lunger Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 On August 13 and 14, Rolf Larson and I -- henceforth little and big jackass respectively -- pioneered a line on the North Face of South Hozomeen (properly: Hozomeen Mountain, South Peak). If you've seen it, you know this thing is intimidating and steep. (By some objective measures, this peak is one of the steepest in the lower 48, and "... the South Peak ... has the steepest North Face of any peak in the Northwest.") We'd gawked at it from N Hozomeen three years ago, speculating that a massive, slanting dihedral feature might be the only feasible route for mortal climbers. Turns out it was feasible, just. Our line begins directly beneath the overhanging summit, travels more or less straight up to gain what we've dubbed (in respectful honor of Fred) the feature, and then primarily grinds up the right-hand facet of the giant corner to reach the summit ridge a couple/few pitches from the summit. ( BTW, big props to Beckey bros and crew, who summitted this beast in 1947 via the SW route. Inspiring. A movie honoring Fred worth sponsoring, if you somehow missed it: ) North Face, IV+, 5.9. 13 pitches to the W ridge, plus a short pitch to join the top of the SW route and then take in its crux pitch. We shiver-bivvied on a sloping ledge 11 pitches up, perched on the exposed right margin of the dihedral, a couple thousand feet above the basin--pretty cool. As far as we know, no other route has been established on this face. The pitches went 5.8, 5.8, 5.8, 4th, 4th, 4th (80+m, some simul-climbing), 5.7, 5.7, 5.8, 5.8, 5.8, 5.9, and 5.7. The last half+ (7 pitches) followed the Pissburger Dihedral. Then an easy pitch on the crest, and the "5.6" final pitch of the standard SW route. [Apologies for so many words and so few photos--album link below. Google recently shut down Picasa, with which it was easy to re-size and embed photos--the new product lacks functionality, and I lack time for extensive photo shenanigans.] This photo courtesy of Jason Griffith; belays marked w/ circles: For context, here's a shot of both Hozos taken from SE Mox Peak a few weeks ago. S Hozomeen is on the right, its north face is in shadow: https://goo.gl/photos/LpzJ1EdPNKHfLpDr5 And a shot of little jackass climbing high on the route (p. 11): https://goo.gl/photos/3ooZbpTG3An1Faah6 Should note that the moderate technical difficulty ratings belie the comprehensive difficulty of the route; this is not straightforward climbing, and careful route-finding and hold selection is mandatory. Some of our 60m 'moderate' leads took well over 1.5 hours! As mentioned above, the first three pitches go straight up to an easy ledge system that then yields the long dihedral. These first three pitches were quite solid and a lot of fun; a recommended crag with easy access . But the corner ... In an effort to give you a flavor for climbing the Pissburger Dihedral, here's a too-common scenario: launch from the belay, hope to protect it soon, find a crack behind a meager flake maybe 15-20' up. Maybe you put in an appropriate-looking nut, but a yank pulls right through as the flake expands. You slot in a crappy cam with a 1 in 50 chance of catching a leader fall, though if you whip it might slow you down, so you leave that mostly ornamental gear hanging there and hope for more soon. You wend, hem and haw to and fro and yonder, tapping and kicking holds to test. Up and right, back down; up and left, decide right is better; then up and right again. A number of deliberate, committing moves and 30-40 more perspiring feet above the ornament, you spy a small patch of vegetation in a faint corner. Out comes the compact ice tool. Scrape, scrape, scrape at this scratch card hoping to reveal a prize, only to find a shallow, flaring "crack"; try a nut, a sideways nut even - nope - maybe the tricam trick that 'worked' earlier will go here - nuh-uh. Poop your pants a little. Search the horizon for anything. Resolve to continue, ensuring you can reverse the moves. Higher still another ornamental piece gives you the false confidence to continue ... ok, so it's pretty much soloing. The 5.9 crux pitch (p. 12) above where we spent the night was stimulating in this manner too, and magnified thanks to the way it traverses above some large overlaps/roofs (and well above a tiny tri-cam). Overall, we can't really recommend the route. Had hoped the giant dihedral would hold a nice crack system. It had a crack, but for the most part it was comprised of very rotten and decomposing rock, or filled with copious humus. Not appealing; on one of my leads I ventured to the corner only to be rebuffed in horrific fashion by the rock peeling away at the slightest touch. So we were forced to find our way up the right-hand facet of the corner via sparsely-protected face climbing. Only near the top did some splitter briefly reveal itself. Squamish. The album for our trip, in not-so-great Google Photos (click on "i" to see captions): https://goo.gl/photos/SmEcZZ2r9BhFy3ZTA And the photo linked below courtesy of - who else - John Scurlock; shows an oblique view from the east, and our line rises to the first bench/notch to the right of the summit. https://goo.gl/photos/Z25Bs4QdRM7z2Tnq9 Thanks to little jackass, we onsighted the descent of the standard SW route, which felt long, exposed, and tedious, especially after a sleepless night and many hours of hyper-vigilance. My impish spouse tried (with some success) to implant this earworm as we departed in the evening: ... so every once in a while the cheeky, existential lyrics would humorously rebound in the Pissburger. A rewarding trip, with many fun/funny moments, and a fair bit of suffering; the whole package arouses that fight or flight instinct. Feel fortunate to have solved (and survived) this problem. Gear notes: We brought a large rack to 4", doubles to 2", large set of nuts, and definitely bring tri-cams through hand-size; used the small black tri-cam more this trip than I have in all previous combined. We had pins and used two to augment our shiver-bivy anchor. Did not bring a bolt kit but wished we had. Double ropes. Compact tool, but no crampons required. Quote
Bronco Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 http://cascadeclimbers.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/1149152/Trip_Report_Issue#Post1149152 Quote
JasonG Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 I seriously didn't think this face would ever be climbed after seeing it from the notch on the SW route. Just looking at it scared me, since I didn't find the SW route was all that easy and it was 1/10th as steep. You guys really pulled off an impressive ascent. More importantly, I'm glad you survived! Quote
HHinkkala Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 I have discovered when there is no gear available there is always a spot to place a large bird beak...thats when you know things have become desperate. Congrats on what was obviously a challenging and complex climb. Quote
ryanl Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 That sounds like a Jackass paradise! Inspiring trip Big and Little, and great write up as usual. Congrats on getting yet another cascade gem Quote
tanstaafl Posted August 17, 2016 Posted August 17, 2016 Thanks for the write-up, Eric, glad you got that out of your system! Quote
John_Scurlock Posted August 18, 2016 Posted August 18, 2016 Holy Criminy! Really outstanding.. KellyM tipped me off on this. That pic you linked to was from December 17, 2003... seems so long ago now... Quote
wayne Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 Impressive effort yet again! Way to scare the shit out of yourselves, and the readers here. Quote
Marko Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 Shee-at, welcome back to earth boys. Masks, capes, and speedos? Quote
olyclimber Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 Dayum. This is what I wait around all year for... you jackasses are my heroes. Quote
tanstaafl Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 Did the alpine thong turn into a speedo somewhere along the way? And John, 2003 *was* a long time ago! We were all so much younger and better looking then, remember? Quote
Rad Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 Wow. Nice. Sounds like a scary adventure on questionable rock with sparse and sketchy protection. You seem to have acquired a taste for those lines and ticked off a good number of them over the years. Glad to hear you had another grand adventure and came back to tell the tale. Quote
dave_b Posted August 19, 2016 Posted August 19, 2016 The continuously cycling phrase "first there is a problem then there is no problem then there is" seems very applicable. Glad the donkey duo dominated. Congrats Rolf & $. Quote
Tom_Sjolseth Posted August 20, 2016 Posted August 20, 2016 Strong work yet again from the Jedi masters of craptastic and vertical choss. I remember looking down on that face thinking "yikes". Quote
Wallstein Posted August 20, 2016 Posted August 20, 2016 I am almost inspired enough to go out there and try it some day! Good job guys! Quote
rat Posted August 22, 2016 Posted August 22, 2016 it may be one of the steepest faces but jackasses know how to avoid the steeps when heading for the barn. had i been climbing a bit more this summer, eric wouldn't have had to bivy on the face. it's probably just a grade IV if both partners are climbing decently. but getting back to the base took about another 6 hours (very impressive first ascent by beckey et. al.) a direct route up the face would be likely require a bolt kit and/or some aid. the corner systems there looked pretty welded. Quote
G-spotter Posted August 22, 2016 Posted August 22, 2016 jeez, not even 5.9+, must be a cake walk. 1 Quote
OlympicMtnBoy Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 That's awesome. Also I don't want to climb it. Nice work guys. Quote
olyclimber Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 First there is a mountain, then there is no mountain, then there is. 1 Quote
Szyjakowski Posted August 27, 2019 Posted August 27, 2019 (edited) This is rad. AMAZING climb by some intrepid adventurers. I am late for the party to congratulate but don't blame me even thought I lost my password. Edited August 27, 2019 by Szyjakowski 1 Quote
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