Know_Fear Posted March 3, 2003 Posted March 3, 2003 (edited) Mark McClure and I climbed a new (old?) line to the left of the Coe icefall on Sunday. The grade is approximately III, two pitches of WI3 plus 400-600 feet of sustained steep snow and ice. It was a classic suffer-fest given the conditions. The details follow. We planned to link the Coe Icefall with Cathedral Ridge to the summit, then descend the south side. We hoped the north side would be wind swept so we didn't bring skis, or snow shoes. It took 7 hours to slog from the Cooper Spur snow park (the gate was locked) to the snout of the Coe icefall. We post-holed through deep snow above Cloudcap, while crossing the Elliot Glacier, and below Snow Dome. The area below the Coe icefall was littered with avalanche debris and rocks. A line up the icefall I'd climbed last June was obliterated by glacier creep, and filled with deep snow. Our attention turned to several water ice filled gullies in the east morrain. The Coe icefall is situated in a small circ. The the east "morrain" is more accurately described as basalt cliffs layered with steep snow fields. We decided to climb the second gully from the end nearest the icefall. We guessed it would be about WI3. P.S. the other gullies looked more difficult, but somewhat fatter. The first pitch was WI3. The direct finish looked to be WI4+. However, our belay anchor was a questionable Specter and 2 ice tools (we didn't bring rock gear, and only had 4 screws). We traversed right to a second pitch of WI3. That took us to the top of the 1st cliff band, and the bottom of a steep snow field. We estimated that snow field to be 500 feet tall. We simul-climbed three sections of steep, very hard snow and ice. We stayed to the right side of the snow field in a shallow gully in order to avoid a thick layer of unconsolidated snow. The snow field had several avi crowns and apparently had slid recently. Spin drift poured down on us. It seemed as though I climbed for an hour with my eyes closed - placing one tool after another. Protection was ice screws in frozen snow/ice (snice). Pickets were useless. After several hours of calf pumping front pointing, questionable anchors, and suffocating spin drift we emerged from the gully. We were near the top right side of Snow Dome. The wind was howling, and clouds were wrapping around the mountain from the west. It was obvious that we would have to descend the north side. By the time we reached the east morrain of the Elliot, visibility was poor and the wind was blowing 50-60 mph. We were knocked on our asses several times. We'd slept about 3 hours Sat night, and now were totally "out of gas." There was no shelter to eat and drink until we reached treeline. We arrived at the car 15.5 hours after we'd left. We both felt it was great fun, and totally worth the effort. Not to mention better than a good day at work. Edited March 3, 2003 by Know_Fear Quote
rbw1966 Posted March 3, 2003 Posted March 3, 2003 Sounds like fun. I almost went over that way last weekend myself. Maybe this coming weekend. If you had it to do over again woul dyou ski to the base? Quote
Know_Fear Posted March 3, 2003 Author Posted March 3, 2003 If you don't plan to go over the top - yes skis or snow shoes would shave a couple of hours. The trail up to the A-frame was dirt near the snow park, but there's OK snow about 1 mile up. You can leave skis at the base of Snow Dome and make a loop - up the Coe, down Snow Dome. P.S. the ice near in the upper east morrain of Elliot looked really fat. I don't know how difficult it is. I'd love to hear about it. Quote
rbw1966 Posted March 3, 2003 Posted March 3, 2003 Thats what I was thinking. Round trip from snowdome but like you I figured there would be minimal snow for the approach. Nice to know someone else suffered that instead of me. Did I meet you at Climb Max one time a few months ago talking about ice on the Coe? Quote
Crackman Posted March 4, 2003 Posted March 4, 2003 Nice work Chris -- making the most of the weather window. Sometimes I too wonder why such suffer-fests are fun -- but usually once it's over I've minimized it and am eager for the next one. Probably should get therapy or better yet medication Quote
wayne Posted March 4, 2003 Posted March 4, 2003 Nice job. Probably was "new" . I have definatly looked at those and drooled at the potenial. There can be so much ice on Hood at times. You really have to just go and see. Quote
MtnHigh Posted March 4, 2003 Posted March 4, 2003 Excellent TR. Suffering yet succeeding is perhaps the best experience on a mountain. Makes you feel like something more was accomplished than the usual aspects of a climb. Saturday morning while on the summit I was looking down the N an NE faces and saw two big slide debris fields, one on the Coe and the other one on the Elliot. Quote
texplorer Posted March 5, 2003 Posted March 5, 2003 That McClure dude is sketchy! Nice job guys, in classic NW sufferfest style. Quote
Billy Posted March 6, 2003 Posted March 6, 2003 Nice job you guys. I have seen that "east moraine of the coe" in the fall before and there is a lot of potential. That sounds like a great route. I think sometimes those routes come in in Nov/Dec when its cold enough. There is a goldmine in there. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.