Bold and Cold Podcast: Epic on North Twin

Just did a fun podcast with Brandon Pullan for The Bold and Cold Podcast, about climbing on the North Twin. We made mention of this piece, the first thing I wrote for the Canadian Alpine Journal.

If you are interested in listening to my version of things :

Here it is.

If you want to listen to Chris’s version of it:

Here is his version.

Death was on the mind a lot

I just wrote a piece for an instructional ice manual on epic-ing less and climbing more.  It took me back to this early lesson I was taught.







dead

ian welsted

Sunset over Mount Alberta

I thought I was dead. Not in some metaphorical, hypothetical sense, but literally. Or rather, I felt dead. Before my mind could process a thought, I realized that I was seeing stars against a black backdrop — that the mid-morning light had been extinguished, as had any desire or care as to my destiny. Standingin a chossy limestone coffin, I reckoned that being hit by rockfall a second time was to be my last memory. It took a few seconds for my mind to refocus, at which point I understood that I was indeed alive, but that my toes were tingling. I’ve been paralyzed, was the next thing that came to me. Like a hypothermic animal caught in a leghold trap, my subconscious decided to accept its fate and simply not care. To give up like this two thirds of the way up one of the biggest faces in the Rockies is not a good survival strategy. Or is it? Maybe not caring was the key to my fortunate outcome.




In reality, though, my continued existence as a living human is due to the effort of my best climbing buddy, Chris Brazeau. Like a knight in shining armour, here he came from above, rapping our single fifty metre line to arrive at my presumed death stance with less than his usual smile. How was it that Chris could chuckle about what had just happened to him while fixing that rap? “I thought I was going for the big one,” was his comment as he described the ten foot fall he had taken while jugging to free our stuck rope. A calm mind, that was the differentiating factor. It was not the first time I realized that there was a difference between Chris and me: he enjoyed the thrill of danger while I all too often did not. But let me leave the lessons learned till later and describe how we had gotten into our predicament and how Chris got us out of it. As Dave Cheesemond wrote, “It would be an impressive and expensive descent ….” (Pushing the Limits, p. 209).







Looking out after the first day

Really, it all centers around a keen climbing and personal friendship. Chris and I began climbing at around the same time. When a couple of years later Chris moved to Squamish to slum it at “the River”, it sounded like such a riot that I couldn’t resist. But while I kept working and maintaining some kind of material quality of life, Chris would do such things as work 17 days in a year so that he could climb as much as possible. Over subsequent summers, I got rope-gunned up the three hardest “multi-pitch routes of quality” in Kevin McLane’s guidebook, always feeling sheepish when leaving the ground with either the unspoken or even the explicit understanding that the crux pitches would not be mine. After all, I only lead 5.10. On our first trip to the Rockies, we figured we would train for the hardest route in the book “’cause it’s only 5.10.” Luckily, we were kept from our intended goal by a snowstorm. So, in the summer of 2004, when we decided to slay dragons and attempt the unrepeated Blanchard-Cheesemond route [North Pillar] on North Twin, I was not in the least surprised when Chris offered to lead what he figured from the route description was the crux of the route. That we didn’t “flounder in the first rock band” was not of my doing. 





Our preparation was complete after seeing North Twin on the way to doing Alberta’s Northeast Ridge. Perhaps we didn’t have a full “training diet of big limestone rock routes”, as Dougherty suggests, but Chris had on-sighted Astro Yam without the aid of the #4 Camalot (I’d forgotten it in the car) at the beginning of the season. With my impatient, now-or-never attitude and Chris’s skills, how could we fail? That we didn’t wonder after avoiding the North Face of Alberta due to its reputation for rockfall in the summer is a bit of a mystery, but obsessions are obsessions. 





We’d been e-mailing about strategy, getting psyched. The fact that the Eiger had been climbed in four hours, combined with my recognition that I couldn’t lead .10d with a pack, somehow made me agree to the suggestion that we go for it in a day. “Light is right,” they say these days, so we took a tarp, two puffies, one rope and a five-millimetre shoelace pull line “cause we’re not going to use it, anyway.” Never mind that we’d tried the Salathé in a day the previous fall and it had taken us two and a half; hitch yourself to a madman and see what happens, I figured. So it was that we headed over Woolley Shoulder — and promptly headed away from our objective and to the shelter of the Lloyd McKay hut. Chris had spent the day before humping loads for pay in to the Elizabeth Parker hut, where his girlfriend, Kitt Redhead, was cooking. Similarly, I’d jogged into Berg Lake to retrieve a pair of sandals from the base of the Emperor Ridge as an excuse to visit my girlfriend, who was finishing the Great Divide trail that day. Being slightly shagged both, we figured the one-day push would require all of our energy, so we might as well start well rested. The extra day gave us the chance to enjoy the beautiful meadows below the north face of Stutfield, eye up a 3000-foot waterfall for future winter reference, and be psyched for the 3 a.m. start.













Yup, he’s a madman, I was thinking. We’d just trundled some rock at our first belay, promptly chopping our rope to fifty metres. And here he was, run out maybe eighty, maybe a hundred feet, already a good way up the face, since we’d soloed the easy choss. I couldn’t watch, only looking up to take a photo, because here we were on the pitch that had drawn my attention after seeing the photo from the first ascent in the American Alpine Journal. It had looked so stellar that I promptly sent a copy c/o Poste Restante, Chamonix, trying to lure  Brazeau back to Canada. Our belay had  taken a #2 and a #3 Camalot, so all Chris had left for the wide crack was one #2 from the anchor. It didn’t want to swallow the #4, which only got put in at the overhang at the top of the pitch. So on that pitch there were two pieces a long way apart. Later, friends and those “in the know” (e.g. Don Serl) suggested that the epic to follow was due to our being on the face when it was too hot. Well, wet limestone a hundred feet run out is one thing; maybe sopping wet it’s another. From my vantage no real problems were encountered for a while, although Chris was twice hit by rockfall. Interesting how, until it happens to you, such objective hazards can be dismissed. My inexperience showed when, crossing the “sinister gully”, I stopped to build an anchor and Chris called up to just hip belay, after the second missile from above hit him on the lip. Pitched-out climbing on the left side of the gully led through some enjoyably solid cracks to an overhanging wide crack (.10d) mentioned in the route description. My conscience got the better of me at this point and prevented me from pulling my usual gambit in such situations. Many times before, I have simply stopped my lead blocks before such cruxes, handing over the sharp end to my rope-gun friend. Somehow I talked myself out of it. As I climbed up to the overhang, I had to manoeuvre around a loose block my own size perilously hanging out from the wall.





Solid cracks with loose blocks






Later I would read Steve House’s description of a loose killer block on their ascent, and of his climbing past it with equanimity. I, on the other hand, was terrified. What the hell am I doing up here; if I fall we’ll both die, was my overwhelming thought. Never mind that I’d read the Buddhist text No Death, No Fear in preparation. In hindsight, I realize that it is the “mind of the observer” that separates those who send these biggest of routes from those, like me, who are haunted by their failures months or years later. Wanting to build an anchor just above the block, I called down my intention to Chris. An encouraging response came from below, and I resorted to aid. At that point our upward progress slowed considerably, like a climax before the foregone conclusion. Finally, the rope-stretcher pitch ended and I was rewarded with the opportunity to try a classic Rockies technique that I had only read about before: for want of a solid anchor, Chris jugged the line off my harness.






Being two working-class non-locals with little Rockies experience, we figured that 8 p.m. was a good quitting time for the day. When the next party gets to this point, they will be amazed that two thinking people could choose a bivy away from the face, unprotected from falling rock, for the night. Perhaps as amazed as we were when we found a Knifeblade in the left-hand wall at the base of the final headwall — the only sign of human passage in the 3000 feet of the route which we completed. Later, I came to believe that the pin was put in only as an anchor for a bivy up against the rock, safe from rockfall, unlike our sandy ledge fifty feet out. Luckily, the mountain gods didn’t hurl anything down on us in the night, although they did treat us to some amazing scenery.
















The next morning, entertaining me in one of our usual debates over route finding, Chris obliged my fancy for a first pitch straight up from the pin. You see, I always claim that I complement Chris equally in our partnership with a greater “mountain sense” even though I’ve spent much less time in the mountains. "Oh, the number of times he would have started up the wrong crack if I hadn’t put him right,” is my line of reasoning. I now know in my heart that we would have been safer on the steeper ground to the right which Chris favored. Rereading the route description has made me realize my conceited error. Mostly, however, it is the continued reality of recovering from breaking my arm while seconding only three pitches after “winning” our debate that makes me aware of my mistake. 

Jiugging with a broken arm






Thus it was that we began our epic 30 hours after leaving the ground. Reinhold Messner wrote in Big Walls that hebelieves that climbers at the  peak of their game avoid such eventualities, while others — let me say “imposters” — fall victim to the same forces. Does the “mind of the imposter” act as an attractor, a black hole that draws in negative energy? I think it does, for I will never forget looking up and seeing those missiles curving in towards me from perhaps six or eight pitches up. “I can only think how different the outcome would have been if the rock had been a foot the other way,” I wrote in the hut book on the way out. But which way? Left, and we would have continued with the climb and, hopefully, completed the second ascent. Right, and the rock would have hit my helmet. And what if we had gotten an earlier start that morning and finished one more pitch by the time the sun was hitting the upper slopes of the mountain? For we were within one pitch of the overhanging portion of the upper headwall, where we would have been protected from above. All rather conjectural when one is an El Cap height off the ground with a broken arm. An unenviable choice stared us coldly in the face. Our first decision was to make an effort upward, for the easier terrain above was definitely much closer than the ground. As I jugged the next pitch, I could not balance properly and raked the rope across a loose block while swinging after removing a piece. Like a sitting duck, I hung on as the block floated past me. After two hours, I reached Chris and we reassessed our decision. A list of factors: two hours to jug one pitch; Chris would have to lead every pitch; if he got hurt, I wouldn’t be able to help; overhanging jugging to come; pain… Down we went.






Sometimes you have to lie back and take it all in.











The editor of the CAJ said, “I’d like to know how you got down.” What can I say other than that Chris engineered a retreat with all the care and experience that he could muster. The first few raps to our bivy spot went well. Next we had to go off the ledge where the previous day I had found no solid anchor. Using a V-thread and a few slung loose blocks, we made it down to my “death stance”. Let it be known that “light is not right” if you ever have to retreat and use a five-mil accessory cord to pull a knot over a loose edge. At least take Spectra or static or something, which we two dirt bags figured we couldn’t afford. No kind of pulling would get the knot to move. To remedy the situation, up went Chris for his free fall when the knot slipped back against the anchor. And down he came to rescue me from my fatal fear with one 50-metre rap line to rap let’s say 750 metres. Thirty raps sounds about right.






Rapping, I am told, is statistically more dangerous than climbing. That we made it attests to Chris’s great ability and his love for life. Only once did I wonder — no, make that twice. The first was when we seemed to be rushing to make it to the lower ledge system on the face before dark. We had crossed to climber’s right of the sinister gully on a loose ledge system. Some of North Twin’s vertical cracks are impeccable, but the low-angled ledges are definitely choss. Out of these little bits and pieces of shattered rock, Chris had made an anchor of two pins, in part to conserve our dwindling rack. As he rapped off, he said something about “direction of pull”, but I missed it; upon weighting the anchor, I found myself leaning back on one very dubious Knifeblade. To my undying shame, I yelled at Chris for his (read my) recklessness as I rapped over the edge. By that time I had become completely dependent on Chris for my rescue. When he asked me for my input on our final rap in the dark that night, I did not understand what he was asking. He had rapped to the ends of our rope and could find no good anchor. As I was coming down second, he asked me to build an anchor, tie off, pull the rope, and then continue down to him. It was such a shock to be asked to take responsibility for myself, and I was enjoying being babied so greatly, that I simply refused. After I rapped to Chris and the ends of the rope, we spent our second night on the face on a non-existent ledge. Throughout the night, we would wake to air-tearing, screeching volleys from above and flatten ourselves as much as humanly possible. Sheltered only by our tarp, I found myself scared by this sound like no other. A breakfast of chocolate-covered coffee beans greeted us in the morning — the last of our food.






The second time I wondered about Chris was when we had reached the safety of the northeast ridge by the middle of the third day. There was finally no mountain looming over us, ready to let loose a barrage of limestone. My idea was to wait it out for the wardens to fly in and rescue us, as friends would phone to report us missing in three or four days. What was Chris thinking? He was worried that Kitt would have to hitchhike back from her work, since he had borrowed her truck to drive to our trailhead. A thousand feet up, with a rinky-dink leftover rack, and he was worried about someone else. It was all I could do to refrain from saying, “F--- Kitt, my arm hurts and we’re still not down.” A better friend you couldn’t ask for.

Luxury away from the face
















On the third night, we lounged in luxury on a large ledge system to the north end of the mountain. After we had considered all kinds of traverses off that would have been possible for able-bodied climbers, I finally convinced Chris that I was unable to function at a level that would allow for downclimbing. Some wild hanging belays in a waterfall below a hanging glacier brought back the fear factor, but they also brought us to our ledge. The impending darkness led us to delay our ground-coming until the next day. Chris claims that he was never so jealous as when he heard me snoring that chilly night away after I finally unfolded my emergency silver bivy bag now that we only had one night to go. When we finally reached non-technical ground the next day, I think that Chris was more relieved than me, for he no longer had the responsibility of caring for an invalid. This thought occurred to me as I let out a great “whoop” of unbridled joy when I knew our epic was behind us. Having not shown any outward signs of stress during our descent of two and a half days, Chris suddenly called out, “Ian, how do I get down?” All that remained between Chris and a scree slope was a ten-foot-high chimney that even I had downclimbed. Now that he knew we were down and safe, Chris could finally show some weakness and ask me for help. How he handled the stress, I don’t know. Probably the same way he deals with the soloing and the wet, 100-foot run-outs — with the calm mind of the pure climber. After all, as he put it, “Death was on the mind a lot.”






Thanks to Dr. Mark Heard of Banff, it is fully functional and only aches occasionally.
















My many thanks to Chris, Kitt (for not asking for her rack back and for

insisting that I go to the hospital when I was in delusional denial) and

Dr. Mark Heard (for fixing me up).






The Canadian Alpine Journal 2005

Mudpit Drytooling Crag, East Revy

Mudpit Drytooling Crag 

Stick clip the first bolt on yellow, blue and red routes routes. 

A bolt at crux of Apprentice Guide route has been extended to avoid pillar below. Red route not climbed to anchor yet, good climbing to lower off from top two bolts.  A directional on the top two bolts if top-roping the red route will keep the rope off sharp edges. Green route onsighted by Tom Schindfessel November 2024.


Find bolted anchors at top of yellow and green routes on a ledge that requires downclimbing to get to them, To get to top anchors find white bucket and use fixed line to descend to anchors.  

Two bolt anchor for right-most orange route is visible from the top of the crag near the edge of the cliff.  Be careful approaching the edge, perhaps belayed to anchor or rap off a tree to approach the edge. 



Approach: Park at Cedar House. Do not cross creek as you would to Mountain Shadows rock crag but instead head up downhill mountain bike trail. One uphill and there is a faint marked trail left to the Stacey Creek waterfall beauty spot. Sta straight on main trail steeply uphill (slippery footing) on a constant steep incline to slight flattening in trail and right hand turn uphill. Head off trail downhill at 45 degrees toward Stacey Creek. Watch your footing at the top of the crag. 

Bottom of crag :here

https://www.gaiagps.com/public/BlumX7AodxkbW0aMJNUntZ9M

Top of crag: here

https://www.gaiagps.com/public/pZxpPdPFGPb34aasiF0tcESv

If You Don't Nail the Approach you Probably Won't do the Climb.


There aren't so many hard and fast rules in alpinism. We know a few though:


-There is no free lunch. Popularized by Uphill Athlete, essentially this says that there are no secret short cuts to endurance training.


-Ice is always more difficult than it looks from the valley.  This is exemplified by the pitch on K6 West that Raphael Slawinski (2 times winner of the X-Games Games for ice climbing) said had him more pumped than ever before on a pitch of ice. From the valley we were calling it the “Guiness Gully” pitch as it looked like easy WI4.


”You’ve got to go with good guys”. This from Urs Kallen, Rockies legends, which reflects the truth that only a team of like minded people is likely to get up much.

To these truisms I would add, “If you don't nail the approach you probably won't do the climb.”

This I learned early on in my climbing. One of the first times I went to the Bugaboos, with Chris Brazeau (before he became the master of the Bugs) we set our sights on the world-famous Becky Chouinard.  Chris was studying Adventure Tourism under KFR, Keith Reid, Squamish legend.  Keith tried to let Chris know that it was within his abilities to climb the B-C in a day, but my doubts had us choose a more conservative two-day strategy.  We camped at the Pigeon-Howser col (I believe this was allowed at that time) so that we could leave our camping gear and return to it after the route.    Late at night we were selfishly concerned when we were woken by a party passing us, heading to camp at the base of the B-C, at what is now referred to as the East Creek camping boulder. 

 “We just drove straight from Manitoba, we’ve been up for 24 hours”.

We were worried that this team of three would be ahead of us the next day, and having moved from Manitoba myself 10 years earlier I knew that it wasn't exactly a hotbed of fast climbers.  Given their level of sleep deprivation we weren't too surprised when one of them left their radical waterfall ice tools behind, but we were surprised when, informed of their loss they replied,

“Throw it down here,” in the middle of the night. So I hucked it downhill, out of the ray of light from my headlamp, and presumably toward our new-found climbing compatriot.

The next morning we passed a tent just before dawn with the same very groggy fellow standing outside advising us that,

“the route is that way,’ pointing downhill,180 degrees away from what was even in the near dark a clearly looming South Howser Tower.  

“Alright, thanks, see you up there,”; Chris has always been nothing if not polite.

As we topped out pitch 6 I remember vividly seeing three brightly clad figures packing up their tent and heading directly away from us, downhill, into the steep East Creek.  I have always wondered what became of their long driving and hiking trip, and whether they recovered from their first effort to make another attempt on the route.


With this example in mind, when I a decade later began the process of taking guiding courses, I put a lot of effort into scoping out the approaches to the commonly guided trade routes.  I had skipped over most of these routes, chosing as a recreational climber to do more of the difficult grade routes rather than the moderate classics.  I had heard of the common guiding trope of the guide candidate who, in the dark of pre-dawn, flubs the approach so badly that they get lost and can't recover, and fail the exam day without even getting to the route.  At the time my partner had a very energetic, fit, and adventurous dog, so I managed to combine dog walks with getting approach beta for these classic routes.  Dog leashes are required in the national parks, the dog would often get surprisingly high on some scramble approach or other, and I would often have to restrain her with the leash on the way down. This demonstrated another truism of alpinism that it is often easier and safer going up than going down. As soon as some photos were taken of me holding the leash tightly we began joking that I was getting to practice my short-roping skills on the dog (some clients have in fact called short-roping “dog-on-leash”). With most of the common terms for guiding companies in the Rockies already taken by friends of mine (anything with Rockies, Alpine, Ice, Canadian) this led to me striking upon the unclaimed niche of Canadian Rockies Pet Guides, a joke which I was amazed some people didn't catch onto.

The two examples of the importance of getting the approach right coincided in my first summer working as an apprentice guide. As the key bivouac permit to climb Mount Sir Donald requires an in-person visit to the Parks Canada booth at Roger's Pass, I was paid an apprentice wage to show up at 9 am to secure the permit, with the clients arriving later in the afternoon.  From Manhattan, they had gotten up at 3 am in order to make it to Banff by noon, Roger's Pass by 3, with a planned arrival at the bivouac below the famous NW ridge by 6 pm.  They were an incredibly interesting young power couple: the wife a lawyer as well as a PhD in psychology who was studying addictions, the husband a commercial lawyer.  With a world of New York city stories to entertain us with, I and the mountain guide were quickly enthralled, and the very steep approach hike flew by.

That is until the mountain guide, around tree line, turned to me and said, 

“What mountain is that,”

to which I replied,

“Sir Donald,”

but with somewhat of a sinking feeling as somehow the mountain I was looking directly at just didn't fit the billing as one of the more impressive ridge climbs in North America.

“Really, look again. You think so….”

at which point I realized he was being rhetorical as he looked at his GPS map on his phone.

It only took us a moment to realize we were looking at Sir Donald’s much smaller northern neighbor, Eagle Peak, and that we had severely messed up the approach.

We had been so engrossed by the conversation that we had hiked uphill steeply with the New York couple for 600 meters and an hour and a half. We literally made the wrong turn about 5 minutes out of the parking lot. I realized what a high performance couple they were when the mountain guide gave them options.

“We can camp here and improvise something tomorrow, or we can turn around, walk down all of the vertical we have gained so far, and arrive in camp around 11 tonight.”

“Yes, let's go to Sir Donald, we are fine.”

As the apprentice I would like to blame the mountain guide for the mistake….but I probably should have noticed.  To make amends, and to try to help salvage the day, I took as much weight from the couple as I could, went ahead to cook dinner, and arrived at camp around 10;30.  They rolled in at 11:30, refused dinner, and went straight to bed, almost 24 hours after waking up. Our planned 4 am wake-up the next morning was out the window, so we agreed on having 7 hours sleep.

The woman was the main climber of the couple, the fellow was fit and did a good job the next morning more or less keeping up. As guides we were sensitive to their fatigue , and kept asking how they were feeling and doing. So did the wife, wanting to check in with her less experienced partner.  By three quarters of the way up the ridge I as the apprentice had fallen a bit behind the lead guide, which gave the man the opportunity to tell me some news which explained his motivation:

“I am going to propose on the summit.”

And he did, on a bright hot clear blue day above the firey red forest fire smoke of the valley below.

So, put in the effort, do your research, and don't mess up the approach.

Lightweight alpinism or basecamp cragging: Two trips to the Catamount Glacier

Carrying everything on your own back.

This summer I was at the Catamount Glacier in the Purcell mountains south of Golden for two different trips. The contrast between the two weeks demonstrated to me the breadth of our sport, and vividly highlighted the utility of using the right approach for the right objective.  

Basecamp Style:
The first week was a Rab Canada sponsored alpine camp where we rock climbed and camped in comfort. As we had a number of guests, athletes, and friends going for a week, we carried outsized loads in and plunked them at snowline on a campsite of smooth rolling granitic slabs at 2500 meters. We each had a stylish and spacious Latok Mountain Tent , lots of food and all of the technical climbing equipment we could use for the rarely-visited rock routes the spires in this area have to offer.

As Rab is aiming to do its best to eliminate CO2 in their production we ixnayed the “Canadian telepherique” (read helicopter, thanks for the expression Mark Klassen) and decided to use the same funds to pay three local friends a reasonable day-wage to hike all of the food, tents, ropes, double racks into camp. It was 5 1/2 kilometers and 750 meters to camp, coincidentally right about the same as a hike to Applebee camp in the Bugaboos.

Madeleine Martin-Preney impressively rope-gunning the South-west ridge of Mount Harmon.


The thing with cragging from a basecamp is that you want to bring enough of a rack and rope to be able to climb technical rock routes like on offer here, on Mount Harmon, and below on Scotch Peak #2. What makes the Catamount a really cool basecamp location is that in addition to alpine rock cragging there are also 3 3000 meter moderate alpine peaks on offer at the end of the valleys.

Megan Cramb enjoying some splitter granite on the imaginatively named Scotch Peak #2. That's how few people seem to go in here, they haven't even come up with separate names for the mountains:)

Don’t find anything on the internet when you search for rock climbing at the Catamount? That’s the advantage of being local and getting out walk-about, we can find out about the secret spots that haven’t hit the headlines yet. Under 20 kilometers south-east of the world famous Bugaboos, I didn’t see anyone I hadn’t walked in with at the Catamount during my 12 days there this summer. That is a far cry from Applebee!

Applebee is a great place to socialize, not such a great place if you don't climb 5.10 cracks.

As sparse as the campers might be, the alpine cragging on the Catamount is not that different from the smaller towers that surrounds Applebee., though there is definitely no East Face of Snowpatch! One thing with the Bugs is that if you don’t climb 5.10 cracks proficiently there isn’t really a lot to do other than join the crowds on the 5 mega-classics that you can actually climb. I heard tell of 25 parties lining up for the Becky-Chouinard this summer. I mean it is an amazing route, I have climbed it a couple of times and look forward to sneaking in there some time before the crowds figure out it is in condition for the season…. Check out the similarity between the Crescent Towers (in the background above) and the one tower we spent the most days climbing on in the photo below.

Jonathan Lytton and Lawrence Quang surveying some of the granitic ridges of the Scotch Peaks basin with Mount Harmon in the background.

Lightweight Style

John and Christina with the Welsh Lakes to the east and the North Star glacier to the west.

Christina and John were my first clients when I got into guiding about 5 years ago. We have had some great adventures together since then so I wasn’t too surprised when Christina proposed that rather than basecamp in the Catamount drainage we instead traverse three valleys in the area. I am not sure if she had seen this trip report or had used her map-reading skill to dream it up. This kind of light alpinism is right up her alley, as she is a very experienced and active backcountry hiker from the rugged west coast of BC. And John has an amazing serve I hear:) Just kidding John, you hold your own, good luck at the tournament this weekend!

Our first night's camp-spot right next to the Welsh Lakes.

We started at the Welsh Lakes, climbed past Carmarthen Peak (named after the Welsh town and its famous castle I visited with my mom as a youngster), over the ridge of Alpha Centauri (3093 meters) and into the upper North Star Glacier. From here we descended the glacier so as to not sleep on ice and camped at 2600 meters on sand at the side of the glacier. The next day we enjoyed a casual ascent up the glacier and onto the shoulder of Alpha Centauri, a coupke of short 45 degree alpine ice, a couple of pitches of easy 5th class climbing, a stroll to its summit, and beautiful panoramic views south to Mount Farnham and east to the Rockies.

Alpha Centauri on the left, North Star on the right, from flsts on the glacier at around 2750 meters.

The crux of the traverse was gaining the ridge off the North Star glacier onto the lower shoulder of Mount Gwendoline. Christina and John do not go on these trips for the sake of technical rock climbing, preferring rather to travel through the high country for the peace and solitude and vistas it provides. What would have been an easy slope covered with snow was instead spitting loose rock from glacial recession, so we did three short 4th class pitches using terrain choice and seated hip belays to make it safe. With relatively large 5- day packs it was reassuring to have the rope.

Climbing the rock buttress out of the North Star glacier. John is all smiles as he gets to like rock climbing more and more.


For the traverse we took a minimum amount of gear we required. As much as it helps to have lightweight gear, it is a better trick to just leave the entire thing behind, for example the rack. So we managed to do the 5 days with a 60 meter rope, three ice screws, and a couple of lockers each. I could mention how light my Rab sleeping bag is, and especially how much smaller the new Rab Ultrasphere 4.5 packs than the old standard Neo-air, and that Camp makes what they claim is the lightest harness in the world, but knowing how to read terrain and use it to belay is a bigger advantage.

I thoroughly enjoyed guiding both these trips. There are always different styles of climbing and knowing how to leave everything behind and enjoy the mountains with a minimum of gear is at the heart of enjoying getting up high. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you are looking for such an experience, whether as part of a group or your own private booking.


Postscript

I should add that in fine style, during the amazing high pressure window when we traversed to the Catamount, two friends from Squamish walked in and established a new route on the North Howser over three days and two nights. This is in stark contrast to many who fly in and often neglect to mention this in their reporting of their ascents. Good style is something to strive for, we all know what it is!

Annual New Route Summary 2021

The journals are out, and have this annual summary of new routes in the Rockies. For those interested in getting after it, a list of the routes I could track down.



Available online, but the AAJ edited out the route of the year, so a photo below:


Scroll to the bottom of the AAJ online page for some cool photos.

http://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/13201216119

Canada 

Rockies Summary 

Whether it was the late effects of the COVID chill, or a very smoky summer, 2021 was not the most active year in the Canadian Rockies. 

In early spring, on March 5, Alik Berg and the author climbed a foamy, sticky ice strip on the northwest face of Mt. Vaux (3,310m) with Berg continuing to the summit for Western Neve (800m, WI5 R M5). A tree line bivy positioned them the next morning for a few vertical ice pitches, which led to 300m of moderate mixed ground, followed by 250m of technical ice before reaching the north-west ridge and a stroll to the summit in a storm. About a week later Berg teamed with Uisdean Hawthorn to make the coveted second ascent of the Mt. Wilson (3,260m) test-piece Dirty Love (V 500m, M7). They first climbed Totem Pole (200m, WI5), before linking it into Dirty Love for a 26-hour 1,700m car-to-car outing. Three days later the team added Amnesiac (500m, WI5 M7), a first ascent of mixed ledges to sustained ice pitches on the northeast face of the east sub peak of Mt. Whymper (2,844m), visible from the Radium highway. 

Also in March, Luka Bogdanovic and Shawn White cycled 11 kilometers along the north shore of Lake Minnewanka to a drainage holding the incredible find of The Odyssey (200m, 7 pitches, WI4). With its remote yet easy to reach location requiring only a 15-minute hike up the drainage following the bike approach, the south-facingroute is bound to become a popular yet adventurous moderate. 

In mid April, Merrick Montemuro, Sebastian Taborszky, and Paul Taylor headed to Moraine Lake and found a striking line of ice in the bowl left of the Perren approach to Mt. Fay (3,235m). On the right hand side of the spectacular wall below the Fay glacier, they climbed Play with Fay (345m, WI6). The same team added Last Harvest (110m, WI3/4) across Hector Lake from the Icefields Parkway near Orion Falls on April 20, at the end of the ice season. 

Brette Herrington and Dylan Cunningham aimed for the headwall at the top of the northeast face of Mt. Niblock (2,976m), where on April 20 they came away with Just a Nibble (14 pitches, 5.10 WI5 M6 R). With technical rock sections climbed in rock shoes after mixed ground leading to the side of the headwall, they climbed to the northeast ridge, descending it without tagging the summit. There remain other possible routes to the summi.. 

The summer alpine scene seemed particularly quiet. In July, Alik Berg and Juan Henriquez added a major new summer line to the huge east face of Mt. Chephren (3,266m). Smoke and a Pancake (1,100m, 5.11-) was climbed over two days, and takes the buttress between the winter routes The Wild Thing (1,300m WI5 M7) and The Dogleg Couloir (V+ 1,300m, M7 A1) on good quartzite for the first 600m and the upper 500m alternating between limestone and shale ledges. At the end of the summer Berg and Maarten Van Haeren completed the first traverse of the Trident Range outside Jasper. They began with the northeast ridge of Perevil Peak, the technical crux. The next day they completed Vertex Peak, Majestic Mountain and Mount Estella, on the last day they went over Manx Peak, Terminal Mountain, down to Marmot Pass and finally over Marmot Mountain, all on quality quartzite. Navigating counterclockwise through the range, the team covered approximately 16 kilometers in the two days. 

Dylan Cunningham had quite a summer. First he climbed Smokeshow (IV 850m, 5.6 45°) on the

northeast buttress to the north summit of Mt. Mummery (3,328m) on the far western flank of the Rockies north of Golden BC with Tanya Bok. This was at the end of the Alpine Club of Canada General Mountaineering Camp in mid August, harkening back to an adventurous time in that venerable institution. On a more technical level, he also snagged the third ascent of the Cheesemond route on the east face of Mt. Assiniboine (V 1,200m, 5.9 A2) with Ryan Richardson. 

Over the summer Craig McGee, with a few partners, established Diamonds are Forever (5.12-, 10 pitches) which climbs the east face of Mount Louis to finish on the right hand edge of the prominent diamond formation the mountain is known for. Starting just to the left of the Eastern Dihedrals (Slawinski, Holeczi), the mixed protection route can be continued to the summit of Louis or rappelled with two ropes.

On October 5, Ryan Leavitt and Patrick Jones climbed a new rock route on a likely unclimbed peak, Elevator Tower #2 (2924m), east of Elkford in the southern Rockies. With loose rock they climbed 12 short pitches up to 5.8 and placed bolts for anchors due to the rock quality. 

The first new route in winter conditions, in October, was a moderate line on Mt. Whyte (2,983m), above the Lake Agnes teahouse. Whyte Noise (430m, AI3 M4) by Sebastian Taborszky, Austin Goodine and Paul Taylor became an instant classic. A few thin ice pitches lead to a romp up a snow couloir to a moderate mixed exit to the ridge and the summit block, and was repeated quickly by a few parties looking for early winter climbing. Also in mid October, but of an entirely more dangerous and striking nature, Chris Petrauskas and Taylor Sullivan held their breath for serac hazard and climbed “a beautiful 10 pitch, mixed/ice line on the left side of Mt. Temple’s north face headwall.” Stringing up the Lights (WI4+ M3+ R) is severely threatened by seracs, climbs to the right of the Elzinga/Miller and was the first new route on the famous north face since 2008. In October the author and Van Haeren headed up the north face of Storm Mountain (3,095m) looking for the mythical unrepeated Wallator route but veered off right into easier ground when confronted by vertical cracks. Their route is a variation that holds many ledge and corner systems. It led to M5 climbing and a snowed up slab. There are almost endless variations possible to the 4 existing routes on this ledgy face.. 

In a more conventional vein, Sebastian Taborszky and Bruno Pierre Couture climbed a three pitch mixed route in Field just to the left of the thin ice of Big Sexy Yodel. Aggravated Turtles (130m, WI5+ M6) was also quickly repeated by a few parties, and is a great option useful when the ice next door is unclimbable, which is often the case. 

Finally, in late January the author finished a moderate drytooling project, which follows weaknesses to the left of Mixed Master. Astringent Apprentice (300m, M5) was started with Sam Eastman, then climbed to the last pitch with Uisdean Hawthorn, and finally climbed in good mixed conditions with Raphael Slawinski. 

Ian Welsted – Canada

Get Started in Canadian Rockies Alpine Mixed Climbing


 

Guiding the Canadian Rockies for the past 5 years (and climbing here for over 25) the most common question I am asked is how to get into alpine climbing. With the growth in popularity of ice climbing, and high profile movies like The Alpinist, it seems more and more people are wanting to get after it. When I was first in the Rockies, I was faced with the same quandary. I came to climbing from hiking and adventuring. Looking up at a mountain in awe, I had the burning desire to get to the top of it. In contrast, what most people seemed to be doing was either climbing very steep ice pillars, or drytooling at sport bolted caves. People had gotten so good at ice climbing that the cutting edge was drytooling onto hanging daggers, combining the two.  There was a proud lore of big alpine routes in the past, so I knew it was possible to climb the big faces that were staring me in the face, but I had to figure out how it was done.

 

 Ice climbing is inherently restricting, as waterfall ice only forms in limited spots, and often in avalanche-threatened gullies. Alpine climbing on the other hand is almost limitless. Also, once a climber reaches a certain familiarity with ice, the technique becomes somewhat repetitive.  Ice climbing for the most part feels like 5.9 climbing to a seasoned veteran, until the ice gets thin, airy, or rotten and won’t accept good screws. So, ice climbing goes quickly from easy and safe to hard and dangerous.  This is likely the reason that in the 90s the interest among Rockies locals switched to bolt protected drytooling.  There was an open debate as to whether this trend would make it easier and therefore more common for climbers to climb alpine routes. 

 

Recently, drytooling in its own right has become the most popular option for folks looking to get out in the winter.  Unlike ice climbing, it is safe and bolted, essentially sport climbing with tools and crampons.  On any given day in the Rockies more people will be found at a few crags than  in the whole rest of the range.  Drilling pockets for the tools has become the norm, as sport climbers want to make the moves bigger, more dynamic, and don’t want to be limited by having tools slip off the holds. With drilled pockets, however, the fine balance and finesse required to keep a pick on a thin edge often goes missing.  We have come a long way from developing the skills required for getting up a big snowy mountain face.

 

As a final reason for going “winter” climbing in the alpine in the Rockies, as Barry Blanchard has pointed out, limestone is often better when it is frozen together!  As “winter” conditions here can often be found any time of year, we have a long season in which to take advantage of this. Also,the Rockies are great training for bigger alpine objectives around the world. Our American friends often point out that the rock is more committing than in Alaska, where solid gear in granite makes harder climbing seem more reasonable. 

 

Considerations:

 

So, what skills, apart from the strength developed at the drytooling crags, do we need for winter alpine climbing?

 

-Avalanches: First in importance is learning to understand the threat avalanches pose in the Rockies.  The range has infamously killed some of the top alpinists in the world.  This isn’t Chamonix, with easily obtained local knowledge of conditions.  Talking with more experienced climbers, taking avalanche courses, patience, and a strong appreciation for the risks involved are essential. Often when avalanche danger is high the gullies that hold the big ice climbs are out of consideration while rocky faces can be safer.

 

-Natural Protection: I have occasionally been hired to guide climbers who are stronger climbers than me but who are unable or unwilling to climb above natural protection.  I will go so far as to say that on almost all alpine climbs in the Rockies, at some point you will be heinously run-out above questionable gear.  Both learning to place gear and to keep a calm mind and accept the risk involved are key elements to alpine climbing in the range. The gear is similar whether placed in rock in the summer or winter, so summer alpine climbing away from bolts might be the easiest way to acquire this skill. The good thing is, in the winter the choss is frozen together so often the gear is actually better once placed in the winter.

 

 

 

-Pitons: Pitons deserve their own category.  In limestone, very often if you only have a rack of nuts and cams your pro will be very widely spaced, to put it mildly.  The first time I climbed with Raphael Slawinski I was amazed by how much safer he made the climbing by finding thin cracks that accepted knifeblades.  A standard rack on almost every alpine outing is three or four knifeblades, an angle or two, and a few small to medium bird-beaks. If the climbing is going to involve long pitches of rock with anchors made on rock this might be augmented.

 

 

-Balance:  Drilled pockets at the crags are great for large moves on overhanging terrain.  In the mountains Mark Twight’s advice in Extreme Alpinism, to traverse when faced with difficult terrain, means that we aren’t often on the kinds of overhangs found at the crags. Instead, fine balance on crampons, and scratching your way up on thin edges, is more the name of the game.  With the popularity of the crags this is harder to find, as former slabs turn into pegboards.

Seeking out newer crag routes that aren’t as steep, or simply starting on the easier end of the list of climbs here is probably the best way to get some of the mileage required.

 

-Bailing:  Getting into alpine climbing with a solid background knowledge of self rescue or simply rappelling is a minimum requirement. If you know how to make anchors for the way up…you know how to bail, you just have to “trust the process” of building a two-piece leaver anchor backed up to a full-strength anchor that gets removed by the second down. You don’t have to memorize all 200 pages of Andy Kirkpatrick’s latest offering, Down, but being confident enough in building gear anchors to retreat means you can feel good about going up. Obviously, having enough rope and cord to do the rappels required is essential.

 

-Weather: Learning the intricacies of mountain weather is a life-long pursuit.  Definitely looking at the bog-standard forecast on your phone in the morning is not good enough. Lots of more precise weather resources are available to help get a picture of the bigger scale weather affecting your outing. After you have an overall idea of what to expect in the area, a more precise pinpoint forecast for a given elevation can confirm your initial assessment.  The easiest of objectives can be completely out of condition if the weather is not on your side. The Mountain Weather Forecast from Avalanche.ca is a great place to look.

 

-Skiing: We are not talking shredding, just basic survival striding.  Snowshoes are ok for roadside jaunts, but for anything more than say a kilometer and skis will be much more efficient.  As these climbs are not popular you won’t be following a broken trail, which makes skis essential.  Most alpine climbers in the Rockies have a pair of skis with Silvrettas that accept climbing boots. Others choose to ski on a light touring set-up and carry their boots. One option is better for skiing downhill, the other is better when having to change boots in spindrift at the bottom of a face.

 

-Backcountry skills: If you are approaching winter alpine climbing from a sport climbing background, rather than a hiking and camping background, there are some essential skills required for just staying comfortable.  Learning to layer clothing, how to efficiently pack a backpack, and what food you need for a long day out might take a few outings to perfect.

 

-Partners: Isn’t this always the crux in most climbing? At the crag you can accept a belay from just about anyone. In the alpine, you want to find a partner who has a similar risk tolerance. If you are lucky enough to know someone who has a lot more experience, don’t fall for the expert halo in decision making, but this experience can likely help you accelerate into the climbing. I have over the years been surprised by how eager a lot of experienced alpinists are for new partners, as even if they have a core group they climb with often schedules and objectives don’t match.  It never hurts to ask!


As a guide I would be remiss if I didn’t point out that there are a number of excellent local alpine guides working guiding climbing in the area.

 

-Grades: A touchy subject. I refrained from calling this “beginner alpine climbs” as a certain depth of climbing and mountain knowledge is useful before heading up these routes. This is reflected in the grading system, where traditionally a commitment grade made up the first quoted grade for a route, followed by a technical grade. There is so much more to these outings than just the physicality of the most strenuous move. Having said that, some boldness on the part of young climbers often goes a long way in getting them up these routes. Being strong enough that the technical crux doesn’t feel difficult certainly helps make the commitment grade more manageable.

Be very aware that the technical grades from the drytooling crag are of limited comparability to the grade in the alpine.  Think indoor grade compared to trad grade, but even moreso. Some first ascensionists famously sandbag, the climbing is often very run out, and the techniques themselves are not directly transferable.  Be wary of the tendency of alpinists to understate risk with comments in social media such as, “Oh yeah, fun pitch”, when in fact a fall could have serious repercussions.  As I said, most classic Rockies alpine routes of quality will have spots where you are unbelievably run-out above questionable gear.  You want to be very humble and solid at the grade you are on.

The good thing is, the grade here is not the reward, so pick an easier than usual grade to climb until you get some mileage, and enjoy the views, the surroundings, and the moment you are in until you build a body of experience so that you can enjoy the harder grades when you end up climbing them.

Self-rescue and personal responsibility: This is the wilderness, and although there is rescue in the mountain parks it is the responsibility of everyone who goes out in the mountains to be self-sufficient. Practicing rescue techniques so that they are second nature is good preparation before venturing off in the hills. An emergency communication device is now considered standard equipment. Have an emergency response plan ready for the worst case scenario, and know exactly who you are going to contact.

 

-Guidebooks: The amazing series of guidebooks by David Jones have more or less revolutionized Rockies climbing.  Not so long ago a lot of time was spent perusing journals, trying to piece together the now out-of-print Select Sandbags guidebook with the similarly difficult to find Waterfalls guidebook.  The waterfall book includes routes that don’t summit (Jones’ requirement for inclusion), so in combination with the Rockies West, South, and North books research is now much easier.  When in doubt, it is always worth asking around to find out if the locals can help, whether that be online or at the crags or gyms.

 
Here are some suggested routes to start with, l
isted from east to west roughly, and south to north.

Coire Dubh: (WI3, 5.7, 700m) This is the uber-classic mixed route of the range, perfect for an introduction. An entry ice pitch leads to a snow bowl walk to the defining pitch, a 5.6 pitch of crack climbing on gear, to numerous possible finishes to the top of Loder Peak. Avalanche hazard is often minimal due to its position in the front ranges, though upslope storms can dump surprising amounts of snow in the bowl above the ice pitch. Don’t be put off by the stated length of the route, a lot of it is uphill walking.

 

Doors of Perception (III, WI3, M5+, 400m) To the left of the 5.6 Coire Dubh corner crack pitch starts this rock route which has become a drytooling classic.  Look for plenty of bolts, and when in doubt as to route finding…look for the bolts.  Stated grades have been all over the map, but the close bolting and often continuous cracks makes the climbing quite reasonable.  This is a good introduction to straight rock climbing with tools as it has received a lot of traffic and the holds are never difficult to find. The first ascent was almost assuredly on natural gear in the summer, before it got bolted and claimed as a winter route, so if you want practice placing gear with gloves on this might be a good place to start, as you can always revert to clipping the bolts.

 

Other Loder Peak routes: Local guide Jay Mills has established and reported various other climbs in this amphitheatre, but they are all on gear and much more serious than the previous two mentioned.  Save these others for when you have more mileage.

 

Klatu Veratu (WI3 M6, 200m) On the north face of Wedge Mountain, graduate beyond the Wedge Smear where so many climbers have been introduced to ice climbing  Beware of Slawinski grading and do not go to the right hand of the two gullies on the face, as this is The Maul, a stiff M7. The bowl leading to the base of the face can be loaded.

https://www.gravsports.com/ice%20pages%20folder/Route%20Descriptions/Wedge_Alpine.htm

 

The Manhole (M5, 300m) The very obvious gash on the north side of The Fist in K-Country.  The first pitch sports a few bolts to get to an ice smear, while the rest of the climb follows cracks in a gully.  Gear is good throughout.

https://raphaelslawinski.blogspot.com/2017/10/before-snow-flies.html

 

The HOle (M6, 300m) On Mount Lawrence Grassi directly above Canmore, a central gully goes through a 8 meter hole in the wall. Hike up the Ha Ling trail, traverse to the top of The Miner’s Gully backcountry ski run, and descend the gully until you can traverse into the base of the line below the hole.  Beware that this traverse in on slabby rock so should not be attempted except in early or late season conditions. The more direct gash in the face, exiting higher and through a roof, is Slawinski’s Tainted Love, a different thing entirely.

https://www.ianwelsted.com/ianwelsted/2015/11/above-canmonix-sitting-down-mid-pitch.html

 

 

Unnamed Direct (WI3, M4, 500m)  On the north outlier sub-peak of Storm Mountain, this is mostly a snow gully with an entrance pitch of ice and a few mixed pitches to join the Northeast Spur (Greenwood-Lofthouse) route.

https://www.ianwelsted.com/ianwelsted/2017/11/planting-flag.html

 

Sick Day (WI4, M3, 300m) As Naoise O Muircheartaigh wrote about the FA, located in the next cirque north from Unnamed Direct,

 

The route is clearly visible from Hwy 1 at the Radium junction. It's in the cirque just north of the Arnica lake cirque and initially ascends a wide ice flow which we climbed in 2 pitches. This is followed by a snow gully (About 140m) before another pitch of ice with a mixed exit (pic3) leading to the summit slope.

Worth noting that, with more snowfall, the summit slope would pose a risk of avalanche. About WI4 M3.

 

A Gentleman’s Day Out (IV, 5.8 mixed)  Listed on page 211 of Joe Josephson’s Waterfall Ice: Climbs in the Canadian Rockies. This route and its neighbour, the equally mysterious An Elderly Man’s Day Out (IV, 5.7 mixed) are described as past Killer Pillar and roughly parallel to the Stanley Headwall mixed climbing venue.  The rock wall on the left side of Stanley Peak, and below the glacial bench, has a number of gullies that in early season are good venues to get alpine-style mileage and are often climbed by those who approach the headwall proper looking to check out conditions.

Whyte Noise (AI3, M4, 430m) Above the Lake Agnes teahouse, a moderate couloir on the north face of Mount Whyte featuring an entry ice pitch, some couloir hiking, and a moderate but real mixed pitch that takes the climbers to the upper ridge and a descent down Mount Niblock.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/rockiesiceandmixedconditions/posts/231454882355842/

 

Janoline Couloir (AD, 50 degrees, 350m) If you aren’t too proud to climb a route that has been skied (admittedly with a few rappels) this couloir on Crowfoot Mountain would be, in the early season, a good introduction to Rockies snow and rock climbing. Just off the Icefields Parkway, this face of Crowfoot Mountain has almost limitless possibilities for this kind of climbing.

 

C-Train (M6, 200m) Further north along the face of Crowfoot, just above Bow Lake on the northern buttress of the tail end of the mountain.  Don’t be put off by the M6 grade as it is for a short-lived section of slightly over-vertical well protected climbing.  Ski across or around Bow Lake in a short hour.  On an early attempt in spring a cornice collapse almost caught the climbers, so beware on these eastern faces of the accumulation from dominant west winds on the Parkway.

https://www.ianwelsted.com/ianwelsted/2019/01/c-train-200-meter-mini-alpine-moderate.html

 

Columbia Glacier Icefields Area

 

Traditionally this has been the center of Canadian Rockies alpinism, for good reason.  Short approaches to the alpine makes for lots of possibilities.  The outlying butresses of Athabasca and Andromeda make for great introductory alpine climbing.

 

AA Buttress routes: The lower part of the east buttress of Mount Athabasca, above the usual approach to the Athabasca-Andromeda col, is marked by a prominent X-shaped couloir system.  Easily approached above the snowcoach road, often wind-scoured even in the middle of winter, these routes are often descended before summiting Athabasca. The routes are listed from climbers’ left to right. (Be wary of the route names, East Chimney vs West Chminey, I have yet to figure out how these cardinal directions correspond to their position on the map).

https://gripped.com/routes/new-moderate-alpine-chimney-on-mount-athabasca/

 

 

McKibben Route (II, M5) Takes slopes and rock steps to the left of the first of the x-couloirs.

 

Huismann/Isaac, Abdominal Drain Head up into the bottom of the x, then take the left hand branch to where you reach lower angled terrain at the top of the buttress.

 

Slawinski/Takeda, West Chimney (II, M5) Take the right hand of the x-branches.  Can be used as a descent route with a fair number of fixed stations, or walk off as for the other routes to climbers’ left depending on avalanche conditions.

 

East Chimney (M5, WI3, 300m) Riding the right hand skyline of the buttress, it has the most sustained climbing of any of the routes on the buttress.

 

Other Athabasca/Andromeda routes:

 

            Many of the routes in this area can be considered good introductory alpine ground.  A solid appreciation of avalanche hazard should be practiced.  The Practice Gullies, any routes in the Andromeda bowl area, Shooting Gallery when in icy condition, and even Asteroid Alley for a steeper option can be quite easy in terms of climbing difficulty, but the sad history of injury and fatalities in this area speaks volumes to the advisability of apprenticing on smaller routes.

 

Sidestreet (M4, 400m) On the left side of the approach to the famous Slpistream is a gully up Little Snowdome.  There are only a few sections of climbing in the gully, depending on snow load and ice formation, but this has long been a good right of passage for Rockies alpine climbers. 

Tourist Turf 250m, m5+ above Lake Louise

Ryan Patteson on the loose start to pitch 7 on the FA. Notice the turf ball clearly visible at the top of the corner. This is located at the bottom of the upper gully.

Tourist Turf 250m, m4R

Follow the red route line, or alternately the potentially easier blue line beginning at pitch 4 traverse so as to avoid the M5+ pitch 5 black corner.


April 9th, 2022

Ryan Patteson, Justin Guarino, Ian Welsted



Starts at the west end of Rockfall Wall on the south side of Lake Louise, the ultimate in tourist turf. The route features many sticks into solid turf, very unusual for the Rockies, and quartzite.

Skin up the snow-cone between Kaleidoscope Pinnacle and Rockfall Wall. The climb is defined by lower angled ledges leading up and left from a triangular snowfield aiming for an upper snow-filled gully which is very obvious when viewed from the lake but much less so when on the climb. Ironically, we left the skis just below a very old, bleached quickdraw that looked as though it had been there since the 80s, on what must be one of the shortest sport routes in the Bow Valley.

  The first pitches trend left overall, aiming for a ledge system below a steep wall.  While on the first pitches aim for the top of a blocky ledge system that borders a much more planar rock wall to the right. At the top of pitch 5 traverse left to spot the corner/chimney system that has a large grass clump at the top, which is the bottom of the gully.  This crux pitch takes gear in the corner but requires face climbing on the arete to its right on quartzite that is not beyond reproach, earning it an R rating.  The roof and gully system on pitch 9, the last of the technical climbing, has a lot of very loose blocks, so carefully sheltering the anchor below is of utmost importance (ie. move the anchor into the gully below the roof).

In a low snow period one has to climb through rock to get to this highpoint on the hanging triangular snowfield, in a bigger snow year it is easy to walk in from the right or climbed easily from the left..

Pitch 1 (M3, 30 meters) : Start up the easiest of the snow ledges, belay at the crest of a higher snowfield. We usually leave skis/ extra gear below a steep triangular overhanging rock crag that can be turned on the left or right.

Pitch 2 if you count the approach pitch as pitch 1, which sometimes requires climbing to reach the apex of the hanging snowfield, where a short steep wall is encountered in lower snow years.

Pitch 2 (M4, 35 meters):  Head up a steep short wall to the first turf, into a small alcove, turn this on the right up right leading cracks and steeper steps to belay at bottom of left to right snow gully.

Pitch 3 (M4, 50 meters): Start left on slabby feet with difficult to find pitons, head to right facing chimney at 8 meters with a clump of turf at the bottom of it. Head straight up the chimney/corner, exit left onto a small ledge with a very small tree and climb a steep three meter wall to top out on a larger snow ledge. Head left to below three parallel chossy chimneys. Next pitch heads up the middle of the three chimney systems.

Pitch 4 red line: climb straight up into the middle of three chossy chimneys for a short pitch to arrive below a black rock corner with cracks. Alternately, blue route line, traverse left past large block at top of snow gully to find a fixed two piece rap anchor in a dish of black rock. This second option might lead to an easier face-climbing pitch 5 than the slightly overhanging black rock corner pitch 5.

Pitch 4 (M4, 20 meters): Two options. If following the blue route line, as on the FA move the anchor left 30 meters on an ascending leftward ledge past a large block at the top of the snow gully and find a fixed two piece rap anchor in a dished alcove of black rock. Better is to head straight up the middle of three chossy chimneys, find a rap anchor below the steep cracks in black rock of the next pitch.

Black rock corner of pitch 5, red route line.

Pitch 5 red route line (M5+, 30 meters): Careful of the large loose blocks at the bottom of the black corner. Climb awkwardly slightly overhanging cracks on the left of the wide corner crack. Top out at 20 meters and head left up snow to the middle of a snow depression avoiding steeper ground on the right. Make the anchor below the next rock step with a gully heading up and left.

Pitch 5 alternate blue route line: Potentially face climbing above the left two piece rap anchor after the far left traverse on pitch 4 looks like less steep ground. Might be more in keeping with the overall M4 grade of the route.

Looking at the potentially easier rising ramp for pitch 6, blue line. Or as on the FA head hard left along a horizontal leftward traverse.

Pitch 6 red line: Traverse hard directly left along an exposed ledge system to pass a slight arete at 35 meters to below a less steep chossy wall on the left side of the arete above.

Pitch 6 alternate blue line: Potentially head up and left in a lower angled ramp from the top of pitch 5, rather than the horizontal traverse. This will lead to joining the usual Pitch 7 of the FA at the bottom of the wide chossy corner crack system.

The loose face climbing to start pitch 7.

Photo taken from rap anchor at 35 m.

Continue past rap anchor to upper turf ball at 20 meters for a much more comfortable stance.

Pitch 7 (M4R, 60 meters) : Face climb with loose rock 15 meters to the bottom of a chossy wide crack corner, rejoining the lower angled ramp alternative coming in from the right. Wide pro in the corner with ledges on the face to the right and an airy arete out right. At 35 meters find a rap anchor, but continue up another 25 meters to a large turf clump and a much more comfortable belay stance.

Pitch 8

Pitch 8 (M3, 40 meters): Easily chimney 8 meters above the anchor into the snow gully. Tromp up the gully keeping in mind snow on your belayers.

Roof on pitch 9

Pitch 9 (M4, 50 meters): Head for the very obvious large chockstone at the top of the gully. It is actually a 5 meter sideways roof featuring large blocks in the gully below it, so moving the belay up to a shelter in an alcove ( rappel anchor) just below the roof might be preferable. Good pro through the roof traverse, pull around the right side on good feet.

Red route line begins at start pitch 2, as in low snow conditions first pitch requires climbing.

Yellow are belay anchors, not fixed. Blue line is potentially easier alternative to pitch 5 black rock corner M5+ of FA.

Foreshortened view from below showing the approximate path to the bottom of the snow gully, no longer apparent from below.

***Essential to check all fixed gear before rappelling, bounce test and hammer pitons while backed up to a gear anchor before committing to them***

Rappel: Purple dots are rappel anchors. Off tree at top, fixed nuts in chimney below roof of pitch 9, midway pitch 7 long rappel to skiers’ left of arete to two piece anchor in black dished rock at end of alternate pitch 4, then 50 meter rap to a 2 meter wide ledge go skiers’ left to above a large tree in a corner below, then to the ground (be careful of trees snagging your ropes on the way down) directly to the climbers’ left side of the triangle of rock you left your gear at.

Ryan, the king of the moment successfully having fed the rat of run-out desire, feeding from vending machines, the only thing open in Lake Louise at 1:30 am.

We rappelled the route, 6 raps.  Standard Rockies mixed route heavy on the pitons.

Although the climbing up to and above pitch 5 is very moderate, the crux lead by Ryan Patteson required a steady head. On subsequent climbs we have found the balck rock corner to be more difficult than initially assumed, now given M5+.

Astringent Apprentice 300m, M5

Chuffed to have completed a new route just to the left of Mixed Master. Sam Eastman and I started it three years ago, when Sam sped up it with a bolt gun in hand and found that it mostly goes on gear, my preferred type of climbing. We followed natural weaknesses, drytooling as there was not a whole load of snow on the route that time around, leading to a lot of tenuous slab climbing between the obvious cracks, thankfully all at a moderate grade. The climb will definitely be better if there is snow on it. Partly it took time to complete as in the spring the first sun burns off any snow, leaving a dubious looking rock climb. Hopefully people can get on it this year as it has more snow and actually ice on it this season.

Blue is the route line. Red is two rappels off trees to below the last pitch of Mixed Master. Route has been drytooled to below the last pitch, but is better with snow/ice. There are large loose blocks on pitch 4 especially that could be nasty in the summer.

The start of the route will determine how you are going to like it, as there is a bit of an entrance exam type move at around 10 meters off the ground. At 15 meters you find the first fixed piece of the route, then a DMM Bulldog at 30 meters, before a bolt to protect a heart shaped block before scrambling to a two bolt anchor. It’s all good, as if you want something a little more classic you are only 20 meters left of the all time natural mixed line in the Rockies, Mixed Master. Really, it is this location that will hopefully lead to some folks trying out this new route.

Pitch 2 on the first few tries was a lot of delicate slab climbing, but with snow on it one easily tromps up and left to two bolts I was hesitant to put in, but are really required when, as when placed, you are delicately balancing on small nubbins in crampons, followed by a fixed pin. A few moves get you to a very large ledge with a few trees. Here the efficient way is to head toward a small alcove out left in a corner in the mountain and protect the traverse with an ice screw in a small but solid ice bulge, before traversing left another 30 meters on what can be called pitch 3 if you split it up by belaying at the ice.

2 bolts and a piton protect the rising traverse on pitch 2. Either belay at the ice up and left in a small alcove, or simuclimb across the top of the ledge with a few pieces of pro under the roof you duck under.

Pitch 4 is one of the highlights of the route. On his first time up the route Raphael Slawinski seemed to have no problem with the delicate footwork required at 5 meters above the belay, while the rest of us missed the key pecker placement, just above a fixed nut, and the fine balance of the Rockies master. A well-versed Scottish cllimber (not naming names) even suggested a bolt might be appropriate…but take faith that when on one occasion I messed up the foot matching the snow on the ledge below effectively cushioned my fall. Gaining the very obvious right facing corner one reaches a chimney section at 30 meters where a decision has to be made: to squeeze and place a very tipped out #4 or a #5 in the back (not an effective option when the route is ice, and not a place for gore-tex), or preferably look for a micro cam on the left outside and climb the offwidth on the outside. Romp up the snow gully above to the base of the wall where it steepens at 60 meters and look to place knifeblades on the wall or lacking snow large nuts at your feet.

Pitch 5 traverses easily past a fixed pin for 15 meters, through one slight depression to a gully with an obviously lower-angled ramp above and a fixed nut and thread anchor. Extend the anchor down to belay the second to avoid rope drag.

Sam Eastman staying warm after doing the rope-gunning on the early pitches of the first attempt.

Uisdean seemed right at home on the snowed up rock.

Pitch 6 is perhaps the most straightforward pitch in any conditions, straight up some low-angled face cracks to where three planes of rock come together. Look for a fixed piton on the left wall, and build the anchor with pitons. You are going to head out on the left wall.

Look for a bolt at Sam’s height on the left wall, the first of three. On the first attempt Sam was hanging on placing the bolt when the crumbly tower he was drilling from collapsed. Thanks for the skills Sam!!

The 7th pitch is moderate again but one of the more sustained pitches. A few pins are useful to reach the first of three bolts. Place some gear before topping out onto the snow ledge as you are going to go a minimum of ten meters to the first tree, or ten more meters to a higher tree.

Move the belay up from the tree by scrambling to a small alcove with two pitons below the narrowing of the groove above. On the second attempt there was no ice here, while on the successful climb a thin dribble helped the moves through the roof on the last pitch.

Move the belay up under the last narrow groove.

Raphael Slawinski saving us from an all-nighter on the last pitch of the new route. If you get it with ice on it it could even be what Raph called “totally classic mixed climbing.”

Astringent Apprentice

Sam Eastman, Uisdean Hawthorn, Raphael Slawinski, Ian Welsted

M5, 300 meters

 

P1: 50 meters, M5. Start 20 meters left of Mixed Master. Right facing corner. Fixed pin at 15 meters, fixed spectre at 30, one bolt next to heart shaped block.  Head up and left to 2 bolt anchor.

P2: 50 meters, easy. Left up shallow gully and snow slope to 2 bolts, a fixed pin, belay above big snow slope out left 5 meters on an ice flow in the back of a small niche.

P3: Traverse left 30 meters on snow slope to fixed angle below very obvious large right facing corner. P2 and P3 can easily be combined.

P4: 60 meters, M5. At 3 meters a fixed nut and beak placement protects slabby moves into crack. #5 cam to protect the awkward squeeze at 30 meters, or better climb on the outside and protect with a small cam. Up snow gully above to vertical wall. Save knifeblades for anchor.

P5: 15 meters, M4. Traverse hard right on ledge past fixed knifeblade to next gully right, fixed nut anchor.

P6: 30 meters, M4. Straight up to the base of next steep wall, fixed silver piton on left wall.

P7: 55 meters to low tree or 65 meters to high tree, M4. Up and lrft to face crack to 3 bolts, amble up snow slope above to tree of choice.

P8: 25 meters. Move belay up gully above to two pin anchor in back of small niche.

P9: 55 meters, M5. Straight up the weakness above, fixed silver piton on right above bulge at 15 meters.  Belay at top on trees.

 

Rappel route with 70 meter ropes  at tops of pitch 9, tree on snow ledge, top of 6,top of 5, reverse long snow traverse ledge, tree on first big ledge, top of pitch 1 bolts

Or/     rappel Mixed Master after walking climber’s right to two tree rappels into the MM gully.

 

Rack: set of nuts, set of cams to #3 with doubles  BD 0.4 to # 2, plenty of pitons with emphasis on knifeblades and a few beaks, #5 for squeeze on pitch 4 optional. Extra cord to equip rappel anchors if rapping the route. Two stubbies and a yellow or two if snowy.

 

Western Neve 800m, M5 WI5R

Spot the line.

westernneverouteline.JPG

Alik Berg and I just climbed a long line of thin ice and incredible neve on the north-west face of Mount Vaux. Craig McGee told me they had flown by it and described it as a WI5 pillar pouring right off the top of the ridge. Fortunately it wasn’t that steep at the top, and only vertical for a few short stints, as there was a distinct lack of good screws to be had.

What it did have was the best neve climbing I have ever experienced in the Rockies. Maybe because it is further west than most of the Rockies, we found single swing sticks in both thin ice (often between 5 and 10 centimeters) and neve.

Alik WN best action.jpeg
Pitches 6-10

Pitches 6-10

Our camp was just downhill from the waypoint marker.

Our camp was just downhill from the waypoint marker.

The long simul-climbing pitch 5 leading to the top two tiers.

The long simul-climbing pitch 5 leading to the top two tiers.

The first tier of pitches 1-4.

The first tier of pitches 1-4.

You can see the ski hill in Golden from the last pitch, which Alik graciously handed over to me as it looked like WI3 and we were sure to make it to the ridge before dark at this point, after he led all of the route except the first dry pitch and th…

You can see the ski hill in Golden from the last pitch, which Alik graciously handed over to me as it looked like WI3 and we were sure to make it to the ridge before dark at this point, after he led all of the route except the first dry pitch and the middle scrambling ground.

The approach is not trivial due to creeks and deadfall. Alik wisely opted for ski boots for this part.

The approach is not trivial due to creeks and deadfall. Alik wisely opted for ski boots for this part.

Western Nevé, 800m, M5 WI5R, March 5th, 2021.

Climbs an aesthetic ice line on the NW face of Mount Vaux. Guarded by a tough approach, the persistent will be rewarded with many pitches of engaging ice climbing.  Difficulty will be dependent on conditions. On the FA the ice was generally quite thin and not always well protected.  The upper 250m of the route is visible from the Finn Creek pull out on the Trans-Canada Highway.

Approach up Finn Creek. Copious deadfall and a thin snowpack near valley bottom give way to better travel higher up. 3-4 hours to idyllic bivy sites amongst some large boulders at treeline directly below the route. The slopes below the route are windward and often largely stripped down to gravel.  Avalanche hazard is mainly limited to some small pockets that must be crossed near the base. 1 hour from the bivy to the base. Overhead hazard is limited to ledges and gullies on the route itself. Although fed by the Hanbury Glacier there is no serac hazard to the route.

 

Gear: single set cams to #2, nuts, good selection of pins, 12 screws including 3-4 10cm or shorter, 70m ropes ideal.

 

P1 30m, M4 Start up easy ground on the left, then traverse back right into the main corner.  Move up 5m and step right to a belay (fixed rap anchor).

P2 35m, WI3+ Step right and climb a fine ice runnel to ledge. Move left to a belay.

P3 45m, M5 WI4+ Step down and left into a left facing corner with a ribbon of thin ice on the left wall.   Climb this past a small overhang and continue up the ice runnel above to the next snow ledge.

P4 70m, WI3+ Climb good rolling ice and continue up the snow gully above for another 30m to an ice belay.

P5 350m, M3 WI3 Follow the path of least resistance to the upper ice strip. Mainly 3rd/4th class terrain first trending right then back left. 

P6-8 180m, WI4-5R Climb three long pitches of thin ice and nevé. Protection not always adequate and mainly in rock. Cross a small snow bowl to the base of the upper ice tier.

P9-10 100m, WI3-4 Continue up thicker, aerated ice to the top.

30 mins of straightforward glacier travel gains the summit.

Descend the route in 12 70m raps.

Annual New Route Summary 2020

Have you or your friends climbed a first ascent in the alpine in the Rockies? Feel like letting others know about your new alpine, ice, mixed, or rock route? Please get ahold of me with the information.

For the past few years I have been writing an annual summary of new route activity in the Canadian Rockies for the Canadian and American Alpine Journals. It is a great way to stay current with what our community is up to, and a great way to get ideas for routes to go and climb.

This year I had the opportunity to climb a few days with Stas Beskin after he and two other friends established the awe-inspiring ice line pictured to the right. It is exciting to see what the climbers are up to these days.

If you feel like reading last year’s report online, click the link below the photo.

Perpetual Spring, Canmore Wall

I have been thinking recently, after a few drytooling outings, there are only a few who can as confidently face climb in crampons as they would in rock shoes. Required skill for this pitch above Canmore.

I have been thinking recently, after a few drytooling outings, there are only a few who can as confidently face climb in crampons as they would in rock shoes. Required skill for this pitch above Canmore.

Perpetual Spring, 350 meters, M7, Canmore Wall 

FA Feb. 18, 2015 

Alik Berg, Raphael Slawinski, Ian Welsted 

Approach as for Kurihara. http://www.tabvar.org/node/149 

In the winter with avalanche hazard we found it best to stick to the trees between the two main gullies  draining the Canmore Wall. Approx. 2 to 2 1/2 hours uphill from the start of the trail at the south/east  end of the Peaks of Grassi section of Canmore. Gain the Highline trail. Head up the first drainage you  get to on this trail, then head right into the treed ridge. There is essentially zero avalanche hazard on  the approach, on route, or from above. 

At the base of the face traverse left around the butress climbed by the first pitch of Kurihara. A gully  system heads up behind the tower which is climbed by the first 2 pitches of Kurihara. There are only  short steps of rock which lead to a hanging upper bowl of snow.  

http://www.tabvar.org/sites/default/files/Kurihara_Topo.pdf 

 Pitch 1. 45 meters. Climb a very short rock step into a narrow low angled gully. The length and  difficulty of this step will vary according to snow conditions. It is possible the rock will be completely  covered by snow. Amble up the easy gully to make a pin belay just below the steep step on the left of  the gully. One fixed pin low on the left in the snow, 2 other pin placements possible upon careful  examination. 

Pitch 2. 60 meters. . Climb the bulge on the left on positive hooks with no pro, M5. After only 5 meters angle relents and gear exists. Exit easily into the upper bowl. Amble up the bowl to the ridgetop. 

Pitch 3. 55 meters. This is the 3rd, easy pitch of Kurihara, except climb the natural line just right of the  arete rather than clipping the bolts on the left. We used the bolted anchor slightly right of the natural  line. 

Pitch 4. 40 meters. Leave the line of Kurihara. Step left back onto the short steep arete, M4. Top out  after 10 meters onto a low angled slope which becomes a nice ledge after heading left below a steep  solid wall. Belay before the corner around to the left. This will shelter the belay from the next crux  pitch. 

Pitch 5. 40 meters, M7. Step down and left into the very obvious left facing corner for easy climbing  for the first 20 meters. Harder climbing at a small lateral roof, continue up cracks above. Step right  onto the arete so as to shelter the belay. 2 fixed pins. Extra finger to hand sized cams useful.  

Pitch 6. 30 meters, M6. Continue up the corner until it is possible to traverse left on thin holds heading  toward the large obvious roof running left. Belay on pins (one fixed) at the first ledge 7-8 meters left  of corner. It is possible that an alternative to this pitch would be to head left at 5 meters off the belay to a left-leaning roof crack weakness. 

Pitch 7. 40 meters, M5. Head straight sideways left. Make a committing but easy downclimb for a  body length down from the overhang in a corner feature at 10 meters. Continue on an easy foot ledge  toward the sharp arete with snow visible beyond. Belay at the arete, at the start of the easy snow slope.

Pitch 8. 60 meters. Easy snow slope with a few steps of ice (!!) and a short steep section. Belay below  an obvious narrow snow-choked chimney. 

Pitch 9. 60 meters, M4 Climb the narrow chimney and another easier narrow chimney higher and  stretch the ropes out in the easier upper gully. 

Pitch 10. 60 meters. Finish off with easy ground until in the upper scree bowl. Continue to the ridge  and more solid rock. 

Descent: amble up to the peak of the wall. Locate a gully climber's left of the very summit. This is the area of the Kurihara top-out. There is a single bolt on a slab 8 meters back from the edge. Walk 5  meters to climber's left of the top-out, and find a two bolt anchor on the front side of a solid block of  rock 3 feet down on the front side (likely to be covered by snow). Rappel Kurihara. 

Rack: We took a rack of 10 knifeblades, some angles, two peckers and a few Lost Arrows and did not  find it excessive. A set of wires and a single rack of cams to blue C4 with doubles in finger to hand  sizes is adequate. A couple of stubbies are useful in the upper gully. 

Stem up easily past the inviting crack and into the hanging bowl.

Stem up easily past the inviting crack and into the hanging bowl.

From here the routeline is fairly obvious, on the left buttress before the long traverse left under the big roof.

From here the routeline is fairly obvious, on the left buttress before the long traverse left under the big roof.

On our second go we brought in the ultimate Rockies ringer, Raphael Slawinski. This sideways mantle on non-existent feet had eluded me on the first attempt. One of the weirdest drytooling moves I have seen.

On our second go we brought in the ultimate Rockies ringer, Raphael Slawinski. This sideways mantle on non-existent feet had eluded me on the first attempt. One of the weirdest drytooling moves I have seen.

Very few people feel comfortable, in my experience, questing out across thin face edges in crampons. Not sure I could have led this pitch, and not terribly enticing to go back to find out having seconded it. This face traverse was the missing link t…

Very few people feel comfortable, in my experience, questing out across thin face edges in crampons. Not sure I could have led this pitch, and not terribly enticing to go back to find out having seconded it. This face traverse was the missing link to bring us to the big roof.

Alik was clearly enjoying himself trundling blocks that could have been heard on the main street of Canmore.

Alik was clearly enjoying himself trundling blocks that could have been heard on the main street of Canmore.

The hydro pond (so popular in the summer with SUPers) gives the location away.

The hydro pond (so popular in the summer with SUPers) gives the location away.

By the upper corner, the route is basically in the bag.

By the upper corner, the route is basically in the bag.

Superdark Rappel

Easily rap Superdark without commiting to walking off (or topping out the crux!)

superdark+approach.jpg

After warming up at the Field Choss Crag, Nik and I decided to undertake the slog into Protection Valley. Carrying a Yosemite rack as well as screws made us opt for the shortest approach available, to Superdark (M5, 195m). Three hours later, after a bit of slippery footing and some minor tree bashing. we were faced with pitch after pitch of chimneying. The first pitch starts off promisingly with some thin unprotected edging to get off the ground. Soon we realized the theme of the day; squeeze past a bulge hanging out from the gully/corner, hike up easy ground to a cave. On pitch 4 we found a very awkward helmet sized squeeze. The options on the face to the right looked like smooth feet and no protection. Numerous ups and downs and hesitations, then committing to a few thin moves finally got me past the roof. Apparently this was made a little less awkward on the FA with a smear of climbable ice on this pitch. Good to know the route is climbable even when it isn’t in mixed condition.

The forecast for very high winds, a rush of cold air, and significant snow came true by the top of pitch 7. Walking off the route didn’t seem smart, so we rapped without incident, from comfortable stances (save the top station, hanging). I wasn’t sure that we could make it up the route (we didn’t we skipped the last 10 meters, which Kris Irwin informed me is the crux due to thin moves and a lack of gear, way to skip the crux!). With this rap route established it gives a good alternative to walking off if the snow conditions don’t appeal.

Overall a good experience, just don’t wear your best goretex jacket (chimneying on every pitch).

A good showing by Nik on his second day of drytooling ever.

Nik mastering the squeeze technique.

Nik mastering the squeeze technique.

Nik pano superdark.jpg

Rap 1: 10 meters short of topout on pitch 7: Two nuts equalized at the top of the steeper ground

Rap 2: From chockstone in massive chimney at top of pitch 5

Rap 3: On a nice ledge slightly climbers right of plumbline from chockstone station. About 7 meters climbers right of route/corner.

Rap 4: About 10 meters from the ground, 3 meters to the right of the route/corner. A better alternative would be to stop on one of the higher ledges and rap to the ground.

Field Choss Crag

For the past few years I have been thinking that it would be nice to have a small crag to get into the swing of standing on crampons without going for a big hike. The south-east toe of Mount Field seems to provide just such a spot. Hiking uphill for 15-20 minutes from the picnic spot brings one to a very chossy chunk of rock replete with chimneys and cracks. It seems safe from avalanches, and when Twisted’s mixed crag gets deservedly popular it can be a good alternative. There are plenty of unclimbed cracks to venture up as well.


We have established three lines. Simon Richardson and i climbed a very rambly face we called Chasing the Ephemeral (M2), named after Simon’s excellent guide to Scottish winter climbing (in red on the photo.)

Blue is walkoff/approach. Rappel SSS.

Blue is walkoff/approach. Rappel SSS.

First Pitch of Chasing the Ephemeral

First Pitch of Chasing the Ephemeral

Then Chris Brazeau and I climbed one of the main corner systems on the buttress, finding very chossy rock in the corner and better but run out rock on the arete to the right. In three pitches we climbed Scottish Scree Slide (M4). Knowledge of piton placement and ability to find and place rock gear is key for this one. It is the obvious corner in yellow on the photo.

Chris coming up to the belay at the top of pitch one.

Chris coming up to the belay at the top of pitch one.

A few people have asked me about SSS. I would recommend being very comfortable with finding and placing good rock gear with gloves on before going. I hear a few people have repeated it, which is excellent as it can only get better as more choss is trundled off it.

Looking down pitch one and two

Looking down pitch one and two

Looking up Pitch 3 Scottish Scree Slide

Looking up Pitch 3 Scottish Scree Slide

Just a few days ago, Christian Schlumpf decided to use the tools for the first time in two years while avoiding pulling down on anything in the extremely chossy Pinball Chimney (M4). Ropes were chopped and we checked out another of the corners before retreating soaking wet and scared from a lack of pro, but we had again gotten some good practice standing on our crampons.

Looking up Pinball Chimney (orange in the overall photo)

Looking up Pinball Chimney (orange in the overall photo)

Christian gingerly loading all four points on Pinball Chimney.

Christian gingerly loading all four points on Pinball Chimney.

Don’t hesitate to get in touch if you want any more info.