Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

A friend of mine is visiting me and would like to climb one of the cascades. He has no mountaineering experience, but is an avid backpacker. Myself, I have very minimal experience, having only participated in some glacier travel classes (but no rescue courses). Would the south route up Mt. Adams be doable for us? Everything I've read seems to suggest it's a burly hike, but not technical. Or, would you suggest maybe another climb? Also, we'll be doing it first week of August--are crampons/ice ax necessary?

  • Replies 9
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

The South Slog isn't technical. You may need crampons but the boot track is usually ok without them. Depends on your level of comfort looking at a 2000 foot runout. On descent, you will be plunge stepping down this slope with the full view. Crampons will probably just ball up if its warm and make it more dangerous. I'd take an axe just so you can use it on the glissade not to mention the self arrest capabilities it gives you.

 

If you want the simplest Cascade climb, go hike up South Sister. Nothing but a long walk and lts of dust.

Posted
...He has no mountaineering experience... Myself, I have very minimal experience...

 

You'll be fine as long as you can follow the donkey trail and the visibility stays good. Map and compass/GPS if you have any doubts about that ability.

 

Please, please, please do NOT decide to make the glissade from the false summit to the Lunch Counter (the 2000 ft runout that Ducknut refers to above) with your crampons on. Every year our mountain rescue group goes up there to drag someone off the mountain with a broken leg/ankle. The cause? Glissading with crampons on. Despite what people might think about the braking abilities of crampons, they are only breaking possibilities. Take them off if you're going to butt slide.

Posted

Thanks guys...I'm pretty stoked about the trip, though I suppose it may be sorta blase.....By the way--would roping up be overkill? I ask only because my buddy doesn't have a harness, so we'd have to get one if it's necessary. Cheers.

Posted

Roping up would be total overkill. Heck, even crampons are overkill. As mentionned by others, an ax is a good thing to steer your glissade down (lots of glissading there).

 

drC

Posted

waterproof boots with tread (mine are worn out and still work this time of year), axe, glissade device (trash bag, rain pants), hat...warm clothes for high winds, food/water...that's all.

i 2nd bug's suggestion; without ski's/board you'll mostly be walking below lunch counter

have fun!

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...