It steepened up and the snow wasn’t continuous on either side of a big rock island. We chose the right and did a slightly sketchy move off the snow, up a loose gully, over dirty rock, and then back onto the steep snow above. A bit more work got us to the top of the snow, then more loose, dirty rock to get to the notch. We slowed considerably here, reaching the notch about 6 hours from the car at 10:30am, and then taking a snack break here.
The first pitch wasn’t perfectly clear. We ascended relatively steep, somewhat loose rock adjacent to the bivy and, in retrospect, it would have been easier to go up closer to the notch. From the crest, it eased up quite a bit and was a fun romp for a ways up to a steeper face. We did a rightward traverse here before cutting straight up to good ledges. Kelsey took a turn, moving the belay over to the left of the ledges before climbing back right on a ramp and doing one tricky move. Up high, the fourth pitch from the description we’d brought involved quite steep climbing on really good holds—it was the most fun of the route.
We then did a short pitch towards the right instead of heading up a very steep, blank looking section, encountering the au cheval flake, then a fun steep move. A final rambling pitch to the right and then back left brought us to the summit ridge where good bivy sites existed. What a gorgeous spot!
A short scramble got us to the summit at 2pm, about 9.5 hours in. We were climbing on a 60m twin rope doubled in half, mainly simul-climbing, but also pitching out where appropriate. The summit views were awesome, looking over to Stuart and Sherpa as well as Colchuck and Dragontail. Glacier and Rainier also made appearances, as well as Daniel.
The scramble was a bit involved, but not too bad. We found a rap anchor near the base of the snowfield on the upper Northeast Face. We did a single rope rap down this and then had some moments of confusion. Scrambling straight down a ways, we found a rap anchor on a tree, but the terrain looked improbably steep and we didn’t want to end up hanging in space with our single rope. Upon further inspection, we discovered that there were rap anchors and more reasonable terrain to skier’s left, staying closer to the Northeast Ridge. After a short scramble and rappel, we cut through a notch to the East Face and found two more rappels down to the base of the face. Whew. Putting the rope and rack away for the day was a nice feeling.