Monday, August 22, 2011

Climbing... so good!


Bugaboo, Snowpatch, and Sean


Well, where do I start??? hmmm.... Yak Peak, Bugaboo Spire, Snowpatch Spire, South Howser Tower, the weather. I'll start with Squamish.

So I arrived back in Vancouver on the 2nd and headed pretty much straight to Squamish! Met up with an old friend, Sean Pickersgill, and we just started climbing lots. Started on St Vitus Dance a 6/7 pitch 5.9 crack and over the 8 days  in Squamish we climbed Intergator, The Squamish Buttress, The Split Pillar, did some cragging at the Smoke Bluffs and Nigthmare Wall, and even a few hours of bouldering.

St Vitus Dance Photo by Sean Pickersgill



I'm sure most of the climbers in the world have heard of this magical granite dome that sits just a few hours from Vancouver. It is as magical as it sounds. Squamish is a cool little town that has a good vibe and a great farmers market of saturday mornings to avoid the weekend rush to climb and you get some great local foods! 

St Vitus Photo by Sean Pickersgill
  

Also during that week we headed out to climb Yak Peak. Another good friend, Steph Peacock, joined us for that and it was a stellar day of granite climbing!

Steph on the first pitch of Yak Check

 Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Sean climbing on Yak
Sean pulling through on of the crux moves

On one of the top pitches of Reality Check on Yak Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Looking up at the route Photo by Sean Pickersgill



To finish the the days of I met up with another good friend, Anja Sigloch, and we did a lap on Banana Peel and climbed a few slabs at the top of the Apron descent. Squamish and Yak Peak where fantastic and then it was time for a stint in the Bugaboos!!


Slab climbing!

I've heard so much about the Bugs and have wanted to get in there to climb for the past number of summers and finally it all came together this one. Sean had the time and was super keen to go so we planned it and headed out on the 11th.

The Bugaboos are an alpine mecca! The granite spires are beautiful and Crescent Spire is home to what is said to be the best Alpine Crag in the world. There are numerous spires and peaks of varying difficulty and something for everyone. If you just want to go mountaineering, travel on a glacier, climb 5.12 finger cracks it's all there!


Sunset on the upper Vowell glacier with Bugaboo, Snowpatch and Pigeon Photo by Sean Pickersgill


We started hiking in at around 8pm and arrived at Applebee Campsite around 11pm. We planned for the Northest Ridge of Bugaboo Spire for our first day.

Applebee campground in the Bugaboos

Woke at 6ish and headed out climbed up to the Bugaboo Crescent col and just started climbing, it was great long easy climbing for hundreds of metres, traversed the summit block and headed down the Kain route to the Bugaboo/Snowpatch Col and back to camp. Our first day in the Bugs was awesome and just increased my motivation to climb more and more. 9 hrs camp to camp and again a great first day!!

Climbing the first pitch of the Northeast Ridge of Bugaboo Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Sean on the second pitch of the Northeast Ridge of Bugaboo Spire
Traversing the summit ridge of Bugaboo Spire Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Descending the Kain Route with Snowpatch behind Photo by Sean Pickersgill



During dinner me and Sean where cruzing the the guidebook and found a route on the west face of Snowpatch that looked sweet, Wildflowers 5.9 9 pitches, so after a good night sleep we headed up to the col and on the Upper Vowell glacier to the base. This route is awesome! It starts with a short 4th class scramble up to the base of a massive left facing corner a pitch of 5.7 then sustained 5.9 corner/crack climbing for 5 pitches until it eases to 5.7 for the last pitch or 2. the first 6 pitches are all in the shade and it was pretty cold, but it is the alpine so you just have to deal!   


Sean climbing the 3rd pitch of Wild Flowers on the West Face of Snowpatch Spire





Topping out on Wild Flowers with Pigeon and the South Howser Photo by Sean Pickersgill

The next 3 days where slower for us, we wanted to climb Mctech Arete a classic 6 pitch climb on the Crescent Spire but when we arrived the where a number of parties and we just weren't into hanging out in line so we headed back to camp. That night it snowed and rained as well as the next day. The following day the weather cleared but things where still wet/snowy so as they dried out we run into Golden for  some more food. We arrived back to camp early that evening with plans to go climb Surfs Up the next day.






We got up around 6:30am and headed to the col and to the base of Surfs Up. There was one party ahead of us and they seemed to get off route on pitch 3, which seems to happen to a lot of parties, as you start pitch 3 go up and slightly right for 20+m and find a big alcove with some tap and scramble up and back down to Surfs Up ledge. After a few more pitches we hit the summit and then descended. Surfs Up is a classic 5.9 and is commonly on many peoples hit list so an early start is recommended. Fortunately we passed that one party and there was another party slightly behind us.


Climbing the second pitch of Surfs Up Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Sean working hard on one of the upper pitches of Surfs Up

That night it rained for a bit and Sean's thermarest got a hole in it so our trip in the Bugs was going to be cut short. Fortunately we found a patch kit and fixed the mat and headed for East Creek Basin with the goal of climbing the Beckey-Chouniard a 800m buttress on the South Howser Tower.


Sean and Pigeon Spire on the way to East Creek

The Beckey-Chouinard is a highly esteemed alpine classic that was first climbed in 1961 by 2 of legendary climbing hardmen Fred Beckey and Yvon Chouinard. The route goes free at 10+ or 10- A0 with a tension traverse left on the last technical pitch.

Sean with Minaret Buttress and the Beckey-Chouinard on the left


After Sean's thermarest was all fixed up we headed to East Creek with food for a few days and plans to hangout there and enjoy the area. We arrived took lots of pictures, eat lots of food and had an early night  with a planned wake-up for 5am for our go at the Beckey-Chouinard.

We woke, ate some granola and headed out after some scrambling we got to the first pitch of more technical climbing and roped up. We where the only ones on the route that day. We swapped leads throughout, climbed well and took short breaks on Big Sandy Ledge and the Summit. We descended the North Ridge of the South Howser and landed on the Upper Vowell Glacier at 8pm and then got to our camp at 9ish. It was a 16hrs camp to camp push that had the best alpine climbing and I have ever experienced.  This truely lives up to the hype it gets!

The first 10- pitch of the Beckey-Chouinard Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Summit of the South Howser Photo by Sean Pickersgill
Descending the South Howser Photo by Sean Pickersgill



The next morning we slept in organized or gear and planned to head back to Golden for the night and finally back to Vancouver and the island on the 21st. Thanks to Felix for letting us crash at his place in Golden and to Dani and Kristen for another great gathering at their place!


Special thanks to Sean for the sweet month of climbing granite splitters! Nice work buddy!!

Hands after some granite climbing

Pigeon and the Howsers

Me and Snowpatch on the Upper Vowell Photo by Sean Pickersgill

Descending into East Creek Basin with Fingerberry Tower on left Photo by Sean Pickersgill

Sunset in East Creek Photo by Sean Pickersgill


Beckey-Chouinard and the Minaret Photo by Sean Pickersgill

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Amazing, Inspiring....Really?


Well about a month ago I arrived in Whitehorse to start preping to go into the mountains for the mid section of the NOLS Yukon Semester. This semester is 79 days in length and is composed of 3 sections: Hiking for 30 days, mountaineering for 24 days and whitewater canoeing for 25 days. One of the coolest things about it is that you are out for 54 days straight learning how to travel and live in the wilderness before coming back to the front country. I was fortunate enough to get to fly in, by float plane, to meet these students to walk, eat and climb our way through some of the most spectacular terrain in the world.


After spending 3 days in Whitehorse preping we loaded the float plane and headed for Big Duff Lake, southwest of Whitehorse, in the Coast Mountains. We landed and in 45 minutes the plane was flying back toward Whitehorse with the hiking instructors and all the garbage from the past 30 days. We being, Roger, Liz and I, started to get the students moving and introducing them to there new gear: mountain boots, crampons, ice axe, rock gear, snow and ice pro, glacier rig(short and long prussic, 2 lockers and 2 non lockers), helmet and 4 season tents.

Once the students had their new gear we went over our route and had a relaxed afternoon of eating and going over goals and expectations for this section.


Over the next 7 days we taught snow school, walking in crampons, roping up, glacier travel, glaciology, conflict resolution, rock climbing and team haul. We also did a few peak ascents and had students leading on rope teams. Those 7 days where jam packed with fun and great weather.


Glaciology class.

We planned for a 3 day window for the Helicopter re-ration and unfortunately with got socked in with weather on the 14th of July, the last day of the ration period. The following days where filled with sleeping, conserving energy, tolerating the fact we had no food and all 17 people having their fingers crossed for a break in the weather. On the 17th the weather broke for about 3 hours which was enough to get the chopper in. After a quick and well run re-ration be the students everyone started eating, energy started to pick up, motivation to get moving and start more climbing all pick up again. We taught arresting as a rope team, snow pro/anchors, mechanical advantage and Z-haul crevasse rescue after we receive our ration.





Arresting on a rope team

 

Could you ask for a better start to a mountaineering course? No not really good weather for window's to climb and teach, then get hammered by weather and have to hunker and not eat for a few days....... hmmm mountaineering anyone. All I can say is those 13 students had a powerful few days.

As people's energies started to come back we packed our bags and headed into the meat and potato's of this mountaineering course. By this time they had the skills to rope up efficiently, travel out front on the rope teams probing their way across the glacier and navigating in harsh conditions.


The area we moved into allowed us to ice climb, travel through steep snow, rock and ice terrain, and climb some peaks. Myself and 4 students went for a stab at Mt Redemption 2435m. This climb involves navigating through some large cracks up to a saddle and then climbing a steep, 40 degree, snow ramp to the ridge and a boulder scramble to the top. Unfortunately we had to turn around due to weather.

Redemption is on the left and Battlecat Buttress on the right.

The Castle on the left and Greyskull on the right.



The next day was blue bird and our move to The Castle/Greyskull area was spectacular! Nice work Pat for leading us through the Firn Zone! The camp was suppose to be or next re-ration but due to the 2 day cleanse :) we left our 3rd re-ration where we started ration 2 and planned on back tracking.

This campsite could be the most beautiful and inspiring spot I've been! We had 3 days of great weather and got to climb Snow Dome, The Castle and go exploring up and down the glaciers. On the last few days before getting back to our 3rd ration Liz, Sarah (the proctor, an instructor that works all 3 sections of the semester) and I wanted to take some students for another crack at Redemption. So we organized a team of 4 students Dave, Cam, Chester and Pat. We got started at 4am with a plan to meet Roger and the rest of the group at the ice fall before heading up to the food cache. The climb was amazing with a quote like " this is the most amazing thing I've ever done in life". After getting back to the glacier we still had 7km to go to get to the rest of the group..... mindless walking is what was needed and mindless walking is what we did. The walking ended around 8:30pm and the 16hr day didn't seem that bad as soon as the bellies where filled with the last of the foods ration. The next day we ascended up to the last food drop.

Pretty much one of the best kitchens in the world

Good times!

Sorry Abby had to do it... deep into the NOLS Glacier Travel Curriculum 

Liz leading up the snow ramp on Redemption.



Summit of Redemption.

Traveling up to the cache was challenging due to some heavy winds, sideways rain and low vize. Once there the weather really kicked in! So a strong team effort saw all the tents get put up without blowing away, the re-ration sorted, and everyone happy with hot drinks and food in their tents.

We tried waiting out the storm and after 2 full days we needed to leave to have time to make our pick-up.  After getting over the first saddle weather to the east started lifting and we where able to get off the ice and start the 3 day walk out to the Haines highway.

From the base of the glacier it was about 38km to the road and we had 3 days. If you've spent sometime mountaineering especially longer trips you know when you hunker in your tent you eat more food right.... so these 3 days food was rationed in each tent/cook group so everyone would be able to sustain the long days as best they could. And you often do the most walking at the end to maximize your climbing time.

On the second day we got into some terrain that took full advantage of the 40 metre contours. So this slowed our movement and had us camp early. That night Roger scouted further and found a route to the ridge but with the cloud cover couldn't see into the valley. We planned for a team to get up at 6:30am to scout and mark a route to the top of the valley. Chester, Will, Roger and I headed out and found a good route to the high end of the valley and as the others came down at 7:00am we scouted further and found a line that lead down out of technical terrain into the dense alder/dwarf birch and willow valley bellow.

The bush slowed our progress and we had to move our pick up to the next day, a day late, to everyones dismay of course. Fortunately this crew knew that hardship and having good tolerance gets you further then complaining and we set up camp for one more night (should I mention we walked in a bog for most of that afternoon and into the early evening then had to combat camp in it).

We had 10kms of bog and bushwack before an old dirt road, 5km, lead to the highway. The morning was slow moving through the rest of the bog and the bush only let up slightly until a game trail showed its face. We followed it for the best part of 8km and arrived at the old road at 1:30pm. Students and Instructors alike where very happy and another lift in energy come into our team. At 3:30pm we made it to the bus and Bri (an All Star by the way) had both breakfast and lunch waiting for us. One thing these students didn't do was waste food, burnt or not they ate it. So needless to say they ate everything that was presented to them.


Then it was on the road to Whitehorse for showers, evaluations, and getting the students ready for there whitewater canoe section on the Hess River.

I'd like to through out there that some of theses students, before this trip, had never slept outside before and have grown to a point of pushing beyond a point they have ever known. All I can say is nice frigging work team!

The Team.....
Right to left: Derek, Chester, Laura, Will, Sarah, Roger, Jeff, Pat, Abby, Laurel, Brian, Dean, Stefan, Liz, Dave, Cam, Skookum Gus, and Me