Class 3
2,266m
Thirty years ago Yellow Aster Bute and Tomyhoi felt like our family's private mountain refuge. No longer. Since the last time I was there (a couple decades ago) it has been discovered by everyone and their dog. Not a big deal. It remains a fantastic spot, and the crowd thins considerably in the evening when all the day hikers head home. The Okanagan, Vancouver and Hood River branches of our family met in Glacier (lunch at Graham's of course) for one more outing to cap off a great summer in the mountains. Some of us had to lug ludicrously big packs up to the lakes below Yellow Aster Bute (some in our party are still not carrying their share), but we managed to get up before sunset. The following morning we lounged about the lakes and did a short jaunt up to Yellow Aster Bute for lunch. Tomyhoi itself was our destination for the next day. I'd forgotten how involved this scramble is; it's not to be taken lightly. For those of us who made it up (Oliver, Eloïse, Guy and Pip) it was an all-day affair, and getting across the top of the glacier was a proper hassle with one ice axe and no crampons (crampons are probably overkill, but both adults should've had ice axes at the very least, and crampons certainly wouldn't have hurt). The other key issue is rockfall, which is a particular hazard when hiking with a six-year old. None of which is to say this wasn't an awesome adventure – it was – but there's always room for improvement and we could've been a little better prepared for this one!
Jos and I have a lot of memories of this place as kids, and bringing our own kids here for the first time was really neat. I think we'll be back again soon (hopefully with Gillian – who injured herself the day before this trip – and Lisa next time).
Participants: Luca, Sparrow, Oliver, Eloïse, Jocelyn, Andrew, Lisa, Guy and Pip.
Guidebook: Matt Gunn (Matt has also added his route description to Bivouac.com).
Photos Strava GPX KML
"Scramble" – The act of ascending a steep slope that requires the use of hands to climb; a pell-mell rush; a method for cooking eggs.
"Scramblegs" [scramble-legs] –
A loose affiliation of families and friends who like to get out into the mountains and, ideally, to the tops of them. Most of us are located in BC, Canada.
Saturday, September 01, 2018
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Uto Peak – Southwest Ridge
PD 5.1.
2,927m
Finding myself in Roger’s Pass without a climbing partner for Mt. Sir Donald (at the top of my wish list this summer), I climbed up the SW ridge of Uto and down the NW. For a 5.7-8 alpine climber (and, perhaps, more to the point, a dad and husband) this was right near the limit of my comfort zone as a solo climb. I brought climbing shoes ‘just in case’ and ended up using them for the entire climb! A very nice route on good rock, though plenty of loose stuff to pay attention to. It’s been a smoky month or so in the Rockies and across the province, but I had a relatively nice day, and stunning views. I had Uto all to myself, and saw just a couple parties on Sir Donald. Pretty sure I also saw a wolverine at first light in the boulder field on the hike up.
Participants: Pip.
Guidebook: David Jones (2012), Rogers Pass Alpine Guide.
Photos Strava Bivouac.com GPX KML
2,927m
Finding myself in Roger’s Pass without a climbing partner for Mt. Sir Donald (at the top of my wish list this summer), I climbed up the SW ridge of Uto and down the NW. For a 5.7-8 alpine climber (and, perhaps, more to the point, a dad and husband) this was right near the limit of my comfort zone as a solo climb. I brought climbing shoes ‘just in case’ and ended up using them for the entire climb! A very nice route on good rock, though plenty of loose stuff to pay attention to. It’s been a smoky month or so in the Rockies and across the province, but I had a relatively nice day, and stunning views. I had Uto all to myself, and saw just a couple parties on Sir Donald. Pretty sure I also saw a wolverine at first light in the boulder field on the hike up.
Participants: Pip.
Guidebook: David Jones (2012), Rogers Pass Alpine Guide.
Photos Strava Bivouac.com GPX KML
Friday, August 17, 2018
Mt. Yuckness – South Summit, Northwest ridge
PD 4th Class
2,851m
Eloïse and Simon got their first alpine start this morning in order to get up Yuckness before catching our return bus after 4 fantastic days at Lake O’Hara. This is a super fun scramble with some very-real exposure that had at least one of the dad’s in our group questioning how he felt about having his son tied to him while he negotiated the trickier bits. Really, really good views of the Lake O’Hara area from the summit, despite pretty heavy smoke; a great way to cap off our trip.
The climbers trail to the West face departs (left) from the main trail shortly after climbing up above Opabin lake (3-5min from the lake). Though unsigned it is very clear. From there we easily followed the cairns up scree to the col between south and north summits, where we roped up for the summit push. On the way down we took the alternate, 3rd class scramble back to the col.
Participants: Pip, Aaron, Eloïse, Simon.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Mt. Schäffer – Southwest ridge
F 3rd class.
2,691m
When it comes to getting a group of 8 adults and 6 kids up Mt. Schäffer the crux move comes 3 months ahead of summit day when you have to book the hugely popular campsite at Lake O’Hara. This is not a trivial matter given that the method Parks Canada uses for this purpose is a good old fashioned phone line that opens to all comers at 8am. Fortunately we had the numbers, and with almost all of the adults in our groups pressing redial for a couple hours on the appointed day we got the sites we needed. As for Schäffer itself, the Southwest ridge was the perfect outing for our group. A pleasant hike to McArthur Lake followed by a steep climb up talus to the base of the SW ridge, where we tied the kids up and headed for the top.
On the approach we took the High-Level Circuit trail to the high point above McArthur Lake (marked by a huge cairn pile) and then left the trail and worked up right and around to the West shoulder. On the descent we took a more direct line back to this same point on the main trail, which I recommend for both ascent and descent. This is easier to nail on the way down as you simply follow the direction off southwest ridge and keep going; on the way up, put your back to the cairn pile and head up into the talus bowl; look for a small break in the cliff band ahead, through which you can gain the SW ridge.
Participants: Pip, Lisa, Eloïse, Oliver, Aaron, Lisa, Simon, Linnaea, Jocelyn, Andrew, Sparrow, Luca, Guy, and Victoire.
Photos Strava (map) Bivouac.com GPX KML
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Wiwaxy Peak – Grassi (South) Ridge
AD+ 5.6-5.7 (10 pitches)
2,706m
Packing up for a family-and-friends hiking trip to Lake O’Hara I thought it was wishful thinking to throw in climbing gear. However, as soon as we got off the bus at the campground and looked across the road to Wiwaxy, We 3 Dads exhibited some quick decision making and got up Grassi Ridge before anyone else was the wiser (the rest of the trip was devoted to family-oriented hikes and scrambles, honestly). After missing the climber’s trail on our first pass (this departs from the trail on the north side of Cataract Brook; we beefed up the cairns a few days later), we had a straightforward approach and very enjoyable climb. As the guide says, most anchors are bolted, and those that aren’t are atop large ledges and can easily be protected with a bit of gear or by slinging a bolder (not all are rap anchors, however; you would need to leave some hardware to get off the route the way you came).
As we approached the West Summit (where the Grassi ridge tops out) we started looking nervously across to the East Summit and the descent trail that traverses beneath it. From our vantage point this looked like the sketchiest (steep, loose) thing we had ever seen, and with very little daylight to play with we were wondering what kind of epic lay ahead. In fact, it was nothing of the sort and we were simply being fooled by foreshortening.
The guide suggests 10-11 pitches. We lost count but ended up doing 12 or 13 including very short pitches 5 and 8 between close anchors. Not sure why these anchors were built this way; both are situated ahead of 3rd class terrain so perhaps the idea is to rig a quick belay without building a full anchor or dealing with the rope drag that would come from the leader continuing over this 3rd class terrain. Three full-length rappels (with a bit of scrambling between #2 and 3) get you to the col between West and East summits; very high potential for rockfall here. Traverse beneath East Peak on the aforementioned trail followed by a quick, very steep descent down to the Wiwaxy gap trail and back to the lake.
* David P. Jones (2015), Rockies Central: The Climbers Guide to the Rocky Mountains of Canada (Volume 2).
Participants: Pip, Aaron, Alex.
Gear: a small rack of wires and cams (small).
Photos Strava (map) Bivouac.com GPX KML
2,706m
Packing up for a family-and-friends hiking trip to Lake O’Hara I thought it was wishful thinking to throw in climbing gear. However, as soon as we got off the bus at the campground and looked across the road to Wiwaxy, We 3 Dads exhibited some quick decision making and got up Grassi Ridge before anyone else was the wiser (the rest of the trip was devoted to family-oriented hikes and scrambles, honestly). After missing the climber’s trail on our first pass (this departs from the trail on the north side of Cataract Brook; we beefed up the cairns a few days later), we had a straightforward approach and very enjoyable climb. As the guide says, most anchors are bolted, and those that aren’t are atop large ledges and can easily be protected with a bit of gear or by slinging a bolder (not all are rap anchors, however; you would need to leave some hardware to get off the route the way you came).
As we approached the West Summit (where the Grassi ridge tops out) we started looking nervously across to the East Summit and the descent trail that traverses beneath it. From our vantage point this looked like the sketchiest (steep, loose) thing we had ever seen, and with very little daylight to play with we were wondering what kind of epic lay ahead. In fact, it was nothing of the sort and we were simply being fooled by foreshortening.
The guide suggests 10-11 pitches. We lost count but ended up doing 12 or 13 including very short pitches 5 and 8 between close anchors. Not sure why these anchors were built this way; both are situated ahead of 3rd class terrain so perhaps the idea is to rig a quick belay without building a full anchor or dealing with the rope drag that would come from the leader continuing over this 3rd class terrain. Three full-length rappels (with a bit of scrambling between #2 and 3) get you to the col between West and East summits; very high potential for rockfall here. Traverse beneath East Peak on the aforementioned trail followed by a quick, very steep descent down to the Wiwaxy gap trail and back to the lake.
* David P. Jones (2015), Rockies Central: The Climbers Guide to the Rocky Mountains of Canada (Volume 2).
Participants: Pip, Aaron, Alex.
Gear: a small rack of wires and cams (small).
Photos Strava (map) Bivouac.com GPX KML
Monday, July 30, 2018
Markhor - Needle Loop
1,995m (Markhor), 2,095m (Needle)
Class 4 / low 5th, Gr. II
Having been up the standard route on Needle several times it was nice to approach from another direction, and this loop has been on my to-do list for years. Other than an initial bushwack up through the steep trees, which turned out to be less of an ordeal than I had been expecting, this was a fantastic route over fun terrain - mostly hiking and easy scrambling with some 4th and even 5th class scrambling with exposure thrown in. A hot, hot day, and we ran a little low on water. Otherwise a thoroughly enjoyable day out!
Participants: Pip and Alex.
Photos Strava Bivouac.com GPX KML
Class 4 / low 5th, Gr. II
Having been up the standard route on Needle several times it was nice to approach from another direction, and this loop has been on my to-do list for years. Other than an initial bushwack up through the steep trees, which turned out to be less of an ordeal than I had been expecting, this was a fantastic route over fun terrain - mostly hiking and easy scrambling with some 4th and even 5th class scrambling with exposure thrown in. A hot, hot day, and we ran a little low on water. Otherwise a thoroughly enjoyable day out!
Participants: Pip and Alex.
Photos Strava Bivouac.com GPX KML
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Wednesday, July 04, 2018
Liberty Bell – Becky route (SW face)
5.6, Grade I.
2360m.
Our first of many trips to Washington Pass I hope! Lucky for us, 4th of July fell mid-week this year and Liberty Bell (as well as adjacent climbs) wasn't crowded. Groups ahead and behind us, but we had the summit to ourselves. Jos did great. I taught her to belay at the bottom of the first pitch, so we had the safety thing covered. This was a pretty perfect alpine outing for us. A fun adventure made pretty stress-free by the low grade (mostly low 5th, with some 4th, and very short crux sections), length of the route, excellent rock, easy gear-placements, and rap anchors.
We were about 6hrs car-to-car, including half an hour on the summit.
Also, Winthrop looks like a super cool town. Can't wait to get back.
Participants: Pip and Jos.
Participants: Pip and Jos.