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Phil K

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Everything posted by Phil K

  1. Oh, and in the middle of this effort he had the time and energy to place 10th in the Cascade Crest 100 mile run on 7/21, posting up a respectable time of 18:44:45. That is 100 miles at ~5:25 each. 23,000+ feet of elevation gain.
  2. I (sort of) know Jeff Hashimoto from Nordic Skiing, but didn't know that he was a climber. The guy is a beast.
  3. It took me a moment to figure that out; it's a plane dropping fire suppressant. I remember back in the day the Neat And Cool area at 'Squish had a red stain from that which lasted for several years.
  4. I just got back from a lake loop up out of Gold Creek and found what has the potential to be an awesome, and reasonably accessible line. There is a second moderate route which might be more difficult to find in prime condition. I am way to old to consider either of these, but would get a kick out of seeing someone else tick them off. Let's start with the moderate. Approximately three trail miles N of the end of the private road, around waypoint 47.43423, -121.34919 there is a creek which drops about 2000' from Rampart Lakes. This is in a huge avalanche swath; trees are blown down several hundred vertical feet up the opposite hillside. It appears there would be multiple pitches of mostly moderate climbing up this creek, with one or more difficult cruxes. The route is generally low angle enough that late in the season it would turn into a Cascade s'nice wallow. We often (or used to) have some hard early season freezes, and with the right timing the route could be just right. Water flow rate is moderate, so it could form up early. Climbing starts at around 3200' elevation. Now the good stuff! Another two-plus miles up valley a creek drains out of Joe Lake. The approach crosses another alder choked slide path coming off Alaska Mountain. There is a quite decent trail through the alder, and this may be follow-able in winter. Once the trail leaves the valley, it crosses the creek and ascends steep terrain toward Joe Lake. Perhaps 400 vertical feet higher the trail approaches the creek at the toe of a steep rocky canyon. The climb starts with a rambly section. At the very head of the canyon there is a vertical drop that I'd guess is about 200 vertical feet. This would be spectacular, steep, and easily grade V. Again, flow rate appears to be moderate enough that this should form up nicely, and the upper steep section could be prime throughout the season. Climbing starts at about 4200' elevation. From the top one would have the option to walk off climber's right and descend on foot. The trail is quite steep, and exposed enough in places to really get my attention, so treat the descent with appropriate respect. Waypoint for the upper section approximately 47.46544, -121.33019. This climb has a real Canadian Rockies ambiance to it. If you do this, and would indulge this geezer, I'd suggest the name Joe's Garage. Certainly the first climb, and potentially second could be do-able in a day by a fast party. With a good bit of mandatory road walking (probably sled trafficked in winter), and several miles of good trail before getting into the alder messes, one could start well before first light. Go get it. Yo!
  5. Besides renowned Choss Dawg Jason, the other dude is Doug Payne (RIP), one of the most solid guys I ever roped up with. Funny story- On our first attempt at this climb, after a torrid approach, we woke at the bivy site to unexpected clouds and the threat of afternoon T-storms. Not liking that prospect we opted to go over the Goode/Stormking col, scout the descent, and out via Park Creek. (NPS shuttle, bus, and bakery) We ascended snow to just below the col and Doug took the sharp end up the final gulley to the top. There he is, like 80' off the deck with barely any meaningful protection, trying to pick his way up a particularly ugly section. Rocks were raining down, Doug was muttering quietly to himself and occasionally cursing out loud; making no progress. It didn't look that hard, and I was surprised that he seemed a bit rattled. He made it, of course, and when it was my turn to follow I was shocked at what a nasty, downsloping rotten mess that section was. I was creeped out even on toprope.
  6. Yeah; a bus ride with bakery stop sounds way better. Fun route for sure!
  7. It looks showery up there this week. Probably not enough to quench the fires, but certainly helpful. Definitely enough to screw up our hiking plans for the week. 😒
  8. I remember that scree slope of doom. Once over that it all seemed pretty fun, and the final scramble wasn't even too bad.
  9. Bicyclists. I think he dislikes bicyclists too.
  10. Looks great. I love that bivi pic!
  11. Just for Lulz have a look at "Jane Smith" who joined 5/9. Something seems less than human about Ms. S
  12. I can do that... won't be showing up before 19:00.
  13. When is the next one? If I start planning now, there's a chance.
  14. It's unanimous at this point! Not even sure if I'll make it, as I work in B-Town until 6PM this coming Thursday.
  15. I'm starting to see a pattern here. Tommy Thompson with @JasonG
  16. I'll be there.
  17. There's a wealth of good pubs in Georgetown if that's more convenient for people.
  18. I feel so sorry for the Stuart Glacier.
  19. Magical place! I'm so glad I spent some quality time up there before it got over-run with nitwits. One memorable trip in 1989 with my wife and father-in-law (who was even older then than I am now!) we did the grand tour much like you and Kim's. I was out in the middle of Shield Lake on an inflatable raft when some hikers down near the outlet called out to me: "IS THIS SNOW LAKE?" Good times.
  20. I voted hybrid, mostly just for pragmatic reasons. Like- whatever works, right? Other sites I frequent are ad-free for dues paying members and not so for the rabble. I'm old, and lost my taste for risk after one too many near misses, so may never contribute a lot, but still like coming here for the vicarious adventure. And Jason's TRs! There is so much great content, history, and funny shizz here that it would be a shame for it to disappear. If some of the technical concerns were corrected, would this site become more lively? That's the key to keeping it thriving, obviously. What (if anything) functions like the old CC.com as a local online climbing community? It sure seems there should be enough demand for that.
  21. Fantastic TR; I couldn't stop reading it. The climbing looks better than I might have expected, but the trash and BS with guided clients seems really trying. You guys did it in great style!
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