markseker Posted February 20, 2003 Posted February 20, 2003 Climb Note: Mt Hood Wy'East 2003-Feb-14 Climb Date: 14-Feb-03, Valentine's day Team: Monty Smith (L), Tim Scott (AL), Francis Chockalingam, Mark Seker Notes Date: 19-Feb-03 Revision: 1.2 Notes Author: Mark Seker (primary), with edits by Tim Scott and Monty Smith Reference: URL for photos http://members19.clubphoto.com/monty672735/1148318/ Climb Summary: from the timberline lodge trailhead, our team of 4 ascended to summit on the exploratory (for us) Wy'east route, descending the dog route. Weather held out free of precipitation, cloudless above and virtually wind free over entire route. 8:55 hours to summit, 0:42 hours on summit performing various antics; 2:17 hours to return to trailhead, except for Tim, whose hi-tech glissade device saved him 25 mins on the descent. Route finding above 9770' was our primary challenge, and this final section took us more than 4 hours to complete. Winter daytime climb conditions allowed headlamp-free travel, except the final hour of descent, which was lit by moonlight (one of the two fully exposed moons the team saw this day). Conditions - Expected: Significant new snow had not fallen anywhere on the route for at least 4-5 days, weather being generally clear thru the region. New fronts were threatening, including a weak precip-producing cloud layer on climb day, but we expected a window long enough for our climb before the major change expected the day after (Saturday) this climb. Snow level dropping from 6000' to 4500' today. Conditions - Actual: Clouds in Portland and rain in Sandy on climb day were perilous, but the cloud deck was thin at Timberline trailhead, where a dusting of snow had fallen during the night. Starting weather was inside the top of a cloud layer, 29 degrees and light wind. Temperature was steady all day, seeming hot during windless sunny ascent (often in single layer clothing) although frozen water in jugs indicated air was below 30 degrees. Snow conditions were good the entire route allowing secure travel with crampons and ice ax; this means we could kick steps in consolidated but not icy snow almost the entire route. In addition, no ice screws were used, as a single picket per line could be made secure for the running belay used. Some exceptions were noted for a few rock steps above 9800', occasional holes or hollow spots, and random sun-glazed ice (mostly on the down route between crater rock and palmer lift) Above 10,000' we all used an ice tool with our ice ax, although no hard ice was encountered. Gear: We each had the Mt Hood dog route gear, but added for each: 1 picket, 1 ice tool, avy beacon, pulley/biners for crevasse rescue. Additional team gear carried: 3 biv bags, 6 ice screws, MLU, 2 cell phones, 2 cameras, 2 shovels, 3 thermal pads, and one 50M 10.5 dry rope. Gear we wished we had: 3-4 more pickets would have reduced the number of lead changes required, and saved some time. Camera tripod for summit team photo. More props for summit antics, as the summit wind did not cooperate enough to even fly the kite! No wind on summit, what a bummer. Detailed Travel Log: ============================= Time / Altitude / What was happening ============================= 07:21 alt 5995 depart timberline lot; to silcox hut (break); exited cloud layer before silcox, and remained in bright sun until sunset; angled up to right to knob on w edge of wht river valley 09:02 alt 8295 arrive at knob on wht river cross into wht river glacier valley; harnessed and roped from here to summit; order: Monty, Francis, Mark, Tim using entire 50m rope with 3-4 kiwi coils on ends. Prusiks installed to cross wht river glacier. This exit point over ridge between palmer and wht glaciers was perfect, providing an easy ramp "down" to wht river glacier and almost no elevation loss. After crossing glacier above some obvious snow-covered crevasses we chose to head up the fall line of the lateral moraine to wy'east ridge versus taking the topo line traverse. Estimate 35 degree slope at steepest point. 10:00 (alt 8500?) exit wht river glacier valley, approx 1 hour after entering. 11:59 alt 9770 top of wyeast ridge, where it hit steele cliffs rocks; place first pro below rocks; removed prusiks. Now the route-finding fun began, having to repeatedly decide to ascend up or traverse right below rock outcrops. All but a few hundred feet of the top 1500' needed picket pro, and we had to switch leads 3 times to move safely with running belay and at least one picket. Occasional hazard of balling up crampons, hidden holes (Monty went to waist once) and tricky moves around a few rocks. Route finding was helped in several places by footprints of prior team on route still visible from another day. Slope averaged 35-50 degrees, and we often were on a high-angle traverse, effectively winding around to the north to avoid the rocks above and not ascending the fall line. 13:46 alt 10360 stop using pro on "bomber snow" slope just below ridge; arrive at ridge top to see over steele cliffs into crater for first time; team gathered together for final time before summit, trading food and smiles. 14:02 alt 10555 start pro again; ref Monty's "redlined" photo to see route chosen. Lead was switched once from here to summit, so Tim topped out first. This was the coolest part of the trip. 6 pitches of snow on steep, exposed slopes. Some tough foot placement situations and a traverse on a steep section before the final turn up to the summit. Very cool. Steepest slope estimated near 60 degrees. 16:16 alt 11250 summit; no wind, CAVU conditions in all directions. Lower cloud deck below 6500' now gone. Ate lunch, emptied natural bladders, performed antics pictures; one party of 2 had taken dog route that day many hours ahead of us, otherwise we were the only climb party this day. 16:54 alt 11250 depart summit for dog route down; no rope, harness, ice tools used in descent. Crampons needed until palmer lift due to icy patches; Mark and Francis chose to alternate glissade and falling on asses on hard spots from 10,000 to 8500', which caused profanity. Watched moonrise (ref photos) over steele cliffs, as we alternated glissading and walking down. Did not encounter any other people, including skiers/boarders over entire route today. 19:11 alt 5960 arrive at car, drink beer the end // 1 Quote
Billy Posted February 20, 2003 Posted February 20, 2003 Wow, that is some detailed report. One thing you left out is how many pickets you need for the rappels? Quote
iain Posted February 20, 2003 Posted February 20, 2003 it's like the Scott expedition to the south pole Quote
markseker Posted February 20, 2003 Author Posted February 20, 2003 no rappels were done. we walked unroped down the standard south side "dog" route Quote
shaggy Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Actually, I wasn't in charge and nobody died, sire Quote
texplorer Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Good thing noone fell on the dynamite. Did you see any cougars? Quote
wayne Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 I may have found someone more anal than me! Quote
CraigA Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Did the Wy'East route with sabertooth a couple weeks ago....what a kick in the butt! We started up the far left gully that leads up Steel Cliff as a starting variation. Made the climb even more interesting!! Here is a picture of the way we started the climb: Craig Quote
b-rock Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Tex, click 'Attachment' on the header to Craig's post. Quote
texplorer Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 In the words of Homer Simpson "DDAAAAAOOOOO". Thanks B-rock. Quote
Alex Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Nice TR. Next time check out the line through Steel Cliff, its way cool! Quote
Sabertooth Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Alex said: Nice TR. Next time check out the line through Steel Cliff, its way cool! That looks like fun Alex. What is the max grade on that? I also saw a line that meandered it's way up the south face of the Steel Cliff. It would have to be very cold for that one, due to icefall off the cliff. Quote
Alex Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 (edited) The upper route is the same as normal wyeast and is certianly the crux afa exposure and overall steepness. Going through the lower Steel Cliff is max 35 or 40 Edited February 21, 2003 by Alex Quote
Alex Posted February 21, 2003 Posted February 21, 2003 Incidentatlly 09:02 alt 8295 arrive at knob on wht river cross into wht river glacier valley; harnessed and roped from here to summit; 10:00 (alt 8500?) exit wht river glacier valley, approx 1 hour after entering. If you cross White River that far down, you are really hurting yourself! If you cross White River at the very base of Steel Cliff at 9400, there is a beautiful easy snow ramp all the way across with no crevasse problems. It basically took us 10 min to get from the W edge of the White River to the base of Steel cliff, with no rope and no worries. Quote
Sabertooth Posted February 22, 2003 Posted February 22, 2003 Anyone tried one of these 2 variations? Quote
CraigA Posted February 24, 2003 Posted February 24, 2003 Sabertooth; so what side of Steel Cliff is that picture from? I can't quite place it. Craig Quote
Sabertooth Posted February 24, 2003 Posted February 24, 2003 It is the south side. Photo taken from that ridgeline over to the Wy'East route. Quote
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