Wow, what an epic trip, huge ups and downs in
weather and expectations, a real adventure. My Californian buddy Scott, expert
in Sierra Nevada alpine climbing, was keen for a Canadian Rockies adventure. I
planned a 6 to 7 day trip to the Lyell Icefield, hoping to traverse the five
Lyells and, if conditions/weather permitted, extend the trip northwestward to
Farbus or Oppy (this extension of the trip was inspired by Vern Dewitt’s and Steven
Song’s 2015 Farbus ascent). We approached via Glacier Lake/River to the eastern
edge of the massive Lyell Icefield. The last, and only, time I was at Glacier
Lake was when I climbed Mt. Forbes, in 1994, 25 years ago!!
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View to Mt. Forbes and Lyell meadows. |
The trail to the east end of Glacier Lake is a highway, and easy
travel, except when you are carrying food for 7 days and a pile of rock gear.
Big packs were slowing us down, but spirits were high, high like the hot temperatures.
Soon after leaving the western end of lake, hiking along the beautiful Glacier
River, the trail disappears. We made the mistake of following some flagging
into the thick trees along the edge of the flat river valley. Wasted a pile of energy and time trying to
stay on this overgrown trail. On the hike out we stayed closer to the river, on
the flats, and the travel was much better. When we got near the lake at the toe
of lhe lower South East Lyell Glacier we got off track. We misread the
description in the Corbett guidebook, the moraine is the big huge, ancient
moraine, not the minor little ridge of scree we took into the trees. We found
the proper old trail on the way down, but it is very overgrown and parts of the
moraine are collapsing making it interesting. This trail is well packed in, but
little shrubs and trees have thick branches blocking the trail. The proper
trail has many sections in the steeper trees where blow down has wiped out the
trail. On the way up, we just straight
line bush bashed up, pure hell.
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South East Lyell Glacier. Nearing the lake at the toe of the lower glacier. The trail is on the top of the huge moraine, Above the hoodoos, just right of the centre of the photo. Is overgrown and sections collapsing, several upper steep tree sections are gone. |
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Scott trying to cool over in the heat of the day. |
Was very happy when we finally arrived at Lyell Meadows. We camped
high in the upper meadows, just below Arctomys Peak. Morning of July 23 we broke
camp, hauled our heavy packs most of the way to the summit of Arctomys Peak. Incredible view from the summit of Acrtomys,
and a huge summit cairn. We hiked over to the edge of the Icefield, great views
to Mt. Forbes. With the heat we decided to wait until early Wednesday morning
to get on the Lyell Icefield, but Tuesday night the weather crapped out. During
the heat of the afternoon on Tuesday we tried to stay cool, but the lack of
shade made this tough. We found an old wind wall made of rock along the ridge
above the glacier. We fortified and added more height to the wall. Since we had the time, I made a deluxe mini
wind wall for the stove. The extra wind protection came in helpful since all
day Wednesday we were absolutely hammered by wind, I could say gusts over 100km
and constants winds around 60 to 80km, all with pouring, pouring rain, for over
24 hours.
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View to the shapely summit of Arctomys Peak. |
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OSWB on the summit of Arctomys Peak. |
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Scott by summit cairn. |
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Summit view down Arctomys Creek and the Valley of Lakes. |
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Lyell summits and glacier. |
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Huge waterfall off glacier. |
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Lyell Icefield and the five summits of the Lyell group. Most left Christian Peak (5), Walter Peak (4), Ernest Peak (3), Edward Peak (2) and most right, Rudolph Peak (1). |
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