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Jeff Hebert

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Kelsey, cruising 5.fun

Northeast Buttress on Goode Mountain

September 3, 2017

The Northeast Buttress on Goode Mountain had been on my short list of late-summer climbs for a few years and the stars hadn’t quite aligned for it until this Labor Day weekend when both Kelsey and I had three full days and sufficient gumption to commit to the mileage.

Headed up to camp below the glacier

We left Seattle at 7am on Saturday morning and left the trailhead around 10:30am.  The slightly-downhill miles on the PCT went pretty easily and quickly and we were at the North Fork of Bridge Creek turnoff, about 12 miles in, faster than we’d anticipated, in about 3 hours.  From there, the trail up the North Fork was in better shape than anticipated, with only a little bit of brush after the mellow, late-summer Grizzly Creek crossing.  We found an easy path down to the North Fork crossing and did a quick barefoot ford where we also ran into another party of two.

The group of us worked our way up the slabs, brush, and talus of the approach to high camp, arriving at a bivy site around 5,400 feet at 6:30pm or so for an 8-hour day—not too bad.

Getting onto the glacier

We decided that an alpine start wouldn’t be needed and set our alarms for 6am after taking in the sunset while enjoying an extended dinner and dessert break.  We were moving by 7am in the morning and wove our way as high as we could on rock before committing to the glacier.  Getting onto it was steeper than I would have liked in approach shoes with strap-on aluminum crampons and with an ultralight axe, but it went.  Once we were on the glacier, we only had to weave our way around a handful of gaping crevasses before holding elevation on a high traverse all the way to the base of the route, at which point we ran into another group of two and found an easy section of collapsed snow in the moat to gain the rock at about 9am.

The first 1000+ feet of the route are easy 4th class, which we simul-climbed pretty quickly.  While it was easier on the left side of the ridge, staying true to the ridge was a lot more fun, so we spent most of the time in that great position on more solid rock than I expected.  The upper sections of the route had a bit more 5th class, but stayed quite mellow and simul-climbable.  We took a couple of breaks in the shade on nice ledges as it was a hot day and finished up the last pitch to the summit at about 3:15pm.

The summit views from Goode are stellar—perhaps even better than from Forbidden Peak.  Thankfully, the wildfire smoke stayed away for the whole day on Sunday and it was a beautifully clear view.  We could see fires to the North, East, and South, so we were quite lucky with the wind direction.

Summit view, looking to the West

Rapping from the summit

The descent gully

After soaking it in for a while, we started down at about 4:30pm, doing three raps to the ledge system and a couple more raps down the couloir before scampering down the rest of the 4th class choss while trying not to kill each other.  At 6:30pm, we were on the open meadow below with some running water.  We loaded up here and descended a bit more, but decided not to follow the other parties down the full descent that night and instead stayed at about 7,400 feet for the night with a great view of the range and sunset.

Near the base of the loose descent gully

Unsavory, sooty, smoky descending to the valley

We started the long walk out at 6:15am the next morning, reaching the valley floor at 9am after a few sections of trickier, loose terrain on the way.  From there, it was a LONG 20-mile walk out with sore feet on a hot, smokey day.  We stopped a few times to take our shoes off and soak our feet in the cool streams, but they definitely felt like hamburger by the end of it.  Thankfully, our single rack of ultralight cams, 8mm 60m rope, and lack of a tent helped keep the load relatively light.

Great adventure to a beautiful summit in the great North Cascades.

In Climbing
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The crew at the lookout

Three Fingers South Peak

August 19, 2017

While not a technical climb, the ascent to Three Fingers Lookout is quite an adventure.  The road is closed at an old bridge and requires around 10 miles of gravel road to get to the trailhead, which we biked.  From there, the trail is somewhat overgrown until Saddle Lake and then opens up toward Goat Flats before transforming into a beautiful, high ridge walk.

From Tin Can Gap, things get a bit more interesting, with some snow traversing or moat navigation to access the lower-angle finish on the South side of the peak, culminating in a fun scramble and climb up ladders to get to the improbable lookout perched on top of the South peak.

Our group of six joined two others to spend the night on Saturday and lucked out that the clouds finally cleared in the evening to reveal the full view and an awesome sunset.  What a spot!

View back at the lookout from near Tin Can Gap

View back at the lookout from near Tin Can Gap

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Kelsey on the exposed arete of the final pitch

The Ragged Edge on Vesper Peak

July 23, 2017

Kelsey on the slab portion on Pitch 2

Kelsey and I had originally planned for a big weekend on the Price Glacier, but work schedules got in the way, so we reset on a single day objective and The Ragged Edge on Vesper Peak sifted to the top.

We left Seattle at 6:15am and left the car at 8:15am.  It was surprisingly hot and humid on the approach, which we did pretty fast, hitting Headlee Pass at 9:45am.  We traversed over to Vesper proper, but there was a solid whiteout at that elevation, so we just started our way up, hoping that things would clear by the time we reached the elevation of the ledges.  We were moving pretty quickly in approach shoes with micro spikes and ultralight axes and didn't look at the GPS to figure out our elevation until it turned out that we were 50 feet from the summit.  Whoops.  I'd never accidentally summited a mountain before!  We arrived at the completely socked-in top a bit before 11am and decided to eat our lunch and take a nap, hoping things would clear.

Things started looking better at about noon, so we headed down the 400 feet or so to the ledge system, traversed it, including a few moments of "are we in the right place?" before finding the start of the route after down climbing some sketchy-looking stuff and traversing around a rock buttress.  We started the route at about 1:15pm and immediately hit a traffic jam with 4 parties ahead of us.  It was to be expected, really.  There were at least 2 parties on True Grit as well, which made for a pretty social setting up there.

We took our time at the comfortable belays and enjoyed all of the pitches.  The route has generally good rock, lots of variety of movement, and a fabulous position.  The final 4 pitches were especially fun and exposed.  After clearing up for most of the day, the clouds came back as we were finishing up around 5:30pm, which made for a dramatic backdrop.

After hitting the top, we quickly packed up and descended, making it to the car after the knee and foot-pounding talus descent just shy of 8pm.  Great climb in a fun position.

Looking down at the final belay as the clouds closed in on us again

In Climbing
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