"Buller Pass Peak" |
View to Laurie on the rocky south summit of "Buller Pass Peak" |
"Buller Pass Peak" |
View to Laurie on the rocky south summit of "Buller Pass Peak" |
View to pitch 4 on CFD+ |
Had a great of climbing with Carlos. We meet for a fun 10 pitch sport route on Friday August 30. Weather was cool and a little windy, but overall good conditions. We had a lot of fun on “CFD+” a 5.9, 310m, 10 pitch fully bolted sport route. Pitch four (5.8, 40m) was the crux. Sustained 5.8 moves with many delicate foot placements and interesting hand pulls. Carlos led pitch four. I led pitch five, graded 5.9, real grade, but short burly wall right off the station, overhang with big blocky holds, super fun. The crux on pitch five was burly, but short with excellent hands and feet, overall easier than the more sustained 5.8 pitch. The upper pitches were awesome slabby 5.6-5.7+ moves for a few pitches. Well bolted and walkoff. Great day out. Tons of fun.
Carlos hanging out. |
Looking up to pitch 4. |
Carlos having fun on pitch 4. |
Carlos at the top of pitch 4. |
Looking down the crux of pitch 5. Just off the belay station. |
Good times. |
Upper pitches, super fun cruising. |
Good views, |
Fabulous day out with the intrepid Steve on Mt. Peter in
the Purcell Range. To avoid potential thunderstorms on Monday afternoon, we
pitched a tent Sunday night on the Farnham Creek FSR to allow an early start.
Our road side camp has great views to the Commander Glacier. Moving before
first light on Monday August 5, we made great time on the trail to the South
West Ridge. Lots of scree slogging to gain the interesting scrambling on the
solid quartzite cliff band at the top of the ridge. As the ridge steepens,
traverse to the upper West Face to gain the easy North Ridge to make the
summit. A little glacier exists on the upper West Face. We used a snow/ice ramp
to avoid some of the nasty wet down climbing we did on the ascent. Incredible
views to the surrounding mountains. Weather improved throughout the day with
skies clearing as we descended. Awesome day out on a fabulous Purcell
11,000’er.
July 26 Scott and I were back at the Mt. Barham/The Blade Col. Took a new line, way left of our attempt last summer, but again the steep slab shut us down with 5.9+ unprotectable climbing. We returned to our front country campsite to regroup. July 27 we needed a simple and easy day and chose the North West Ridge of Mt. Engadine. Fun easy day out with interesting scrambling and a good cardio workout. Just under 7 hours car to car. Great views and nice to tag a summit.
View to Mt. Engadine at the end of the day. |
Big slab below The Blade / Mt. Barham col. Difficult to protect and all 5.9+ lines. |
Back at camp dealing with defeat. |
Onto the fun NW ridge of Mt. Engadine. |
View to the top of Mt. Engadine. |
Enjoyable hiking and scrambling. |
Some fun sections. |
Scree slog after fun ridge. |
View to the summit. |
Scott's final steps to the pinnacle. |
High cloud views. |
Summit posers. |
View from Opal Creek to the "Cat's Eats". South summit is the right summit. |
July 22 Scott Berry and I were successful on our climb of “Cat’s Ears” (GR383179). We had attempted this peak last year, but didn’t figure out the route description. We climbed the West Face of South Cat’s Ear on the Don Forest/Gene Fraser route (1981), or close to it. The upper mountain, once at the col between the two Cat’s Ear, is a series of steep loose gullies, with steps of varying rock quality up to 5.6/5.7. A truly scary choss fest. The final pitch to the summit was fun 5.6 on solid rock with great pro. Not all the 5.6 climbing was as high quality. Incredible views from the summit ridge. Two high points on the summit ridge. Both appeared to have cairns, but I carefully disassembled both and found no register. I left a new summit register and book. Based on my research, our ascent is the second ascent. A stunning summit, but hard climbing on loose terrain, not an easy day for sure. Super happy to reach this elusive summit.
more details to come ...
View to Mt. Lorette. |
On Friday July 12, after a full day in the office and feeding the family dinner; last minute I decided on a quick bike n hike. Parked at the regular parking spot for Wasootch Peak, rode my bike about 4 kilometres north and hide my bike in the bush. Bush bashed up the north ridge of “Wasootch North Peak”. Fun scramble once above tree line. Great evening light and a cool breeze in the alpine. Great hike from the north peak to the main Wasootch Peak. Haven’t been in the hills much recently, so I pushed the pace and was happy with a car to car of 3 hours 15 minutes. Good times.
Anyone ever hear of the ice route “Ceramic Engineer “. Probably not. I am approaching 30 seasons of ice climbing and have never heard of anyone climbing this route. Haven’t been out at all this season and was looking for an easy WI3 route. Ceramic Engineer 70m, WI3 is in Jo Jo’s guidebook and seemed like a reasonable day out. It is just east of Mt. Wilson, about 6 km east of Saskatchewan Crossing in Owen Creek.
Hiking up to the WI3 route we climbed. |
I convinced John it was a good idea so we headed there on Saturday Feb. 10. After hiking in almost 5 km we saw some scary sun affected WI5 ice. We hiked a bit and found a 45m WI3 route. Climbed it, not sure it was Ceramic Engineer? Was a great day out with a great bud in remote setting. Tons of fun.