Jump to content

Alex

Members
  • Posts

    4663
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Alex

  1. Please dont take my usage of quotes as mockery. (Funny how intent in writing can be misunderstood.) Alex
  2. Alex

    Out of the Closet

    I think pope is going to out the master of all spray, Capt. Caveman hisself!!
  3. 126 might be the gate beyond Colonial CG.
  4. Overall this sounds like a better, less crowded route than that to the summit of Mt Marrymoor. Seems like everytime I do my 10 laps around that Cascade jewel, there is some gaper traversing the wrong way!. Pope, you should send in this story to the Stranger (see their recent issue on sexual real estate).
  5. I can't wait for winter!
  6. Moving to spray. As a one-time professional wildlife biologist, I have to say the post is too short to offer any value, and the sources far too meager (you're using Earth First! as a source? c'mon dude) to really take seriously. Wildlife management, and recreation's impact on wildlife is far more complex an issue than can be addressed here (or anywhere on the Internet). There are alot of highly skilled, thoughtful, and passionate wildlife professionals working on the balancing act between humans and wildlife on our public and private lands. Trust me, you will not be able to do a better job than whats already being done. Alex
  7. it is overkill unless you are climbing in the desert southwest. for granite, Ex38, and so on you dont need "a thick 6 inches".
  8. Climb: Johannesburg-East Ridge Date of Climb: 8/14/2004 Trip Report: EJohnson and I got together for a weekend crack at Johannesburg. We opted for a little more conservative approach and went for the E Ridge, rather than the NE Rib (1957), because we didnt know how fast we would/could climb together, or really what the mountain held in store. Our plan was to climb to CJ Col using "Dougs Direct", drop some bivy gear at CJ Col, summit, and back to the bivy on the first day. Rest and then go back out the same way the next day. We left the Cascade Pass parking lot at 4:40 am, in the oppressive heat. It felt like it was 90 degrees at 4am in the parking lot! We got up to Cascade Pass before dawn where a nice breeze cooled us off, and proceeded up and over Mixup Arm to the Cache Gl. Here, we hung a sharp right and climbed a fairly well travelled route to the top of Mixup-Triplets Ridge as per N Ridge Mixup Route (aka "Dougs Direct"). This is a 3rd class scramble, albeit with significant exposure. The downclimb down the other side of Mixup is 3rd class for 800 feet to scree, which we descended to turn the butress coming off Cascade, and ascended to a small bivy site several hundred feet below CJ Col 4.5 hrs from car. The E Ridge route starts from here. The hardest technical move on the entire route comes in the first 10 feet off the snow, as you move from snow up an initially steep white granite "staircase". The angle quickly kicks back and the rock is solid and the climbing on this portion enjoyable. These 120m are the only pitches we used a rope on on the entire route, placing one piece of pro. After the granite staircase, the route moves up steep heather and 3rd class gullys for a long way to the false summit. While there is a significant amount of loose rubble on the route, the rock you climb is solid and route fairly low angle. The route is in some ways reminiscnet of many of the "advanced" scrambles in the Colorado Rockies (like Crestone Needle), just not as well travelled. Erick and I both commented on how this was not what we were expecting. We both had prepared ourselves mentally for something more challenging and scary, technically. Certainly something steeper. I am chickenshit when it comes to soloing exposed technical ground, but the E Ridge route is really no problem anywhere. From the false summit (2 hours from the col) the summit ridge now works depressingly far to the true summit. Don't give up! We were dehydrated and beginning to get fatigued in the hot sun, but pushed onwards. The E Ridge route travels the ridge about 50-100 ft below the crest (S side) from the first false summit to the true summit, along a well-worn path. About an hour. It is not difficult to follow. Just below the summit pyramid, a deep-walled gully is turned at its head (notch). Here we dropped packs and scrambled to the summit in a few minutes. The return down the E Ridge went a little faster initially, as the trip back to the false summit was farily quick. (It was depressing thinking that we had lugged crampons, axe, a technical rack all the way up and down the route never to use them.) As usual, you typically find the best route on the way down, and this was no exception. We found a slightly better way down the first few hundred feet below the false summit to the first rap station, which takes you in 30m past a steep snow slope (only water on route). From here a few raps, never more than 30m long, (2 more?) and downclimbing take you down the majority of the route to the head of the "granite staircase". The descent is fine with a small party, however the risk of rockfall injury increases. Stay close together, be careful when pulling your rope. By this time the large approaching thunderstorms weighed on our minds, and we tried to descend with all speed, without killing each others with the occaisional loose rock. It was sprinkling on and off, but we never got wet. I was on Torment a few years ago when a large thunderstorm decided to try to destroy Johannesburg, and I didnt want to see that up close again. The final granite staircase looks steep, but is no problem once you start down it. We got to our bivy gear at 4:40, 12 hours after leaving the car, and sacked out waiting for the thunderstorms to make up their minds. The return trip, after 12 hours rest and coyotes at 1:20 am, was fine and uneventful. "Dougs Direct" is a great short way to get back to civilization, albeit with 3rd class scrambling as exposed as any you'll do on Johannesburg. Summary: Erick and I don't know why this route isnt climbed more often. While stenuous, its really a great day out in the mountains and not particularly dangerous if you climb close together. Descending is tedious but again stay close together, take turns downclimbing the loose sections, and wear a hard hat. The climbing is never technical and not frighteningly exposed. If you are a competent technical climber, you will be able to quickly and easily solo the route if dry. I'd like to say don't underestimate Johannesburg, its a really really big mountain, but don't get psyched out by its noteriety either. You can manage it; really fit parties can climb the entire route as a day trip. The bivy is really choice - solitude, great views! Gear Notes: We carried a fairly beefy rack, axe, crampons, and 60m 8.5 rope. We used the rope for 3 simulclimbing pitches at the start, but otherwise only for some rappels. Axe was nice for the snow right at the base of the route, but otherwise leave axe and crampons in the moat. Approach Notes: Detailed descent beta: Summit to False summit: travel the ridge line typically 50-100 feet below on S side for an hour. 3rd class. False summit: downclimb easily down a narrow gully skiers right (looks good, and is) to the head of a steep snow patch. good rap anchor off a block. downclimb to next rap anchor a double yellow sling(??) skiers left. next rap anchor is a newer green sling on a horn. a short rap to a small crappy block with 2 old 1" slings. downclimb to one final anchor (new teal sling) to 3rd class downclimbing to the heathery slopes. In most cases you can downclimb all these sections, but you'll love rapping over the first snowpatch! downclimb to head of "granite staircase". Here you can downclimb or rap 3 more times (30m each). a block skiers right (new teal sling) leads to a hidden rap anchor of 2 fixed nuts, and finally a single piton anchor to the snow.
  9. Good job Steve! Thats hella quick!
  10. Very cool. I was looking at this earlier in the year as a secret "no one goes there to do that" and "its granite!" project. Have wanted to check out Blum ever since I saw it from Challenger in 99.
  11. Maybe this will help http://www.mountainwerks.org/alexk/art/prusiksfaceroute.jpg
  12. Baker and Shuksan are in Vol 3 (Red). Briefly Vol 1 covers: Mt St Helens, Mt Adams, Mt Rainier, entire Stuart Range Vol 2 covers: Glacier Peak, much of North Cascades Park incl Dome, Cascade Pass area, Ptarmigan Traverse peaks Vol 3 covers: Baker, Shuksan, Pasayten Wilderness, Washington Pass and the Wine Spires, Chehalis, Cheam and Anderson River groups
  13. Bronco, please include me in your plans. Climbers must have no idea how easy the Norweigian Buttress is, and how cheap! We will scoop them all and climb this covetted cascade jewel! You don't even need a Chinese liason officer!
  14. check yer pms
  15. Plastics have really limited use, in my experience. I used to use plastics for winter-ish trips, now I use leather boots (Scarpa Eiger, Freney) exclusively. They are lighter, cheaper, more comfortable. You don't have to get a La Sportiva Nepal Top to get a worthy leather boot. There are only two instances that I use plastics now: week+ long trips to snow country (like, the Alaska Range) and -25 degree days ice climbing in the Canadian Rockies. The leather boots do everything else, better. If you can, take a long hard look at good leather boots.
  16. REI has some information on a Seattle-area local company that is recycling these now.
  17. My buddy Monkey was s'posed to gun me up Nutsack Tower, but his old creaky body just isnt up to the punishment after his weekend epic. Anyone up for Thurs/Fri climb? Slesse, Nooksack, something similar?
  18. Kaia, yes. Check out Alpine Lakes forum. Alex
  19. personally I hate the heat, but I am more sick of all the hardman climbing going on here despite it, while I rot away at my desk job ug! ah to be 20 and in college again!
  20. I think so. The S Ridge of Ingalls N Peak is 130m of climbing (so not "long" by Cascades standards). The "walkoff" (more of a downclimb) is to the West off the summit, avoiding the rap stations down the S Face. I've always preferred the raps, though.
  21. There is a small patch of snow in the gully still, however right now (8/8/2004) you can stay on some gravel/scree on its left without needing to set foot on the snow proper. So no crampons or axe needed.
  22. Mark, the Easton is one of the easiest routes in Washington. It is covered in Fred Beckeys Alpine Guide (vol 3). People climb this route often without incident, and its snowmobiled in the winter. However, it is a technical route where you will be expected to know what you are doing! When I climbed (as a party of 2), I fell waist deep into a hidden crevasse. Any mountain route, especially up an active glacier, can be very dangerous. People get hurt and die on Mt Baker every year. No one here on this board will be able to mitigate the risks you and your party take.
  23. Joe Josephsons guide has about as much info as you could ask for on Polar Circus. Go check it out! You will not have a problem routefinding once you are at the base of it.
  24. ah thats true, AllYouCanEat is right on, N Ridge of Adams might be just your ticket...decent camping in the meadows below it, and a non-technical, non glaciated route to the summit
  25. NE Ridge of Black Peak Thompson
×
×
  • Create New...