Blake Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 I want to go up and climb Yak Check this spring or summer when it dries off and melts out. Does anyone know typically when the route can be climbed, or have a guess for when things will melt out this year? Thanks! Quote
DirtyHarry Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 Earlier than things in the higher mountains. Maybe once it stops raining. But you know this, Blake. Quote
catbirdseat Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 I had a look at it last weekend, and of course it is covered with snow, but things are warming up and the snow is melting fast. I should think you might climb it in a month or so if you get a spell of dry weather. Â It's a cool looking objective. Quote
G-spotter Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 It's usually snowfree but a bit damp by mid-late May. Personal opinion of best time to climb it is August or September. Â Bring kayak if climbing during thunderstorm Quote
bstach Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 The walk-off descent will likely have snow into mid-summer, steep at the top, if i recall correctly. Probably not something you want to do in runners, er, i mean tennis shoes. Might want to bring an axe, too. Or consider rapping the route. Late summer, it is an easy walk off with no snow. Quote
AlpineK Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 When I did Yak Check last we didn't have tennies; no big boots either. I didn't think the descent was that bad plunge stepping, but my partner is freaked out by snow and he had to face in the whole way down the snow. It all depends on how comfortable you are on snow. Quote
G-spotter Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 rapping the route is a dumb idea it only takes an hour from the summit back to the highway if you walk off, it takes longer than this to rap, plus the descent is via a different route (Yak Check) with shitty rusted rap anchors (some have been upgraded as of last year but some still feature sketchy bolts and/or tatty slings fixed to hand-removable pitons) Quote
bstach Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 When I did Yak Check last we didn't have tennies; no big boots either. I didn't think the descent was that bad plunge stepping, but my partner is freaked out by snow and he had to face in the whole way down the snow. It all depends on how comfortable you are on snow. Â Plung stepping in your rock shoes?! Nice. Â I agree it will mostly depend on the actual snow conditions that day and your personal comfort level on snow. Just wanted to make you aware that even if the climb is clean and dry, there will still be snow on the descent, including steep bits. Do with that what you will. Quote
AlpineK Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 (edited) It wasn't quite like that. We had rock shoes and some light weight hiking shoes. Â Dru I never said anything about rapping. I agree that's a bad idea. Edited April 12, 2007 by AlpineK Quote
bstach Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 It wasn't quite like that. We had rock shoes and some light weight hiking shoes. Dru I never said anything about rapping. I agree that's a bad idea.  I think Dru was replying to me.  I climbed this once a few years ago and walked off, so i don't really remember what the stations look like. I agree it would be faster to walk off. Quote
Sol Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 blake, just wait til the bypass glacier on sleese slides (usually july or august). climb sleese in a day. spend a day chilling and driving to yak. climb yak the next day and head home. its really not that rad, the domes and slabs in d-town are much more quality in my opinion, so spend your early season climbing those and tick yak whenever its conveinent. Quote
G-spotter Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 such sage advice from someone who can't even spell slesse right Quote
sill Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 blake, its really not that rad, the domes and slabs in d-town are much more quality in my opinion, so spend your early season climbing those and tick yak whenever its conveinent. Â I agree, it's not all that great, but in combination with a couple days in Squamish or somthing like Slesse it makes a worthy alpine cragging day. If you do it, climb Yak-Check as others have probably mentioned, the rock is a bit better that way. Quote
layton Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 Fuck those guys, it's fun as hell. As for conditions...you'll know when the time is right. Like the amulet you were born wearing. Quote
jordop Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 Fuck those guys, it's fun as hell. As for conditions...you'll know when the time is right. Like the amulet you were born wearing. Here here. Various rodent entrails can also be used. For full effect, one should also yak at the base yage style. Wicked full spectrum auras. Quote
layton Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 whatever, different strokes... Â Yeah, but you seem to not like a lot of alpine climbs you've posted about here, or seriously downplayed them. Quote
jmace Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 Just for comparison: I had no problems rapping the route the one and only time I've climbed it. Quote
bstach Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 I remember reading somewhere that the rap route follows Reality Check and has bolted anchors the whole way. But not having done it, I can't say for sure. Dru sounds like he knows what he is talking about, so I wouldn't count on it. Â Regardless, way faster to walk off. Quote
G-spotter Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 "Fixed" anchors are not the same as "bolted" anchors. Craig McGee and friends replaced the lower 6 stations last summer and removed some manky pins, replaced with solid bolts. Not sure if they got back and spruced up the top or not. I remember that the anchor above and right of the through-flake was rusty hardware with ugly bleached tat in 2005. Â The anchors on Speedway are way nicer. Metolius Rap Hangers almost the whole way (there's one anchor with one regular bolt and a quicklink). But Speedway doesn't top out. Quote
bstach Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 Oh, I get it....so "fixed" is code for "shitty rusted rap anchors with tatty slings and hand-removable pitons". Â I laerned something today on teh interwebs. Quote
G-spotter Posted April 13, 2007 Posted April 13, 2007 "fixed" could be anything from brand new bolts to a sling around a tree. it just means that anchors of some sort are in place. Quote
gertlush Posted April 14, 2007 Posted April 14, 2007 ..and don't drink the coffee from the little shop... Quote
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