Long's Peak Trip Report (trip 2)
Trail: Cables, Class 5.6, 12 miles, 4800 ft elevation gain
Normally when I redo a 14'er or other mountain I usually just make some
little note at the bottom of the original page but in this case I felt the
trip warranted more of a write up. I am always on the look out for a
partner for more technical trips and it turned out that the boyfriend of one
of my classmates was interested in climbing trips. As luck would have
it he was also more experienced on both snow and rock climbing than I was
which was perfect, I'm always looking for more experienced partners to learn
from. Enter my partner for this trip, Brian Hynek, a research
scientist at CU who does research concerning the planet Mars.
I introduced myself to Brian maybe a month or so ago and we tossed around
some ideas before settling on the Cables route on Longs for the day April
8th, 2005. As the time approached we checked betas for the route to
ensure it was doable this time of year. As it turned out the weather
on April 7th was supposed to be perfect so we changed our trip date (one of
the joys of academia is the schedule flexibility).
Brian and I emailed back and forth to make sure we had everything we needed
for the trip, it looked like a spring ascent of Cables was going to be an
entirely different beast than a summer ascent so we planned carefully.
In the end we brought a 60 meter rope, several slings, runners, beaners,
quick draws, and a few smaller cams and nuts as well as shovels, beacons,
and helmets.
I awoke at 2 in the morning and packed up, had a quick breakfast and headed
to pick up Brian. I met him at his girlfriend Licia's house and we
headed to the trailhead. we arrived at ~ 4 in the morning, packed up
quickly and headed out. The snow was well consolidated and we were
happy to have left the snowshoes at home. It was during the beginning
of the trip through the trees that I realized a 99 cent pack of sausages is
no way to start a day. I felt like I was going to vomit for about an
hour but eventually my stomach settled and I felt great. We made quick
time up to Mills Moraine and arrived within 1.5 hours of setting out.
It was slightly to early to catch the sunrise on Longs so I missed an
otherwise great photo opportunity. We set out and crested the saddle
between Mt. Lady Washington and Battle mountain and headed across the
Boulder field. We consciously moved a bit more slowly to conserve
energy for the upcoming climb and took several short breaks to take in the
scenery. As we neared the approach route we headed up a steep
snowfield. The conditions looked relatively benign so we dropped the
beacons, shovels, and Leki Poles behind a large boulder and replace them
with axes and crampons before setting out on the final approach up steeper
snow to Chasm View.
Chasm View was a awe inspiring and to me at least gut churning. I kept
thinking how we would be navigating steep snow over the huge Diamond.
I think this helped me to be real f''ing careful once we were above
it.
The Diamond with the North Face route above it
The final approach to the North Face
We arrived at the base of the pitch 4.5 hours after setting out and removed
our crampons and stowed the axes. This would turn out to be a bit
stupid. I anchored myself to the first bolt and we donned our
harnesses. I belayed Brian up the pitch and it soon became obvious
that there was enough snow and ice on the route to make it tough. In
the summer time I think I could free climb it (I'm not recommending this by
the way) but now it was dodgy and Brian had a couple long sections of run
out between pro placement. Eventually Brian reached the top and I
unhooked myself from the anchor and started climbing. I was really
glad to be following here because it was damn hard to find footing that
didn't land on snow and ice. I quickly made it up to Brian and we
pulled the rope back up and re donned crampons and pulled back out the
axes.
Brian leading up the old Cables Route
It ws up on the North Face that my old fear of steep snow really
surfaced. I hate steep snow, I really, really hate steep snow with
patches of thin snow with no good axe placement, poor footing, and an 800
foot vertical drop beneath it. Brian on the other hand had total
confidence which helped bolster me. We stayed roped for a distance and
made our way up the face with Brian trying to find places to set pro.
It soon became apparent that there was not much in the way of placement and
we stowed the rope and made our way up slowly. Most of the climb was
on snow and we made sure to get good footing and axe placement whenever
possible. Throughout the climb the thought of being above the diamond
stayed with me.
Various pictures of me up on the North Face
We finally reached a point where we were able to move up 3rd-4th class rock
that weren't to slabby and crested to the summit.
The technical pitch and snow climbing took about 3 hours as we were being
very careful. I think free of snow I could have bombed up the whole
section in an hour easily.
I haven't been up on longs for a year and a half and forgot how big the
summit was. We were on it but still a way from the summit block.
We finally arrived at the summit block around 1:45 and hung out for
about 20 or 30 minutes. The Homestretch looked easily manageable
but we didn't really give that route much thought. The views were
spectacular and we marveled at how perfect the weather was. I think it
was over 50 on the summit and the wind was blowing from the south west so it
hadn't bothered us all day. We called our respective others to let
them know we were safe, ate, and drank and headed down.
At first I was still quite nervous but after awhile I noticed myself become
much calmer. We were looking down a steep field over a cliff all while
downcliming wet 3rd and 4th class rock and carefully avoiding softer
snow and I started really enjoying myself. By the time we were
near to the rappel point where I had been terrified before I was enjoying
the hell out of the situation. Brian and I even started joking about
how a slip would let us set the all time descent speed record. I think
going with a more experienced climber really bolstered my confidence and I
feel like I passed one of those milestones in a climbers life.
Anyways, we anchored ourselves and our bags to the top bolts and took some
pictures. It was surreal to be hanging out up there with snow
everywhere and the diamond right next to us. It was such a cool
experience to be somewhere most people won't go and take in the scenery from
an amazingly airy vantage point.
Brian Rapelling
Me rappelling
Brian set the rappel through the first and second bolt and headed
down. He yelled up that the rope didn't reach the bottom and that he
was going to down climb it. After a moment he was safely down and I
headed down. I just rapped to the second to top bolt, re anchored
myself and pulled the rope out. I then reset the rappel to the second
bolt and made my way the rest of the way down. In the interest of
expedience Brian suggested I re anchor and set up a rappel from the first
bolt so we could cover some of the snowfield quickly. I did and we
both headed down to a set of rocks 90 feet or so down the field. We
quickly recollected our gear and headed down the snow. Brian ran over
to a rock outcropping for a photo opportunity before we made the final push
down. I noticed that I was actually really enjoying running around on
the snow slope up there, I guess my fear of snow has now evaporated.
We made quick time back towards the trees by crossing over the lower
southerly ridge on Mt. Lady Washington and following snowfields down as far
as we could. By some stroke of bad luck allot of the snow had melted
which led to tons of postholing and inadvertently following the wrong
trail. Apparently the whole area near the trees was criss-crossed with
hikers trails and we ended up postholing for an extra hour through the
woods. The snow was melted enough that I kept going in it up to my
knees or thighs. This basically meant I spent an hour cursing my head
off. A look at the contour map put us in the right direction and we
finally came across the stream. I was getting pretty ill-tempered by
this point and opted for following the stream if we didn't quickly hit the
trail. Thankfully Brian said lets try another minute or two and within
30 feet we were on the trail.
We made it back to the car at 7 which gave us a total round trip time of ~
15 hours. Not bad when you consider the number of breaks we took and
the care with which we did the sketchy part.
I dropped Brian off at his house in Nederland where he invited me in for a
beer. I declined as I was about as sleepy as you can get and knew I'd
just sit there and stare at the wall before falling asleep on the drive
home. I headed down the canyon once again listening to obnoxious AM
stations to keep me awake.
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