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| East Face   | 
| Page Type: Route Location: Washington, United States, North America Lat/Lon: 48.45190°N / 121.0577°W Route Type: Mountaineering Season: Summer Time Required: A long day Rock Difficulty: 5.3 (YDS) Number of Pitches: 2 Grade: III
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| Page By: Eric Sandbo Created/Edited: Mar 9, 2006 / Apr 22, 2006 Object ID: 179637 Hits: 593  Loading... Page Score: 87.42% - 4 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
OverviewAn astoundingly easy climb for such an
exposed, barren face. The views are tremendous. Expect to take all
day if you're going from the road and back. If it's just a side trip
from hiking up the Cache Glacier, give yourself about 3-4 hours.
Getting ThereSee the Getting There section of
the Ptarmigan Traverse Stage
1 page. Follow it as far as the middle of the Cache Glacier. On
the glacier, bear right to Gunsight Notch, the right-most gap in the
wall that bounds the S side of the glacier. As the Cache Glacier
recedes, Gunsight Notch is getting harder to reach, especially in
late Summer. mauri
pelto adds this update: “I work on Cache Glacier every
year, measuring its snowpack etc. In travelling to Gunsight Notch
most of these years it seems like it is getting tougher to get to the
notch itself with less snow providing easy access by August. The rock
underneath the snow ramp is not pleasant.”
Pass
through the gap, turn right, and find the short, shallow, leftward
gully very close. Drop the heavy packs in the notch and switch to
summit packs and rock gear.
Route DescriptionThe gully is easy Class 5, with a
little protection. Beckey's guidebook says it's the hardest part of
the climb. I was more impressed with the top pitch, but exposure and
lack of pro influenced that.
At the top of the first pitch, stand
and admire traverse ahead. You'll probably decide to coil the ropes,
but keep harnesses on. The E face is a huge, broad staircase, like
the side of a pyramid. Walk a ledge as far as looks reasonable, step
up or do an easy mantle, repeat as necessary. You'll want to admire
the view, but not while you're moving. The climbing is very easy,
but people have died here. Stay focused.
The final pitch is maybe 40-50 feet (12-15m)
in a broad, shallow groove leading straight up to the middle of the
summit ridge. It had good enough holds, but I wanted pro. Maybe
you'll do better at fitting the flaring cracks that I was, or maybe
you're good enough that you won't care.
The ridge crest is narrow and loose.
We continued the belay S a few feet on the crest to the summit, where
there's a bit more room, and it's glued together better.
 On
the return, do one short rappel down that top pitch, and one down the
bottom gully. The traverse between the pitches was comfortable, even
going down.
Be
very careful of loose rock when easing off the crest. I almost
killed my friends with rockfall in 1977. It might have been that
same year that someone apparently anchored from a loose block and
fell all the way to the glacier.
Essential GearA light rock rack to 2 inches, glacier
gear. A map and compass to identify the ocean of peaks, and in case
the weather moves in. [I learned about the Middle Fork valley
searching for 2 climbers who missed Gunsight Notch descending in the
fog.]
Maps and BooksUSGS Cascade Pass, Wash. 7.5
minute quad covers all the approach and mountain.
CASCADE
ALPINE GUIDE, VOL. II: STEVENS PASS TO RAINY PASS: Climbing &
High Routes, 3rd Edition is the most comprehensive guide to the
North-Central Cascades.
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