Thursday, March 25, 2010

Quandary Peak Winter (3/25/10)

Route Name: East Ridge (standard route)
Start Elevation: 10,850 ft.
Summit Elevation: 14,265 ft.
Elevation Gain: 3415 ft.
Round-trip Mileage: 6.4 mi (according to my GPS, 6.75mi. according to the books)

INTRODUCTION

Four of us headed up Quandary today. The weather was perfect. Hardly a cloud in the sky. Visibility went on for over a hundred miles (We could make out the Maroon Bells in the distance). There was fresh snow on Quandary over the past two days. From the looks of the trail I'd say it must have been around 8 inches. There was no issue at all route-finding as we another hike trekking up ahead of us in his snowshoes marking the trail. It turns out the guy making trail ahead of us was Bill Middlebrook of 14ers.com.

This was my second ascent of Quandary Peak and more excitingly, our group's first winter ascent of any 14er. Being our here in Colorado in March on a rare occasion we decided the time was right to give snow ascending a try. We had the proper gear including snowshoes, crampons, and ice axes though not all this was necessary on Quandary. We also liked the low avalanche danger on Quandary's East Ridge as we are not experienced at reading snow and avalanche signs.
From Quandary's East ridge

TRAIL BETA

We snowshoed from top to bottom. With all the fresh snow below treeline it was a necessity. We noticed at least one person from another group today post-holing in the trees. Once on the ridge the snow was harder in sporadic areas mixed with other sections that were still 1+ feet deep.
Once above 13000 feet the snow is mostly wind-hardened and packed down. The snowshoes for us up there became basically our over-sized crampons. The trail is just steep enough and the snow just hard enough that we were happy to have some "teeth" to grip the trail. We didn't bring ice axes and did okay with this, but in retrospect we would have felt more comfy on the descent with them.
On our descent things we warming up. We were shedding layers every half mile or so. Once in the trees the trail got more and more slushy as we went. Near the TH there were two small parts of trail that had already melted out.

TRACK

I took a GPX track of our hike on my Nokia N800 with Maemo Mapper. I've put it into a KML file for download here:

My Track


PHOTOS

If you would like to see all my photos from this hike you can click the photo below and it links to my Google Photo Album:


Monday, March 22, 2010

Tennessee Pass Snowshoeing (3/22/10)

Route Name: Tennessee Pass loop trails
A great idea of what the snow looked like. Thick enough
to make snowshoes useful in most places
Start Elevation: 10,441 ft.
Round-trip Mileage: 1.85 mi

INTRODUCTION

We decided to explore the loop trail at Tennessee Pass on the snowshoes. This hike included Mark, Denny, Marcia, Luke, Jonah, Seth, Matt, and Joyce. We headed out around 10am to clear skies and a good amount of snow on the trails.
The loop trails at Tennessee Pass are mostly flat. Our elevation went up and down and did not vary by more than 100 feet over the 2 miles. Off trail the snow was several feet thick. Strangely enough, there were a few places on trail where the snow had melted through because of wear and tear.
Upon finishing our modest hike for the morning we picnic lunch-ed in the parking lot on a tarp we laid out in the parking lot. Still a beautiful day and clear skies!

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