Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

Trip: Shuksan - NF up, skied White Salmon down

 

Date: 5/12/2007

 

Trip Report:

It seems that Western Washingon finally, if temporarily, resolved its weather management issues this week. To avoid a sense of self-loathing, James (jhamaker) and I headed north to attempt the North Face of Shuksan. Our plan was to tely ski down to avoid the slogging celebrated in so many previous TRs.

 

 

The route

 

498158508_80dd1a4ced.jpg

 

 

The approach went quickly; a short stroll up to the lodge, flat ski to the end of the cat track, then a traverse to the valley with three straightforward gully crossings.

 

The valley itself is a phantasmagoria of avalanche debris; one of the largest avi fans I’ve ever seen.

 

 

Crossing Avalanche Alley

 

498157166_19bad34856.jpg

 

 

Hangin’ Judge’s Glacier

 

498186145_c19a06f817.jpg

 

 

No Hanging Around Glacier closeup

 

498186009_43dffc10f6.jpg

 

 

Rather than carry over, we chose to camp atop a safe knoll lower down and get up earlier the following morning. At 3:30 the following morning, we were trudging our way up to the col below the North Face. Snow conditions were horrible: breakable crust, but too icy to ski (ski crampons would have been useful here). At times, James was able to rice paper over the crust while my more corn fed frame punched clean through up to the middle of my shins. Right in the middle of a snowmobiling fantasy, I heard a snap, looked down, and noticed that my 3 section ski pole had suddenly developed a 4th section. So much for carbon fiber. My sleeping bag began to beckon me like a warm, stinky siren.

 

"Duct tape to the rescue!" James called out. He came equipped with a ski pole splint and enough duct tape to build reasonably waterproof mummy. There are definite advantages to climbing with a millwright.

 

Things quickly turned in our favor. The North Face was in perfect, firm condition. Weather was astounding. After an initial test belay, we stowed the rope and climbed. And climbed. And climbed.

 

 

It feels so good when it stops. On the North Face, Price Lake below

 

498186649_a7a7018a78.jpg

 

 

James practices his dance moves midway up

 

498158300_714dd71446.jpg

 

 

Sponsored by Value Village. Nearing the top of the North Face

 

 

498157710_cc67e65d4b.jpg

 

 

The telecrawling stage

 

498157286_7eb6c5bab3.jpg

 

After a quick traverse of the upper Hanging Glacier, we stopped to splint my ski pole and power nap in the warm sunshine. James scooped a handful of the Crystal Glacier. Perfect corn. A fast downward traverse and short ascent brought us to the Sulfide Glacier and the base of the summit pyramid. From there we kicked buckets up to the summit.

 

Dressed for success

 

498185919_e6368aa634.jpg

 

 

Can we ski now?

 

498186877_d8b96ddbce.jpg

 

One can ski from the base of the summit pyramid all the way down the mountain; a run of well over 5000 vertical feet with only one short ascending traverse to break up the fun. We tore down the Sulfide, through the Hourglass, or Hell’s Highway, or whatever it’s being called this week, and onto the Upper Curtis Glacier. From there we skinned up a rising traverse to the Pyramid and its attending ridge, then down the ridge to the notch.

 

Man in Tights. Traversing the Upper Curtis Glacier

 

498157864_24592b54e0.jpg

 

 

Where’s that notch? Upper Curtis Glacier

 

 

498187171_466e048113.jpg

 

 

The mean side of the summit pyramid

 

498186345_766c44649a.jpg

 

 

Once through the notch, we couldn’t see over the rollover, so we downclimbed. It turned out to be perfectly skiable.

 

This sucks: a vertical mile of perfect corn. White Salmon Glacier

 

498187087_a01aea7553.jpg

 

 

Carving some White Salmon

 

498158194_113a94e77d.jpg

 

 

Miraculously, perfect corn persisted all the way down, regardless of aspect, until about 500 feet from the valley bottom. At that point, the glop took over. James kicked down a good size wet slide, which we had to wait for like a slow moving freight train before crossing the final slope. After that it was just a matter of chattering across the avi debris filled valley back to camp.

 

 

Pardon my avalanche

 

498157954_2904b06e2d.jpg

 

 

James had dinner duty, so I crawled into my bag. He apparently asked me a question, and got nothing but a snore in reply.

 

The weather moved in that evening. By morning, it was raining.

 

Leaving camp in the poo

 

498186581_49f63c1128.jpg

 

Our skins would not adhere the following morning. Duct tape the rescue! James seemed to have an unlimited supply of the stuff.

 

Avi conditions on the way back had become extreme; we heard three slides kick off; and I dodged one baby slide just before the first gully crossing. Wet snow slides sound exactly like a waterfall, or someone skiing, both of which were happening at the time. Some incredibly minor change in volume must have tipped me off and caused me to look up and spot the avalanche as it came pouring down. I skied out of the way, promptly fell, bounced back up like a punching bag, and watched a few death donuts roll past.

 

I’d say hauling skis up the North Face, while seemingly cumbersome at first, is a far better option than carrying over. Skis make the approach trivial this time of year. They never really got in our way while climbing the North Face, which was mostly 40 to 50 degree firm neve for us. Circumnavigating the mountain and traversing five of its glaciers is much easier and far more enjoyable on skis. And the downhill run (if in shape, of course) has got to be one of the longest and most scenic in North America.

 

After a great meal at Milano’s in Glacier (highly recommended), James took over the driving while I did what I do best these days; I passed out.

 

I awoke just as we were passing the Tulalip Casino.

 

James turned to me. "You know, you don’t snore when you’re sitting up."

 

 

 

Gear Notes:

Ascent: lead climber had 1 Quark and 1 toy axe, 2nd had one light axe and a ski pole with an arrest grip. Crampons, one 30m rope, 2 pre-slung pickets. Not used: 1 screw, 3 small nuts, 2 long slings. Belayed one pitch at bottom.

 

Descent: Tely skis w/ skins. Ski crampons advisable.

 

Approach Notes:

Straightforward on skis. Lower lodge, following cat track to end, traverse and cross three gullies to valley.

Edited by tvashtarkatena
  • Replies 17
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted (edited)

Great work guys,

jhamaker is one of the most unpretensious and gifted mountain atheletes I've had the pleasure of sharing a rope with.

Edited by BigWave
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...
Posted

Very nice TR. The photo annotations are especially useful, like the route, the upper Curtis notch you need to hit, etc. I wish more folks did this with their photos.

 

Thanks!

johngo

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...