20140722-23 Lone Pine Peak South Face Attempt
Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2014 12:02 pm
Aysel and I had planned on climbing the Beckey Route on the big south face of Lone Pine Peak (IV, 5.8 or so, 16 pitches or so). We headed up the north side of the canyon on sandy slopes with some bushwhacking to reach the base. Slept under a huge boulder about a couple hours from the base on the first night. I wasn't feeling so great, I guess from being at 9,000ft or so since I rarely hike at elevation right now.
Next day, hiked to the base and told Aysel I didn't feel so great about everything. I was to lead all the pitches and I did not think we would finish the route in one day, and I wasn't feeling fit at elevation nor equipped for several days on the route. We bailed and headed back to Lone Pine where the temps were in the 90's or so. Climbed a few sport routes in the Alabama Hills before driving home.
Some photos:
Parking by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Starting our hike
Stonehouse Buttress and SF by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Stonehouse Buttress and part of the South Face
DSC01919 by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Looking up the South Face, a few hundred meters left of our route. South Corner and other routes in this shot.
Album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tacodelri ... 902151305/
I will be ready to go back sometime. I am in great climbing shape and am very fast on technical ground, but as I said I don't hike at elevation with a pack often so that got me down. After spending some time in Yosemite and evolving a bit, I don't like doing these sorts of routes in multiple days. When I am in shape, I predict I could solo the route with a light rack using a light rope and a clove hitch for self-belay on the sections I'd be uncomfortable freesoloing, I could probably climb the route in a longish day. I don't like freesoloing exposed pitches above 5.8, or slab above 5.6ish, so the crux pitch would be the longest time expenditure for me. Those grades reflect Yosemite, not the Sierra which is a tad different. I always figure 5.x in the Sierra will be harder for me than 5.x in Yosemite. I learned some limits as well as how many pitches/how much ground I can cover ropeless there, but I haven't really applied it in the Sierra except for on Lone Pine Peak's North Ridge, which I did ropeless with Ingrid K 4 years ago when I was not as strong.
Point being, I know I can solo say, 16 pitches of easy-moderate ground with secure jams/movement in an hour and change without trying to go fast (assuming I make no routefinding mistakes, of course), but to do the same with a partner would take significantly longer, with cleaning, belaying, traverses, etc in the mix.
Anywho, cheers.
Next day, hiked to the base and told Aysel I didn't feel so great about everything. I was to lead all the pitches and I did not think we would finish the route in one day, and I wasn't feeling fit at elevation nor equipped for several days on the route. We bailed and headed back to Lone Pine where the temps were in the 90's or so. Climbed a few sport routes in the Alabama Hills before driving home.
Some photos:
Parking by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Starting our hike
Stonehouse Buttress and SF by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Stonehouse Buttress and part of the South Face
DSC01919 by TacoDelRio, on Flickr
Looking up the South Face, a few hundred meters left of our route. South Corner and other routes in this shot.
Album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tacodelri ... 902151305/
I will be ready to go back sometime. I am in great climbing shape and am very fast on technical ground, but as I said I don't hike at elevation with a pack often so that got me down. After spending some time in Yosemite and evolving a bit, I don't like doing these sorts of routes in multiple days. When I am in shape, I predict I could solo the route with a light rack using a light rope and a clove hitch for self-belay on the sections I'd be uncomfortable freesoloing, I could probably climb the route in a longish day. I don't like freesoloing exposed pitches above 5.8, or slab above 5.6ish, so the crux pitch would be the longest time expenditure for me. Those grades reflect Yosemite, not the Sierra which is a tad different. I always figure 5.x in the Sierra will be harder for me than 5.x in Yosemite. I learned some limits as well as how many pitches/how much ground I can cover ropeless there, but I haven't really applied it in the Sierra except for on Lone Pine Peak's North Ridge, which I did ropeless with Ingrid K 4 years ago when I was not as strong.
Point being, I know I can solo say, 16 pitches of easy-moderate ground with secure jams/movement in an hour and change without trying to go fast (assuming I make no routefinding mistakes, of course), but to do the same with a partner would take significantly longer, with cleaning, belaying, traverses, etc in the mix.
Anywho, cheers.