rocky_joe Posted October 2, 2009 Posted October 2, 2009 Trip: Dragontail Peak - Serpentine Arete Date: 9/25/2009 Trip Report: In a last weekend of summer hurrah, Thomas (Maineiac) and myself made our way up to the Enchantments for a little bit of an alpine fix. In usual fashion the trip was an interesting one, with lots of twists and turn, both planned and unplanned, along the way. A few online conversations, phone calls and email had given rise to a brilliant plans, a plan so crazy that it just might work. As our mutual favorite artist was to be playing a show in SE PDX on Wednesday night, we made plans to drive up and hike in thursday, climb fri-sat and drive out saturday as well (in order to get to PDX in time for free beer at the Ice Fest). Wednesday: Leaving Eugene at 5pm we arrived in PDX around 7:30. only one stop was made along the way; a stop by Mendeg's house in SE to pick up some new cams (thanks again Gent!). We got to the venue around 8 (about 3 mins before they opened) and we rudely shooed out of the place by some mangy fixie kid, fuckin hipster. After deciding that leaving a car full of gear parked on morrison was less than brilliant we drove over to a garage in downtown and parked there. We made our way back over the morrison bridge, stopping only for some $2.50 pints along the way. back in the SE at 9, the show had yet to start so we found ourselves seated in the fine establishment across the street: Sassy's. What a place that is, cheap drinks and cheaper women--suits us just fine. A few dancers later we made our way to the show. It was fantastic and with it behind us we could now focus on the task at hand. Thursday: The drive up to Leavenworth was fine, not much traffic through Tacoma or Seattle, but not much as far as views through most of the pass. Once in 11worth the clouds had cleared, and God is that a weird weird little place! Great brats and beer, but damn, I've never seen (nor have I wanted to)so much leiderhosen (or how ever it is spelled). A beer was drank and a brat eaten and we found ourselves back in the car and on the way to the TH. the TH was fairly empty and we made quick time getting on the trail and good time to Colchuck; about 1hr 40mins. Views of the mountain are, as I'm sure a good number of you know, stellar. Absolutely one of the most gorgeous places I've seen. We set up camp, had some dinner and studied the topo and the mountain. Sleep was good and we definitely heard some goats outside the tent doing whatever it is those things do. We woke a wee late (on trail by 7am) but made fair time getting to the route and were scrambling up the first ramp by 8:45. God that moraine is steep. We roped up rather early and pitched out the upper 4th stuff before, through and after the gulley. Being rather new to alpine rock, neither Thomas nor I felt entirely comfortably simuling anything that might be a bit spicy. The climbing was easy and we decided on a little mid 5th variation just before the 5.7 OW. Good call that was, a little interesting chimney with a fun internal crack system. The crux pitches went really well, Thomas took the lead on the hardest crux pitches; his lead head and confidence is quite a bit stronger than my own. I was happy to let him lead, while I carried the back pack and cleaned. The 4-5 pitches of 5.6-5.8 are really fun climbing, a few tenuous moves, a few exposed, but mostly really fun solid locks and jams. Above the difficult stuff the climb gets, how do you say, interesting. The TRs I'd read had definitely mentioned the difficult route finding, and they aren't kidding. this proved to be the crux of the climb. So, being a bit in doubt of where the climb went I took the "lead" through the easier stuff and followed the two route finding rules I could remember: follow signs of people and areas free of lichen. Keeping this in mind we went up, up and away (from the route). So turns out that the two reasons that rock might be lacking lichen are, a) people climbing and b) water flowing. Bet you can't guess which one we ended up following. Not only was I following the lichen free rock, I kept seeing relatively fresh foot prints. In no way would I describe our ascent as fast. Was it efficient? For the methods we chose (pitch most all of the climb out) we were pretty fast, but again, despite the climbing being easy, we weren't comfortable simuling most of the terrain. Everything was going pretty well, until the sun decided to go down. God that made things fun. Then I bonked. And if we needed more encouragement we found brand spanking new rap slings, apparently the party ahead of us was off-route and bailed here. So much fun at this point it was intolerable. Then Thomas called down from the sharp end, "hey dude, it's really steep up here, I don't know where to go." ---- "FUCK! Reallly?!?! Alright dude, set an anchor and bring me up." I get to Thomas about 20 metres later and find him standing between some flake and a super steep headwall. To the left is a slab that has a big bulge and the only climbable feature (at least for us) is a short OW. To the right is a steep (80-85) flake system...looks even harder. We initially resign ourselves to an on-route bivy; but in the end (about 45 minutes later) I lift my head and say, "fuck it, get me the gear, I'm aiding the fucker." The crack went pretty well, a little modified French freeing and I was to easier terrain. Then the summit; bliss. I belay Thomas up and we celebrate that we will be sleeping on the summit and not in some God-aweful squeeze chimney. I dunno how much warmer the summit was, but it was nice to be able to lay down. And I know what you're asking yourself, so I'll spare you the curiosity, we took turns playing Jake Gyllenhall: things got REAL cozy in that space blanket. A few hours of uncontrollable shivering and the sun was up. God it was nice to see that sun. The next beast we tackled was the descent. The Beckey guide just says follow class 3 ledges down to Ass-guard pass, too bad it didn't say which way the ledges were. As the left looked like it would definitely send us over the glacier we elected to go skier's right. After a few hundred feet it cliffed out and we did three raps. Solid slings at the first two and then a 2 stopper and tri-cam anchor at a hanging belay about 30m off the ground. Quick descent from there littered with encounters with hikers asking if we were the headlamps on the mountain last night. Honestly, I can't see myself going up Aasguard for fun anytime soon. We got back to camp and made the best meal I've had in a good long while: TunaMac. So good after no food for a good long while. All in all, the climbing was fun, the scrambling sucked and I am now a lot more confident in my alpine skills. I don't feel we made bad decisions, our lack of speed was largely due to lack of practical experience. Perhaps we should have selected an easier route, but I'm stoked to have this one under my belt and have put a lot of this year's goals into perspective. Pictures to come later. Gear Notes: double from #2 metolius to #2 C4 and a #3 set of stoppers and a few hexes bunches of slings Approach Notes: Stuart TH Quote
mountainsloth Posted October 2, 2009 Posted October 2, 2009 easy to get lost on that route. we followed the rule of "stay on the ridge" after the crux pitches. we still got off route and i believe finished the route via the last pitch or two of backbone. that mountain is certainly an adventure! plus... epics make you a better climber... provided you live through them! Quote
LostCamKenny Posted October 2, 2009 Posted October 2, 2009 a little modified French freeing sounds technical... Quote
Le Piston Posted October 2, 2009 Posted October 2, 2009 I wondered if you guys would post here. I met you heading down Asgaard pass. Way to get it done! That is a great route, but can be "interesting" route finding. Like I said when we talked, I'm glad to know I'm not the only one who can turn a 5.8 route into 5.10 adventure. Keep up the good work! Quote
111 Posted October 2, 2009 Posted October 2, 2009 yup, that sounds pretty standard for the route! Quote
112 Posted October 5, 2009 Posted October 5, 2009 So much fun at this point it was intolerable. I like the team portriat. Nice TR and photos. Quote
goatboy Posted October 5, 2009 Posted October 5, 2009 I'm a little confused by that final photo. Maybe you're on rappel? Quote
Jim Posted October 5, 2009 Posted October 5, 2009 Good job guys! It's getting cold up there at night. Our unplanned bivy was in the summer! Quote
rocky_joe Posted October 6, 2009 Author Posted October 6, 2009 The final photo is taken from the base of the last rappel. super clean granite with some interesting cracks...wonder if any of it has been attempted. Quote
3sheets Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Classic! My partner and I were the ones slightly ahead of you guys at the base and headed up Backbone/Fin Direct. We were wondering about you two. We were on the summit kind of late ourselves and we were quite worried about your progress. For us the descent was the biggest bitch, getting around the snirt/ice above Asguard. We should have rapped but we ended up traversing the shrund. We didn't see any headlights coming down but we bailed and hiked out that night. Really glad to see that you made it out alright. Quote
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