipton Road. Drive east to the Nevada State Line, then continue east
for another 5.3 miles to a dirt road with a stop sign on the north side
of the highway (Site 6). Turn left onto the powerline road and drive
north for 5.1 miles to a cross road (Site 4). |

Ridge traverse (view west). |
Either cross the powerline road (coming from Searchlight) or
turn left (coming from Primm) at the intersection and drive west up the
rocky ridge for 1.4 miles to a fork in the road (Site 7). Turn right
and drive north and down off the ridge; this part is a bit steep and
rocky (possibly a concern for 2-WD vehicles). Follow this road as it
curves to the east and runs down a wash, seemingly going in the wrong
direction. Pass an obvious left turn that just goes to a campsite in
the wash. The road continues down the sandy wash, eventually bends to
the left, and starts up another sandy wash heading in the proper
direction: west. There are no more intersections, and about 0.1 miles
past an old corral, the road ends at Pipe Spring (Site 8).
Pipe Spring is an acceptable trailhead, but it is easier to
drive back down the road for 0.4 miles to a large outcrop of white
quartzite boulders on the north side of the wash. Park by the quartzite
outcrop; this is the trailhead (Site 9).
|

Traverse ridge and sidehill to saddle (view west). |
The Hike
From the trailhead in the wash (Table 2, Waypoint 3), the
route runs north for about 10 minutes (0.23 miles) over the low ridge
and down into the next sandy wash. The ridge is at the transition
between the Mojave
Desert Scrub and Pinyon-Juniper
Woodland habitat types (Upper Sonoran Life Zones). The ridge is
thick with blackbrush, buckhorn
cholla cactus, pricklypear
cactus, Banana
Yucca, Joshua
Trees, Singleleaf
Pinyon Pine, and Utah
Juniper, a mix of lower- and higher-elevation species.
After busting through the brush, the route turns west and runs
up the broad, open wash. The wash is lined with trees and many species
of shrubs, including bitterbrush and apache plume that are typical of
washes. Watch for Western Scrub-jays (similar to Blue Jays),
Black-tailed Jackrabbits, and Desert
Cottontail. |

Wash on west side of crest (view north from above saddle). |
The walking in the firm sand and gravel is easy. The route
bends to the north at the first major fork (Wpt. 8), and again stays to
the right at what seems like a minor fork (Wpt. 9). After a short
narrow section, the wash widens again. somewhere in there, the juniper
species changes from Utah Juniper (the common species in southern
Nevada) to California Juniper (the common species in southern
California).
High in the wash, it becomes advantageous to climb onto the ridge to
the north. Leaving the sandy wash at a side gully immediately above a
juniper lying across the wash (forcing you to climb across a rocky
outcrop on the side of the wash to get around it) is a reasonable
solution (Wpt. 10). This route up this steep section passes beneath a
rocky outcrop and climbs onto the ridge above (Wpt. 12). |

Majestic old California Juniper in wash (view north). |
From the ridgeline (Wpt. 12), the route runs west and up
the ridge, weaving among Banana Yucca, pricklypear cactus, other
shrubs, and Singleleaf Pinyon Pine and California Juniper trees. When
the grade steepens below a high knob (Wpt. 13), the route cuts
northwest across the side of the knob to gain the crest of the
McCullough Range. The crest provides a great view down the canyon to
the west with Interstate-15 and Clark Mountain in the background.
On the crest, the route runs north and descends to a saddle (Wpt. 27).
At the saddle, the route drops off the west side of the ridge and
descends a short distance to the sandy wash below (Wpt. 15). In the
wash, the route turns north and runs up the canyon. The fairly narrow
canyon jogs to the west and then northwest again, and then opens into a
fairly wide canyon with relatively low ridges on all sides. In open
area, there are some stately old multi-trunked California Juniper trees
with thick trunks, shaggy bark, and trunks to about 20 feet high. |

McCullough Mountain summit (view north). |
Because the ridges are rounded, it is hard to tell from the
wash which peak is the summit. The simplest route follows the wash
until it ends at a saddle, then climbs the sidehill to the north to the
summit (Wpt. 18).
From the summit, return to the trailhead by retracing this route (8.5
miles round trip), or consider following the McCullough Mountain Ridges
Route to make a figure-8-loop back to Pipe Spring (9.6 miles round
trip). |

Sunset (view west from summit). |
|
|
Table 1. Highway Coordinates (NAD27; UTM Zone 11S).
| Site # |
Location |
Latitude (°N) |
Longitude (°W) |
UTM Easting |
UTM Northing |
Elevation (feet) |
Verified |
| 1 |
Hwy 95 at Hwy 164 (Nipton Road) |
35.4653 |
114.9193 |
688801 |
3926431 |
3,460 |
Map |
| 2 |
Nipton Road at dirt road |
35.5068 |
115.0555 |
676352 |
3930785 |
3,960 |
Map |
| 3 |
Fork in the road |
35.5655 |
115.0794 |
674061 |
3937257 |
4,375 |
Map |
| 4 |
Powerline road intersection |
35.5659 |
115.0971 |
672453 |
3937265 |
4,560 |
Map |
| 5 |
Interstate-15 at Nipton Road |
35.4734 |
115.4480 |
640814 |
3926450 |
3,455 |
Map |
| 6 |
Nipton Road at powerline road |
35.5077 |
115.1383 |
668839 |
3930740 |
4,795 |
Map |
| 7 |
Fork in the road |
35.56391 |
115.12239 |
670165 |
3937004 |
4,913 |
GPS |
| 8 |
Pipe Spring |
35.57322 |
115.15519 |
667173 |
3937981 |
5,429 |
GPS |
| 9 |
Trailhead |
35.57289 |
115.14907 |
667728 |
3937954 |
5,294 |
GPS |
Table 2. Hiking Coordinates Based on GPS Data (NAD27; UTM Zone 11S).
| Wpt |
Location |
Time |
Duration |
Easting |
Northing |
Elev(ft) |
Point-to-Point Distance (mi) |
Cumulative Distance (mi) |
Verified |
| 3 |
Trailhead |
12:38 |
0:00 |
667728 |
3937954 |
5,294 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
GPS |
| 7 |
First wash |
12:47 |
0:09 |
667754 |
3938266 |
5,280 |
0.23 |
0.23 |
GPS |
| 8 |
Fork in wash, go right |
12:49 |
0:01 |
667689 |
3938294 |
5,290 |
0.05 |
0.27 |
GPS |
| 9 |
Fork in wash, go north |
13:03 |
0:13 |
667256 |
3938768 |
5,430 |
0.46 |
0.73 |
GPS |
| 10 |
Leaving wash |
13:26 |
0:22 |
667107 |
3939525 |
5,637 |
0.63 |
1.37 |
GPS |
| 11 |
Under rocky outcrop |
13:39 |
0:13 |
667124 |
3939723 |
5,809 |
0.19 |
1.56 |
GPS |
| 12 |
Top of ridge |
13:51 |
0:11 |
667006 |
3939800 |
6,042 |
0.15 |
1.71 |
GPS |
| 13 |
Starting across sidehill |
14:33 |
0:41 |
666375 |
3939885 |
6,343 |
0.58 |
2.30 |
GPS |
| 14 |
Crest of the range |
14:39 |
0:06 |
666274 |
3940039 |
6,252 |
0.18 |
2.47 |
GPS |
| 27 |
Saddle (rest stop) |
14:56 |
0:17 |
666264 |
3940180 |
6,183 |
0.22 |
2.69 |
GPS |
| 15 |
Bottom of wash |
15:00 |
0:03 |
666237 |
3940228 |
6,126 |
0.04 |
2.73 |
GPS |
| 16 |
Possible camp |
15:45 |
0:44 |
665455 |
3941217 |
6,603 |
1.05 |
3.79 |
GPS |
| 17 |
Possible camp |
15:47 |
0:02 |
665362 |
3941225 |
6,583 |
0.06 |
3.85 |
GPS |
| 18 |
Summit |
16:06 |
0:19 |
664939 |
3941228 |
6,949 |
0.40 |
4.25 |
GPS |
|