Hunter Lee Posted July 22, 2012 Posted July 22, 2012 (edited) Trip: Mt Waddington - Main Summit via Bravo Glacier Date: 7/14/2012 Trip Report: After 7 months of anticipation and planning, a dozen or so people coming then not coming, Shawn, Chris, Henrik and I landed on the Tiedemann glacier late Saturday night July the 14'th 2012. The drive from Vancouver, with stops took roughly 11 hours- if one was determined they could do it faster. We were lucky that a helicopter was available shortly after we arrived- Summer fires in BC lure the White Saddle helicopters away from climbers for hours at a time. Mike and Audrey King at the White Saddle ranch on Bluff lake are super helpful, they'll get ya in there, best to show up ready to go cause things happen fast around there. The route up the Bravo glacier starts off easy and progressively gets more and more challenging. Zipping up to Rainy Knob is pretty straight forward, after that you will slow down as more and more crevasses appear. You will most likely need to belay someone across a few of them, as terrain and snow bridge condition merit caution. Note: we climbed in Mid-July, the snow pack that year was slightly above average, though the weather up until July wasn't all that hot. What we dealt with is probably an average scenario for that time of year. Once past Rainy Knob the terrain became a little more challenging, there were two sections that we pitched out: one was a crevasse above Rainy Knob the other was the Headwall just below Bravo Col. Once past Bravo Col the terrain once again turns mild with a few cold holes here and there. We once again encountered some difficult terrain high up on the hill, a crevasse just below the Tooth and Mt. Waddington required us to climb down into and up the other side. Note: there were other options: a steep snow back with a HUGE drop off or a long walk around could have got us to our high camp as well. The climbing begins once you leave the upper glacier just below the Tooth. This is a mix between 4'th and low 5'th class terrain. We pitched out the last bit before the Notch. Once at the notch you'll get a good dose of exposure, and you'll enter the chimney on the South East side of Mount Waddington. The book rates this as 5.7. We opted to climb up and to the right out of the Chimney as the left exit looked caked with snow and rime. The Mazama exit is rated 5.8, as is the direct exit. The rock is loose in spots here, so be careful! The views from Waddington are second to none. This area has a South American/Himalayan feel to it. Definitely worth the time and effort! High up on the route, above the SE chimney you will enter easier terrain. Here you see Henrik and I with the Tooth behind us...If I ever go back I'll definitely climb the Tooth! Not sure what the terrain looks like when there is no snow and ice, it could be low 5'th, for us it was mixed terrain that required rock pro, ice pro and snow pro. We all summated Mt. Waddington, there wasn't much room up top. This was the most exposed summit I've ever stood on! The view from the top is breathtaking to say the least. All in all it took us three days to climb up there. Day 1 from the Tiedemann to just below the Headwall on the Bravo Glacier. Day 2 from just below the headwall to high camp. Day 3 summit climb. This is the view from the main summit looking at the North-West Summit. Not much room on the summit: The Route We ended up pitching out 6 pitches, if conditions were better we might have scrambled more. The route was mixed, MI 2, with some rock at 5.8- though most felt 5.6 or 5.7. Yellow is the descent line down from the notch onto the upper snow pack. From high camp to the summit and back took us 13 hours. In better conditions we would have been much faster....though the ice and mixed climbing made the trip that much more enjoyable! Pitched climbing up high. Rack Used We used a standard alpine rack: -set of nuts -5 pins- knife blades, bugs, and an angle -full range of cams up to #3 Camalot, we doubled up on .75 and #1 -5 screws, 10cm, 2-13's, 16cm and one 22cm (for v-threads) -2 pickets -alpine draws (12 in total), be sure to bring a handful of double length slings for horns. Approach Notes: javascript:void(0) Edited July 22, 2012 by Hunter Lee Quote
Le Piston Posted July 22, 2012 Posted July 22, 2012 Congrats on a great climb and thank you for sharing the trip and pictures. Quote
wayne Posted July 22, 2012 Posted July 22, 2012 Looks like a great trip! Thanks for sharing it. Quote
Atraslin Posted July 22, 2012 Posted July 22, 2012 Bravo! Such a sick area. I don't think the true summit gets climbed very often. Nice work. Quote
JasonG Posted July 24, 2012 Posted July 24, 2012 Excellent, thanks for the TR! So, is three days to the summit very fast, or pretty normal if given good weather and conditions? That looks like one of the better summits in N.A.! Quote
HHinkkala Posted July 25, 2012 Posted July 25, 2012 Certainly was a fantastic trip, and a good trip report. My hand/thumb appears to be recovering okay, got it stitched up and hopefully after a few weeks i may be able to start climbing again... Quote
Dan_Miller Posted July 26, 2012 Posted July 26, 2012 Very good work guys! No doubt one to remember. There's a reason it's truly one of the Fifty Classics in NA. Thanks for the fine TR. Quote
Don_Serl Posted July 26, 2012 Posted July 26, 2012 Nice work, and a very concise and precise TR. Congrats! And oh boy, did you ever do well on the summit tower - that's a LOT of rime! Reminds me of photos from 20 or 30 or 60 years ago. You boys are obviously 'clean and competent' to pull thru all that in 13 hrs... Well done - I hope the numerous other parties who are planning Waddington Range trips this summer have similarly positive outcomes (there is a LOT of interest this year, for some reason). Quote
AlpineK Posted July 30, 2012 Posted July 30, 2012 Very good work guys! No doubt one to remember. There's a reason it's truly one of the Fifty Classics in NA. Thanks for the fine TR. Cool route and nice pictures Unfortunately ya gotta be like Fred and climb the South Face to score a 50-Classic Quote
Marko Posted July 30, 2012 Posted July 30, 2012 Way cool; thanks for the pics. Quite a wonderful place. Quote
wetrocks Posted July 31, 2012 Posted July 31, 2012 (there is a LOT of interest this year, for some reason). Last year Mike went up to the Yukon and Audrey ended up shutting operations down for a good part of the climbing season. There could be a bit of a backlog of climbers from 2011. It sure wasn't busy up there though. We had the place to ourselves. Only a few other climbing parties had been in before us. What a place. Can't wait to go back! Cheers, Chris Quote
Hunter Lee Posted August 28, 2012 Author Posted August 28, 2012 I think three days is normal. If one was forced to they could pull it off in 2 days, you'd have a couple long days though. The view from the summit is second to none! Quote
keenwesh Posted August 28, 2012 Posted August 28, 2012 we heard about the hand injury before we went in there. got to the base of the summit tower and that was fresh in our minds. Quite the area! Quote
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