Friday, September 29, 2017

Route: Tower Mountain & Golden Horn (North Cascades)

Mountain Information:

I) Golden Horn

2) Tower Mountain

Driving Directions:



Route Information: South Ridge











  • Approach from Mountaineers: 
    • Hike north on the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) from Rainy Pass, through Cutthroat and Granite Passes and past Tower Mountain to 6,300 ft. Turn right and ascend to Snowy Lakes and good campsites at 6,700 ft.
  • Ascend from Mountaineers:  Tower Mountain and Golden Horn may be climbed in either order.  Just be sure to stay high in the Snowy Lakes basin when traveling from one to the other.
    • Ascend to the notch in the west ridge of Tower Mountain. Scramble towards the west face until a traverse leads to a narrow gully marked by a gendarme on its left. Scramble this gully to a notch in the ridge and then follow a ramp system in a broad gully. When the gully narrows, climb a smooth slab and then onto a ledge that leads to the ridge. Climb over blocks and a short chimney to a corner and then more block to the summit.
    • Hike to Snowy Lakes at 6,700 ft and continue roughly northwest towards Golden Horn. Ascend a gully and talus to near the summit.  Class 3 scrambling leads to the summit.

Misc 

  • Notes: 
    • Not recommended for large parties over 6 because of rockfall danger. Groups of 6 or more should split up and climb separate peaks.
    • There are excellent campsites along the PCT and especially at the Snowy Lakes area right at the base of the mountain.
    • There is no need for a backcountry permit because this peak is not located in the North Cascades National Park.
    • Most folks climb this peak July though October. It can be done in May-June but may be snowy at the top making the summit more difficult. The road is closed at least half the year making it important to check the road conditions before climbing this peak. During summer it's usually open. Late September and early October is prime time to be here considering the golden larches are at their peak.

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Route: Mount Stuart - West Ridge Carryover to Cascadian Couloir (Central Cascades)

Mountain Information:

Driving Directions:

  • Trailhead: 
    • Address:

Route Information: West Ridge & Cascadian Couloir

  • Gain: 5,250 ft
  • Round Trip:  15-18 miles
  • Activity: Rock Climbing
  • Difficulty: Intermediate Rock Climb
  • Season: May, June, July, August, September 
  • Mountaineers Route Description 
  • Key data
    • Trailhead to Climb  2,500ft
    • Climb to Long John Tower 1,000ft
    • Long John Tower to West Rib Notch 350ft
    • West Rib Notch to Summit 400ft
    • Summit to Trailhead 1,000ft
  • Existing tracks:  
  • Caltopo Route: https://caltopo.com/m/NU11 
  • Route Photos from trip reports: 
West Ridge Route

Cascadian Couloir

West Ridge Route 2

West Ridge Route Variation


stuart0004.JPG
Beginning of the West Ridge Route


The Air Step

Long John Tower
stuart0005.JPG
West Ridge Notch



Longs pass to Cascadian Couloir

Long John Tower 2
Route Section 1
Route Section 2
Carryover Route
Cascadian Couloir to False Summit
Cascadian Couloir Route

Mt Stuart Summit





Misc 

  • Notes
    • This athletic climb is largely scrambling on a huge granite massif. Fast efficient parties who travel light are favored. Routefinding dilemmas tend to occur at Long John Tower, at exposed section of West Ridge Notch, and in descent (not staying right). Snow patches along the route should be utilized for drinking water.
    • Large rats, also known as, snafflehounds, inhabit the summit bivy area, so be careful about anything (including boots) with salt on it; they will try to eat it. Most of route is traveled unroped. The key to this climb is traveling light. Contact Leavenworth Ranger Station for updated backcountry regulations for the area.
    • Use caution on the slopes below false summit - steep snow early in the year and loose rock later in the year.
    • On the way down Cascadian, you could take the Cascadian Cutoff trail which helped bypass some of the final few hundred feet of choss. Look for this trail about a 1000 ft above the creek, on skier's right in the meadows.
    • Bivy Sites: There are bivy sites at 7680, 8200 before LJT, and just above LJT, then again below WR notch, and at the summit. 8200 bivy had a reachable snow patch as of 8/20/2016 that was about 50 feet below on the north side of the ridge. Depending on the weather, it might become unreachable. The 8200' bivy can fit about 6 people (4 bivy sites - 2, 2, 1, 1). the sites are around the top of the ridge on the left, before the class 4 exit gully on the right that gets one to the notch from where the downclimb for the base of the LJT starts.
    • Climbing Gears: Mountaineers climbed the route in approach shoes, with a 30m rope, BD cams #0.3 to #2, set of nuts, 6 shoulder slings and 4 double slings.
    • Water: It was reported that everyone carried 3-4 liters of water and that was sufficient until they reached Ingalls Creek at the bottom of Cascadian C. 

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Route: Del Campo Peak (Mountain Loop Highway)

Mountain Information:

Driving Directions:

  • Trailhead: Gothic Basin Trailhead
  • Co-ordinates: 48.025833, -121.443732
  • Address: Monte Cristo Trail, Granite Falls, WA 98252
  • Elevation:  2,360 ft
  • Pass:  Northwest Forest Pass
  • Directions 
    • SummitPost: "Follow the Mountain Loop Highway from Granite Falls 30 miles, all the way to Barlow Pass (elevation 2400 feet), right across the street from the Goat Lake trail head. Park near the pullout and gate. Hike the Monte Cristo Road for about one mile (please see the red tape section wash-out details) to the South Fork Sauk River crossing where the Weden Creek Trail (FST 724) begins. Some folks will prefer to use a bicycle on this old road."
  • Weather forecast
  • Avalanche danger forecast:  

Route Information: Foggy Lake

Peaks and Pass
Route Info
Standard Route


Route variations

Another Variation
Gothic - Del Campo Traverse

 Misc 

Friday, September 15, 2017

Route: Kyes Peak - South Ridge (Central Cascades)

Mountain Information:

Driving Directions:

  • Trailhead: 
    • Address: NF-63, Gold Bar, WA 98251
    • Due to ongoing resource damage there is no overnight camping allowed at Blanca Lake. Campfires are also prohibited at lake.Road damage has made the trail head inaccessible. Temporary trail head at 63 junction. Federal Recreation Pass required to park.
    • The "new" trailhead is obvious, it is right where NF-63 coming from the west (the Index-Galena Road) hits NF-65 coming from the east (where you arrive from). The continuation of NF-63 north to the trailhead is blocked right there (although the actual washouts are much closer to the old trailhead), so you park near that intersection and hike up NF-63.
    • The 2 mile hike to the old trailhead is easy. Note that the toilet at the old trailhead is locked.

NF-63 to Old Trailhead Closed
Parking Sign

Junction of NF-65 and NF-63



Route Information: South Ridge


Existing GPS Track

Path with Annotations
Route Markers and Summary

FR 63 to old Blanca Lake Trailhead
Virgin Lake Split
Talus Bypass Point 5845
Saddle to South Face
Pass to Summit
Summit Traverse

  • Route Photos from trip reports:
Virgin Lake

Starting Point

Route along Point 5845
Ridge Saddle

 Kyes Peak South Face
Route to Approach Pass
Boulder to Pass
Summit Traverse

Ascend the Pass

Shark Fin on the Pass
Around about on Pass
Summit Ridge

Approach Summit Block
Summit Block

Scramble Path on Summit
Water Source
Bivy/Camping Site close to Summit Block

Columbia Glacier and Kyes Peak from Cloumbia Peak

Blanca Lake from Ridge

  • Approach & Ascend from Mountaineers: 
    • Take Blanca Lake Trail to Virgin Lake (4,600 ft), a great place to camp if you make this a multi-day trip. From Virgin Lake, take the south ridge going northeast. You may have to stay on the east side to traverse the ridge.  The trail levels out at 5,300 ft. Head onto the west side of the ridge at 5,845 ft, and then up steep slopes, avoiding cliff bands.  Cross a boulder field at 6,300 ft and then aim for a gap at Point 7026. Some Class 4 scrambling to the summit.

Misc 

  • Notes
    • Kyes peak is the highest summit in the Monte Cristo Group and is very isolated from civilization. When the weather is good this peak offers views of the many famous peaks in Washington including Sloan Peak, Mount Pugh, Baker, Rainier, Glacier Peak and many more. This peak is pretty much in the middle of the Cascade Range.
    • Other high peaks in the Monte Cristo group include Columbia Peak (7,172ft), Monte Cristo Peak (7,136ft), and Cadet Peak (7,186ft).
    • From a distance, the summit block looks very formidable, but as it turns out, it is quite easy. There are a number of seams in the rock that make for excellent footholds as you ascend. These were followed up. The only challenge to this part of the scramble is the loose rock everywhere.
    • Based on one Peakbagger report
      • First part of climber's trail: easy hiking but somewhat overgrown down low. Highlight is a pleasant small meadow.
      • Overgrown ledges: I found this to be the worst part in some ways. The faint path is easy to lose and it traverses and climbs up some rocky fins and ledges. I could not find a route that did not involve ugly class 3 bushwhacking, but one might exist.
      • Trail on pleasant ridge: past the overgrown ledges, the trail is pretty nice for a while, on or near the crest, mostly flat. Nice views.
      • The trail drops down to the west and sidehills to avoid Peak 5845. The heather is slippery with difficult footing even when dry, and there are glades of closely spaced evergreens to bushwhack through. You can stay high or low to get different mixtures of these. A small boulder field down low offers a tempting way to avoid a little of the sidehilling, but not much.
      • The Steep Ridge: From the col at 5400', a faint trail switchbacks relentlessly uphill, partly in forest, party in open heather clearings. The footing is OK, but there are countless variations. Up top it gets steep and a bit rocky before finally cutting left to descend a rocky staircase ramp to the talus basin below, in a section of white blocks (marked with cairns). 
      • The Talus Basin: A huge, sloping, open, rocky area. In early season probably mostly snow, in September a mix of huge blocks, ball-bearing scree, and everything in between. Angle uphill, past a small lake, towards a notch in the skyline ridge.
      • The South Ridge: The bedrock of breccia is huge, solid, rounded blobs offering good friction, but the scree lying about is miserable loose ball-bearing gravel that can be very slippery. Follow ledges and the crest, trying to avoid the gravel the best you can. The final push to the summit block is easy, on clean, flat, glacier-scoured rock (or snow in early season).
      • The Summit Block: As you approach it is foreshortened and looks intimidating, but it is easily climbed directly using seams in the pillowy breccia. Just don't step on any gravel. Near the top a ledge leads right directly the airy summit. Downclimbing is definitely trickier, but it goes OK with care.
    • (From SummitPost) It is a rocky point (Peak 5845) on the ridge with cliff bands and potentially dangerous terrain. There was bootpath going up Peak 5845, but people usually drop down to the west and sidehill to avoid gain/lose elevation. This spot is easy to find any time of the year because it is mostly flat when you get there. Be warned, in later season this is where the blueberry bushes start up which often times is slippery making travel a little bit more tedious. So now traverse the mountain going slightly up hill towards your right until you think your a little ways beyond Point 5845. Then starting heading almost directly up, if you encounter a cliff band, you have to keep traversing.
    • Depending on where you end up you may get either onto the ridge again or at the notch which is on the ridge. Either one is fine, but the ridge is probably the better option. You may get lucky and find a rigged trail that switchbacks up the mountain, if not, no big deal. But you do want to make sure you don't end up on any unnecessary terrain. There should not be any terrain beyond class 2 until you get to the summit block.
    • Once you start getting glimpses of Kyes Peak and of the boulder field, you should head towards it. But do keep in mind there are some cliffs below between you and the boulder field which there is a nice traverse "pathway" to the right which is a series of mini scramble sections down the the boulder field.
    • Even in late season much of the boulder field is covered in snow, which depending on snow conditions it might be time to take out the ice axe if you brought one, I personally was fine without one but the snow was soft. Head towards the false summit to the north, but eventually you want to curve to the right. You will see a section I call "The Gap" which is a small notch in the ridge between two high points.
    • Once you scramble up to the gap you are back on the ridge again which doesn't look very ridge like at this point. Now go towards the round about and then to the right of it which takes you to a permanent snow field. If you like snow, take the snow field towards the summit block. If you like rock, take the ridge to your left which is nice and gentile although with a few ups and downs.
    • The summit is the one on the right which of course is the one farther away. But at least it's a cats walk from here. Once you get to the summit block it is considered class 2, perhaps class 3 depending on how you rate a route. I will admit though that one should be cautious here because there is some loose pebbles and such on the rock making it a little more tricky. But for most mountaineers it won't be much of a problem. The summit pyramid is not as bad as it looks. Look for the crack that has nice foot holds which takes you about 20 feet from the summit. The last 20 or so feet carefully traverse over to the summit. From here you are rewarded with a great view of the area.
    • To avoid bushwhacking on the south ridge, people could descent via the Columbia Glacier route or Blanca Lake NW side.
    • There are bivy sites close to summit block
    • This mountain can be climbed year round, but is recommended between the months of June through October. Early summer is probably best because of all the blue berry bushes you have to travel over in later season. But the later months tend to have better weather. So it's debatable which you prefer and it also depends on the weather that year.