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Climb: Bear-DNB

 

Date of Climb: 8/22/2005

 

Trip Report:

Climbed the Direct North Buttress on Bear Mountain with Sky. We decided on doing a two day trip. Leaving Seattle early in the morning and doing the approach the first day, then doing the climb and hike out on the second. Sounded like a great plan to the both of us.

So...we leave Seattle around 4am on Sunday and headed for the border with our friends to the north. We were slightly apprehensive, and Sky had a few butterflies as we neared Sumas, due apparently to some run-ins with the RCMP and Whatcom Co. Sheriffs Office from a few years prior. However we were greeted by a very friendly Canadian beauty who's only question was what took so long coming back up to visit...

Once through the crux of the route everything else seemed like a breeze...we were home free now.

Except...true to form we lost the trail as soon as we were on it and found ourselves in a marshy wasteland cursing as we sunk ankle deep into the murk. This was followed by some nice hiking in old growth cedar forest, and then by some seriously heinous bushwhacking through more murky swampy vinemaple and devilsclub thickets.

After a few miles we located the trail again shortly before Bear Creek. Up the ridge and into amazing blueberry grazing grounds where we, and especially Sky, indulged in natures bounty.

3988Approach.jpg

We weren't sure if there was going to be water up at camp, but Ruta Lake seemed out of the way, so we decided to chance it and head straight to camp. At the saddle we could hear a water trickle coming off a buttress a little higher and went to water up.

The next morning we awoke at 4:45 to clouds and fog, and slowly ate and got shit ready. Decending the scree/talus slope down and around the NW Buttress was easy but tedious, and as we rounded the buttress the immense N side of Bear became visible.

3988Readying.jpg

 

Shrouded in swirling fog and cloud it looked ominous, feeling super tiny with this enourmous wall with huge buttresses dropping down around us I felt truely in the hall of the mountain king.

3988InTheHall.jpg

 

We put on crampons to cross and ascend the glacier to the toe of the buttress, up a little farther we found a nice place to access the slabs. We didn't waste much time getting off the glacier with all the ice popping and creaking and Sky and I both standing on a precarious looking/feeling block of ice.

I started up the slabs while Sky made himself a bit lighter. I tried to kill him with a 30lb trundle but failed because Sky even while squatting has the reflexes of a cat and quickly jumped out of the way to safety. With that excitement over we made our way up the slabs and did a bit of spicy moves in the tennis shoes before stopping to belay.

Sky led a pitch up to the top of a pedestal and then up to the base of the prominent dihedral. I got the dihedral pitches which went as one long rope stretcher. Super fun climbing with a little bulge to pass. We did one pitch for every two on the Kearney topo and quickly found ourselves on the big snow patch ledge.

3988SkyIntoSqueeze.jpg

3988Traverse.jpg

We continued linking pitches up improving rock and climbing. Sky got the great corner fist crack pitch which we both thought was the best of the route...not technically difficult but nice and sustained on probably the best rock of the route. Up up up, and soon enough we were on top after 8.5 hours on the rock.

3988Satisfied.jpg

My first thought after topping out was "That's it?" WTF?...I had come expecting sustained hardish climbing and instead found mostly moderate climbing with a couple little cruxy spots. The only thing I could think of was the great line from Chuck D. and Flava: "Don't Believe the Hype!" hahaha.gif

Quickly back to camp for a feast of smoked sardines, trout and crackers and we were ready for the long haul out.

This time we were able to actually follow the trail most of the way which makes life way better....then it got dark.

We took turns intermittently following and then losing the trail,backtracking,bushwhacking and generally wandering in circles until we stumbled out and onto the end of the abandoned road...phew! cantfocus.gif What a relief.

Back in Chilliwak we hit the pub for beers and Miccydees for burgers and fries and headed for home.

 

 

Gear Notes:

60m 9mm

Largish rack including some tiny stoppers

 

shoulda had: more tequila

 

Approach Notes:

Trail was hard for us to follow cause we're retards and bushwhacking is way more fun.

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Posted

We just call him the mountain peacock, but the devil is close enough. Seeing all of these rad trips going down from the saftey of my armchair demands death defying acts of standing up and walking. Only a devil would set me on that god aweful course. Instead of raising arizona, the mountain peacock is raising the desk jockey. The copy machine traverse is truly exposed. smile.gif And the fax machine crack offers no protection? smile.gif Yet, I managed to survive another day. Whew.

 

...Nice work guys.

Posted
I started up the slabs while Sky made himself a bit lighter. I tried to kill him with a 30lb trundle but failed because Sky even while squatting has the reflexes of a cat and quickly jumped out of the way to safety.

 

headline caption, NWMJ#3.

Posted

Smoked sardines and trout? EEEEWWWWWWWWWWWW!!!!!! smile.gif

 

Nice climb guys. I've often thought about doing it, and yes, like you said, I figured it would be hard and sustained. Sounds worthwhile anyway...

Posted

Don't believe the hype Josh, it's super cruiser fun action.

It is definitely a damn fine, big route, but I've got to say that whomever Kevin Mclane is referring to in his Alpine Select book in the quote "likened in quality by one ascensionist to the Beckey-Chouinard in the Bugaboos" is clearly smoking crack or has not climbed both routes or both. Because the DNB on Bear IMHO does not even belong in the same class as the B/C route. But that's just me.

Posted
Smoked sardines and trout?

 

Yeah dog, you take those bad boys and roll them up in a little tortilla...funky fish taco. Make your breath smell for days. But damn, so good, ultimate summit food.

Posted
is the Beckey-Chouinard harder or just better rock/ better climbing.

 

both. but how many moderate alpine rock climbs are better than the Beckey-Chouinard on Howser in NAmerica?

 

Bear DNB is more remote and has more of a wilderness feel.

Posted

Beckey-Chouinard I thought was generally more sustained all around, and the rock is waaayyy better and the climbing more aesthetic.

I agree with jb that Bear does have a certain "wilderness" feel that the Howsers do not. Probably because there are so many people in the Bugs.

 

On the "wandering 5.9" pitch we kinda went straight up for a bit then around left and up some wild face climbing.

Posted

Nice work gents. thumbs_up.gif Doing the climb and the de-proach in one day is burly. We didn't have enough Knob Creek to pull that off.

 

Yeah, that corner fist crack pitch stands out, though many of its inferior kin offer stupendous position. A couple weeks ago we had clear skies (and hot!) which afforded spectacular views of Redoubt, et. al. Glad you guys enjoyed the route; I agree an outing on Bear has a wild feel, but even better, wild huckleberries!

Posted

Damn, those huckleberries were soooo good. Sky stopped and munched them by the fistfull for about half an hour while I napped on a large boulder.

The weather came and went while we were up there...mixed clouds/fog and sun. Mox Peaks were looking awesome poking out above the fog like a couple of huge fangs. Yeah!

Posted

Berries are the best. The abundent blueberries were the only thing that kept me sane during the day of hellish thirst on Index and the hungry walk out. It is actually pretty surprising how much moisture those things contain if you eat them in a large enough quantity.

Posted

Too bad you missed the opportunity to peer down the north face from the summit. That's one of the best parts of climbing Bear Mountain.

yellaf.gif

If that's what I wanted to do I would have done the walk up.

Posted

Yeah, it is still pretty cool to top out tho, even after climbing a technical feature. The thing I would have found most interesting would be if there was a summit register, and, if so, what kind of stuff was in it. That is always kind of neat to check out when you are on mountains that get climbed much less often.

 

Looks like even walking up that thing would be a bitch. All and all, it's hard to question a decision to just get off and go enjoy some bigdrink.gif.

Posted

From camp to the top of the NB is cruiser hiking across talus and meadows. From the top of the NB it's a fair ways to the summit via easy ridge walking/scrambling.

Like Sky said, all we wanted was to get down and bigdrink.gif

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