Knowsam Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 How much alpine ice is there w/1 day of Van? I'm looking for climbs that are 1-2 days door to door. Lots, a few, rare or none is specific enough. Are they summer or winter mountaineering routes. Anything else I need or should know would be great too. Thanks Sean Quote
G-spotter Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 lots, summer and winter you must like slide alder. because the approaches to nearly every alpine ice climb is thru the green bastard Quote
Knowsam Posted October 8, 2006 Author Posted October 8, 2006 Thanks for the response. Is there a guide book or just word of mouth and some adventure? Are these fourweek drive logging road routes or something I can get to in my 2WD and hike in? I've flipped through Alpine Select but there seems to be very few ice routes. Any help in finding more info would be great. Thanks again for the quick response. Sean Quote
genepires Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 Mt matier, a bit north of whistler is a good alpine ice face that is a reasonable weekend trip from van. no 4wd as you park right off the hwy. Nice trail in via the trail that goes by 3 nice lakes. camping right on the upper lake. climb up through the ice fall for a couple pitches to gain the glacier, then hike the glacier, preferably on the left side which is smoother, then over to the face, crawl through the schrund and up the 40 degree face for 3 ro 4 pitches. good descent down skiers R of the route and back to camp. There is another approach (that I haven't done) which bypasses most of the glacier too. Maybe someone else can help you with that. It is in the select guide. I thougth that this route is very cool, like a mini athabasca. Quote
G-spotter Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 the guide book you want is called "Climbing and Hiking in SW BC" by Bruce Fairley. Quote
Dr.Hook Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 I love slide alder. Aim for 3-4 days and your options will open up. Try the Tantalus Range. Quote
fishstick Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 There is certainly alpine ice within a day or a day and a half of Vancouver.  Much of the info on such is by word of mouth or acquired through mileage in the hills. Alpine Select, while a great book, tends to be somewhat rock-centric. The photos in the book however offer hints as to what's out there.  Fairly's book in my mind is no longer a good investment. Your money would be better spent on Gunn's scrambling guide to SW BC. The latter is vastly more up to date on approach info (critical on the Coast as it changes with logging plans) and has photos (beta). Travel super-light, hammer up some of his high points and look around. There's a world of white out there that can't be seen from the roads below. Gunn's scrambles also cover some intriguing areas off the common climbing radar.  Another book investment that I'd recommend is the "Backroad Mapbook" published by Mussio Ventures. It's painfully expensive at 40.00, but it provides a clear understanding of where stuff is in our complex landscape.  Overall, the alpine ice here is harder to see and somewhat harder to get to than the CDN Rockies or the Sierras, but it isn’t nearly as bad as some suggest. I’d recommend figuring stuff out by starting with routes that have reasonable trail access.  The normal season is rather short. September and October seem to offer prime alpine ice conditions. November rains quickly dump a meter of snow in the mtns and serve as a reminder that it’s time to go skiing.  GB Quote
curtveld Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 Maybe someone else can help you with that. Matier NW face is a good call. The other access is via Keith's hut in Cerise Creek. Also some glacier travel required, but no slide alder. You could probably do it in a long day with some headlamp hiking. Quote
G-spotter Posted October 8, 2006 Posted October 8, 2006 wedgemount area: wedge NR and NF routes Y couloir on parkhurst rethel couloir on rethel owls couloir NF weart  central garibaldi: NF castle towers EF or NF garibaldi  chilliwack valley: pleiades coouloirs priest-coupe on rexford  joffre group: 3 couloirs on NF joffre NW face matier stonecrop gl. on slalok  whistler area: NF fitzsimmons among others  further north:  NF Brew NF Sampson NF Crazy NF Plutus NF Meager  across the border NF Shuksan NF Baker ne face redoubt  winter/spring: cheam range north faces slesse couloirs nf harvey ne butt west lion nf ossa east face outram sumallo cirque  etc. Quote
Knowsam Posted October 9, 2006 Author Posted October 9, 2006 Thanks all, that's exactly what I was looking for. Quote
Don_Serl Posted October 9, 2006 Posted October 9, 2006 drew's hit most of the "hits", but watch out - the warmer weather over the past few years is melting routes out. for instance, Graham Rowbotham and I went up to repeat the Paymaster couloir on Crazy Mtn (Bralorne area) on Saturday, and it's GONE. the neighbouring "Plutocrat" looked to still be in. and the routes on Joffre seem to melt out early-ish now too. it seems like maybe some of these routes will revert to being summer (snow) climbs from being autumn (ice) routes - too bad! aside from the printed guides, check out bivouac.com. it's like $20 to sign up, but there's quite a bit of good info lurking, and recent updates on access too. cheers, don Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.