Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Mt Bourgeau

It's Monday again - Monday Fun Day as we saw in our household - the long range forecast isn't looking good, so this might be the last warm day for trail running round here. Today's adventure was a jaunt/run/hike up Bourgeau - been on the bucket list for a while. And it didn't disappoint - mostly runnable the whole way too which is a bonus!

Enjoy the photos.














Wasootch Ridge

Winter is here! No doubt about that. After a run in shorts up Mt Bourgeau last Monday, it was a bit of a shock to have full on winter conditions on Wasootch. Breaking trail the whole way was a good workout, however, and the views speak for themselves. Great day, and a stunning route. Need to go back though and bag the summit - will take an ice tool for that though!

Here's a link to a 360 panorama I took:

http://360.io/NCJfTL

The final summit is the pointy peak just right of centre 
Saira cranking



Monday, October 7, 2013

The Grand Teton - Owen Spalding route 5.4

I'm a bit late posting this one, but anyways!

Since watching Kilian and Tony all over the interwebs blasting up the Owen Spalding route (5.4) last summer, this one has been on my radar, not least since I've always admired the Grand as a beautiful peak, and have a pic of it hanging in my office.

We decided to make a trip of it before Leadville, and the high camp at over 10,000ft on the moraines provided perfect acclimatization. And what a spot to camp - just incredible, and a huge adventure for Saira, myself and the boys. I did a recce of the route on our first day, run/scrambling up to the upper saddle. I have to say the upper section was looking a bit intimidating at first sight, but the next day I was able to make it up to the summit alone, without too much difficulty. I would say 5.4 is a push, as the route is mostly a hard scramble, but the exposure is HUGE!!

Crux - definitely the belly roll. The initial chimney after the crawl is easy, but a slip here would be costly. The summit is really quite incredible, and it was cool to arrive up top in the sun in a pair of shorts, with a handheld bottle, and be greeted with some odd (disdainful?) looks from the mountain guides and their clients, who'd taken half a day to get there.

I think I was back at camp in under 3 hours for the round trip, at a relatively relaxed pace. Next time, I'll go for the car to summit to car push. Looking forward to that one!

For anyone interested in this route, by far the best resource I came across was

http://www.wyomingwhiskey.org

You'll find great route descriptions and photos, some videos and current conditions. Enjoy some of my photos below.

Approach up the zig zags

Stellar camp on the moraines below the lower saddle (centre top)

It looks rough, but we had super comfy, flat platforms for our tents
And check out my 360 here: http://360.io/QtHe4h

View down from the lower saddle

Heading up from the lower saddle on my evening recce 
The chockstone Chimney. The Eye of the Needle is up and right 
This is where the real climbing starts. The route essentially heads across the obvious ledge, leftwards

The Belly Roll, and the crux in my opinion. Big exposure below!

If you fall, it's a long way down

The crawl - an easy but exposed hand traverse
I took this pic from the Crawl on the way down
Summit view - and check this out! http://360.io/kt7CPv


Back at camp

Saira, brewing up!

Our lower camp in the meadows below Middle Teton

Bert enjoying the evening sun below Middle Teton

Definitely an adventure for the boys!



Saturday, October 5, 2013