Tag Archives: mountaineering

Quandary Cristo Couloir March 28

I got up a little earlier on Wednesday March 28, so I could attempt the Cristo Couloir on Quandary, a 14,265′ mountain just outside Breckenridge Colorado. I arrived at the main trail parking at 6:45 and spent fifteen minutes changing into my boots, SCARPA Men’s Charmoz GTX Alpine Boot – mildly insulated waterproof hiking boots that I’ve used for similar conditions for a few years. I got some nice pictures of the gully running from about 11,300′ to 13,800′ almost directly South from the Blue Lakes dam at the end of the road.

I headed West up the road, and ran into a van with a couple young guys who had passed and said the trail was closed. I couldn’t even imagine and told them I was going up to the dam and then up the snow. I think they decided to try it too, and they drove on up the road. I passed the next parking lot and sure enough, there was a trail closure sign on it, but I had no idea where that trail went, so I just continued on the road. I made really good time, and the snow got deeper, and I eventually passed them where the minivan straddled the road, digging out a spinning tire with an ice axe.

At the Blue Lakes Dam there were two forks to the ramp of snow heading up into the upper reaches of the mountain – about 2,500′ of snow climbing at a gentle 40 degrees give or take for most of it. I put my Black Diamond Contact Crampons on, swapped out my trekking poles for an ice axe, and took off up the ramp. I chose the right fork, which had a really nice steep spot, but I ended up on dirt for a bit, and had to carefully step (I didn’t want to de-crampon) over to an angled trail of snow back to the center of the couloir and up.

Shortly after I took a small break and looked down and realized I should have taken the left fork (climber’s left). Oh, well. The snow was nice and firm and there were both hiking and snowboard tracks to follow where it made sense. I got to the bottleneck about 13,200′ where there was a short line of not too steep, but very thin, hard, narrow ice in a groove between rocks. Great handholds on the rocks, so not a big deal. Soon after that the snow got softer, and sure enough, snowball missiles about the size of a watermelon started coming down from the cliffs above the center of the upper snow patch.

I watched for a gap and headed left and up to skirt the rocks along the left side and at about 13,500′ was punching through up to my knees on every step, so I waded over to the rocks and looked for firmer snow. It was obvious that the center of the gully was too dangerous, and the left side wasn’t firm enough anymore, so I took my crampons off and stowed them, and followed the many obvious goat paths up along the ridge toward the top, with only about 750′ to go.

The very top of this branch of the ridge skirted along a very deep ravine with steep cliffs and deep snow in the middle. Awesome looking over. A few sketchy moves here and there, but plenty of handholds so for me anyway, Class 3. YMMV. Soon it leveled off a bit, and I was on top. I hung out for about 15 minutes in the warm sun and since the East Ridge at the top was very slick hard ice, I put my crampons back on until I got down to about 13,800′ where I took them off again.

I ran into a few groups of older climbers and chatted a bit. At about 13,000′ I ran into a couple goats, and got some great pics. Soon after I ran into a guy on the way down who had been with one of the groups. We decided to hike sortof together the rest of the way down. He had Kahtoola MICROspikes on, so with his extra traction we leap-frogged down. We managed to get lost again, probably in the exact same spot, but I found the fork to get us back very quickly, and we were soon at the bottom.

It was a really fun hike, in spite of getting lost, and with more food and water in the pack than last time (last time I had a waist pack on, this time I had a hydration pack), it wasn’t too bad for recovering quickly.

Garmin Track of this adventure: CLICK HERE

Quandary Cristo Couloir March 28
 


Everest Ridge Climb March 10 2012

Ryan and I had planned to climb Everest Ridge of Mount Timpanogos for over a year now. We attempted it last year as an overnighter by going up the Battle Creek Trail and getting lost in the snow a little ways below the Baldy Saddle in waist deep soft snow. Totally needed snowshoes to get up through the trees and up to the trail to the saddle.

This year we were prepared with snowshoes, and while Ryan had wanted to start at 4 AM, I had estimated we could do it with a 5 AM start. That turned into a 5:25 AM start by the time we were done. I had gotten lost on the way to the Dry Canyon Trailhead on the Northeast corner of Orem and got in a bit late.

As we started up by headlamp in the dark from about the 5500′ elevation start we ran into packed snow at about 6500′ and started punching through deep snow about 7500′ and put on our snowshoes. We made our way up to the first cliff band at about 8500′ on very steep snow and cached our snowshoes and extra trekking poles along an obvious cliff shelf.

We put on our crampons and started up the face of the hump, which turned out to be crusty melted-out snow over scrub brush and we had to fight for every foot of gain. When we finally got to the top of the hump, along the ridge crest, sweaty and thirsty, the going got a bit easier for a while. Until we came to a traverse under a cliff band that had us wading in wet waist-deep snow teetering over a 60 degree slope as big wet snowballs rolled off as mini slab avalanches.

We finally regained the ridge, and between postholing in wet snow and scrambling over boulders with some good exposure, I managed to get a good cramp in my right leg near the top where I’d tweaked it skating a few weeks ago. I also tweaked my left ankle then, and it hurt quite a bit on right traverses (ankle rolling inward). It was really slow going, and we’d lost a few hours between the postholing and traversing, and managed to get to 11,200′ – just 500′ to go – the worst 500′ btw – by about 1:30 – approximately 3 hours behind our anticipated 11:30 summit pace.

Ryan felt a bit sketched looking out at the next series of traverses, as was I. It was about 70 degree snow, already rolling off snowballs, and we watched a party descending fall and slide several feet in one spot. I did some quick calculations and figured we were at the turnaround point for a sunset parking lot arrival, so we decided to bail.

We fairly quickly got down to the crest of the ridge overlooking a 60 degree slope with one loaded crack across it, and decided to slide down over the faint edge where it looked more stable and glissade to the bottom. The descending party caught up, called us nuts, and mentioned the bands of cliffs below the proposed glissade path. I said “what’s the worst that could happen?”. Since I got a little faint-hearted peering down the slope when I sat down, Ryan took the lead, dropped to his butt, and down he went, a few hundred feet until he had to walk a short section. I came down next and the snow was just perfect for sliding under control. I think our ride inspired the crew behind us and they followed in our butt grooves, overtook us, and continued on down.

We continued for over 1500′ of glissading, and at about the 8500′ level we angled off to the cliff bands where the snowshoes were cached. The next couple hours were pure misery as Ryan worked his way up through very deep wet slushy snow to the snowshoes, and I ended up just going down to the ridgeline leading off to the Dry Canyon Trail to wait. I called Ryan to verify and he said he’d bring mine down. In the meantime, with the wet snow my boots had filled with water, so I took off my boots, socks and liners, and wrung out my socks and replaced them without the liners, since they were wool and would provide some warmth I hoped.

Ryan finally made it down with the snowshoes and I put them on, but forgot to unlock the left platform riser (for ascending steep slopes) and had to stop to pop it down, since it kept kicking me forward to a near-fall. We got to the Dry Canyon Trail and found a large field of wind-blown crust over melted out granules. Our steps kicked up granules over the surface and they slid down the ice sounding like a rain-stick. Along the trail through the darkening trees we discussed ideas for greater success next year. Is that a sign of denial? or just that we’re climbers?

Ryan stopped to change his wet socks and I wrung mine out once again (the foam liner was filled with water and kept pumping into my socks). I called Angie for a “rescue” of dry warm socks and shoes and clothes since my feet were really numb and swollen from the ice water in my boots. We kept our snowshoes on until the trail devolved into mud with a snowbank along the shady side just under 7000′ and then I was eager to just get home, so we booked it down the trail arriving just before sunset became darkness.

My right quad was throbbing from the effort, and I immediately kicked off my muddy boots to let my feet dry. We said our goodbyes, and Ryan drove home while I chugged hot EmergenC while changing in Angie’s car. I slept in until 11 the next day (Daylight Savings). I got the pictures up to Picasa a day or two later for your enjoyment.

Everest Ridge Climb 2012