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Jeff Hebert

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West Ridge on Mount Thomson

July 16, 2023

Kelsey and I were looking for a single-day moderate alpine climbing objective and settled on Mount Thomson having looked at it a number of times from the Kendall Katwalk but never having been all the way back to do it. We left Seattle around 6:30am and were leaving the car a bit after 7:30am.

Our approach was reasonably quick, getting to the Katwalk for a snack in a little over 2 hours and then pressing on past Ridge Lake and then to Bumblebee Pass in a little over 3 hours from the car. We got a good look at the mountain from here and could see a party on the high slabs. We dropped down past a campsite and then started the lollipop, ascending talus and scree that looked worse than it was (for the most part) up to the West Ridge notch 4 hours and 8.5 miles from the car.

We geared up here and spent a couple of minutes looking around the base of the ridge and up the ridge thinking that it looked improbably steep for low 5th class, but as soon as we got onto the rock just left of the ridge crest to start and then on the crest shortly thereafter, we found very moderate terrain which was plenty comfortable to climb in our approach shoes with a light single rack. We decided to simul-climb with our 8mm 60m rope doubled up and this worked reasonably well, combining the three pitches of 5th class into two simul blocks.

The slab section afforded some great views of Mount Rainier on what was a brilliantly clear day. We scampered across and realized after a short stop shy of the next rock face that there was a tree belay tucked all the way up against it. We moved our belay here and then Kelsey finished the climb up to the final ridge. We put the rope in the backpack from here and scrambled to the top, savoring the great views at about 2pm.

We quickly hit a traffic jam on the descent and decided that at least the first rappel was easily down-climbable, so we did that. The next rappel looked a bit more loose and exposed, so we took the rope out for it since we were waiting regardless. The next rap was an easy down-climb. We scooted past the two other parties once everyone was off rappel and then began the slog out.

We stopped at Ridge Lake for a quick dip, which was marvelous and refreshed us for at least the next couple of miles. From the Kendall Katwalk down felt interminable, with the 18 miles adding up to some serious foot and leg pain, but it all faded quickly with a burger at Commonwealth shortly thereafter. It was about an 11 hour 15 minute round trip for us. Nice to be back on rock after a long time!

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Adam on his way back across the traverse

South Ridge on Mount Jefferson

May 28, 2023

Given its distance from Seattle, Mount Jefferson had sat on my list for a while and so I was excited when I dropped a line to my friend Adam in advance of Memorial Day weekend to hear that he and his friend Eric were planning to climb its South Ridge. We left Seattle early on Saturday morning and arrived at Pamelia Lake Trailhead around 11:30am. After debating the merits of various forms of protection and gear (we went in heavy with a tent per person), we started hiking in trail runners with overnight, ski, glacier, and steep snow gear on our backs.

About a mile after reaching the PCT, we started to hit snow, but it was too patchy to make sense to switch to our boots and skins. By the time the snow was clearly continuous enough, we were nearing Shale Lake and our camp for the night and it didn’t make sense to transition. It took a little over 4 hours to make it those 8 miles from the car. We set up our luxurious array of tents and took a nap before dinner—one of my all-time mountain adventure favorite activities.

 

With temperatures around freezing overnight and a relatively cool day expected, we weren’t in a big rush in the morning. We were up at 5am and moving by 6am after scraping the frost off our skis. The ascent went very smoothly from camp at 5,900 feet to the point where the ridge steepened at 9,500 feet in about 3 hours. We left our skis here and switched to crampons, ascending the ridge and then steep snow just to the East of it until we reached the red saddle at about 10,250 feet roughly an hour later.

The steep snow traverse was intimidating from this vantage point, especially given a series of deep runnels cutting through it. We had a snack, got our two tools out, made sure our crampons weren’t going to skate around on us, and then I set off, offering my toes to the foothold gods. It would have been difficult to protect this section well without a lot of pickets and patience. While it was steep, the pick placements and feet were good enough that we each soloed across. The runnels were quite a 3-D challenge to get good footholds and sticks to step in and then back out, but we figured it out. It took about 45 minutes to painstakingly crab walk across this section to reach the ridge and slightly lower-angle terrain on the other side.

We continued to corkscrew around, eventually reaching a rime-covered ramp toward the summit requiring quite a bit of front pointing and high daggering. I got to a point just a few feet below the top where pulling on the final steep rime mushroom feature didn’t seem worth the risk to poke my head just over the top and so I called it good here and down-climbed. Eric and Adam had made similar decisions a bit earlier. We regrouped at the beginning of the traverse back across and were much faster on the way back with the face warming up considerably in the sun and our footsteps already being cut.

A quick romp plunge-stepping down the snow next to the ridge got us to our skis. It was about 2:30pm at this point but the snow was still in prime spring conditions and we whooped our way down the mountain, reaching our tents in about 40 minutes, savoring it and taking our time.

We decided that it would be worth beating Memorial Day traffic and not hiking out on frozen snow, so we packed up camp, skied out as much as we could, cut one switchback on snow, and then hoofed it out, aided by pain-killing whiskey in about 3.5 hours from camp to the car around 8:30pm. That made for a very late arrival home in Seattle, but it was worth having a whole holiday at home as well.

Especially in the rimed-up spring conditions we encountered, the last 1,000 feet of this route were appreciably more technical than the normal routes on other Cascade volcanoes. I was glad to have a bunch of steep snow experience before tackling this one.

See our GPS Track here

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Little Tahoma via Paradise

May 13, 2023

Little Tahoma had been on my list for years but I had always prioritized other peaks and routes. With a heat wave this weekend and one day to get outside, getting high in MRNP seemed like a good plan. Colin and I decided to be responsible mountain citizens and secure a permit, which meant with work schedules that we had to wait until 7:30am when the ranger station was open. We left Seattle at 5am, secured our permit after waiting in line for a bit while all geared up at 8am, and left the Paradise parking lot just after 8am.

It was smooth sailing in the conga line up the Muir Snowfield until we curved climber’s right away from the beaten path around 8,500 feet. As we traversed onto the Cowlitz Glacier, we decided to deviate from the guidebook instructions and rise up to almost 9,000 feet to get around the crevasses and seracs. This involved a little extra effort, but was very smooth and straightforward. We then were able to slide our way down to 8,600 feet again to cross the rock rib with only a short stint on rock and dirt.

The Ingraham Glacier was even more straightforward. We did a descending traverse to 8,350 feet or so before rising back up to the Whitman Glacier access col. This face was pretty firm but we didn’t need crampons since there was an existing boot pack. We reached the col 3 hours and 15 minutes after starting our day—reasonably quick compared to the ski touring guidebook estimates, so it seemed our up and down approach across the Cowlitz and Ingraham Glaciers had paid off.

After a snack, we booted (with some terrible isothermal post holing) up the steep snow just below the rock cliffs and did a steep traverse on snow that was pretty warm and slushy but not showing signs of full-on wet slide. This brought us to the cirque below the Southeast Face of Little Tahoma at about 9,200 feet. We skinned for a ways before hooking into a nice boot pack which carried us up about 800 feet below the summit. Some trail breaking in snow from here (ski tracks must have filled in the boot pack) got us to 100 feet from the top where we scrambled up rock, across the ridge, and then down and back up to the summit.

The last 50 feet or so were heads-up in ski boots, but we never felt the need to get the rope out in either direction. We reached the summit 6 hours and 20 minutes from the car and soaked in our up-close-and-personal view of Rainier. The exposure on the Northwest Face of Little Tahoma is pretty breathtaking from the top.

Our descent from the summit to our skis was forgettable in deep isothermal slush but the ski from there made up for it, with heavy, buttered corn and a perfect slope angle to enjoy it. We retraced our steps back out and got to the car just over 9 hours after we’d started. This day ended up being a bit bigger and more effortful than expected with our extra elevation gain in both directions and the slushy snow, but was right within the time expectation we had. Great day!

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