Monday, August 27, 2007

Mount Jackson




























Here are some photos from the Mt. Jackson trip in Glacier National Park.

The last photo was where we set up our tents on the moraine. We are actually at least a km from the Jackson glacier but it looks really close in the photo. It was rather windy and the cheap three person tent I brought flapped like crazy and I got 2 hours sleep!

The other photos are mostly an assorment of pix of the glaciers: looking down on the Jackson Glacier itself, as well as the Harrison Glacier from the summit. There was also (an ?unnamed?) glacier on the east side of Mt. Jackson that is hanging on at a really steep incline that was kind of neat.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Mist Mountain












Mist Mountain, August 25th/2007(El. = 3,140 m/10,300'; El. Gain = 1,100 m/3,600')

Here are some photos from a scramble I did with James up Mist Mountain in the Highwood region of Kananaskis Provincial Park. It is roughly a 2.5 hour drive to get to the trailhead from Lethbridge and we after finding the trailhead, we started out a bit past 10 AM.

This was a new scrambling area for me and it was an interesting day. The mountains look different than those further south- to me, they are a bit more rugged looking (less vegetation and colours like in Waterton/Glacier) but with interesting striations in the rock from afar.

Difficulty-wise, the ascent up was not too bad - I would rate this outing on the hard end of moderate. That said, we could have found an easier way up if we spent more time route finding, etc.

We were on top of the ridge by about 1 PM; gaining the ridge was most of the elevation gain, but we were still quite far from the true summit... It was quite the ridgewalk! We tried to follow the standard 'Alan Kane' guidebook route, but we deviated a bit by following a route to the left of the gully he suggested in his guidebook (mostly because we forgot the guidebook in the car and the gully looked quite steep and absolutely full of crappy scree that was giving trouble for a group of three climbers that we saw ahead of us. We could hear them speaking quite clearly even though they were a few hundred metres over from us, and we expected to catch up to them on the ridgetop... however, we had a break for lunch and we saw them make the summit but never crossed paths with the other group. They must have dropped down the other side of the mountain towards Mt. Lipsett (as we did) to complete a loop.)

There was lots of exhilirating exposure on the ridge and we finally made it to the summit by 3:15 PM, with weird mountain weather playing havoc with our nerves. The peaks to the West (notably Mt. Joffre, we think) became engulfed in rainclouds and it began to snow lightly on us as we made our way down the ridgetop). We were worried we might get caught in a rain or snowstorm, but the weather luckily cooperated, and we were in sunshine most of the day in fact, with ominous clouds far off in the west sometimes throwing a few snowflakes our way.

Descending, we found a scree run which allowed us to bypass some of the downclimbing that Kane had described as 'difficult' in his guidebook. This took us quite a bit offroute and required some traversing accross a mixture of terrain, mostly large talus and scree fields. At one point I took a tumble when the scree was interrupted by a gully of dirt - the dirt was strangely hardened by the weather and it had no 'give' when I stepped on it. Due to the steepness I slid on my butt as soon as I fell and I must have gone a good 15 feet in 2 seconds. Luckily I came to a stop with just a few scratches and a pretty bruised ego!

Dropping to the col between Mt. Lipsett and Mist Mountain, we followed a stream back through the valley to the highway and after 9 hours, were done with our loop. All in all, a most interesting scramble!

Monday, August 20, 2007

Nub Peak, Assiniboine Park

Nub Peak (~8950 ft), Assiniboine Provincial Park

July 28th/07



Here are some pix from this past summer's trip to Assiniboine Provincial Park (July 27th-30th/07. We went with some other folks with the Chinook Club from Lethbridge and slept at the Naiset Huts, which were quite reasonable. Only 20 bucks a night!



Some people in our group hiked in over 2-3 days from the Sunshine ski resort in Banff, but we flew in by helicopter from the Shark pad in Kananaskis. The helicopter trip was awesome and only cost us $150 each for the short ride in... we hiked out with one full pack out but shipped one of our packs by helicopter at a cost of two bucks a pound. The hike out was a good 25 kms or so.



The Naiset Huts are located a few minutes away from Assiniboine Lodge, which was great, since there is a 4 o'clock happy hour daily with beer or tea! Happy hour is open to people caming or staying at the huts, not necessarily for patrons of the Lodge.



Nub Peak is a great day hike from the Naiset Cabins. We took a meandering route to the top, which allowed us to view Sunburst and Cerulean Lakes. We left the Naiset Huts and made it up to the summit by lunch time and after lounging around the summit for a good 30 minutes or so, were back at Magog Lake for a swim by 3:30. Perfect timing for 4 o'clock happy hour at the lodge!



The lodge has a spotting scope set up, which allowed us to look up towards the Hind Hut, which is the hut halfway up Mt. Assiniboine. We were able to see a couple of parties making their way accross the glacier towards the summit.

Mt. Stimson




















Getting there:

This trip was organized by Susan Schwartz, David Olson and Ken Mcdermott of the Glacier Mountaineering Society (GMS). Susan (from Colorado) and David (from Wisconsin) travel up to Montana every year for Glacier Mountaineering Week, which was starting just after our 3-day trip to Stimson. Ken was kind enough to invite me along as a fourth member of their little expedition.

Late Thursday night, Ken and I drove down from Lethbridge and met the others at the cabin of David Olson’s uncle on St. Mary Lake. The place (on the Blackfoot reserve) looked like a little hideaway from the road, but inside it was really nice and had awesome views of the lake and surrounding peaks.

The trip up Mount Stimson
DAY 1: Friday, we awoke early (5 AM) and made the drive up past east Glacier to our trailhead. On the way, a large brown bear, (perhaps a grizzly) popped out of the woods and dashed across the highway in front of us. Susan and David also saw a cow moose with a calf not too far from where we parked.

We finally headed towards the trail shortly after 9 AM. Words to describe the approach: decimation, devastation, obliteration, shattering, destruction, ABANDON ALL HOPE ALL YE WHO ENTER HERE! It was ‘just’ a 9 mile approach (15 km) following elk trails, but more often than not, we found ourselves floundering along the trail slowed by quagmires of deadfall, or more commonly - bushwhacking in thick brush after losing the trail completely.

After crossing Middle Flathead River and stashing the canoe away, we followed a park trail to the first crossing of Pinchot creek. There was a ridiculously steep drop of a couple of hundred feet to the creek, where we discovered a cable strung across the river at an opportune spot, which assisted in the crossing. There was a USGS water monitoring station being set up there, complete with solar panels and antennae for remote data transmission. It was rather funny to see such alien looking technology in the middle of the bush!

We made really slow progress after the first crossing of Pinchot; by 8 PM we were still a few miles from our intended campsite near the base of Stimson and our morale was getting low. It was a heatwave in Lethbridge that weekend, and in Glacier the heat was slightly better, but still brutal… probably still in the 30s.

We had been given rather detailed information on the approach from one Ralph Thornton (a longtime GMS member), who had made multiple trips (apparently 5 trips!) up the creek to the summit of Stimson. We tried our best to stick to Ralph’s route and in particular, we expended much energy looking for a phantom elk trail that Ralph had described rather favorably, which we had guessed was some distance upwards from the creek. By 8 PM we had decided we had ascended too high and decided to drop down towards the creek and luckily found a good trail that took us within a half mile of our intended camp by 9:30 PM. My feet got a bit trashed from hiking in wet boots as we followed some gravel beds along Pinchot creek.

The only ‘near miss’ of the day occurred as I fell almost up to my waist in a big hole as we hung our food in a tree in the dark!

Day 2: Summit day!

Again it was super hot day, probably in the 30s after 10 AM. We left camp at 8 AM and made it to the saddle between Mt. Pinchot and Mt. Stimson by noon. The trip up from the saddle was mostly class II and a bit of class III near the summit… typically there were lots of ledges a couple of feet high that one could ascend rather easily, the most difficult part being loose rubble on the ledges that could cause one to trip or dislodge a nugget or two onto fellow climbers below. We made it to the summit ridge by 3:45 PM and views did not disappoint! The summit ridge of Stimson runs roughly east-west, with the true summit being a few minutes west of the eastern edge, and it was a fun little scramble to follow the ridge to the true summit. There were great views of the Mt. Jackson and Mt. Logan, as well as the Jackson and Blackfoot glaciers; Mt. St. Nicolas; Rising Wolf Mountain. We found a canister in the summit cairn and saw we were the first summit party of the year. Judging from the summit canister, there are just a few parties that make it up every year. We spent way too much time on the summit and finally started our descent around 4:30.

Initially, the descent was slow. The ledges were impossible to make good time on the way down! Finally, when we hit the top of the saddle we found some scree that took us down to Pinchot Creek. At this point, my feet were just killing me and unfortunately I slowed down the group pretty good. By the time we made it to the gravel beds of the creek it was dark (10 PM) and eventually, we had to don headlamps. (I forgot mine and had to follow closely behind the others, tricky, especially when crossing the stream!) We still had to follow the stream for about a kilometer to find our campsite, which was along the stream somewhere. To make a long story short – we got lost and ended up going in circles for a bit, thrashing about the woods trying to find our tent by GPS. It was very much reminiscent of the movie ‘The Blair Witch Project’. I don’t think I will ever forget that night, as much as I would like to! It is a bit spooky to be bushwhacking in the dark- you don’t really see much past the first set of bushes that your flashlight shines upon. Finally by midnight, we found our tents and had a midnight snack. We hit the sack around 1 AM!

Day 3: We felt bagged from our previous ‘day off’ and were not ecstatic about the prospect of backpacking out. Luckily, we knew exactly what we were up against and really, we knew it could not be any worse than the previous couple of days!

The only real trouble we had on the way out (aside from the heat) was finding the exact spot where we crossed the Pinchot Creek for the first time on the way back. Luckily, Susan had her GPS with her and with some care we managed to find the little cairns we had built at the spot where we crossed. From that crossing, there was still some unexpected bushwhacking that occurred, but we made it back to the cars by 8:00… about 11 hours! The shortest day yet!

I am really glad I did this trip and in particular, I appreciated the good humour and patience of David, Susan and Ken… but I don’t think I ever want to do this trip again!!!