Telegraph Peak via NW Face, 09-Jan-2010
Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2010 6:38 pm
I needed to test out some new Christmas goodies (a pair of Garmont Tower mountaineering boots and BD Sabertooth crampons) so I planned to just take it easy and check out snow conditions near Telegraph and the DBB. I wasn't sure if I'd actually climb it with these new boots. I also have one of those $50 Baldy annual passes so I thought I could take the lifts all the way up to Thunder and the DBB. Some might say that's cheating but with this weather, I might never get to snowboard here! I might as well use it for something.
But when I got to the lift at Miner's Bowl, they wouldn't let me get on because I didn't have skis or a snowboard. There was a guy there with a snowmobile and he offered to give me a ride up to the road. He ended up driving me all the way to Thunder! The guy turned out to be Nick. I took the ridge down to the Telegraph-Thunder saddle and traversed over to the main couloir. Some rocks started to come down and I decided the main couloir looked too vulnerable. I went back right and went up the side of one of the mini ridges so that I could take cover behind the rocks. I would move up to a safe point behind a rock and then repeat. Stuff continued to come down every so often.
I topped out about a hundred feet shy of the summit and took the ridge up. It took me about 1.5 hours to do this 600 ft climb--pretty slow by any standard but my feet were hurting like crazy with these new boots. The only way they didn't hurt was if I front-pointed. It was icy in the chute anyway so I front-pointed most of the way. But this was tiring as hell and I had to stop and rest every 30-40 ft. I also switched to the axe in anchor position instead self-belay. This felt more secure. I can see the value of having a second tool now.
It was really clear on top. I spent almost two hours up there just hanging out. I saw no one else and the last person here seemed to be Bob Burb on 12/21/09. I came back via the west ridge and only needed crampons for the last couple of hundred feet before the saddle.
Red is way up, blue is way down. Thinking about it now, I could have gone up the green route but it gets really steep up there and I only had one axe.
Closeup
Further away
Looking down into Coldwater Canyon
Baldy Bowl not looking too good
But when I got to the lift at Miner's Bowl, they wouldn't let me get on because I didn't have skis or a snowboard. There was a guy there with a snowmobile and he offered to give me a ride up to the road. He ended up driving me all the way to Thunder! The guy turned out to be Nick. I took the ridge down to the Telegraph-Thunder saddle and traversed over to the main couloir. Some rocks started to come down and I decided the main couloir looked too vulnerable. I went back right and went up the side of one of the mini ridges so that I could take cover behind the rocks. I would move up to a safe point behind a rock and then repeat. Stuff continued to come down every so often.
I topped out about a hundred feet shy of the summit and took the ridge up. It took me about 1.5 hours to do this 600 ft climb--pretty slow by any standard but my feet were hurting like crazy with these new boots. The only way they didn't hurt was if I front-pointed. It was icy in the chute anyway so I front-pointed most of the way. But this was tiring as hell and I had to stop and rest every 30-40 ft. I also switched to the axe in anchor position instead self-belay. This felt more secure. I can see the value of having a second tool now.
It was really clear on top. I spent almost two hours up there just hanging out. I saw no one else and the last person here seemed to be Bob Burb on 12/21/09. I came back via the west ridge and only needed crampons for the last couple of hundred feet before the saddle.
Red is way up, blue is way down. Thinking about it now, I could have gone up the green route but it gets really steep up there and I only had one axe.
Closeup
Further away
Looking down into Coldwater Canyon
Baldy Bowl not looking too good