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North Route
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North Route

 
North Route

Page Type: Route

Location: Washington, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 48.71500°N / 121.995°W

Route Type: Basic snow, no glacier

Time Required: Most of a day

Difficulty: 3rd class, 50 degree snow

Route Quality: 
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Page By: jrs

Created/Edited: Nov 15, 2002 / Nov 15, 2002

Object ID: 157346

Hits: 1803 

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Approach


There are two approaches from Dailey prairie. At the north end of the prairie, where the Cavnaugh Creek 7.5 USGS Map has a trail marked at elevation 3239ft ascend the trail northeast and then south until the trail ends. Continue southeast through forest. The second approach follows the approach to the West Ridge until the trees become scrubby. At this point leave the ridge and traverse to the north (left). Both approaches continue from here where you will want to follow an ascending traverse below two cliff buttresses until reaching a slope leading directly to the summit.

Route Description


The North Route up the North Twin Sister is a straight forward scramble. Until late season the slope is snow covered and makes for a pleasant accent and a quick descent. The route is steep enough that a novice will feel like they are doing "real climbing" yet the snow conditions for most of the year make self arrests relatively simple. Once you've managed to find the north side of the mountain the route description boils down to "go up until you're on the summit". There are no glaciers, bergshrunds, or moat problems. Over all, it is a very pleasant snow climb and it is the standard descent route for other routes up the mountain.

Essential Gear


The North Route, under ideal conditions, is a simple snow scramble. You will want an ice axe and good boots. A rope and crampons are not needed except for on the rare occasions that the snow isn't soft enough for good footing or an easy self arrest. If a rope is needed however, due to poor conditions or lack of confidence, consider not climbing the route.

Miscellaneous Info


If you have information about this route that doesn't pertain to any of the other sections, please add it here.

Images

It looks like a volcano but...



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