mikebromberg Posted June 18, 2013 Posted June 18, 2013 (edited) Trip: Mount Macdonald, Rogers Pass, BC - Northwest Ridge Integral D+ 5.8 Date: 6/16/2013 Trip Report: If you fancy long alpine ridge climbs with short approaches, you might enjoy Mt. Macdonald's Northwest ridge. We certainly did. The NW Ridge is gained via 600m of easy snow climbing up the Herdman Couloir, before a rising traverse of 4th and easy 5th class climbing leads to the upper of two "prominent notch"(es) of the Northwest ridge. From here, follow the ridge of good to excellent quality quartzite to the summit roughly 1000m later. Approaching with the Trans Canada Highway below. Alpine Quartzite. The upper headwall seen from the Promenade Ledge. The NW ridge climbs the right skyline. It looks like this at it's base This was a nice pitch. The summit pyramid. Alpine splendor: Syndicate Peak and the Dawson Range behind Mt Tupper, the Swiss Peaks, Mt Rogers and more alpine splendor. Despite being the birthplace of North American mountaineering and widely known as a winter destination, the Rogers Pass sees surprisingly little alpinist traffic. I've climbed a fair amount of moderate alpine routes, both in North America and in the alps, and I can say confidently that this route is in my top 10. Gear Notes: There is a fantastic new guidebook for the pass- "Rogers Pass Alpine Guide" by David P Jones . This is the "Centennial Edition" to the original 1912 guidebook to the Selkirk Mountains by Wheeler and Parker which was North America's First mountaineering guidebook. Approach Notes: From the picnic area just West of the Westernmost snowshed, travel downstream (East) 75m past the outhouse and find a gun position for winter avalanche control. From here descend to Connaught creeka and cross via a downed spruce spanning the torrent. Continue East and eventually uphill following a rocky stream bed to reach the Herdman Couloir. Edited June 18, 2013 by mikebromberg Quote
genepires Posted June 18, 2013 Posted June 18, 2013 (edited) that looks real nice and uncrowded like the other classics in the area. how would you rate it compared to sir donald? Edited June 18, 2013 by genepires Quote
mikebromberg Posted June 18, 2013 Author Posted June 18, 2013 I'd say that it has more sustained and harder climbing than the NW ridge of Sir D. Quote
JasonG Posted June 18, 2013 Posted June 18, 2013 Wow, that looks really fun! Is this an early season route, to take advantage of snow in the gully? Thanks for the report, I've added it to the list (and added the guidebook to my Christmas list). Quote
tvashtarkatena Posted June 18, 2013 Posted June 18, 2013 That thing looks like an eroded pyramid. Very cool. Quote
jmace Posted June 18, 2013 Posted June 18, 2013 Keep em coming!! I may spend my entire summer vacation allotment up in these parts, loving the photos to go with the topos I have been drooling over. Quote
mikebromberg Posted June 18, 2013 Author Posted June 18, 2013 I imagine that descending the Herdman couloir without snow would be a long, tedious and hard on the knees. A little bit of suffering aside, I'm sure it would still 'go' later in the season. Quote
bstach Posted July 9, 2013 Posted July 9, 2013 Thanks for posting. Adding this to my 'to do' list. Quote
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