johndavidjr Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 NCNP was subject of NatlGeo Mag cover soon after park was established, when I was 12. It's of a group of climbers seemingly about to rap off a route. There is a tarn far below. I kept the thing for years but lost it long ago, & wish now that I knew where cover shot was taken, & by who etc. Quote
klenke Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 My parents have all the old Natl. Geographic Magz in their garage starting from about the late 60's. No guarantees, but I could have them check for the issue and photography info therein but you'll have to be a little more specific on the year. If you can narrow it down to a specific year, I may be able to get some answers for you. The park was created in 1968, so the issue might be from that year. Quote
cj001f Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 From the Publications search engine on the Nat Geo website, May 1968 is the one your looking for. $2.05 including shipping on eBay http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=280&item=6904888298&rd=1&ssPageName=WDVW Quote
klenke Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 Here is another source saying it's the May 1968 issue. The cover photo is taken looking east (probably from Magic Mountain) to Trapper Lake. Glory Mountain is beyond the lake and McGregor Mountain is the high peak in the distance below the O and G in "Geographic." Quote
johndavidjr Posted June 11, 2004 Author Posted June 11, 2004 Wow-- Thanks!!! I haven't seen that in years. The article itself was very bland, even to a 12-year-old, but dumb as it sounds, that shot definitely is a key piece of something-or-other for me. Seven years later I hitch-hiked up to Washington Pass from the Okanogan & thought I'd died & gone to heaven, but didn't actually climb in NCP until years later. It's a long story, to be revealed when my memoirs are published. Quote
klenke Posted June 11, 2004 Posted June 11, 2004 I checked with my dad. There is an inconvenient gap in the family catalog of NG issues. We started getting it in '67 but the early '68 issues are missing. My mother said these were probably lost or never sent while my parents were moving (I was not yet born). However, my dad has every NG issue on CD-ROM. He said he'd try and find the issue in question. I told him to look for information relevant to the cover photo. We (I) know where the photo is taken from/to, but I'm not sure if it is the exact summit of Magic. Quote
johndavidjr Posted June 12, 2004 Author Posted June 12, 2004 There are inside photos: an aerial shot of picketts and a group on Sahale Arm & I think one of Logan. I'm pretty sure another shot. Wonder who took the alpine photos. I also remember one of a old guy at an inn (?)in Stehekin with pies. Quote
Blake Posted June 12, 2004 Posted June 12, 2004 The april 1974 National Geographic had a huge story about Stehekin as well. I think that the area on that 1968 cover will receive fewer visitors this summer than any in recent years. Quote
lancegranite Posted June 12, 2004 Posted June 12, 2004 After years of second hand searching, I am the proud owner of the "Half dome clean issue" ....now, if I can only find it in this mess... Quote
johndavidjr Posted June 12, 2004 Author Posted June 12, 2004 Blake-- Why do you say that regarding fewer visitors? Lance--I remember being delighted by the Halfdome cover--can't remember whether Galen Rowell shot the pic, or was its subject. Quote
Blake Posted June 12, 2004 Posted June 12, 2004 Blake-- Why do you say that regarding fewer visitors? Because Cottonwood camp (the start of the brushbash/cimb to Trapper lake) is now a 13 mile hike from the end of the Stehekin Road. The trail to the Pelton Basin dropdown point to trapper lake is also a few more miles from the road due to washouts from Boston Creek. Quote
Alex Posted June 14, 2004 Posted June 14, 2004 Blake-- Why do you say that regarding fewer visitors? Because Cottonwood camp (the start of the brushbash/cimb to Trapper lake) is now a 13 mile hike from the end of the Stehekin Road. The trail to the Pelton Basin dropdown point to trapper lake is also a few more miles from the road due to washouts from Boston Creek. Trapper Lake is an easy 4 hours from Cascade Pass trailhead, though, with no real bushwacking and only a small river ford. Fine fishing in that lake. One of my first ever and still most memorable trips in NOCA was to Trapper Lake with Eric Bindseil, Geoff Radford, Toni et al. Good Times!! Quote
Blake Posted June 15, 2004 Posted June 15, 2004 Blake-- Why do you say that regarding fewer visitors? Because Cottonwood camp (the start of the brushbash/cimb to Trapper lake) is now a 13 mile hike from the end of the Stehekin Road. The trail to the Pelton Basin dropdown point to trapper lake is also a few more miles from the road due to washouts from Boston Creek. Trapper Lake is an easy 4 hours from Cascade Pass trailhead, though, with no real bushwacking and only a small river ford. Fine fishing in that lake. One of my first ever and still most memorable trips in NOCA was to Trapper Lake with Eric Bindseil, Geoff Radford, Toni et al. Good Times!! Now you have to walk just to get to the cascade pass TH though. Once you get to that ntoch to the left of Pelton Peak/Yawning Galcier (below small cirlce of snow), what's the route into Trapper like? Quote
Alex Posted June 15, 2004 Posted June 15, 2004 You can see most of the route in this photo, you hike down the CassPass trail below Sahale Arm until it starts curving left as to go towards Horseshoe Basin. 'Schwack (short) through the timber to nice alpine medows and creek bottom below Pelton. Here ford creek. Head up large talus blocks towards small circle of snow in this pic to a small col. Some goat paths throughout. The descent down to Trapper Lake from this point is down a very steep alpine grassy hillside. We did it with full packs, so its not too bad. But it would be very dangerous when wet! We camped at the head of the lake, where the S Glacier runoff feeds Trapper Lake. Awesome place to be. Awesome fishing. S Glacier is an awesome route. Everything about this area is superlative! Quote
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