Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Chilliwack, BC - Slesse Mountain

NOTE: CLICK IMAGES FOR A LARGER FORMAT

It has been a great season climbing thus far but Slesse was still on my hit list and the summer drawing short. With the high pressure system that formed over the PNW last week I knew that it would likely be the last chance for a summer ascent on Slesse. My post for a partner resulted in a hook-up with a great guy and experienced climber from Bellingham.

After a quick stop at the Triple O in Chilliwack we rolled down the Chilliwack Lake Road and found Slesse Creek Road at the mileage quoted by Becky. There were a couple of tougher sections and so we pulled my gear box off the back of my van and stashed it to give me more clearance to get thru the wash outs. We tried to follow Nelson's and/or Becky's instructions but with new logging activity things got a bit confusing and we ended driving around looking for the Slesse Mtn trail head. I ripped open a sidewall and had to change a tire on a steep logging road but luckily that only ate up time and didn't strand us. We ended up finding the a trail but with no signs we had to only assume it was the correct spot. Our approach notes have the updated information with regards to finding the correct trail head. By the time we got to the Nesakwatch Creek side it was already dark and so we had to look for trails by head lamp. The best we could do was locate the old trail head at ~3.5 miles from the road. I had read about a new trail on the mountslesse forum but we had no luck locating it so we parked and crashed at the old trail trail head.


Fixing the flat as we look for the Slesse Mtn trail head

Alarms were ringing around 4am and we were up and going by 5am by head lamps. The first business was to cross the Nesakwatch Creek and the cold water ensured that we would not be sleepy for the rest of the approach. The growth on the far side of the creek is pretty thick so following the old logging road is best done by looking up and making sure there is no canopy cover above. A bit of bush whacking took us thru thickets and at one point we came across a large hornets nest hanging in a tree. I wasn't sure it was still inhabited so I tapped it gently and boy was I wrong. Within an instant the hornets were pouring out the entrance and surrounding the nest. We backed off quickly and with good luck neither one of us sustained any hits. A little further up the trail Kurt plunged into a dirt crevasse just catching himself before really going in! Luckily he also avoided injury. We discovered that this area of the trail had what looked like small mine shafts of sorts?!? We crossed a couple of wooden foot bridges and in about 45 minutes emerged from the brush to find a nice hiking trail with flagging tape. I believe that we just hooked up with the new and much better Memorial Trail. Soon thereafter we arrived at the Memorial Plaque and found the climber's trail leading up the bowl just behind it.

Signage as one approaches the Memorial to Flight 810



www.mountslesse.ca for more info


The memorial plaque


Slesse at first light from the Memorial

We continued up the scree bowl following the rocky drainage and passing an old landing gear and various plane wreckage bits from the 1956 plane crash. We decided to take the gulley just SE of the East Buttress toe and then cross over the notch in the lower part of the East Buttress which would put us in the pocket glacier cirque. (Good map on pg.170 of Becky’s guide Vol.III) The good news was that the pocket glacier had slid and the objective danger in that area was now minimized. It allowed us the ability to cross quickly and in trail runners. Just as we were standing in the notch of the East Buttress we watched a huge avalanche let loose as the north side glacier broke away and swept straight through the headwall gully, a common approach for the Direct NE Buttress start.

Landing gear from flight 810


The approach from the Memorial

Kurt and I filled up with some water here

Heading up to the approach gully

Approach gully

Looking down the gully - lots of loose rock


Approach over the East Buttress and the cross over notch


Slabs to the East Buttress notch

We down climbed into the pocket glacier cirque and as we made our way across the cirque we came across a rope which had been cut through. We coiled it up and talked about whether or not this could be the rope from the accident back in early July in which a climber was killed by falling ice. A sobering and sad thought but a reality to remind us of the serious nature of this environment. We moved on quietly knowing that this mountain has been a place of many tragic events. As we reached the long ramp we gave one last look back at the cirque and the remaining glacier and were thankful for the safe passage.


The pocket glacier cirque...free of ice

Remnants of this years' glacier - note descent from the notch is in the background


Crossing the cirque


News story of accident


Abandoned rope and suspect glacier


A sobbering reminder

Last bits of objective danger melting out


A look back across the cirque


The approach ramp


The dude making good time

8:30am and we were now crossing onto the buttress through the treed section. We followed a semi-trail that wound its way through the 3rd and 4th class terrain and eventually took us on to the crest where we changed over to rock shoes for the 5th class terrain. It wasn’t long before we were through the double cracks, the short 5.9 (Becky’s pitch 8/Nelson’s pitch 13) and into the nice 5.8 layback where we bootied a very old stiff-necked Friend.


Kurt cruising the 5.8ish twin cracks

The short 5.9 crack


Kurt enjoying the 5.8+ layback where we bootied gear

After the large bivi ledge we simul-climbed the next 600’ until we reached the leaning pillar. A nice corner with a fixed pin took us into a couple of short pitches and more ledges. Then the loose blocky corner pitch with the ¼” Leaper bolt and a fun step though a notch in a roof. The next pitch went long for almost a full rope length to the described alcove atop Nelson’s pitch 22. A good belay with nuts here and a great photo op looking down the whole buttress below. Two more longer pitches and we were at the summit at 5:30pm.

Starting into the 600' of simul climbing


Upper wall and leaning pillar

The corner past a fixed pin




Will this block hold?


Kurt cranking out the loose corner with the 1/4" Leaper


Alcove belay stance


View from the alcove belay

Kurt in a happy place


Summit Man!


Mt Baker


We got to go 6000' down where???



The climbing was not very difficult but the rock appearance gave the impression that whole sections of the mountain were ready to peel away at a given moment. I found huge hand holds and plenty of footholds the whole way up and even though the over hanging roofy sections which always provided some stemming option.

We weren’t on the summit long before we need to start moving and find our way down, daylight was limited. We had opted for a single rope so we were prepared to do some down climbing to get to the large lower ledge system. As we followed the cairn marked descent SW around the corner we only had a small 4th class down climb and then we discovered a new set of slings. Kurt and I figured this was recently set up by someone not too happy to down climb this section but who only had a single rope. So we rapped and of course found another station about 80’ to 90’ down. One more rap and we were at the large ledge which was easily walked to the other rap stations. I spotted a faint trail heading across the scree bowl and towards the wooded ridge so we knew where we were headed. Once we made it to the big gulley behind the north face we only had one task left. Follow that trail along the crest and down towards Slesse Creek. This is one arduous trail that seems like its’ steepness will never end. It will definitely give you a good thigh work out and when it finally hits bottom you’ll have another ~2 - 2.5 miles back to the car along the old logging road.

Overall our car to car time was 17 hours.

A BIG thanks to Kurt Hicks for being a great climber and a great partner.




Sunday, September 9, 2007

North Bend, WA - Infinite Blitz!!!


Car to Car - 6:11
Base to Base - 5:11
Base to Summit - 3:20
Summit to Base - 1:51


It seems like this thing is turning into an addiction but for a change of pace Michael and I decided to climb a little quicker than usual. I can't say we went all out but there were major factors that worked in our favor to help achieve our above times on this route.

a) simul-climbing saves a bunch of time and with the easier grades there are many pitches that can be taken just as that

b) prior knowledge of the path provided us with little wasted time going this way or that and kept us on track to find the sparse belays and gear up high. In addition, knowing the moves and flavor of each pitch also helped.

c) light individual packs allowed us to drink, eat and carry what we felt was necessary and avoided trading a single pack off

d) good temps kept us from dehyration and over heating

e) comfy shoes helped stave off sore feet

f) twin ropes that were light allowed for fast movement, hauling and rope handling

g) comfort with climbing styles was helpful

h) knowing the raps, locations, logistics and doing some simul-rapping of sorts on the lower angle terrain

i) good aerobic fitness and a large latte helped to keep us running well in the morning


Once again thanks Michael!!!

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Leavenworth, WA - Iconoclast

After a great day of climbing at Careno Crag Kathy and I decided we should go hit the classic hard man route on Snow Creek wall, Iconoclast! What we didn't plan on was Kathy feeling a bit under the weather. After arriving at the base of the wall we decided we would give it a go and see if she felt better after a few pitches. By the time we reached the 5th pitch we were feeling the heat of the day and not feeling the mojo. I will be back...

Kathy taking off on 2nd pitch of Remorse start


Coming up the 3rd pitch - all smiles so far


KC pulling thru the first roof on the 3rd pitch


Money pitch 4 - a bit run out here, follow the vege corner above to chains


Bail point :(

Friday, August 31, 2007

Acme, WA - Mythic Wall

Day two of our extended weekend adventure took us to the east side of the Twin Sisters just outside of Bellingham and near the town of Acme. I think that is the place where Wile Coyote orders his stuff for his attempts to trap the Road Runner - Beep Beep! The goal was to climb a little known wall called the Mythic Wall. I had read about it on Cascade Climbers but had little more information than that. It was supposed to be a nice 6 pitch gear route around 5.10 but the approach was going to be a bit exploratory. ...that means bush whacking here in the Cascades...shhhhh...don't tell Kathy...


The images that lured me in...


Beautiful Green Creek with Baker to the east


Options for the Olivine type rock


Looks so good...doesn't it?


Gear and all!!


Where it all begins...


A late departure from Index, getting caught in the Everett Fair traffic, a great Thai dinner in Monroe and waiting on Hiway 9 for a transport being towed out of a ditch got us to the trail head rather late in the evening. The energizer bunny hopped into her jammies early and bedded down since she doesn't drive stick. I'm going to have to fix that issue sometime soon. Eventually I found Mosquito Lake Road and then after crossing the Nooksack River FSR #38 which is also called the Middle Fork Nooksack River Road. I went about 10 miles to a nice pull off and we crashed there hoping for an early morning start. We were up around 6am and drove the last mile to the signed Elbow Lake trail head. KC made a brew and I got us some oats ready. A quick packing and we were on our way.

We hiked down to a washed out bridge and the first challenge was crossing the wide and fast flowing Nooksak on some thinner logs. Once on the other side we regained the trail and made our way easily to the first major switch back at ~2700 feet. At this point it was time to drop into the gentle forest and make our way up towards the head of Green Creek while paralleling the creek at around 2750'. When we met the creek at this elevation we would see the talus slopes and should be able to spot the wall. At first the forest was gentle but it didn't take long before we has to cross Hildebrand Creek and beat our way through Devil's Club and some seriously slippery rocks. This was definitely ankle wrecking territory and I didn't intend to hurt myself in anyway so I went carefully through the creek area. I also had the forethought to bring flagging tape and mark the "trail" we were using so that we could hopefully pick our way back easy enough. Unfortunately I underestimated KC's ability to suffer through bush whacking. Let's just say this was a challenge for her and she had her moments. I tried to enjoy the givings of the gentle forest and as we made our way up past the creek we ran into very thick huckleberry. Those things are tasty and I would stop every so often and pack my mouth full of them. It kind of made up for the lack of trail. Eventually we made our way down to the creek, crossed on some logs, through dense fir and out into the talus. What a relief! Unfortunately what was fore casted as 20% chance of showers had it's 20% focused on this area. We discussed options, ate a power bar and Kathy swore that she was not going back through the bush we just came in by. The clouds descended so quickly that we couldn't see the route(s) what so ever. After 3.5 hours of bush whacking we had no choice but to turn back and head for the trail head.


A Green Creek Waterfall


A brief moment of bush whacking relief


Find my happy place, find my happy place, find my happy place...

We decided to cross the creek by following the talus down and hopefully find a better path on the other side. What I didn't know is that my altimeter was going fritzy and as we made our way up the other side to the 2750' mark we would end up much higher on the slope than indicated. As we bashed our way back, things didn't look familiar and we weren't coming across my flagging tape. Kathy was growing more frustrated and said something about the worst experience of her life. I had a hard time believing her because it wasn't raining or snowing...yet. The elevation mistake left us way too high up slope and traversing more difficult slopes than we initially came in on. Kathy was predicting we would never find the Elbow Lake trail and that we would bash our way to the van. I was a little more optimistic and kept consulting the topo map I had bought a couple of nights before. We of course eventually found the trail and that is when I discovered the altimeter was way off. As I stood on the trail and called down to KC she asked if I was on the trail. I gave her the affirmative and she told me to "shut-up"; I don't think she believed me until she was standing beside me. A hug, a smile, tears of joy? and we were on our way to warm drinks, dry clothes and to see Westieeeeeee.

Maybe next time!