brambo Posted July 16, 2008 Posted July 16, 2008 (edited) Trip: Mt. Baker - North Ridge up, Coleman-Deming ski down Date: 7/12/2008-7/13/2008 Trip Report: ThomasB and I climbed the North Ridge of Mt. Baker last weekend. A superb snow/ice climb! Walked/skinned up to Heliotrope ridge on Saturday (see approach notes below). Great views from the campsite on Heliotrope ridge. Woke up early on Sun (3am, after not wanting to wake up for half an hour). Left camp at 4am and started skiing down with headlamp. After a short ski down put on skins and started traversing through complex glacial terrain (read: lots of crevasses). Met up with two other groups here (all on foot). Had to pull out the rope to belay over one snowbridge. Kept the rope on for the remainder of the glacier traverse. Saw some people who bivouaced just west of the north ridge toe (I'm not sure if I would sleep very well here below the seracs of the NNW face). Opted for the left hand start of the ridge. An interesting, but not too technical bergschrund crossing at the start led us on the north ridge proper. Snow was already pretty soft on the slope(facing the sun), but not really a problem here. Did a couple of simul-climb ropelengths (used pickets/ice axe for belay) until the slope mellowed out, at which point we took off the rope and walked to the start of the ice tongue (crux). Snow was much firmer up high. Choose to go up high and close to the ice tongue, and then traverse over to the left on steepish (~45dg) sometimes dirty ice slopes just below some rotten rock and not too unstable looking seracs. Started belay when we were out of this somewhat sketchy zone. Good ice screws. Probably better to traverse on snow/glacier lower down and then go straight up to the leftmost part of the ice tongue (where it formes a ridge). From the leftmost part of the ice tongue Thomas fearlessly led the crux, but as it turned out, it wasn't nearly as steep as some reports mentioned. Perhaps a couple of meters of 55 degrees. After this we continued simulclimbing on very enjoyable, moderately angled ice!! Impressive views of seracs on our left. Continued simulclimbing for a while until slope mellowed out again. Used ice screws on the ice tongue, and pickets higher up on the slope. Walked up to the bergschrund that guards the summit. By this time we were pretty tired, and going was slow but steady. We had lost sight of the (three) groups behind us (they topped out of the right hand couloir when we were climbing the crux). Started using rope (simulclimbing w/ pickets) again below the upper bergschrund and finally topped out on the false summit plateau just before 1pm (total time just under 9hrs). Happy and ready to ski! But first a short jaunt to the true summit. The wind was pretty brutal (pretty much since we started on the crux of the route), so we didn't stay long. Skied down the Roman wall in pretty decent snow. At the pass between the Coleman and Deming glaciers we had to take off our skis for a bit, but after that we were good to go again. Crossed some small crevasses en route (perhaps 20cm wide), but as long as you don't turn right on top of them you should be fine ;-) Had to skin up to our camp, and after some relaxing and drinking lots of water we headed back down the way we came. Some more reasonable skiing and some more bushwhacking. Good times! I'll see if I can post some pictures soon. Gear Notes: Skis, skins, 2x25m twin ropes, 8 ice screws, 3 pickets, 2 ice tools (used all gear). We simulclimbed pretty much everything, so a bit longer rope would probably have been faster (30-35m), or a bit more gear would have done the trick too. Approach Notes: From Glacier Creek Road/Heliotrope Ridge Trailhead (3700ft) walk along the west side of Grouse Creek through mature forest. Head into slide path when forest starts to steepen (bushwhack). Skiable from approx. 4600ft. At 4700ft follow a snow filled gully to the SE and onto Heliotrope Ridge. Camp at ~7100ft. Edited July 16, 2008 by brambo Quote
CraigM Posted July 30, 2008 Posted July 30, 2008 what did you do for water, did you have to melt snow. I am doing Coleman- Demming this weekend and wondering how much fuel I need to bring. Quote
jonnyd Posted July 30, 2008 Posted July 30, 2008 Plenty of running water below 6000 ft...last weekend we did not have to melt any water. j Quote
mtn_goat_1 Posted July 31, 2008 Posted July 31, 2008 I'm climbing Coleman-Deming this weekend, with a planned camp betweem 6,000-7,200 feet. Do you know if the camp will be rock or snow now? Any water above 6,000 feet? Thanks! Quote
Swedeclimber Posted August 1, 2008 Posted August 1, 2008 Two weeks ago the camps on the Hog's back was rock, but snow in between them. Plenty of running water. Higher up I would expect to melt snow. We saw several teams camping higher up the glacier. Quote
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