Showing posts with label Thurber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thurber. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2021

Skirafting the Winds

 


    As much as any other multisport, skirafting critically relies on an alignment of several conditions: snowpack stability and coverage, temperature ranges, weather and stream flows. On the heels of perfect conditions in alignment on the Idaho skiraft and the San Juan skiraft I felt overdue for a reckoning with the weather gods, and the Winds delivered in spades.


    I was asked by trip partners to lock in a rigid start date for a northern winds ski traverse-to-packraft weeks in advance, which felt like a mistake but it's all we could manage as a group.  Despite punchy snowpack in the trees the morning we began late May, we were able to crush through a dozen miles from the trailhead through blowdown riddled forest and across mush-capped lakes to the base of the climb to Indian Pass. 

ascending towards the divide at Indian Pass

final water collection for a few days

storm sets in on Bull Lake Glacier

    A committing traverse across five passes and seven glaciers in a remote setting wasn't going to marry well with a well-advertised prolonged storm. It started in phases though, and a great evening weather window at our first glacier camp along with some fresh laps kept route-alteration thoughts at bay.

A brief clearing


He's smiling because he won't see the sun for another 4 days





        Given that this route was 80% skiing and 20% paddling, the other four members elected to pre-stash most of their paddling gear near our put-in in the Bridger Wilderness. I carried my full paddling set-up, which wasn't entirely pointless since my 15 oz. pfd was a useful camp seat, paddle can be used to set up pyramids, and I was considering using my boat as a sled on flats and to ferry the group across the Green above our eventual put-in. Allen and Michael both carried their drysuits, which turned out to be distressingly necessary survival gear during the storm.

        Due to the extreme weight consciousness required of skirafters, we elected to use three pyramid tents for a group of five. With the best snow camp construction techniques floorless tents can still be problematic with blowing and accumulating snow. There is a fine, or even vanishing line between shoveling out from tent wall burial and allowing too much spindrift.

Approaching the most worrying bergschrund and onto Sacagawea Glacier

Crossing towards Helen Glacier

    A bit of spindrift accompanying 4" of fresh at our first glacier camp dampened our bags slightly, but a welcome lunch hour dose of sunshine on Sacagawea glacier the next day allowed us to nearly recover our bag loft.

    As we approached the next crux pass a gale set in, creating visibility and windload concerns for our descent towards our second glacier camp. We regrouped at the pass and enjoyed the first half of the 1900' descent in fresh snow, but the warm temps of late May in the beginning phase of a storm yielded punchy snowpack towards the bottom. 

Blaurock Pass

    We spent half an hour in the barren valley bottom below searching for boulders to provide the best wind shelter but every new giant boulder we spotted at the edge of fog visibility turned out to be disappointingly small on approach. We settled and dug in, agreeing to compare notes on our tent platform/wall/trench construction ideas the following morning.

Looking for camp below the Sentinels

    Those notes would have been embarrassing. The heart of the storm arrived overnight, providing a further foot of dry snow in windless conditions and luring us into digging out too thoroughly around midnight. Sporadic stiff gusts followed, and all five of us failed to prevent serious spindrift and sleeping bag accumulation in the absence of bivvy sack armor.

    The following morning we were faced with a serious set of decisions as a group. Visibility and wind were pressing concerns, progress would be tough in any direction with all the new snow, and the ratcheting danger of windload instability was serious given the new accumulation and transport. And at least two of us had developed unrecoverably wet sleeping bags overnight, so we were on a deteriorating comfort vs. survivability trajectory if further unforeseen problems with travel or equipment were to develop. There were several options - wait out the weather, return to the start point via one of two routes, exit the range on the side we were on through forest, or press on over the divide and down to the Green River, the intended route. We quickly narrowed the options to the latter two, and given that the first three miles for both of those overlapped, we broke camp and downskinned while individually weighing our arguments and concerns.


    From my perspective, the greatest difficulty would likely be approaching the divide up high, navigating across glacier in whiteout, which might necessitate an overly exposed emergency camp. I have some experience with this, and it isn't easy. The untested descent route off the divide into Tourist Creek was the most serious concern for others, but given that the slopes were windward we considered it an option still despite growing avalanche danger. 

    In the crux moment of our discussion, a hole in the clouds opened up and a red mylar balloon appeared, drifting just over our heads in the direction of the forest exit. I'm not one to trust in omens. But I'd bet all five of us though were weighing the look of disregarding that omen or the temptation of following it blindly. In the end, we decided to press over the divide with the idea that there was enough time to retreat back to trees before nightfall in the face of impassible obstacle or condition.



Grasshopper glacier, scour-exposed blue ice, approaching the divide and a face melting whiteout

        It was a relief to finally have a decision made, even if we didn't yet know if it was the correct one. Months later, maybe we still don't. We took turns breaking trail and could now settle in to making step by step decisions and evaluations with that overarching route indecision shelved for the moment. Fast progress up and onto the final glacier, nearing the divide, was very welcome. Finally on the divide, we inched forwards with Liz leading blindly in thick fog while I followed with a compass and map, shouting direction instructions with the goal of finding our descent through a narrow gap between large cliffs leading to tourist creek basin. Fortunately, we found the steepest slope to be scoured rather than loaded, and mostly free from exposure to avalanche terrain. Switching to crampons, we booted and scraped down through a boulder field, returned to skis, started losing elevation and were quickly below cloud level.
 
Off the divide


approaching the Tourist Creek wall

    We made fast progress down the upper half of Tourist Creek, but snowpack coverage became problematic as we wandered through the giant talus pile underneath the massive north facing wall at the mouth of the canyon. The character of our route was transitioning from obvious, clear pathway into frustrating unskiable talus maze.



    We reached a point where we'd have to switch to boots and risked running short on flat campable terrain, so after brief debate decided on camp at a bench near some tall spruce along the creek. This turned out to be a good decision, since the remaining 2/3 mile into the Green River valley bottom would nearly take a further full day. However, camping again on snowpack with only three dry sleeping bags for five people was a grim prospect. After dinner, Allen and Michael put on all their remaining clothing, pulled on their drysuits save the neck gasket, and slithered into their drowned down cocoons for the night. They barely but successfully staved off hypothermia. I still shiver at the thought of that experience second hand, so I can't imagine how they feel about revisiting it. Maybe it's one of those things that's uglier to think about than to actually experience, but I'm probably wrong.

The boulder maze we spent most of a day navigating


    We felt like we had nearly accomplished our descent to the safety of the valley, and we had in terms of mileage. Boulder hopping with full packs and a fresh coat of powder proved to be the most significantly underestimated challenge of the trip though, and we reached the Green River late the following afternoon despite it being one good frisbee throw from our tourist creek camp.

Green River headwaters


    We used a single boat and a throw bag to ferry people and gear across the Green (too deep to wade) so we could access the CDT in order to bypass the log filled gorge below the meadow.

On to the CDT


the better part of a bridge on the CDT

Allen looks for a good spot for his bag to continue not drying out

        Finally camped on dry ground next to the Green River with the storm seemingly breaking, a great sense of success and relaxation set in. We were in safe and familiar territory, but a great deal of work remained.

The Forager Skimorager gets ready to swallow five pairs of skis and boots, axes, shovels, poles and a few packs

Good thing we have a packraft that requires four people to carry for the 20 upcoming wood portages


Squaretop with a fresh coating as the storm clears

        The better part of the day was spent paddling downriver and across the Green River Lakes. My memory of my previous descent of this river stretch, though, had failed to include the abundant log population. A hundred pound packraft was painful to shepherd through those reaches.



Dano pilots the crux rapid



Green River Lakes


        As a team we were left wondering if it was worth the effort to paddle out of the range rather than walk, but I think on the balance it was the best option. On long trips with loads of gear I hate the prospect finishing with a slog and sore back and tired feet, and the river and lakes had better views than the forested trail. I've had discussions this year with two other seasoned adventurers about trip retrospective - one claims that the measure of a great route is that it's appealing to complete a second time, while the other claims that a great route is identified by having no drive to repeat. I'm still deciding on this one...















Thursday, October 14, 2021

Class V Packrafting: Middle Kings

 

   Through the 2019 spring season, having pulled off successful runs on serious backcountry creeks and rivers in Colorado's San Juan mountains (Vallecito, Brazos, Pinos) on the heels of Bull Lake Creek I finally started to believe that I was up for the next major milestone, the Middle Kings: a legendary remote, unrelenting and punishing river that cuts a yosemite-like valley while dropping from over 8000' along the PCT down to 1000' in the Sierra Nevada foothills. This river, one of the benchmarks of North America class V expedition kayaking, had been our stated goal for that year.

    Even though our 2019 Middle Kings run went better than we had expected, I had never felt more drained of adrenaline, worn down and beat up.

The Exit of Waterfall Gorge, 2019 (Photo John Baker)

Here's my video from that first trip:

(Click for the 2019 Video)

 In the continuing spirit of exploring new-to-me terrain in the 2020 season, I had my eye on a couple of missions in Canada, Idaho and other Sierra Nevada runs. Every time Dan and I discussed ideas I would present a different one, but Dan settled into consistent promotion of another crack at the Middle Kings. We warmed up on a Cherry Creek lap followed by a low flow trip through cherry bomb, after which Dan humored me for a headwaters exploration run in a nearby drainage:



but I eventually relented and saddled up for Middle Kings round two. This year we had a much shorter and more scenic approach (the standard one over Bishop Pass), superior boats (Valkyrie prototypes) plus more confidence in our own selves. Allen joined us from Durango for his second packraft trip, his first being the Animas-Vallecito Skiraft linkup.

    Subject to an inflexible schedule and meteorological whimsy, we ended up with a much lower flow this year - 600 cfs at Rodgers Crossing. But first, and possibly unique among Middle Kings paddlers, we got to fully enjoy our hike in over the Sierra crest.







Slab camp next to the put-in just above Palisade Creek

    And we're off on the Middle Kings! 



    The first few warm-up slides helped suppress the butterflies enough for Dan and I to take a crack at an oft-portaged drop: Squeeze Play (of course aided by half the flow kayakers typically have):

A tricky entrance resulted in this somewhat successful contortion


Clip of Squeeze Play

This gave us hope that some of the bigger features further down would go. We were right.

Money Drop


unnamed slides



    Dan and I had portaged the above series of drops in 2019, while John took a ride in a weir hole just below the drop where Dan is pictured above. This year it proved problematic in different ways - I hung up on a boulder at the bottom and had to roll off it, while Dan took a faceshot to the large undercut boulder on the bottom left (!). Fortunately we were able to shake it off.

    Dan had showed us portagers up on Money Drop and lead the charge down Breakfast Slide, a tempting but very long slide with a tough pothole at the bottom:

Dan probes Breakfast Slide

The pothole at the bottom of Breakfast slide is a difficult off-camber hit

    The standard (kayak) line involves skirting the left side of the pothole, but with packrafts and low flows that part of the slide just wanted to roll you over your right side into the pothole landing. Dan's difficulty with this standard left line gave me pause and I eventually settled on a wall-tapping right line



Breakfast Slide POV

    Waterfall Gorge was relatively easy to pick apart at low flow, but still demanded a scout and safety below the marquee waterfall given the boxed-in terminal hole lurking just below the large pool


Dan takes the plunge

Allen's last big feature before succumbing to a nagging shoulder injury


    We camped just below the waterfall, and Dan and I were treated to some fantastic slides to start the day.



    Dan and I ran some sections and portaged a good bit below here, careful to avoid Raw Dog gorge which looked incredibly spicy at this flow (or any flow). Allen, with his somewhat injured shoulder, decided to walk from Simpson Meadow down to Tehipite valley, skipping the Middle Four (and would hike out to a trailhead from there - no trail exists along the Bottom Nine below Tehipite)

    It turned into a very long day pushing the whole way through Simpson meadow and the Middle Four to get to Tehipite, a splendid camp. Taller than El Cap!! We expeditiously avoided photo stops until the next day as we proceeded towards the start of the infamous Bottom Nine.

The last of the low gradient beneath Tehipite Dome

...and she disappears after the Bottom Nine starting line

    Whereas our first run in 2019 had filled us with great intrepidation, Dan and I were now filled with great intrepidation and a little bit of confidence. These new boats were much superior even to the Alpackalypses we had used previously, in control, speed through features and rollability.




    However, despite fewer portages and scouts than the previous year, the grueling nature of the Bottom Nine caught up to us. Whereas the upper slide sections on Days 1 into 2 had the air of thrill and glory, the Bottom Nine on Day 3 turned into an onslaught. Both Dan and I each had a particularly ugly swim as the day wore on, with Dan now nursing an injury (developed on Upper Cherry's Kiwi-in-a-Pocket) that cast a question mark over his ability to continue paddling. I was in no mood to take pictures or even video, and right after a scary swim where Dan plucked me out of a mid-river eddy just above an awful drop, we had no choice but to call it a day.

Dan assess his assets at the final camp. Upside-down no-longer-live-oak for scale.

    In the morning we continued. Only a few of the more challenging rapids remained, and an overnight recovery had worked wonders. In the end, we had successfully paddled the Middle Kings, in packrafts, with only a handful of portages on the Bottom Nine.




Confluence!


Here's my 2020 Video from the Middle Kings run:
(Click for 2020 Video)


Even at lower flows, the 'runout' on Garlic Falls is a serious affair





Finishing on fumes, we both agreed to take a year off from this one, and this time we meant it.


NOTE: the Middle Kings (sans Bottom Nine) was also packrafted in 2021 by another team around 1100 cfs. No media from that trip except a selfie with Dane Jackson at Tehipite.