Sunday, April 5, 2009

Found a one meter wide choke

I found a hard-to-get-to steep chute in Hells with a one meter wide choke yesterday! Just when I thought I had done it all in there :-). From above (above), and below (below ;-). I was able to thread through it without too much rock-grinding.




Today, I went down to the Ogden Play Park with c-dub Craig. Bluebird day, low icy water, good times, more ice cream headaches ;-).




Craig working a spin in the top hole. Thanks for taking the photos Clay!

Friday, April 3, 2009

The Banana chute and Mt Allen. Mt Allen's NW rib from the NW, framed by the Banana chute on the left, and Scary Larrys on the right.  There are some difficult lines in here waiting for a wandering alpinist with rock boards. 

Epic day in the Snowbasin backcountry last Tuesday; we did 5 runs off the top of Mt Allen finishing with a run out to 27th street (ok, kind of a loong hike out the bottom ;-)! I thought it was around 16,500 total vertical, but my buddies altimeter said over 17,000. 



Scary Larrys runs from the uppermost left to the lower right. Its hard to pick out here, but it is an epic chute. I'll have to try to get some good photos of this chute; its hard to see it all from anywhere, except from the air I suppose. 

Sunday, March 29, 2009



We hit the "two trees" Finger chute today. Its becoming an 8 foot vertical drop minimum off the cornice now, onto steep hard snow, with 8'' of fresh on it; much harder to get into than last time I did it. I tagged a couple rocks moving right, then got down into better snow. The base has settled alot with the warm weather we had; those rocks just don't want to go away this time of year. No worries about cornice stability, after the way they were bombed last storm cycle. My buddy Steve dropped in, and a young visitor from the midwest, Josiah, did it too. We showed Josiah the main Banana chute entrance, and also  some quality north-facing trees toward the Coldwater saddle. I crashed into a stump on the runout, and now have a large bruise on the right hip to show for it.  I talked with my chiropractor about it, and didn't knock anything out of alignment, thankfully. Interesting that he didn't recommend ice for a large muscle bruise; ice for joint injuries/sprains, yes; ice for muscle bruises didn't test out though (muscle testing).  I put a magnet on it, and arnica gel, and it healed quickly. 

Heres a view looking down Two Trees, before the last storm; about the same coverage though.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Got out to the Ogden Kayak Park at 24th street yesterday; the Weber river is coming up! 600 cfs, and icy cold. Gates have recently been installed here, they are cool! I'd rather be snowboarding powder, but the paddling is fun too. I managed a couple spins in the top hole, and hit all my rolls; ice-cream headaches though.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

March 2009 - The Snowbasin backcountry

Primo conditions on February 19, 2009; but they kept Mt Ogden closed back then. Look at that sun-shadow line! (Click on the photos to enlarge.)
Looking down the sun-shadow line; large rock bands are just below this beautiful looking snow.

I've been getting more photos this season; time to finally put some up.
With the Mt Allen backcountry gate moved up the hill, the top of the Mt Allen NW chute is right out the gate. (I've heard some debate which one is the Banana chute; I thought it was the Mt Allen NW chute, not the next one north, which seems to come out of the Toto area?)

We had a good storm on Monday-Tuesday; on Wednesday (March 11) when they finally got the tram open, I cut a couple pockets out of the top of the Mt Allen NW chute, and then cut the cornice on the west entrance. Last year I was calling this the Logical chute, since its such a logical one to do ;-). Beautiful area; not a place to take a ride though, with scattered small evergreens below the west entrance, enduring the avalanche poundings over the years, branches all stripped off on the uphill side. I met up with Joe H yesterday, and did another run in there, and got some fine Coldwater turns in the northfacing trees.


Dropping the cornice in the west entrance, the "Logical chute", with the Logical point behind.

I missed the opening of the Mt Ogden chutes by a couple days (have to work sometime ;-), but I went up there Saturday morning and dropped in right before the little closed sign headed toward the summit, above the Mt Ogden main chute. I'd prefer to cut that bowl from the top; that sign is not in a very good place; but it was stable, and nice snow, a foot of powder with a soft base. Forgot the slope meter unfortunately; I'd estimate that entrance is over 55 degrees though; probably 58 or so. After cutting right, jump turn, and toeside slip, barely making it over a rock band clean, I cut right again, and tagged a rock just as I was going to start turning. Darn! Then hit another rock, oh well, that sweet Volkl 164 had to get broken in sometime. Hey Mike G, thanks again for that board; its my main ride these days.

On the way up toward the Mt Ogden summit, above.
After the run, with my cut going through the sun-shadow line, right of the summit. Someone did the technical line left of the summit a couple days ago (the "little chute" I wrote about last year), and there are also tracks in the "tower shot". That looks rocky now too. For reference, Snowbasin is reporting 116" today (March 15, 2009), and 339" season total. We had a couple very warm days in the 60s before the last storm cycle, and that really melted things. That last storm cycle really rejuvenated the snowpack in a big way.

February 3, 2009
The Outdoor Retailer show had on-snow demos at Snowbasin today, and it was fun to see some pros up on Mt Ogden ripping the chutes. The main chute got bumped out, and the choke was icy, but that didn't slow this crowd down much. Corky Still from Moment Skis absolutely charged the whole chute; quite impressive. Another guy threw a heli off a hit on below the choke on the right, into less than ideal snow; no problem.
Scoping out the Mt Ogden couloir.
Corky charging the fall line.
Teli turns in variable snow, heading into the icy choke.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Snowbasins closing day- Southeast chutes again!

Snowbasins last day! What a party; loads of costumed skiers, live band on the plaza, bbqs in the parking lot... wish I had all day to hang out. A touring buddy/photographer down from Montana was a no-show (something about a gal-pal, eh Kirk? ;-), so I was looking at yet another awesome solo steep tour day. What else is new!

Highlights for me today were:
- Finally hitting the skiers left east chute on Mt. Ogden. This is a classic; akin to Snowbird's Pipeline, and Alta's Little Chute, narrower, but not quite as long. Around 45 degrees, 3 meters wide, with a crux rock in the middle half way down. Maybe that is why a local told me its called "the crippler". It looks like a double fall line, but it feels pretty straight down once you're in it. I was late on a full sun day (April 28, remember!), and I wasn't surprised when my first cut oozed slowwly down, taking out the slushy recent snow layer, which had settled down to a few inches. This made the run a firm crust sideslip; ... oh well! It was still great to get in there, and realize what a quality chute that is. I'm sure a few people have hit this (although I haven't seen tracks in it for the past 3 years), but I predict that this will get alot more traffic in coming years. It is not as steep as it looks. The center rock does make it more of a no-fall zone for the first half, though.

-Squeezing in one last run before work (only the 3rd run actually), I took the standard Needles boot to the top of Taxman, and sideslipped into the next shot up the ridge, which is extremely steep at the top. Wish I had the inclinometer with me; this is in the vicinity of 60 degrees, about a two meter wide entrance between the rock bands, then a relatively safe runout bowl. How did I never see this one before? So accessible! That whole corniced zone is very steep; too bad its mostly cliffs.
The steep, narrow little shot west of Taxman is in the center of the photo above. This is the only photo I have of it at the moment; taken from the top of the Needles gondola.

On the approach to Mt. Ogden from the Needles gondola, I hiked to the first ridge further left than before, then traversed the ridge for a ways. What a beautiful, knife-edge ridge, with some easy rock moves, and good booting conditions. Some small creatures were all that preceded me, their tiny tracks going right along the cornice line. A little taste of mountaineering. Dropped in higher and did a big traverse of the whole bowl, which got me a lot closer to Mt. Ogden than on Friday.
What a fine, fine day, full sun, no wind, and quite the festive atmosphere for Snowbasin's last day!

Friday, April 25, 2008

Mt. Ogden's Southeast chutes



There are two narrow chutes on the east side of Mt. Ogden that I look at every ride up the Needles gondola. I've never seen tracks in them before today. Today was Friday, April 25, I can't make it up tomorrow, and Sunday is closing day, so I was hoping to hit one or maybe two new lines today, with the east chutes and the north-facing "tower" shot (off the summit) at the top of the list. The Porcupine chair has an even better view, and so last week, when Porcupine was the closest lift running to Mt. Ogden, I looked at those chutes quite a bit, but the patrol said they were closed that day.

Anyway, today the Porcupine chair was closed :-(, so after a warmup run, I did a hike up the Needles bowl, veering right to the start of the huge cornice line over the middle Needles cirque. The wind was nuking! Gusting to 50 I would say; drove me to my knees a few times on the ridges. There was about 6" of fresh, well bonded, but high wind is another factor, and so I did one long cut from the start of the cornice line to the east. This is the very top of what the trail map calls Taxman; could be called "the steepest Taxman". The very top of this is quite steep, maybe 55 degrees, and yet nothing moved. This was a good sign, but still; with the winds, and the added hike of having Porcupine chair closed, I figured I wouldn't get up Mt. Ogden today. Next run I hiked to the west of Needles, and dropped over toward the top of Porky chair. As soon as I dropped onto the other side of the ridge, it was hard wind scoured sun crust; look out! Then some nice untracked wind-hammered powder, but too short... riding up the Needles, to my surprise I saw that there were tracks in one of those East chutes! Two skiers had hit it, from close to the top. And it hadn't slid. OK, that was all I needed to see; I hiked from Needles over the ridge to Porky again, and tried a big traverse, but it went nowhere in the flats. Hiking, tired, the wind was nuking in the flats for pete's sake! Getting over toward the chutes, the sun came out, and the winds weren't hitting that area for some reason, so I sat under a big old tree in the middle of an untracked low angle slope, ate a bar, drank all of my small water bottle, and even made a call to work.

Booting was good; solid crust under the fresh 6". I missed the chute I wanted to head up, and climbed something with a couple rock bands that would be very difficult to ski. For a fairly small face, it is pretty complicated. Eventually I realized that the skiers had started in the southern of the two east chutes, then jumped over to the other one. Most of this terrain was no steeper than 40 degrees; the upper half of the face where I went is sustained at 45 degrees.

For the upper half, I took a new line to the north of the skiers. What a cool view of the north face! There is a traversing entrance to the "tower" shot, that would be a great belayed cut. Theres another lower entrance that seems to cliff out; maybe a rappel would make it worthwhile. Someone had done the Mt Ogden couloir, and they had pushed down a sluff that propagated into a good-sized slide, running about 500 feet.

I decided to start right off the summit, since I'd never been off the summit of Mt. Ogden before. Going east, the crux of the whole run is about 10 feet from the summit, where there is a meter wide sideways thread, over a steep cliff at the very top of the north face. This is a no-fall zone. The wind was a bit unnerving, but I managed it carefully, then cut on down my chosen line. I was a bit concerned that the intermittent sun would destabilize the new snow. It was about 3:30 PM by now. The worst case would be that it all slid out under my cut, and I was left with the old hard crust to get down. I pushed down some chunks, but it didn't slide, so that was good. Still, I stayed in a sideslip for most of it, not wanting to jump ahead of any rolling chunks. I missed the top of the left chute, and didn't want to jump in where the skiers had, so I put tracks in the untracked bottom of the right chute. This entire side of Mt. Ogden has rock bands and outcrops all over the place, and not all the lines go through; I like hiking up what I plan to come down, or close to it.
Another fine day at the Basin!