The location of the cabin was known only to his several close friends.
Fast forward to summer 2024. Monte Wolfe (born Archie Wright) is still a legend in Bear Valley. Tales include his coming into town to buy jeans that had to be slit below the knee to accommodate his bulging calf muscles, his drinking and womanizing, his carrying supplies back to his cabin—a cast iron stove, a sink, shovels—all while bushwhacking, of course. I was surprised to find out he was my size. Well, his height anyway. I’m 5’5”, but my calves are pathetic. There’s a ski run named ‘Monte Wolfe’ at the ski area. And of the course the local bar is named after him. Definitely legend material. Monte Wolfe disappeared mysteriously in 1940.
I’ve adventured in the Bear Valley backcountry for over a decade. I’ve climbed many local mountains, skied off of summits, pushed further and further into the wilderness. But that cabin… it called out to me as a different kind of adventure. One loaded with intrigue. Legend. Mystery. A treasure hunt. Could I even find it?
I researched map coordinates, and found some on a website describing a fight over whether to preserve the cabin. The US Forest Service apparently wants the cabin to decay and go away, since its defies the Wilderness Act of 1964. But historians (and his friend’s families) want to preserve it. Anyway, I wondered if the coordinates were even accurate—seems like neither side wins if the cabin location becomes common knowledge. So, I assumed those coordinates were red herrings. But, with nothing else to go on, I plugged them into CalTopo.
When I saw the location on the map, my eyebrows went up and I sucked in a breath. That red dot was way the heck far into the wilderness - how was I going to get there?
There were several options, all long, all involving serious bushwhacking. The one I chose wasn’t the shortest, but entered from an area that I knew. The first 9 miles is a 3,500-foot drop from Bear Valley to the Mokelumne River on an intermittent, unmaintained trail. I’d been on that several times for other adventures. Hot, dry, and thick with avalanche brush and manzanita, I only lost the trail four times as I descended.
I overnighted next to the Mokelumne River, excited (and nervous) about the possible five miles of upriver bushwhacking the next day.
Next morning, full of anticipation and caffeine, I set off up the Mokelumne River. In this deeply carved, remote canyon, it was no surprise to enter a forest of soaring old growth that had never been cut. Humbled, I gaped at cathedral-like columns of cedar, pine, and fir, an ancient forest carpeted in pathfinder (Adenocaulon bicolor). These ground plants, when disturbed, expose their silver undersides, which glow in the dark forest interior, so it’s easy to see where you walked. Magical.
Finally, after four and a half miles, the view opened to a beautiful granite-lined basin surrounded by steep forested ridges, with the Mokelumne River winding below. If I were to build a cabin, I breathed, I would build it in this valley. I scoured the view for a cabin, but didn’t see anything. According to CalTopo, the cabin was within a thousand feet, but the app’s direction finder spun erratically. WTF?
I retreated off the granite, and the app calmed down. It led me, disbelieving, over a marshy area bright with wildflowers, further into the forest. As my eyes slowly adjusted to the shadows under the trees, the silhouette of the cabin emerged. I held my breath. Everything in and around me went absolutely still.
There it was, Monte Wolfe’s cabin.
I still had 14 miles and a 3,800-foot climb to get back to the trailhead tonight. I laughed. Where once I might have felt anxious at the distance and the meager remains of the day, in comparison to Monte Wolfe…?
I had all the inspiration I needed.