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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/09/24 in all areas

  1. Trip: Cirque of the Unclimbables - SE Face of LFT and W Ridge of E Huey among others Trip Date: 07/25/2024 Trip Report: I was fortunate to be invited to join a team to the Cirque of the Unclimbables from 7/20 to 8/4 this summer. We were supported with generous funding from the Bob Wilson Grant through the Mazamas. The team also included my partner Kyle, and the duo Angie and Damon. Our chosen itinerary was to drive to Vancouver BC, fly to Whitehorse, rent a truck and drive 6 hrs (half on gravel) to Finlayson Lake, take a float plane to Glacier Lake, hike up to Fairy Meadows (4 miles, 2.8k', lots of downed trees currently) where you make camp. Almost all the routes are an hour or less walk from camp and involve hiking through meadows and talus, but no glacier travel. We reversed the process on the way out, but added a night at Inconnu Lodge which is included in the airfare if your timing/logistics allow (lodge is owned by the bush plane folks, Kluane Air). This whole process basically makes for 3 days travel on each end of the trip from the lower 48, expect more time if driving to Finlayson Lake from the states. The rental car definitely adds a fair bit to cost but allowed us to spend more time there as we were limited by work vacation, luckily we snagged a good deal on this. Flying Air North into Whitehorse was pretty great, awesome little airline with good service. At Finlayson Lake there is a basic dry cabin to hang out in while you wait for the float plane. We had to wait a day due to wildfire smoke which was causing low visibility in the mountains. Kluane Air, the bush plane company, is awesome but definitely account for weather as the old DeHaviland Beavers they run need visibility to fly in the mountains. These planes can take 4 passengers plus gear pretty comfortably. Once dropped at Glacier Lake there is a pit toilet, bear boxes, and a dry one-room cabin with no furnishings. We arrived in the evening and chose to hike up to camp that night. This hike looked minimal on paper but lots of over-under with downed trees, swarming mosquitoes, and 65lbs packs made this take 3:30... I think you could do it faster but it's not like anyone comes here to set FKTs on the approach and this felt pretty hefty. We left half our food and some extra gear at the cabin and did a resupply run 5 days later. Rental car... brand new F150 booked on sale (Labor Day?) The swimming dock at Finlayson Lake. The pickup compound at Finlayson is shared with a horse-pack supported big game hunting outfit. The Kluane Air cabin at Finlayson Lake. When you hear the plane it's time to go! Flying over the bush. Coming into land at Glacier Lake Smokey but not too bad, looking up at the approach from just after the lake. A bit overgrown. Entering the last uphill section above tree line. Hope it hasn't rained. Amazing fin feature visible from the approach. Final uphill bit to Fairy Meadows. The base camp area features two prime spots on opposite sides of the creek. Both are under massive boulders which shelter you from most weather. Each spot have 2-3 bear bins; military surplus metal boxes. There are also bolts in the rock and old rope/tat for hanging things. There is plentiful clear water, a pit toilet that is (barely) maintained by the park service, and quite a few sport, trad and boulder routes on the massive boulders. Bear bin at Fairy Meadows... some idiot left a bunch of open food and a book in this thing through the winter. Everything was moldy and slimy. We cleaned this out and packed out the trash. It still smelled so bad after being aired out for days that we didn't want to use it. Our camp under this massive 30ft boulder which reflected the sound of the creek. Note the items hanging from bolts. The not-very-well-maintained pit toilet that the National Park installed... looks like a marmot or three tried to live there through the winter. Beautiful creek in Fairy Meadows. After we arrived at Fairy Meadows, setup camp and had dinner it was quite late (near midnight?) but Damon and Angie decided they were going to try Lotus the next day anyway. They got up at 3am and went right to it. Kyle meanwhile started feeling sick (we sat next to an elderly lady who coughed a lot on the plane) and so we rested the next day and watched them through binoculars. Based on their progress we assumed they would rap off from the bivy ledge, where the rap route diverges from the climbing about half way up. However, after dinner we wandered up the meadow looking for them and spotted them on the headwall pitches 3/4 of the way up. The desire to not have to redo the lower pitches a second time had spurred them on. Given the latitude it's also only dark from midnight to 4am at that time of year. In the end they rapped through the night and were back in camp at 6am the next day. An impressive effort, but oof! Scoping Lotus while Damon and Angie send. Critical supplies courtesy of the Sav-on-foods in Whitehorse which has a bomb bulk section. UK Smarties in the bag. After another day of rest Kyle and I decided to go for Lotus ourselves. He still wasn't feeling 100% but we knew good weather wouldn't last forever here. We hoped to be a little faster than our teammates and woke at 4am. We were joined by Michael and Patrick, two of the four guys from a Montana team who were the only other party for most of our time. They graciously let us start first. We had heard the lower pitches were very wet but they had dried a bit and minimal french free got us into the chimneys. We had hoped to simul the chimneys which go at 5.7 but it was fairly steep and sustained enough to make us simply pitch out rope stretchers. Michael and Patrick did simul and passed us here but seemed pretty tired doing so and we all ended up about the same speed on the headwall. Start of the route. Wet and scary detached flakes to start. Kyle getting it done in the chimneys. We made good time to the bivy ledge and started on the headwall. The sun was strong and I was sweating in just a sun hoody. We had climbed to the bivy with two packs and now left some gear stashed here in one pack and continued up using fix and follow and hauling the other pack. The nubbin pitches were surprising spicy. Never dangerous but mandatory climbing above small nuts and cams on small face holds. The first roof is very easy on the L side and the second (crux) roof is a hand crack on the R side. This assumes you read the nubbin climbing correctly and can get yourself in line for each of these. The pitch above the crux roof is an amazing double crack, unfortunately our feet hurt too much to really enjoy it. Kyle on the Headwall Michael on the crux roof. Kyle on the amazing pitch above the roof, trying not to foot jam. It should be noted on this route that grades indicate sustained old school Yosemite style climbing with almost every pitch being 50m. It definitely feels more like a Yosemite route than an alpine route and took longer than we anticipated. Kyle and I topped out as thunder began to rumble from dark clouds to the E. We started to rappel immediately and were one rappel from the bivy ledge when it started to pour. Luckily it slacked off soon and we reached the ground after midnight, making it back to camp around 2am. After a rest day we used the last good weather day to do a resupply. Glacier Lake from the summit of Lotus as storm clouds approach. Proboscis and other cool mountains from the summit. Rappeling Lotus The rain is upon us. Setting up the bug net we got on the resupply. This was a game changer as mosquitoes were quite bad in the meadow. Scoping options with Kyle on a mediocre weather day. Scenic shots from Fairy Meadows waiting for more weather windows. After that we got one more full good weather day. Angie and Damon did Brent's Hammer (6 pitch 5.11+ steep cracks) on Terrace. Damon managed to onsight and declared it 11- (though he also said the style suited him). Kyle and I decided to do the W Ridge of E Huey (1200' gain, 5.9, much moss and lichen covered slab), which was fun in a way that an obscure route in the Pickets might be fun, but which I would not recommend to those looking for a quality rock climb. Kyle heading up one of the first "real" pitches on Huey at the top of a long gully system. Great views near the top of the gully on Huey. The best pitch on W Ridge of Huey? But only low 5th. Kyle on 5.6 moss slab... the real crux of the route. View of Lotus and Parrot Beak from Huey. Terrace in the foreground where DnA are climbing, with Proboscis in the back. Typical rap anchor on Huey. We also slung some blocks in the gully to avoid water polished slab down climbing. We also had some partial days playing on the crags around basecamp. We all tried the Toilet Crack (11+ hand crack roof), D+A also tried the first few pitches of Riders on the Storm (just above camp, only 10+ to P3) and the Penguin (12- bolted boulder problem). After checking the weather we decided that hanging out for 3 days of rain made no sense and flew out early. The experience flying with Sean and Warren at Kluane Air was great and the hospitality shown at their lodge was amazing. We got back to Whitehorse a couple days early, changed our flights and climbed in Squamish for a day before driving home. Nice views with the changing weather from camp. A quick paddle with the stashed canoes at the cabin while waiting for Warren to fly through the storm clouds to get us. Scenic views from the flight out. Open bivy outside Whitehorse before a 5am flight... this was a bad decision because mosquitoes. Duh. Devils Thumb massif from the flight to Vancouver? Lots of gear still. Damon with some of the bags. Kyle cranking out Angels Crest on practically no sleep after the mosquitoe bivy to 5am flight to bag shuffle and straight to Squallywood. Double Rainbow... Trout Creek somewhere just over the horizon... almost home. Gear Notes: Standard rack listed elsewhere. We used a single and a tag and liked it. A bug net to hang from the boulder at camp was clutch. Rain jacket, personal bug net, good food and entertainment. Approach Notes: Car, plane, car, plane, hike... expect 2.5 days if everything goes perfectly, count on 3+.
    4 points
  2. My partner at one point observed, "I think this is our first trip where our combined age exceeds 100." hah. Which sadly means we haven't climbed together since before the pandemic, when we we already damn close. I try to keep in mind those wise words of Dave Whitelaw: "Every day is a gift."
    2 points
  3. 1 point
  4. To be fair, there has been a long standing pole fetish; Mongo now has something for everyone. The rooster comb and pole are really what deserve some attention. I don’t know how you climbed the RC without knocking some huge blocks off like we did, Wayne. How is something like that created?? About the Pole, there’s a big gendarme that’s separating the RC from the pole and I was wondering if that would be considered part of the pole or not. We belayed from the notch in between the 2 (circled) for our route up the south side. That may have been what was referenced as the hypothesized 5.11 5-pitch headwall? On a ridge like this, when is one tower considered separate from another? Agreed! Although I welcome the challenge of our SKT. You’ll need to bring more salmon to win.
    1 point
  5. It says here the toe is nothing but clean rock, and it's always sunny. Easy approach, too. Nice climb, guys. Like how you took your time with it. Some fantastic bivys.
    1 point
  6. Will the first party to explore and successfully climb the Lower 40% of the “Full Mongo” from its toe in Goodell Creek to Fury top be “waking up the choss,” “add[ing] a thousand feet of vertical bushwhacking…?” Looking forward to the hands-on answer.
    1 point
  7. Trip: Nesakwatch Spires - Ensawkwatch Enchainment Trip Date: 07/27/2024 Trip Report: Posting this mostly just to say that if you wanna get after this, there are still snow patches in the basin for water, and as of last weekend the bugs were not even remotely bad. Driving past the parking spot for Slesse now highly inadvisable. We went a bit further and managed to retreat without getting a flat tire, but we were lucky rather than smart in that regard. North Ridge of South Nesakwatch Spire from summit of north spire: Edited to add: Also, the pocket glacier has not slid yet. Gear Notes: Light rack to modern (grey) #4 Camalot, tricams handy Approach Notes: Steep but such a nice well-trodden trail!
    1 point
  8. Gray haired local here. Made a similar mistake several years ago on my first attempt of the Mythic Wall and aimed for the good belay off of the ground way far left. Ended up committing and climbing 4 pitches in the neighborhood of your route. Called it "Four-long and Forlorn". Amazing how much choss there is in on that wall considering the relative quality of the Mythic Wall Route. Cheers Fellows! Matt
    1 point
  9. Hello, An interesting turn of events has brought me here for the first time. I was attempting to write a recollection of my ascent of the East Pillar Direct on Mt. Slesse with Greg Child in 93 and of course had to start by acknowledging John Stoddard and Dennis Mullen's visionary and bold first ascent of the East Face proper of Mt. Slesse in 77, hammerless and no cams? Then in thinking of John, I remembered our adventures together back then and was once again saddened to to think of his untimely passing. I decided to look John up on line and found this thread and the remembrances of so many including most recently Dennis Mullen. I met John in Squamish on one of my first weekends there in spring of 76 and he'd just bailed off the Grand from the start of The Flats and the fact that he was even up there blew my newbie mind. John was the Seattle ambassador to our gang of misfits and we shared a lot of shenanigans on and off the rock with a shared love of climbing, weed and Zappa. He was engaging, smart, fun, sensitive and caring. John's enthusiasm and support was critical to my success in solving the Misled bolt ladder (in Vasque Ascenders) and then freeing the 2nd pitch of The Phew which opened up my eyes to Cruel Shoes. John was a dear soul and I will treasure his memory and miss him for as long as I live; maybe some day when things are better there's a gathering for him somewhere? My condolences to his family and those closest to him. Perry Beckham Squamish BC
    1 point
  10. Hey, I never said that the North Face of Swiss Peak CAN'T be done in a day. I just said that of all the climbs in Washington, I think that route (among all the previously established routes) would be the HARDEST to make in 24 hours trailhead-to-trailhead. Perhaps Swiss Peak would be the hardest summit to make in a day, by any route.
    1 point
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