When we visited the Black Diamond Mines regional reserve the ranger told us a bit about Mount Diablo. Mount Diablo is a pretty young mountain and when it rose all the geological features of the area changed. In the Black Diamond Mines you can observe that the different geological layers are tilted and they all rise towards Mount Diablo. The ranger got us interested and we wanted to explore the area for ourselves. So we headed off to Mount Diablo State Park for a strenuous hike. According to the hike reviews on the web the most interesting hike is the so called "grand loop" that starts halfway up to the top of Mount Diablo and goes complete around it, covering three different peaks on the way.
The official "map" for this state park is really bad, many trails are not on the map and the scale is too coarse grained plus the trail heads are not marked well. My advise is to bring a GPS (e.g., a Garmin) with the OpenStreetMap maps of California. These maps include all trails of the state park and will help you during your hike.
Health warning: you are exposed to direct sun light through most of the hike plus it is super hot, even in September. Bring plenty of water (at least 3/4 of a gallon - 3l per person).
Hike description
The length of the hike is only around 10 miles (~16.3km) with ~3680ft (1120m) elevation gain. The hike is very strenuous as you are exposed to the sun during most of the time and Mount Diablo tries to step up to his name. The amazing part of this hike is walking along the ridge to Eagle peak, the steep incline up to North peak, and the magnificent views from Mount Diablo.
The height profile shows the decline from the parking lot and the inclines to
Eagle peak (2nd peak in the picture), North peak (3rd peak), and Mount Diablo (4th peak).
Picture time
Some pictures that we took on the way up.
On the Deer Flat road, behind us is the Juniper campground
After locating a GeoCache.
Exhausted on Eagle peak.
View from Eagle peak.
On the way to Mount Diablo.
View from the top.
View towards South.
View towards North peak.
Summary
Overall I would classify this hike as strenuous 6 hour day hike. The three different peaks are great highlights of this trip. If you get tired on the way you can easily leave out some of the peaks (start off with North peak as this peak is only special because of the steep incline at the end). Watch out to bring plenty of water on the hike, otherwise you'll dry out in the heat!