Silver Star Mountain (Okanogan County, Washington)
| Silver Star Mountain | |
|---|---|
Silver Star Mountain at sunset seen from Kangaroo Ridge | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 8,876 ft (2,705 m) |
| Prominence | 2,436 ft (742 m) |
| Coordinates | 48°32.88′N 120°35.11′W / 48.54800°N 120.58517°W |
| Geography | |
| Location | Okanogan County, Washington |
| Parent range | Methow Mountains North Cascades Cascade Range |
| Topo map | USGS Silver Star Mountain |
| Geology | |
| Rock type | Granite |
| Climbing | |
| First ascent | Lage Wernstedt, 1926 |
| Easiest route | South Route |
Silver Star Mountain is an 8,876-foot (2,705-metre) mountain located in Okanogan County, Washington. The mountain is part of the Methow Mountains, a subset of the Cascade Range. Silver Star is the dominant feature in the Washington Pass area and visible from the North Cascades Highway. It was first climbed by Lage Wernstedt in 1926.
The summit ridge of Silver Star consists of a long ridge of spires (the Wine Spires) leading to the main summit. Vasiliki Ridge radiates north from the Wine Spires, and Snagtooth Ridge extends south from Silver Star. The mountain is a steep ragged wall as seen from the west on Highway 20. The north side glacier reaches to just below the ridge line. The easiest route is up the moderate glacier from the north via Silver Star Creek.
Silver Star Mountain stands within the watershed of the Methow River, which drains into the Columbia River's Lake Pateros reservoir, impounded by Wells Dam. The west and north sides of Silver Star drain into Early Winters Creek, thence into the Methow River. The southeast side of Silver Star drains into Cedar Creek, thence into Early Winters Creek.