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Sleeper Routes


curtveld

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Plenty’s been said and written about the classics. Anyone care to offer up some unheralded Cascade routes that gave more value than expected. Just to get the ball rolling:

 

White Chuck – NE ridge: Varied climbing (lots of 3rd class, a glacier crossing and a bit of steep 5th class), solid rock and good access (via USFS #2436) make this a relatively painless alpine outing. Not a beginner’s route as protection is spotty.

 

Robinson Mtn. – North or “Crusoe” Couloir: An aesthetic couloir on the quiet side of a big mountain. Probably best in spring or early summer.

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The 1971 Gerber-Sink route on N. Face Dragontail is really fun, and you have a number of finishes to choose from. I'm thinking the Backbone Fin completion will be the way I go next time.

 

Also on Dragontail, the NE Buttress doesn't see much attention. Be forewarned that much of the information in the guidebook is flat out wrong. Good adventure to be had with likely no one else on that side of the peak.

 

East Buttress on Thunder Peak is good, and probably hasn't seen an ascent since Lowell Skoog did the FA. I did the lower portion a couple years before that, but we bailed after the second segment, fearing choss above. Faint hearts n'er win the prize, and Lowell assured me the upper part was just fine. Decent climbing, good rock, remote location. Guidebook is useless, but I recollect a decent account in the AAJ.

 

There's also Stellar Eclipse on the Whine Spire on Silver Star, still awaiting a second ascent lo these last 14 years.

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No one really thinks of the Chilliwack Valley as a destination for alpine snow and ice routes, but the Priest/Coupe on Rexford, and the north couloirs on the Pleiades, seem like good climbs. I haven't climbed them myself though so I can't proclaim them to be sleeper classics or chestbeat about being the only cascadeclimber to have done them. They might suck. Getting to the start of the Pleiades routes would certainly be a major thrash unless Red Mountain Mine Trail has been freshly brushed out (last pruned in 1999 that I know of)

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have you been up Mt. Pugh?

Pugh has a very airy trail to the top – built back in the 20’s to access the fire lookout. Haven’t heard of any technical routes, but it does appear to have potential.

Mt Pugh is a fun winter route.

 

One of the unhearlded routes - Traverse Denny Mountain to Chair Peak. Good cracker!

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It involves some ledgy wandering on solid rock, it's been a long time since I've been on it, so I don't recall just how much is 5th, I think it's a number of bits scattered all along the route. I do remember a tidy little chimney about halfway up to the fin. There's nothing as individually stellar as say the finger crack on Serpentine, but nothing as ho-hum as the long choss slog higher on that route. It's actually a perfect sleeper, moderate, solid, accessible, enjoyable, and not in fashion. Oh, and long enough that you'll know you've been out for a day.

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