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[TR] Distal Phalanx - North Arete (FA) 9/6/2008


John Frieh

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Trip: Distal Phalanx - North Arete (FA)

 

Date: 9/6/2008

 

Summary:

 

First Ascent of the North Arete of Distal Phalanx 5.10, A0 Grade IV. Sept 6th 2008 John Frieh and Craig Gyselinck

 

Distal Phalanx courtesy of John Roper

DistalPhalanx_falls_6.jpg

 

Connecting the dots...

Sure enough. Surf Mr Scurlock's long enough and you'll find something that'll make you swear under you breath and scramble for your stack of CAGs... seems to be a weekly occurrence for me. Only this time the offending picture had a link..?

 

Click.

 

Hook. Line. Sinker. Dr Roper roped me in with this:

 

"Distal Phalanx (7615+) is the central climax of the long, untouched north arete above Neve Creek"

 

I immediately fired off an email to the good doctor only to learn the untouched had recently "been touched though was still unclimbed"

 

Touched but still unclimbed? Why I wanted to know... Too chossy? Too hard? Beta? Details?

 

The good doctor forwarded my request for details and got this in return:

 

"They went up to McAllister Creek bridge to cross Thunder Creek."

Hmmm...

 

But whatever it was... chossy, hard, etc... it didnt really matter. I had sent the pic to Craig (Alpinemonkey) and he was stoked! Both of us had to be @ work Monday morning so we figured we had to be at minimum halfway up the arete on Saturday if not on the summit to allow enough time on Sunday to get out and home. After examining the terrain and mileage we would have to cover before the actual climbing we agreed we needed to be underway by 2:30 am. Unfortunately both of us had to work a full day on Friday so we didnt get to the TH until late... I had time for 2 hours of shut eye in the parking lot next to my car before having to puke and rally.

 

(Funny side story: some walking by around midnight felt the need to tell me to "get a tent" :laf::ass: )

 

We were on the trail @ 2:40. We reached the bridge across thunder creek quickly and promptly began the schwack up Thunder creek to Neve creek and on up to Distal Phalanx.

 

Neve Creek

neve1.JPG

 

Craig in a sea of Stinging Nettles

neve2.JPG

 

Craig and I joked "When I first saw the route my skin tingled! Then I realized it was just the stinging nettles" :laf:

 

Local riff raff

bbear.JPG

 

Neve Falls

neve_falls.JPG

 

Other falls (summit in upper left hand corner)

neve3.JPG

 

We started the arete around 11 am. Taking advantage of ramp systems and vegetation (veggie belay!) we were able to simul solo the lower half the arete (maybe a move or two at most of 5.6). As we didnt know where the next water source would be we started the arete with 4 liters each in addition to overnight gear on our backs... unfortunately the heavier packs, lack of sleep and effort already expended getting up Neve creek was starting to take a toll on each of us... it was apparent we were moving slower than normal. I was worried we werent going to make the summit by night fall.

 

We busted out the rope at the halfway point where the arete gets much steeper and began simul climbed until the terrain demanded we pitch it out. I think we each found our second wind or the fact that dusk was coming quickly and the upper arete lacked bivy ledges but we started climbing much faster.

 

Craig

craig2.JPG

 

craig3.JPG

 

craig.JPG

 

Neve Falls visible below

craig4.JPG

 

Closing in

john.JPG

 

Ask me about my windshirt!

john1.JPG

 

Summit!

craigsummit.JPG

 

We barely made the summit by nightfall... I followed the last pitch by headlamp. In the interest of finishing before dark we opted to A0 one or two moves instead of hauling packs (we both climbing the entire route carrying bivy gear + water for the next day).

 

We spent two hours trying to get a head start on the awaiting descent but more or less created more work for us the next day. We passed out in some bushes SE of the summit around 10 pm... 20 hours of effort on two hours of sleep had finally caught up with us :sleep::sleep::sleep:

 

Craig: So you're going to make coffee... right?

bivy1.JPG

 

The next morning we sorted out where we were and proceeded to climb back up over Styloid Peak and down to Thunder Creek. We searched in vain for some way across Thunder Creek to the easy trail on the other side... no such luck. Two days of schwacking had driven us :crosseye: we spent a good 15 minutes trying to prop a bean pole across one narrow point of the creek :noway:

 

Down thunder creek we marched... I repeated "one less step... each step counts" over and over in my head. To our surprise we made much much better time on the way out than back in and we back to the TH around 4:30 pm.

 

Epilogue:

I had a blast. Yeah... the approach is brushy but it is no way as bad as going into Bear. In fact... if you've climbed the CNB of Bear and felt the climb was worth the approach chances are you'd like this climb. It is after all awaiting a FFA! ;)

 

Gear Notes:

green, red, yellow c3

x1 0.3

x2 0.4

x2 0.5

x3 0.75

x2 1

x2 2

x2 3

x1 3.5 (old style)

x1 4 (old style)

70 m rope

5-13 nuts

 

hammer/pins (didnt use)

 

 

Approach Notes:

Ill edit my post with some maps and such.

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awesome you guys, congrats, a last great problem has been sent!

 

it was blake and I who made an attempt on Mantis earlier this year. we tried, but we were just too tired to finish from halfway up. we took the arete directly from the base and climbed some good 5.10 cruxes on reasonably clean rock down low. on the way out we found the cruiser approach: pyramid lake trail to pyramid bivy area, colonial glacier, to neve glacier, decend neve falls to the base (3-4 hours, not a lick of brush).

 

with the easy approach you could summit bag on the way out (snowfield, pyramid, paul bunyan's stump, colonial, etc.) for a pretty cool traverse in a unique corner of the cascades.

 

:brew::rawk:

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Did Roper tell you it was us looking for beta? You guys are a little stingy with the beta eh?

 

We both pulled on two pieces passing a tight chimney right of "the blob"... it's the second to the last point in the arete that overhangs on most sides. With out a pack in chimney it would have been easy but whatever... it's alpine :)

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Good job Craig and John! That's a very very long day to go from the trailhead to the top of that route in a push. We must have done a different line on the lower section, definitely found a little 5.10 down there, then lots of brushy simulclimbing to the halfway ledge where we left a cairn and bailed. There was some crazy lighting that made the upper headwall appear filled with chossy roofs, but your photos look good.

 

As Sol told the NCNP people "we're off to climb the Distinct Phallus!"

 

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Don't take A0 to hardcore, were just being percise and overly knit picky with our climbing. We said A0 because I know I did, pull on two pieces of gear near the top to gain about 5 feet to a hold. The nature of the move was awkward with my pack on, it was getting dark, and I was tired. Most parties would have just claimed a free ascent I immagine. So if someone goes to "nab" the FFA, you just freed I don't know, somewhere around 2000 feet of climbing, where we did 1995 ft.

 

I don't know if I agree with John's comparison to Bear's approach. Though they are both bad, I thought this was worse by far. Perhaps my lack of sleep put me in a cranky mood, or perhaps I have put Bear behind me forever. At least the way we went. It sounds like others have found an easier way to the peak though. John and I just like to add more flavor to our climbing.

 

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How Mantis and the area look for wintertime activities?

 

With the pyramid lake approach it would be quite accessible and looks pretty damn good. Darin's supercouloir of the cascades was still holding snow on the true mantis pk. (i think).

 

Dont climb anything Sky could potentially ski unless you solo it :laf:

 

Mantis itself looked slabby and crackless though I suspect you were looking at the couloir... when you moving back Mike? ;)

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