maxhasson Posted September 14, 2006 Posted September 14, 2006 (edited) Climb: Dragontail-Dragon Scar Date of Climb: 9/6/2006 Trip Report: The Beckey guides see a lot of action in our house. Countless cascade peaks are drooled over daily, even though we only see a handful every season. The right side of Dragontail had been calling to Jens for a long time, so we headed up to the Lake for a night in the woods. Wednesday morning found us below the wildly striated Colchuck glacier, pondering the options above. Many thin systems spiral upwards to the right of the Boving route, some of which could use a carefully drilled bolt or two, perhaps just a solid piton. We were not equipped with such advanced exploratory equipment, however, so we chose a pillar to shoot for and headed up a fairly protectable crack. Two intriguing, enjoyable, and just a little loose pitches found us atop a sweet ledge, faced with a variety of climbing options. Thin cracks again teased us with their scant pro, but Jens found a serpentine path up to the prominent rock scar above. This feature is quite obvious from the Lake below, and appears to have sheared away some time ago. Three right facing corners offered themselves to us, Jens deciding the left one too improbable, I attempted the right one with the same results. Clearly, the center line was the only thing between success and a long, expensive rappel to the glacier. Luckily, after removing a few clumps of moss, Jens was able to reach the crux roof, a challenging feature composed of wild blocks and surprisingly splitter jams. Atop even larger blocks he belayed me up, struggling for purchase I managed to send down a sizable chunk of granite. One last technical ropelength led me past some funky knobs and finally an enjoyable stembox, draging the heavy rope to a last belay below low angle ramps and ledges. From here we expected a possibly heinous 1200 feet of loose scrambling and intricate route finding. On the contrary, we found a superb path through orange flavored granite, depositing us on the summit ridge in less than half an hour. I trudged the last few 100 metres to the summit, my first time atop the dragon, and surveyed the vast spectacle of... smoke and haze mostly, forest fires have transformed the view into a murky panorama, unique but not quite as good as it gets. The descent proved uneventful, crampons and an axe were definitely appreciated, as the late season iciness has formed. All told we climbed 5 long pitches, found no evidence of previous ascent (although you can never really rule it out), got to the top, and made it to the trailhead just as our ride showed up. An excellent outing, and a bitchin' day. oh yeah, i think it's something like grade IV, 5.11aR... Gear Notes: standard rack, extra thin gear helpful Edited September 14, 2006 by maxhasson Quote
Alpinfox Posted September 14, 2006 Posted September 14, 2006 Wahoo! Sounds great. Did either of you take any pictures? What's the rating? Quote
maxhasson Posted September 14, 2006 Author Posted September 14, 2006 Jens peering up to his next task, top of pitch 2 pitch three, rooster finch(?) in bacground the wild upper portion posing down topo (sorry, a little big) Quote
Weekend_Climberz Posted September 14, 2006 Posted September 14, 2006 Nice trip. Another great route on the DT. Quote
Kat_Roslyn Posted September 15, 2006 Posted September 15, 2006 You guys are kick ass! Nice pictures too. Quote
hoodie Posted September 15, 2006 Posted September 15, 2006 Nicely done gents! Heres a couple pics to give a sense of the commitment (very) over on that wall. Climb starts lower left. Max and Jens. Quote
Off_White Posted September 15, 2006 Posted September 15, 2006 oooh, no lack of scars on that wall, eh? Nice pics Hoodie, thanks for adding to the story. Quote
layton Posted September 15, 2006 Posted September 15, 2006 that last pic hoodie posted is so very cool nice work Quote
maxhasson Posted September 15, 2006 Author Posted September 15, 2006 yeah, thanks hoodie, thats a sweet addition, were you guiding the colchuck that day? you're just visible under the ice ax in one of my fotos. Quote
slaphappy Posted September 15, 2006 Posted September 15, 2006 ...he said "guide Colchuck", bwahaaaaaaa! seriously though, nice job! - Quote
still_climbin Posted September 20, 2006 Posted September 20, 2006 Nicely done and great photos. I've looked at that wall for years and its good to see someone with you'e sense of adventure do it. Quote
olyclimber Posted September 27, 2006 Posted September 27, 2006 Sweet! Nicely done gents! Heres a couple pics to give a sense of the commitment (very) over on that wall. Climb starts lower left. Max and Jens. Quote
lunger Posted September 28, 2006 Posted September 28, 2006 deeeee-luxxxe nice work, love that vagarious d-tail rock "R" designation because of scant pro, copious loose rock, or (both) crappy pro in rotten/loose rock? .11 moves w/ long fall potential (ugh)? Quote
JensHolsten Posted September 29, 2006 Posted September 29, 2006 Thanks again for the pics Hoodie. That was a fun suprise to see those! The "R" designation is definetely for the crux pitch. Every pitch was more exciting than most I climb (seems to always happen in the mountains), but the real place to keep open eyes is pulling the crux roof. This feature, while incredibly splitter and fun, is a frightning collection of loose blocks. These blocks are all quite large and sharp. The rope being cut in the event of falling rock or even a leader fall is a possibility. Also, the belay is directly underneath the action (although when Max let loose a large block following the pitch it looked like it might have cleared the belay). That said, Max and I were blown away at how quality the climbing and the rock was on this line. I definetely recommend the route and would love to see what others think. Get after it! Quote
bwrts Posted October 3, 2006 Posted October 3, 2006 hey great effort...there is a nice chunk of stone there.... have you guys seen cole lately??? Quote
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