On the striking north side of Buck Mountain are three prominent ridges.
The westernmost of these steep ridges is the North Northwest Ridge Route.
The nature of the route is adventurous with some route finding, exposure on
easier terrain, and possible snow climbing at the base. Placing gear along
this route is possible most of the way, but often there aren't too many options
or bomber placements. The climbing varies from 4th Class and mid 5th, to 5.7 on
the west ridge. Rope drag is a real hazard along the route and loose rock
often tumbles off the route and into the North Face West Couloir just to the
left of this route. Simul-climbing is possible and usually safe along much of
the terrain. The views along the route of
Whister, the
Grand
Teton, and the nearby
North Central Ridge are superb. This route and it's neighbors are
seldom done and solitude is usually found on the north side of Buck Mountain.
North Northwest Ridge (5.7)- from the broad bench below the north side
routes, traverse to the uppermost right corner with the last part usually being
on steep snow or ice. Ice-Axe and cramp-ons will usually be required to
get to the base. Start at the base of the North Face West Couloir near a
large boulder often laden with rap slings. Traverse up and right out of
the base of the couloir onto loose rock, followed by more solid rock the higher
you get away from the couloir. Generally, the most rotten, loose rock will be
found closer to the coloir (left), and the more solid rock will be closer to the
ridge (right). Climb 5.3-5.4 for several hundred feet with various types
of climbing from friction, to shelf mantling, to face climbing. The route
steepens and the climbing has more 5.5 -5.6 type moves as it nears the west
summit ridge and prominent notch. Just before this area stay left and
traverse back toward the top of the couloir. Once on the west summit
ridge, a slightly overhanging fin blocks the climbing to the summit at a
prominent notch at the top of the North Face Couloir. This is the only
way to the summit from here, and the moves look tougher than they are. Make a
committing pull up with large jugs to a small ledge that gives way to a scramble
to the summit.
Approach- From the Taggart Lake Parking area, follow the trail north
of the Lake and pick up a climbers trail that heads up into Avalanche Canyon.
This subsidiary trail is rough in spots and passes over many downed logs and
creeks, but is prevalent all the way to the South Fork of Avalanche Canyon,
where you must scramble steeply up into the South Fork and find a faint path
again in the upper basin. Access the broad slope under the north face
routes on the left side, but be aware of rock fall and sections of pure ice in
this area. Traverse right (west) along the base to furthest west to start the
climb.
Descent- Utilize the Class 3 East Face slopes to get back to the
valley, but be aware that the well used path will lead you toward Death Canyon,
where you can pick up the Valley Trail back to Taggart in 4.5 more miles.
Rappelling the route would only be advised in extreme situations given the walk
off option. Another descent option may be to utilize the NE Couloir to go
from the East Face area back over and into Avalanche Canyon, but this would
require some serious route finding.
Gear- This route doesn't have many great cracks, but still there are
some here and there to be found. A selection of small to medium nuts, 2
larger cams along with some small aliens, and some large slings to girth hitch
rock horns would be useful. Long runners are critical on the pro to reduce
the rope drag since there's many sharp arĂȘtes and horns to climb around.
Rappelling this route would require leaving the better part of a climbing rack
on the mountain. There was little evidence of gear left behind (slings
etc.) in the area, compared to what is found on some of the more popular climbs
in the Tetons.
From Taggart Lake Trailhead : 7.2
miles and 6042 feet gain (one way) / 16.7 miles and 6498 feet
roundtrip using East Face descent