Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Alaska Range Spring Climbing

Root Canal, half way up the Mooses Tooth at the base of Ham and Eggs and Shaken Not Stirred with "Beckey", "Fred Beckey"...
Scoping First Ascents, or someone's woman?

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Mt. Huntington Classics

On the 13th kiwi Mike Madden and I flew into the Northeast Fork of the Tokositna with Paul Roderick, and three British guys. On the way into the range we dropped off two climbers at the Kahiltna Base camp at which point Paul said, "I don't think we'll make it into the Tok, anywhere else you want to go?" The five of us said no, we would rather wait until we can get into Hungtington at which point I'd resigned myself to beers and burgers at the West Rib, which sounded just fine, as I'd only gotten to Talkeetna last night late, and I'd been on the the road for a crazy month. One night of chilling out sounded great. That was, of course, until ten minutes later, after we'd taken off from Kahiltna base camp and headed over the pass into the Tokositna. I couldn't see much from the backseat, but after numerous steep bank turns, each one bringing us seemingly close to the steep granite walls on the north side of the valley, and Paul had us on the ground at the base of Huntington. No burgers, or beers, I guess.

Mike and I set up camp and the next day we spent skiing to the base of the Access Couloir of the Harvard Route. The Stegasauraus looming big above, and the ice looked nice and deep blue, where it wasn't covered by snow. We'd put a track up the climber's right side of the glacier. The guidebook showed a line up the steep, left hand side, but Mike and I had skis, and the right hand option was a low angle, forty minute skin from camp to the base of either the West Face Couloir (a.k.a. Nettle/Quirk) or the Harvard Route. We put the track up in a near whiteout feeling by braille for the contours and the next day which was clear, we'd seemed to go clear of any crevasses.

Day three Mike and I (team name, "New Zealand Sheep Ranch," although Mike resented any name referring to the sheep love habits of kiwis, I was the one who was at TAT's front desk when it was time to give them an expedition name) woke up around three and noticed a decent pressure drop, and in a hasty decision, driven half by fear of committment, and half but the desire for more sleep, we said hey, lets try the West Face couloir as a warm-up instead, so we went back to sleep until six, then got up and fired up the route. We made good time, Mike led the whole damn thing, he was on fire after a whole season of guiding in the Southern Alps, and by three we were on top of the couloir, though without any bivy gear, and we rappelled the route, and were back in camp by eight for dinner.

The lower snowfield was steep, as steep as anything I've skied, I'm guessing around sixty degrees, and the snow was reasonable for climbing. The route description says to go right at the top of the snowfield, then back left. But we went strait up through an ice couloir, then back left around a rock buttress, then right into the base of the actual start of the couloir. The ice was perfect except for one section that was rotten. There are two basic ways to climb the lower section, either the right hand or left hand variation. The left hand variation has a few steeper steps but both are generally in the AI3 to AI3+ range, with a few places you might call AI4. The upper couloir was pure, blue ice for the most part, ice screws sunk in nice and tight and every pitch went the full length of the rope. Though it is the West Face couloir, it actually has a more northerly aspect, so it doesn't receive much sunlight, at least not in mid-April. The decent was easy, V-threads down the climbers right side of the couloir courtesy of two guys who had climbed it a few days before us. We added a few in areas that had been buries with snow. We downclimbed the initial snowfield, which took about half an hour, then skied back to camp.

Two days later we started up the Harvard Route, with a plan to bivy on the Upper Park, then beneath the Nose, then to fire for the summit and return to camp on day three. The British Team was already on day three when we started on day one, so we expected to see them at some point. We started at a 9 am from camp, because we only had to make the Upper Park in the first day, around 8 pitches of snow and ice. We made it by 3, and found beatiful ice, some of which was covered with snow, a nice mixed ice and rock squeeze through a chimney (thought the topo said to go right here, the squeeze was easy enough and fun), then some rotten snow, and finally the bivy, which had been dug out by the Brits.

Around 5:30 they rappelled down passed us; one of them had gotten frostbite on day two because they had started too late and ended up finishing at the base of the nose at 4 am. So their trip was done. After they left we noticed the pressure dropping and those high dark clouds rolling in pretty quick after the three days of splitter sunshine we'd had. So we bailed, and got back to camp around midnight. We rested the next day, and then as the pressure was slowly and surely ticking its way up the barometer, we made our second go at the route, getting to the Upper Park bivy, and fixing one of the cruxes, the Spiral, that night. The next day we woke up to beautiful pre-dawn skies, ascended our fixed rope and continued on, choosing to take the right hand variation around the bastion, a C1 crack. Near the top of the crack I didn't like what the exit of it was looking like, so I lowered down and climbed and easy but thin AI4 corner ten feet to the right. I probably should have climbed that to begin with. The Brits said the middle variation, which on the topo is described as a 5.9 chimney, was beautiful AI4-5. After Mike ascended our line we cruised 4 pitches of snow and ice to the base of the Nose, I fixed it, we made camp on the beautifully exposed Nose bivy and spent a cozy night in our small tent.

Mike is about 6'5'' so he takes up most of the tent. The next morning we woke up at 5, jugged the lines and continued up two pitches before snow conditions turned us around. We were back in camp by 4 pm. I definitely regret turning around that early. The snow conditions weren't good, and the weather was also deteriorating, but who knows, I guess thats climbing and I'm here to tell the tale with all my digits. The descent is entirely rigged with mostly fixed rock anchors. As long as there are no hangups, climbers can expect the entire descent to take hours for a party of two.

We spent the next 5 days waiting for a pickup, skiing powder, and trying to beat our neighbors at cards. We just got back to beautiful Talkeetna today and so many people have already arrived for the season.

Good luck on your climbs!

Danny Uhlmann with Mike Madden, Team New Zealand Sheep Ranch

duhlmann@gmail.com

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Great Gorge Report 4/21/09

Shaken not Stirred: Conditions are good and the crux is stout. Left-hand variation is in now. First pitch is beginning to melt out. All rappel anchors are fixed and easy to use.

Kahiltna glacier: Snow on the SW ridge of Frances, faceted and hard to move in.

Mini Moonflower, Absolutely outstanding. All ice and GREAT. Crux pitch was thick enough ice to protect and In your Face steep.
---Team Tiny------

Monday, April 20, 2009

Alaska Range, Ruth Glacier, Great Gorge




ham and eggs report- looks snowy, we have not had a climbing report yet. there has been some freeze thaw activity so the route is taking shape.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

April Alaska Range Conditions Report

Condition report:
Tokositna/Huntington- climbing conditions on the west face have been good. The ice pitches on the west face coulior are in. The summit snowfield has been thigh deep but plowable for you hardmen or women.
Ruth area- there is plenty of snow but not over the top. the ice pitches on the southeast side of Dickey were reported snowy and the ice was there but hard to find in some areas. There are no current reports from Ham and Eggs but a Norwegian team is poised and ready as of April 14th.
Peak 11300 is in good shape with some deep winter sugar layers.
Hunter- no reports
Denali- no climbing reports but the west butt looks good a bit wind scoured from 13000ft to the 14 camp.
Foraker- no reports
Little Swiss- no reports but it is very white in there, just looking for some attention.
Tordrillos- ashy! come with another plan
Kichatnas- no report waiting for Twid.

Talkeetna Air Taxi- paul

Friday, April 10, 2009

SUNDAY SUNDAY SOMEDAY.....


Danial is getting geared up for the Monster Truck Rally. Meet at the Chase gravel pit Easter sunday. Egg hunt to follow at high noon.....

Monday, April 06, 2009

Talkeetna Air Taxi reaching new heights....






Catching over 60 feet of sweet air........
First Bicycle summit of TAT Hill, training camp is coming soon.

Caught in the Act




'Wild' Bill Post has been caught in the act using the company vehicle to transport materials for his dream cabin. The location is undisclosed North of the Alaska Range.














We are on to you Bill.

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Reports from the Tokositna Glacier.

This group flew in on March 26th and out today from the East Fork of the Tok; and this is the breaking news they had to report.....
There is a 14 inch wind crust on top of 2-3 ft of sugar snow. the alpine ice is in fat. Temps were close to zero during the day most days and the coldest we saw was -30 at night. wind was light most days with it picking up at night. when the sun came out it was beautiful. Not alot of avy activity but the potential was there.

Here we go........

Friday, April 03, 2009

Sheila is here



Our lovely Sheila has arrived from Broome, she has travelled 7,247 miles from the land down Under and has greeted us in Talkeetna.










The winter time maintainance crew at the airport finally gets their spring excitement.....