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YocumRidge

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  1. the 'schrund below the n face currently in skeery condition - the right side now overhanging slush w/ essentially nothign to stand on to try to traverse around...

    I am still waiting on those pics from you :)

    Oh, and thanks for catching my ass in there.

  2. "Route 7A: Stay close to the cleaver [while climbing the Eliot HW] and gain the col behind Cathedral Spire and follow the 500 feet of the north face"

     

    The line we climbed was UP the Cleaver/Cathedral Spire and it cannot be seen from the vantage point shown in the Don Lowe photo. The details of the Combs et al. ascent in 1958 (published in "Letter to Author", Combs, 1985) would be however helpful to resolve this contradiction.

     

    While it can not be seen in Jeff's book but what you climbed matches the description perfectly.

     

    1. Gain the col behind Cathedral Spire - your pictures show you coming up right at the col.

     

    2. Climb the last 500 feet or so of the N. Face route which dumps you right on the summit. Your summit picture that I compared to mine from 2010 is most certainly the North Face "direct" finish.

     

    I say direct because where the North Face (Route 5) splits one can join Cooper Spur on the left or go right. However, above the split to go around the rock outcrop one can regain the ridge from either side and continue directly to the summit. Which what we did coming from the left and you did coming from the right.

     

    So in my mind you climbed 7A albeit under lean conditions and was undoubtably different from the conditions in 1958 which would have probably been a very steep snow slope. I will also add that I think Jeff has the route (7a) drawn in a bit high.

     

    In the photo shown below you topped out on the summit block which is rock out cropping on the left. In fact if you look carefully you can see the summit cornice.

     

    The face to the right would have you top out approximately 50-100 meters to west of the summit. So that is something completely different and appears to me to be the top of the North Cleaver Route but seems like an odd finish as going directly to the summit like you did would make more sense.

     

     

     

    That is the standard easterly variation of the Eliot HW which is also indicated as a "7A" in the Jeff's pic and which was 200 m west from the line we were on.

    7204443532_f97e64272c_c.jpg

     

     

    The "7A" route description given in Ore High, as based on the Combs et al. ascent in 1958, seems to refer to a different route all together which might or might not be the Ravine.

     

    We were specifically interested in (and climbed) the obvious ice flow along the Cathedral spire followed by the exit at the col and then finished via whatever was the most straightforward way getting to the summit, i.e. continuing up the north cleaver for a while and taking the standard direct NF exit through the cornice.

     

     

  3. Thanks, Dan.

     

     

    I was expecting a shit-storm on this one so I am going to respond to the psistrom's comment.

    I have no interest whatsoever in picking a fight but having struggled up the Eliot Glacier Headwall route many years ago from the bottom up--through the crevasses and over the yawning bergschrund and up the steep rock-scoured ice runnels and then, finally, the rock bands at the top--it seems somehow unearned to slip in from the side, zip up two pitches, and say you've climbed the same route. This seems like Eliot Glacier Headwall Lite.

     

    You are correct, that is NOT the Eliot Glacier Headwall route, "lite" or "heavy", whatever you call it, and I thought I made it clear enough to indicate in my TR. I guess not.

     

    Re: the approach. Yes, we did "cheat" and slip in from the side of Cathedral ridge, because when I recently soloed the "heavy" approach, you are referring to, I thought it was not worth the time/interest to drag my friends up there. FYI, the "heavy" approach is also a famous ski destination in spring. So, should I now wait until September to make it even "heavier"?

     

     

     

  4. THAT is the 7A variation of the Eliot HW, according to the Jeff Thomas depiction.

    7204443532_f97e64272c_c.jpg

     

    7205170604_27813837a6_h.jpg

     

    "Route 7A: Stay close to the cleaver [while climbing the Eliot HW] and gain the col behind Cathedral Spire..."

     

    The line we climbed was UP the Cleaver/Cathedral Spire and it cannot be seen from the vantage point shown in the Don Lowe photo. The details of the Combs et al. ascent in 1958 (published in "Letter to Author", Combs, 1985) would be however helpful to resolve this contradiction.

  5. Trip: HOOD - Cathedral Spire -"Ravine" (possible FA)

     

    Date: 5/10/2012

     

    Trip Report:

    WI3+, M4, grade II

     

    Last week my kalifornikan friend Vitaliy Musiyenko, who drove for 11 hrs from San Francisco "to climb peaks in the PNW" with me, and I (Anastasia Blagoveshchenskaya) climbed "Ravine" on the western aspect of the Cathedral Spire on Mt. Hood. The line was originally spotted and pre-named by Wayne Wallace a couple of years ago, but remained unclimbed to our knowledge.

     

    In the current conditions, we have rated it at WI3+, M4, grade II:

    7201021406_e260c1b883_b.jpg

     

     

    “Climbing peaks in the PNW” for Vitaliy got very quickly limited to just one - Mt. Hood, thanks to the convenient access and, for the time being, abundance of ice on the north side thereof. The plan was born to camp on the summit and make day trips for various routes.

     

     

    We begun the slog to the summit at the unusual hour of Noon.

     

    At the P-lot:

    7184844720_373a2c7cd2_c.jpg

     

    Yes, I do like my sleep in the morning if the "unusual hour of noon" is able to produce sunny skies, frigid temps in 20s F and hard snowpack. :grin:

     

     

     

    Vitaliy (who never been on Hood before) was curious about the famous dog route:

    7185580074_cf8560d8b5_c.jpg

     

     

    At 5 p.m. , in increasing winds, we had arrived at the summit ridge and pitched in our tent between the rime feathers. At this point, it was really getting windy and I was badly dreaming of my Primaloft (as OlegV defines it, a “fish fur” :) ) pants.

     

    At the camp:

    7186107176_c892e2fdb6_c.jpg7186116282_1caff0aafc_c.jpg7185083290_0e2d709f93_c.jpg

     

     

     

    When Oleg, Andy and I climbed the Eliot HW on 05/06/12, Ravine was looking very enticing, so I suggested to Vitaliy that we should go and check it out more closely. So, next morning we hiked down the Cathedral ridge to the Horseshoe rock and traversed the Eliot gl. above the shrund to the base of the Ravine.

     

    At the base of the Ravine after the traverse:

    7185707594_9f651e404f_b.jpg

     

    Ravine (detail):

    7185682070_3fecd822db_b.jpg

     

    Vitaliy is heading up first 55 m pitch:

    7185745548_d8c6c68440_b.jpg

     

    Vitaliy at the crux:

    7185805576_aff3c10c53_b.jpg

     

    7185821108_23e938739b_b.jpg

     

     

     

    Looking down at the shrund and our tracks above it:

    7185919056_d995e5d2ac_b.jpg

     

    Vitaliy coming up the second pitch to the saddle by the Cathedral Spire:

    7185880056_8188c5a6c8_c.jpg

     

     

    At this point we re-grouped and simul-climbed the North cleaver to the summit cornice arriving at 2 p.m. (after starting at the Horseshoe rock at 10

    a.m.).

     

     

    The summit cornice looms above:

    7186002618_68d9ff4f48_c.jpg

     

    Simuling final slopes:

    7186057930_7e0574cff0_c.jpg

     

    Vitaliy and the rack at the summit:

    7186090288_72d42e1725_c.jpg

     

    Stoked:

    7185042046_5b5d0b74c1_b.jpg

     

     

     

     

     

    Gear Notes:

    Used: 8 screws, 3 pickets, green C4, orange metolius mastercam, yellow alien, 60 m rope, 1 Nomic, 3 Cobras

     

    Approach Notes:

    Summit carryover

  6. Why do you think the mountain is dangerous to hike now when it had high pressure and every day freeze/melt? Even if the cold snap would not happen by the end of the next week?

    Right now the avy danger is minimal on Hood because of the said freeze/melts.

    If you are concerned about hiking in slushy snow, then start early when it is all solid hard. But then again, it is a matter of personal preference if you are to take the Old Chute up. Two days ago when we topped out the North Cleaver, we run into a party of 15 tourists from Indiana who arrived at the summit at 2 pm. In tropical temps of 40F.

    Most skiers tend to start later in the day too - to allow the snow to soften up a bit.

     

     

  7. Oleg, thanks for the best piece of prose I read in a while. If Dostoevsky was alive, he would have been proud of you :).

     

    Now that high temps are annihilating the beautiful mixed lines on the I-rock,

    7184888718_5834422fd9_c.jpg

     

     

    we had moved our attention elsewhere - to the Eliot Gl. headwall - located on the northwestern aspect of Mt. Hood and being the object of the Oleg's infatuation for the last couple of years. And deservingly so.

     

    Eliot Glacier Headwall with lots of ice and decent rock as of two days ago:

    7185753186_04e557ef62_b.jpg

     

     

    The long-assed bitchy approach from the Tilly Jane TH with the Cloud Cap road still being closed was rather unappealing to us, so we took advantage of carrying over via the summit from the south side. Not knowing how much trail breaking we were supposed to do (it turned out a lot) - plus Andy was arriving from Seattle, we chose to camp as close as possible to the summit.

    However, as of now, with the dog route being pre-cut in place, the Eliot HW should be a straightforward C2C day.

     

     

    NB.

    Oleg's igloo building skills were highly appreciated at the somewhat windy Crater rock.

    Oleg at the Camp Sulphur:

    7160726168_58c9817e1f_c.jpg

     

     

     

    Gradual evolution of my tent: from the originally manufactured as a 2 person tent to a 1 man, 2 women tent and now to a 2 men, 1 woman tent. Pretty stoked, it might become a circus tent one day :) .

    7160727476_a70655f2f2_c.jpg

     

     

    Soleil dansant on the Yocum and Cathedral ridges:

    7159201180_99f56ed7ba_b.jpg

     

     

    Trio on the summit:

    7160753042_8c6fbe180a_c.jpg

     

     

    Chillaxing at the camp:

    7160754482_d0c4d30f67_c.jpg

     

     

    Awesome trip, Andy and Oleg! :brew:

     

     

     

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  8. The Cody dog would make a great tent mate...extra warmth and probably a great cuddler.

     

    Yeah, Codsky is like that. Although he does not enjoy being squeezed in a tent, an open bivy is more his thing.

    If things dont go according to a plan, he will ride on a back of your skis. Embrace extra 150 lbs then! :)

     

    5547428899_3d0f18d6ac_z.jpg

  9. it doesn't seem like elitist apinism.

     

    Obviously both are better than the average bear.

    Which would seem almost humbling to most bears.

     

    grizzly-bear.jpg

     

    Dogs are equal opportunity climbers as are bears.

     

    Not sure if I would climb with bears though - they can be so moody and unpredictable. But its just me :P

  10. No offense to dogs, how could one not admire them?

     

    Some of them climb mountains, like this OlegV's dog Charlie - who runs up his "dedicated" route on Hoodie in under 3 hrs. Thank gawd there are no leash/being "roped up" laws here, so he proudly soloes it.

     

    Charlie approaching Hood summit in June 2008:

    63555_1793386834322_1229206824_32140168_5564103_n.jpg

     

    This would be the definition of the "dog route" then...

     

    d

     

     

    I wonder how that can be interpreted as "elitist" though...

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