Its summit is located 9.6 kilometres (6.0 mi) east of Osoyoos and 4.0 kilometres (2.5 mi) north of the United States border with Washington state.
The term is used primarily to refer to the rural district around the summit and its communities, and also to the Crowsnest Highway with its long climb up the mountainside from the floor of the Okanagan Valley at Osoyoos, just below.
[2] He named the mountain after prospector John Haywood, who called himself an Anarchist, and carried a stick of dynamite in his boot.
[3] Before Sidley, English speaking settlers called this summit Larch Tree Hill.
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