mgetlin Posted April 1, 2018 Posted April 1, 2018 (edited) Trip: Mt. Hood - Three Little Monkeys - New Route on The Black SpiderTrip Date: 03/31/2018Trip Report: “Three Little Monkeys” New Route on the Black Spider, Mt. Hood OR WI4+ M5R Michael Getlin and Walter Burkhardt I was chatting with Wayne a few months back and he mentioned that there was some unclimbed potential on the left side of the Spider. A quick scouting mission showed a beautiful and long ice line between the existing Fric-Amos route and the Elder-Russel summer line. A fat long ice line it was not, but it seemed to have smears in all the right places so we gave it a go. We left Timberline at 5am with perfect high cloud cover that promised to keep the sun off the east-facing, concave wall. We crossed the bergschrund at 8:15 and started right in on what we thought would be the crux pitch. A few vertical mixed moves brought me to the hanging, detached ice dagger which proved fragile and delaminated. It was a type of fragile water ice climbing that I have never seen on Mt. Hood. It was strikingly similar to the first pitch of "Mean Streak" in Cody (we bailed). WI4+ (Not Mt. Hood grading) I brought Walter up and then set off to try and connect to another hanging dagger directly above but huge unsupported snow mushrooms guarded it. After sending one down on Walter I decided to try right. This proved to be the crux pitch of the route as rotten snow over near vertical mud lead to two distinct vertical mud chimneys. The second one was protectable, the first was not. It turns out though that in a pinch, the rock/mud takes decent sticks. Several times when I thought I was getting in trouble, I just wailed away at the rock face and my picks stuck like magic! Gotta love volcanoes. M5 R For the third pitch I jogged left again, trying to get back on the plumb line which proved a good guess as we found sound rock with interesting mixed moves and wonderful water ice that took good screws. WI3 M3 After bringing Walter up, I climbed up a narrow ice gully hoping to veer left and drop into the upper bowl through which the Fric-Amos route finishes. At this point it was getting late and we were looking for a quick exit. But to my surprise the bowl was guarded by a vertical snow fin that would have involved about 50 feet of unprotectable down climbing, so I veered right and then straight up, finding a path through wild gold-colored gendarmes that rose like turrets over the upper face. We popped into the sun and knew we were home free. WI3 In all we climbed five full length pitches, the last of which was mostly steep snow. I was lucky to share this experience with Walter. He was a great mentor to me when I first started going to the mountains and I owe him a good deal of credit for keeping me safe and motivated over the years. Note: In retrospect, it’s worth mentioning that the face was pretty dry when we climbed it. The start or Arachnophobia and the visible parts of the center drip looked more like rotten snow than solid alpine ice. I think when the face is fat, the line would be a very reasonable outing. I was surprised at how direct, steep, and sustained it was. I would love someone to give her a go in better ice conditions and see if that little kink in the second pitch could be ironed out. Our line in yellow Looking at the start from below - the face seemed dry to me but it was my first time up there so I don't really know. Approaching the line (Straight ahead) Mid way up the first pitch Walter Following P3 Looking up at the start of P4 Gear Notes: We brought a single 60m, 2 Pickets, 5 screws, 4 pins, and 4 cams (.5-2). We could have used a few smaller cams and a rack of nuts would have been niceApproach Notes: Timberline to top of palmer. Dropped our skis and crossed the white river at about 8800ft. 3:15 car to schrund in good conditions. Edited April 1, 2018 by mgetlin 2 4 Quote
ScaredSilly Posted April 1, 2018 Posted April 1, 2018 Nice, always fun getting good sticks in conglomerated mud. 1 Quote
nutsandbolts Posted April 2, 2018 Posted April 2, 2018 Nice work homies! Filling in that blank space on the topo nicely 1 Quote
JayB Posted April 2, 2018 Posted April 2, 2018 That's quite a line! Loved reading about the mud placements. Maybe the PNW volcano equivalent of ascending the white cliffs of dover with ice tools... 1 Quote
mgetlin Posted April 2, 2018 Author Posted April 2, 2018 2 hours ago, JayB said: That's quite a line! Loved reading about the mud placements. Maybe the PNW volcano equivalent of ascending the white cliffs of dover with ice tools... Definitely placed a number 2 in a mud crack. It fit like a glove! Bomber. Quote
nonbasketless Posted April 2, 2018 Posted April 2, 2018 Woooooooooooo, well done! Not sure what I'm more excited about: an intriguing FA or just the fact that a new Oregon trip report has been posted. Either way, awe ya! 2 Quote
wayne Posted April 2, 2018 Posted April 2, 2018 Wow! that does indeed look steep. This is one of only a few routes that have appeared to put up a good fight! Nice go on that climb guys, way to get after it. 1 Quote
mgetlin Posted April 3, 2018 Author Posted April 3, 2018 54 minutes ago, wayne said: Wow! that does indeed look steep. This is one of only a few routes that have appeared to put up a good fight! Nice go on that climb guys, way to get after it. Thanks Wayne! Your work on the drip got me really stoked on that face. 1 Quote
Couloir Posted April 15, 2018 Posted April 15, 2018 Well done, Mike. I love seeing these new efforts. Quote
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