When four of us drove to Lone Pine, CA to attempt Mount Whitney last weekend, we thought we had this in the bag. The highest peak in the contiguous US is known for having an easy 11-mile trail which you can basically roller skate up. The hard part is supposedly getting a permit, which we got suspiciously easily. Why didn't anyone want to try casually walking up the summit with their kids, grandma, and a picnic basket on a nice weekend in May? Because it's still covered in snow and ice. Oh.
The locals told us that no one had summited for two weeks, due to waist-high snow hiding a narrow ridge beneath. Everyone seemed to think that a more reasonable goal was to turn around at Trail Crest at 13,700 feet. Under less snowy conditions, this is where you would walk the final ridge up to Whitney summit, at 14,508 feet.
Base camp with the Sierras in the background |
Trail Camp in the morning |
In the morning we left our camp set up in order to get an early start. My first use of ice axe and crampons was tenuous on the way up the steep snow chute to Trail Crest. At one point I lost traction and started skidding down the chute, almost taking another climber with me.
The chute where I slipped |
Little avalanches started to scatter down the chute as the day got warmer, and I was still inching feet first downward, as if descending a ladder. My face felt like it was melting off from the sun's reflection in the snow, and my crampons kept falling off. It seemed like the appropriate time to do something stupid, so I took off the crampons and tried glissading down on my butt. Dave was forced to do the same thing after losing a crampon. Using my ice axe as a rudder, I tried to slide in a controlled fashion. This worked well for about 5 seconds, then I lost control but miraculously pulled off a self-arrest with my axe. I repeated this process over and over, completing the bottom half of the chute in a fraction of the time it took me to descend the top half.
We reached the tents exhausted, soaked, and hours behind schedule. I was resigned to spend another night until we noticed that the tents were floating in snowmelt, and our stuff inside was getting wet. That's what we get for camping in a cirque. We knew we'd have to hike out that night, so we made some coffee and food, and attempted to lighten our loads by giving some stuff to other hikers. By the time we got down to 10,000 feet, the trail got easier with less snow. We made it to the trailhead just before sunset and ordered all the food and beer at our favorite diner in Lone Pine. Unfortunately no one had the appetite to eat much of it.
Even though we didn't summit, it was an awesome experience. I hope there will be another attempt, as soon as we learn how to keep our crampons on, and maybe get an extra day off to acclimatize.