Mt. Antero Trip Report
Trail:
West Slopes II, Class 2, ~16 miles, 4900 ft
elevation
gain
It
was the spring break of my last semester of graduate coursework and I
thought it might be nice to get out and do a tougher hike.
Dave Hale and I had been passing the idea of doing something back and
forth for a few weeks and had originally decided on the
Sunshine/Redcloud combination but factors such as distance, lodging,
and snow cover dissuaded us from this notion. Ultimately we
decided on tackling Antero from the Baldwin Gulch Trailhead.
Dave's friend Brian Frieburger and his Golden Retriever, Jack also came
along.
Dave
and Brian invited me to crash at a lodge they had rented in Buena Vista
the night before we were to climb and I drove down Monday, March 21st,
2005, from Boulder to meet them. I was pretty tired when I
arrived and we all turned in around 10:30. I awoke at 5 the
next morning and headed out to 7-11 for coffee. When I
returned to the lodge we all packed up and headed for more coffee
before going to the trailhead.
The
trailhead itself is about 10 miles past the turn off to the Mt.
Princeton auto road and we arrived and started hiking at 8:11
After about 1 hour we arrived at the regular 4wd parking 3 miles in and
~1500 feet up.
From
here the snow became much more powdery and their was a good bit of
postholing for most of the rest of the trip. I should add
that Brian has some incredible endurance and kept the front for the
whole way. After the second stream crossing we mistakenly
went left and lost about 20 minutes. Once we figured out the
right way we were back on track. We soon came to an opening
abovve the trees where we had a clear view of the peak.
We
spoke a bit about choices and decided to head directly up the second
gully we came to rather than walk the switchbacks. The
climbing was pretty easy and the gully stayed moderately low angled
until the top where it reached ~30 degrees on snow then 40-50 on
rock. At one point we stopped and Dave snapped a couple of
photos. Dave accidentally dropped his camera in the bag and
we
watched it roll down the steepest part of the gully. We were
all pretty tired from the climb and watched it tumble, Jack actually
took off after it and taking this as a cue Brian shouted 'fetch Jack,
fetch'. Jack sprang down after it grabbed it and ran it right
back to Dave, the picture below is right after this. It was
great to have Jack along because he always seemed to have energy when
we didn't.
At
the top of the gully we regained the road for ~ 400 feet before turning
off on a trail that brought us around the back of the
mountain. On the other side we were awarded fantastic views
of Shavano and Tabeguache. The day was beautiful and the wind
stayed low, I thin the temperature went between 11 and 30 degrees
depending on where we were but given the length of the hike we stayed
warm from exertion. We continued around the backside over
steeper snowfield until arriving at the top of the 4wd road and the
start pf the saddle.
When
we got to the saddle we were a bit concerned about the steepness of the
snow covering it in many areas. The concern came both from
questioning its stability and Jack's safety. I was quite
honestly tired enough that I could have happily turned around (Hiking
with Dave and Brian is always a bit humbling to my ego). Dave
left it us to up as he has climbed this before. Brian decided
he wanted to go for it so we headed out. This turned out to
be a bit tricky as we initially tried the backside of the ridge to
avoid the snow slopes.
Once
back on the ridge we made quick time and managed to gain the summit in
20 minutes. The day was beautiful and we had arrived in about
6.5 hours, without the detour in the beginning and attempting the back
side of the ridge it would have been 5.5. We hung out on the
ridge and marveled at the scenery. The weather was great and
the views afforded some of the most densely packed scenery I have seen
in a while. The Sawatchers, Sangres, and Pikes Peak were all
visible. I mostly hunkered down and refueled. This
ws my seventh mountain over 13000 in two months but I was so beat I
could have slept up there.
Jack
seemed unfatigued which made me want to throw a saddle on him but he
was to quick to catch. We all made short work of the descent
and arrived back at our trucks at 6:11 making it a perfect ten hour
day. Brian and Dave headed to dinner but I knew I wouldn't be
able to stay awake for the drive home if I didn't get going so I headed
back to Boulder. I used my usual trick of finding the Rush
Limbaugh station and leaving it on back to Boulder, this keeps me to
pissed off to fall asleep. I had a great day and Brian, Dave,
and Jack were fun and challenging partners. I look forward to
our full moon climb of Quandary later in the week.