danhelmstadter Posted May 14, 2012 Posted May 14, 2012 Trip: American Border Peak & Canadian Border Peak - abp - east face, cbp - sw face Date: 5/10-13/2012 Trip Report: I took this photo from the summit of Pleiades in early February, at first glance, a ski line on the east face of ABP seems improbable, but the photo captivated my imagination and eventually provoked me to attempt ABP, Twice I made it to the summit of Winchester in April, getting shut down first by a nasty cold, then by stormy weather. approximate route I climbed and skied on ABP (photo from feb 12) On Thursday I went in heavy with extra food and gas. Bivying by the south face of Larrabee, the night was cold, and snow solid the next morning for the approach. The first sight of the east face of ABP was not inspiring. Conditions appeared to have deteriorated considerably since February - melted out and runnelled. I decided to keep circling 'round in hopes of more coverage on the NE aspect, there was. I climbed up moderate glaciated slopes for about a thousand feet, then went left onto the steep east face, following what appeared to be the least icy way. The way was complicated, a few times I thought I would dead end in a chute and have to back track, but it went, twisting and turning up chutes and ribs. Conditions were a little scary. There was lots of icy slide worn neve, and lots of crust, with powder here and there shallowly burying the slickened neve. There was just barely enough snow clinging to the summit nub to make it skiable. Exposure was intense, especially looking down the sheer ~1000' cliff of the west face. I clicked into my skis and cautiously made my way down. Lots of crust, ice, death balls, and edgy runnels made catching a tip and taking a slide for life a frightening possibility. Friendly snow conditions such as pow or corn would have made this a much different experience, instead I was on edge the whole time. I headed back to my bivy feeling good, and decided to ski the cool looking southwest face of Canadian Border Peak the next day. Approaching CBP was somewhat of a pain in the ass - probably just a few miles, but lots of up and down getting over cleavers of high basins. The SW face of CBP was fun to shred, much less serious than the east face of ABP, and conditions were ideal for fast turns. I skied the sw face from 50 feet below the summit where the snow ended. The next morning I skied lookers left on south face of Larrabee, nice & friendly low stress conditions. South West face CBP Views from the summit of ABP east face abp, no bueno conditions low on abp turns on moderate slopes down low on abp north face of larrabee abp from somewhere on cbp view of international border cool formations I already miss the soft hazy red sunsets over Tomyhoi. Quote
G-spotter Posted May 14, 2012 Posted May 14, 2012 You got any shots of the east face of Tomyhoi? Quote
JasonG Posted May 14, 2012 Posted May 14, 2012 Stunning lines as usual Dan! These have got to be first descents? Quote
Gaucho Argentino Posted May 15, 2012 Posted May 15, 2012 Dude, freaking awesome!! How many people did you see over how many days over there? Quote
Stefan Posted May 15, 2012 Posted May 15, 2012 Twice I made it to the summit of Winchester in April, getting shut down first by a nasty cold, then by stormy weather. so you mean to say, when we don't see a trip report from you, you were still out being a badass? that was one haul out to CBP....AND back! Quote
ryanl Posted May 15, 2012 Posted May 15, 2012 "The SW face of CBP was fun to shred, much less serious than the east face of ABP, and conditions were ideal for fast turns. Yeah, Dan, looks like a mellow, shred-able, line. Pull any tricks along the descent to make it interesting at least? Quote
danhelmstadter Posted May 16, 2012 Author Posted May 16, 2012 G-spotter, I didn't get any this time, here's one from mid December. Sure is an impressive face, most of the snow on it as of now looks rotten, runnelled and ready to slide off. Gaucho, I didn't see anyone else, except I'm pretty sure I saw John Scurlock's yellow plane flying nearby when I was on the summit of Larrabee. Quote
JoshK Posted May 16, 2012 Posted May 16, 2012 Dan, Glad to see you kicked that cold and got back in there for another shot. That stuff looks nuts...awe-inspiring as always! Quote
jordop Posted May 17, 2012 Posted May 17, 2012 Holy fuck, that is awesome. Even more so that you did it solo. So many impressive local lines that people always overlook in the search for sickness. Quote
Atraslin Posted May 22, 2012 Posted May 22, 2012 Poaching a line in Canada eh.Or is it still on the US side. That ABP face looks wild. Quote
G-spotter Posted December 12, 2012 Posted December 12, 2012 I was talking to Fred Beckey last week and he was blown away when I told him that this line had been skiied on ABP. He just shook his head and said "Wow." Quote
JasonG Posted March 22, 2018 Posted March 22, 2018 I wish the pics still showed!!! I totally forgot about Dan's descent of ABP, thanks @G-spotter. I remember looking down that face....I don't see how anyone could ski it and live. But that's Dan for you. Quote
olyclimber Posted March 22, 2018 Posted March 22, 2018 With a little work I was able to get the images out of the Wayback Machine. I think Dan's account on that image hosting site is gone...and there are other TRs with images on that same hosting service with the same issue. Thanks @G-spotter for nominating this one, and @JasonG for the challenge. And of course.... @danhelmstadter for the TR! 1 Quote
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