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Wednesday 18 February 2015

Walking and Whiskey: The annual hut trip was a great success!

Hut trips are awesome. After my first few winter camping trips over the last few years I've become addicted. Spending a few nights in the solitude of the backcountry is always a huge learning experience and can be very humbling.  You are so immersed in the  sheer monstrosity of the mountains you are exploring and the immense power and dynamics of weather. Inevitably you see a lot and have a lot of fun. Especially when you have the whole cabin exclusively to share with super rad friends.


Day 1: The Approach

Showed up at Asulkan parking lot 9:30am. We knew the weather was supposed to be gross so no need to rush. Poured rain the entire 7km approch. Rylan and I ended up catching up with the rest of the crew on the way up and we moved as a spread out pack ascending to the hut.




Day 1 Map

As we rolled into the hut clouds sunk on us and wind picked up. Skiing was out of the question for the day. We sat around in the hut, played cards, practiced repelling from the rafters, did a good number on the whisky, and chatted about what the following day might bring. 




Hut Chilling (ph: Nikos Schwelm)



Day 2: 6th Step of Paradise and Asulkan Pass

In a hut everyone kind of wakes up at the same time. It's not really a matter of choice in spaces that tight. Once you have 14 people squirming in vinyl sleeping bags, as the alpine sun pokes through the large glass windows, it becomes kind of impossible to stay asleep. The day has begun.



Mark taking in the view


Cowboy coffee with maple syrup (a.k.a. Cafe Canadiana) and a pre-made breakfast burrito slightly burnt over a propane stove and we are good to go. People go out and split into groups. Zach leads charge and starts punching tracks up the 7 Steps of Paradise. I chase Andrew (Blondie) Leoppky and Bill (Nitro) Knight as they attempt to go on a casual cornice cutting rampage. Clouds blew in, and we decided going for a walk would be better than dropping ice. 



Zach's crew setting the track (ph: Nikos Schwelm)


We ascended the first 6 Steps of Paradise up towards Youngs Peak, but chose to turn around at the headwall due to having a large group and too many people on the slope to safely keep going up. Our crew (Myself, Rylan Kappler, Nitro, Blondie, and Mark) skied the traditional paradise chute, while the rest of the cabin skied the frontside.



Rylan getting ready to drop into the seemingly never ending Paradise chute.


After our first run we walked back up to the cabin, had a quick beer and sandwich, and sent our way up the Asulkan Pass for a second lap.



Setting a track up the knob, with Asulkan Pass on the right side





View over the back of Asulkan Pass into the Incomappleux (ph: Mark Dalgliesh)




That time I disappeared in a trap door on the ridge. Almost pooped myself on this one.




De-Skinning at the top of the knob before dropping in. (ph: Nikos Schwelm)



Myself dropping into a well deserved run (ph: Nikos Schwelm)




Rylan and I's beautiful powder 8s, and Nitro's classy pow 11. 


We shredded down to the hut after our second long run of the day. Legs were well worn and the stomach needed something more than cliff bars. The evening was passed by more card games, laughs, whiskey, and birthday cake made out of squished 2 bite brownies. Seriously if you aren't dying to hut trip now I don't know what it takes. It's awesome. 


The day's trek. The left green and red are the first climb and descent respectively,  right green and red are the second climb and descent.

Rylan and I were having to much fun to go home, and after realizing we had too much food and didn't want to go to work on Monday we decided it would be best to get one more day/night in and adventure even harder. For some reason Rylan and I have this relationship where if one of us sparks a mission idea in the others ear it seems as if we both can't stop thinking about it until it becomes a reality. This semi-competitive trust and passion drives us to do some rad shit. The idea to ascend to the infamous Sapphire Col shelter was born.


Day 3: 7 Steps of Paradise/Youngs Peak and Sapphire Col

Sunday was a big but drawn out day. We got up slowly with the sun rise, and took advantage of the visibility. Most people were packing up to go home after shredding and Rylan and I managed to secure some extra food and layers for our slog up to the Sapphire Col Shelter that afternoon. The first ones out of the cabin we started our ascent up the 7 Steps. With a well worn in uptrack and sunshine we made it to the top in a few quick hours.


The first few Steps of Paradise with a well worn in uptrack, some beautiful turns, and a healthy dose of sunshine.

Initial thoughts were to ski a couple of chutes off of Young's peak, but the weather had other things in mind. As we climbed the headwall we noticed a decent amount of wind-loading and visibility was as consistent as a child with too much sugar in the blood. Big lines were going to be a no go. We shredded some high speed open surfy turns down the long smooth faces of the seven steps back the the Asulkan Hut.

With one amazing 700m run already under our belt by 11am we decided to hang out at the hut for a bit and save our legs for the long slog ahead. Rylan and I ate lunch and dried out as many clothes as we could. We would wait until 1:30, as late as we thought safely possible, to start our ascent so we would spend the least amount of time in the Sappire shelter.

"Burr! What a place to be; Sapphire Col! The hut is about as exposed as a hut can get; neither insulated nor heated. It's literally a tin-can. If you can brave it, it can certainly be worth the effort." 
- Douglas Sproul, legendary local ski mountaineer and author


Things like wet clothes and freezing water bottles can be borderline terminal when you have to climb another 800m with all your gear, and retire in the most infamously cold place to sleep in all of Roger's Pass. Rylan and I pushed for 3-4 hours, setting tracks through a gully, contouring around  hundred foot ancient glacial moraines, climbing around the outskirts of the towering ice of the Asulkan glacier, under the monster rock Cleaver, and finally across towards the famed Jupiter traverse. I would/should have taken pictures here but as my phone had been in the backcountry for 3 days at this point (Always save your last bit of battery! You never know what might happen) and I was pretty low on energy myself. I just trudged on climbing the glaciers and staring at the beautiful Asulkan mountain group. 

We rolled up to the Sapphire Col shelter around 4:30pm, to find the door for the hut was snowed in. Rylan cracked a joke about finding dead bodies in the old and frozen shelter and we went to town digging our way in.


The Sapphire Col shelter and some damn nice skis.


We settled in and immediately changed out of wet climbing clothes and into dry clothes for the night in a freezing frenzy. Those clothes remained an ice block for the rest of the trip. Water bottle, gloves, beacon, phone, and anything else un freezable went into the sleeping bag to stay warm for the night.


Wet clothes freezing for good




Rylan getting comfy on his 1/4" foam mattress and enjoying the last light of the night.


We ate our dinner of sausage, fine cheese, crackers, and of course whiskey (a necessity in these temperatures to stay warm and fall asleep). We took our time to scour the mountaineering books donated by previous occupants, and wrote our names and a quick note in the log book. 

For some reason there is something so powerful about taking the time to write your name into the history books of these mountains. Almost every true peak or shelter has one in it. So many legends have roamed these areas before us, and to put your own name amongst theirs is both empowering and humbling. Reading the notes and anecdotes of previous adventures never gets old, and you really learn to respect how beast mode some of these guys are.


Simon Lavalle writing his name into the Avalanche Peak log book on a previous adventure this summer.




Our morning ascent and descent of Young's Peak on the left, and our afternoon ascent to Sapphire Col shelter on the right.


We eventually dozed off for a few hours sleep in the cold quite desolate shelter. The power of how far away you are from everything becomes ever more present with the silence and cold of the night.


Day 4: Final Descent, Lily Glacier to loop

We woke with the sun at a healthy 7am on Day 4, and got our gear on asap so to beat the effects of warming on the East facing slopes we were to traverse. The strong sun dances around throughout the day in the alpine, triggering avalanches as it heats the snowpack. We knew we had to outrun this. 


Saying goodbye to the shelter as the golden morning light hits the mountains.



Frozen ski boots and snowpants on, half a Clif bar in the gut, bags packed, and we were on our way. We crossed around the front side of the Dome, climbing the Cleaver, and contouring around to the Dome Col.


Rylan on my tails crossing under "Dome, The Mountain" under the early morning sun.


We descended down the Lily glacier, railing wide open turns through the fields and playing on big moraines as we dropped vert into the valley. A heinous ski out the melt-freeze valley and we were back at the truck.


The Cleaver ascent to the Dome Col in green and the Lily Glacier descent in red.



The whole way home, glaciers, moraines, ice, creeks, and everything else.



It was 10am, and with 1600m of skiing already under our belts that day, and 3 days/nights prior in hut beds and walking our butts off we were ready for our celebratory multi-thousand-calorie-make-up-meal. 

Huge thanks to the guys at Liberty Skis, Fresh Air Kelowna, Goonsquad, and all of the VOCO homies for making this stuff a possibility! Stoked to have friends and companies that are so into making this stuff happen!


Monday 29 December 2014

First big mission of the year, Ursus Minor Southeast couloir

With low snow we were scrambling for ideas to keep us busy on a day to day basis. Consistent temperatures in the first few weeks of December stabilized snowpack, but we were haunted by the rain crust left earlier which persisted to high elevations (1800-2000m). Cold icy conditions in the valley left us scrambling for elevation.

In comes the VOCO boys. I have always had a lot of respect for the crew of great outdoorsmen/women which go to UBCO. Many of them are well studied in both the formally taught as well as the physically learned elements of the mountains. And some of em know how to ski pretty damn well too. Jordan Harrington, Andrew (Blondie) Loeppky, and Bill (Knightrous) Knight were to be my guides for the day.

Over a few text messages, myself taking a couple hours scouring google earth and backcountry forums, and sitting down with route books we decided on a mission that would make the most of the great stability while getting us high enough above the icy valley bottoms. It was going to have to be a fairly big day...

We started at 7:30AM at the Rogers Pass Summit parking lot, and started climbing up Balu Pass. We went ~6km up the valley approach, and then started our ascent up Ursus Minor, crossing a couple of bowls and bushwacking through a few treed areas. All of us had explored this drainage before and skiied this part of the pass many times before, so we knew pretty much exactly where we were going with our day. You can see our route as follows, with the red being the ascent and the green being the descent:


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Climbing the fields and trees was beautiful, the snow below 1800m was quite crusty but
proved to get softer and softer as we ascended, eventually becoming blower up higher.

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Crossing the upper snowfields.


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The saddle in sight, with the scramble in the distance.

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We all know this feeling. Reaching the end of our tour after having climbed over 1400m, and slowly nearing the saddle, and eventually our final elevation of ~2800m.

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Starting the summit scramble after gearing up at the top saddle. This shit was kinda scary. Scrambling in ski boots is never comfortable, and between slab traverses, howling ridge winds, and a rotten base of facets didn't make it any more comfortable. None the less the summit push seems to always be when the motivation is at a maximum when the end goal is in sight.


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Finishing the top scramble and climbing the ridge.

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After gearing up in the sheltered pocket on the north side of the ridge we skied down to the couli we had spent all day getting up to.


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The view of the couloir we were about to ski. We climbed up on the left side of this image, and walked/skied the ridge to drop in on the SE couloir on the right. This is the only image that does our scramble up the south ridge justice. For scale imagine the little guy in the foreground shrunk and placed up on the rocky faces on the left (there was more snow around the shoulder where we climbed).

And finally the descent! (Blogger wont let me display a Vimeo video so you will have to follow the link)

http://vimeo.com/115035516


Thanks for reading! Hope you enjoyed, more adventures coming soon!

PHOTOS COURTESY OF: Andrew Loeppky and Jordan Harrington

Wednesday 24 December 2014

Okay, first blog post. Let's see how this goes.

In the mountains you are always at the mercy of the weather.

The last few months have been challenging as a skier living in interior BC. We keep getting brief glimpses of light snowfalls. A few promising dumps lead us to believe that winter is here, only for the snow to get chased out of town by waves of warm weather. One day you are planning a big alpine mission, and next thing you know it has rained to 2500m. The last 4 years we have been able to ski high up as early as halloween, but this year that was different.

Weather is relentless, and an unpredictable part of backcountry travel. While you cannot control the weather, you can however control how you respond to the trials of poor weather.

As a result we've had a slower start to the season in Revelstoke. The resort proved to be hit and miss, but usually we could find good snow if we delved deep enough into the bootpacks and slackcountry bowls. There is an art to navigating each specific ski hill, and learning where each roll and little hike in the woods will take you is a skill that develops over many years. I'm fortunate enough to be at that point in Revelstoke.

Here is a couple photos we managed to bag at the resort, in bounds and out:


Classic jump laps down Seperate Reality.




Poking around looking for soft landings on Gracias Ridge.




Slackcountry adventures, climbing the ridges and far bowls looking for snow. Brand new Liberty Double Helixs, Dynafit Radical FTs, and Pomoca climbing skins blew me away with ease of use and lightness. It's going to be a good season of touring and exploration with this setup!




A new bowl we found! You can see our three tracks down the right side

That wraps up the first few weeks of skiing around Revelstoke Mountain Resort.


Keep up to date on my blog to see photos from our high alpine missions, and the awesome shots from the Liberty Skis team shoot in Revelstoke. All in my next post! I swear it'll blow your mind.