Entry-level mountaineering - Catskills, Adirondacks, or anywhere else nearby
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Hello everyone! I am looking to put my newly learned, basic mountaineering skills to work in the places mentioned in the title of this post. I've learned the basic snow and glacier travel, self-arresting, and anchor building techniques, and would like to tackle some peaks around here this winter in which I may have to utilize what I've learned in the form of frontpointing, axe-use, etc. If anyone has any suggestions I would really appreciate it. I am familiar with the Catskills and 'dacks so even just a few peaks and basic info would be really helpful. Thanks! |
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Check out the high peaks region in the Adirondacks. There are plenty of peaks to bag in the winter that you could continue to practice your techniques. If you are looking for more of a challenge, check out Mt. Washington in NH. |
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If you're feeling ambitious, Katahdin in ME is pretty awesome in the winter. 17+ mile approach on skis or snowshoes and many different routes to the top. I think it's the best in the east. |
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In the Adirondacks: |
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Will be heading out this winter. Pm me if interested |
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Thanks guys, that's really helpful. Wolfjaw and Basin and Saddleback sound like what I'm gunnin for. Haven't done any ice climbing yet, so Trap Dike and Gothics sound out of my league. Something to work towards, though, since I'm planning on taking an ice climbing class this winter. Anything similar to Wolfjaw and Basin and Saddleback in the Catskills that anyone can think of? |
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If you're just starting out I'd recommend just hiking in the winter out there to get used to the environment. Good way to build up a base, especially if you don't have any ice experience get some experience before you go nuts. Cascade could be a good one. |
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S. M. Lee wrote:Thanks guys, that's really helpful. Wolfjaw and Basin and Saddleback sound like what I'm gunnin for. Haven't done any ice climbing yet, so Trap Dike and Gothics sound out of my league.There's also the Ribbon/True North slide on Gothics. Did it a few years ago, lots of fun, kinda steep, and definitely easier 'mountaineering' grade challenge without being an actual ice climb. Even requires about .5 miles of relatively no-brainer bushwhacking. ;-) I guess people ski this slide a lot, perfect grade and usually has a good snow pack. Beware that the top out could be deep snow as it tends to get blown into the trees on the left, same side your exit will be. We ended up swimming in 4-6 feet of unconsolidated snow on top of the spruce (falling through frequently). At the end of the ascent it definitely added some pucker to an otherwise pedestrian day. Maybe try going all the way up to make the exit to the ridge trail shorter. Took us 30 minutes to go 300 yards. We bailed left off the slide about 200 feet from the top. In hindsight that was a mistake. adkhike.com/2010.htm#Gothics9 A lot of people solo the Trap Dike (ropeless). The top usually has thin ice or thin snow/ice compressed, so you can't protect it with screws anyway. The rest is usually WI2, which most people with any sense of balance can solo. It's a longish day, especially if you have to break trail for any portion of it. Same for Gothics true north. I found getting into ice climbing made me a mountaineeer, not the other way around. Having the rescue skills is probably critical for glacier travel, but other than avalanches the ADKs don't have anything in common with what most consider mountaineering. It's mostly ice climbing or hiking. Quality options where these two disciplines overlap are few and far between, and the best ones IMO require a lot of effort (more hiking than climbing). If you're interested in getting on ice there's plenty of climbers and guide services willing to help you along. More true than on rock, an ice climber's best protection is being a good climber. The rule of thumb is don't fall. lol |
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Thanks, Medic, I may take you up on that offer. |
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True North is good. Any time of the year is fine, as long as the North Face looks white from Lake Placid. :-) |
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True north is good but can be a real slog in the winter. The best time is early winter/late fall when it ices up but there hasn't been much precip. Crampons or micro-spikes necessary. Trekking poles or a light mountaineering axe are good for balance. |
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Central gully is a good noob objective. |
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kind of off-topic, but any word on ice conditions currently? Do you think it'd be a fool's errand to go to the dacks in search of ice this weekend? |
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True North as a climbing objective? Really? It's a black run up top, blue at the bottom. If True North is the type of "climbs" OP wants, then there are shit ton of slides he can slog up and come down (angel, bennie), just be aware of avalanche condition. Especially after hurricane Irene blew everything open. |
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divnamite wrote:If True North is the type of "climbs" OP wants, then there are shit ton of slides he can slog up and come down (angel, bennie), just be aware of avalanche condition.Yup, that's how hikers become climbers. However, the fast track is to get on some vertical ice and skip the inbetween stuff. Slide climbing is fun anytime of the year. :) |
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I'm definitely going to try and get on some ice asap, just need to recover from buying all this gear before signing up for a class. But if late fall/early winter is ideal for these slides, then that's perfect for me to get my fix and strap on my shiny crampons and swing my axe into stuff, even if a bit overkill. What can I say, I'm (arguably) a grown man that still likes to play in the snow with new toys. |
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S. M. Lee wrote:I'm definitely going to try and get on some ice asap, just need to recover from buying all this gear before signing up for a class. But if late fall/early winter is ideal for these slides, then that's perfect for me to get my fix and strap on my shiny crampons and swing my axe into stuff, even if a bit overkill. What can I say, I'm (arguably) a grown man that still likes to play in the snow with new toys. Central Gully sounds even more perfect, aside from the distance. Maybe as a second objective this season around January-ish.I don't know any of the slides will be steep enough for crampons and ice axe. I don't think they'll be icy enough to even use crampon without a good winter freeze cycle. Go to the mountaineer at Keene and see what they recommend. |
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divnamite wrote: I don't know any of the slides will be steep enough for crampons and ice axe. I don't think they'll be icy enough to even use crampon without a good winter freeze cycle. Go to the mountaineer at Keene and see what they recommend.I have run into very little in winter that requires more than a pair of MSR Denali snowshoes when the snow pack is right. Last year was a touch different with very little snow below 3000' and not much above. A mountaineering ice axe is good for the leader to clear snow off the overhanging branches from the back of a pack, that is about it. |
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Ben Brotelho wrote:kind of off-topic, but any word on ice conditions currently? Do you think it'd be a fool's errand to go to the dacks in search of ice this weekend?It's below freezing every night up there now, so I would expect a fair amount of thin ice on the slides this w/e. |
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Lee, crevasse rescue, glacial travel and anchor building can be done just about anywhere in the catskills. Self-arrest is a little bit more difficult to practice (I personally think Tucks or Hunginton Ravine bottom areas are great for that, but it's a long drive). |
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A bit closer to the Albany area lie a few lesser-known options. I wouldn't do these solo (well, OK, *I* would, but I wouldn't recommend it!), but they may give you a better concept of wilderness navigation and independent resourcefulness needed for mountaineering. |