Jump to content

St. Helen's Before The Blast


mothboy88

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 24
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I hear it was often confused w/Mt. Adams. It was probably about the same. I met an old woman who had summited it long ago (when female climbers were few and far between), and she didn't seem to think it was all that hard. Then again, there were probably ways to make it so! wink.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had summited at least 3 times. Once we packed up downhill skis to the top and marked the crevasses with wands. A great glissade track went from the top of dogshead to the parking lot. Also skied up after the blast but before it opened evils3d.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also skied up after the blast but before it opened evils3d.gif

 

We took a field trip into the Toutle River valley below he crater before it opened - thanks to having a prof who was on the mtn. the day before it went. Cool to look up into hte crater from the moonscape of the valley.

 

And if anyone has a 7.5 minute pre-eruption St. Helens topo, I'd be interested - I've got the 15 and the 30 minutes, and would like to complete my set.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A great glissade track went from the top of dogshead to the parking lot.

 

That's one of my most distinctive memories of pre-eruption St Helens--an amazingly huge trough--visible from space probably--made by countless wet butts glissading down from the Dogshead. I remember sliding down it once and getting scared because the bottom of the trough had been scoured down to hard ice. It was difficult to stop. I climbed St Helens in the mid-1970s, but never did it with skis, unfortunately.

 

I have a film preserved by the Mountaineers History Committee of Sigurd Hall, Ralph Eskenazi, John James and Dwight Watson skiing St Helens in June 1938. Probably only a handful of ski descents had been made prior to that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder who has documented proof of the "last ascent"?

 

In the Apr-May 1980 issue of Summit magazine, Pete Reagan wrote an article called "The Dragon's Mouth" about a climb of St Helens on April 10, 1980. This was after the eruptions had started but before the big blast. The summit had collapsed by this time. There may have been later climbs, but this was certainly the last one so well documented.

 

Pete also wrote articles about climbing St Helens soon after the blast. There are references on my ski history website:

 

http://www.alpenglow.org/ski-history/ref/summit-info.html#1980s

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I climbed it twice in 1978 with Evergreen State College students; once in February via Dogs Head & once in July via Shoestring Glacier. Rockfall on Shoestring very nearly killed six of us. It was an extremely harrowing and drawn-out experience. I would like to hear from anyone who was along on that trip if they happen on this post.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A friend of mine was taking some less experienced folks up a year before it went active. The weather came in and, being conservative with the newbies, he turned back about 500 ft below the summit. and said "Don't worry, the mountain will still be here". cantfocus.gif They never got up before it blew.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder who has documented proof of the "last acent"?

 

One of the Mt St Helen's memorabelia picture books has an aerial picture of 3 climbers in bright red, orange, and yellow jackets standing on the summit about 50 ft away from a 100 yard long smoldering black crack. IIRC the caption mentioned late April of 1980. At that point the area around the mountain was closed off so it would have been a significant pack-in.

 

I'd also suggest the book "Volcano Cowboys," written by one of the Volcanologists who worked on that project and then went on to do Mt Pinatubo (sp?) and others around the world as a special volcano response team. They go into detail about how and why decisions were made given what they knew at the time. There is a copy in the Mazamas library.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Friends of mine were on Mt. Adams when it blew. They got some nice photos while being plummeted with pumice and larger than desired debris.

 

If you've never taken the tour up the new road up to Johnstone Ridge, it's worth it. The movie they run at the top is cool! "The only thing the government has done right recently" was my Dad's quote!

 

I found a big bag of all the newspaper articles from Seattle Times and Yakima whatever done in previous and following months at a thrift store for $5.00. Fabulous reading!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I climbed it several times before it blew, and spent the night on the summit in March, 1980. Definitely not the last ascent, probably at least one of the last "legal" ascents (I think the mountain was closed 3 weeks later when quakes caused massive avalanches), very likely the last overnight on the summit, but we are sure it was the last time anyone drank Inglenook Burgundy on the summit. That's our one claim to fame and we're stickin' to it!

 

The only routes of any technical interest at all (i.e there was a crevasse or two to negotiate) were the Forsythe Glacier and the Shoestring Glacier. The latter was sort of interesting just because it was so narrow. Some group in SW Washington or Portland had published a guidesheet to St. Helens climbing that listed the primary difficulties of south side routes as "boredom and mosquitoes."

 

There was outstanding glissading off all sides of the peak.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...