There is basically no snow in Southcentral AK below 2,500
FSL.
Snowpacks, as measured at the usual snowtel sites, are
pitiful, even by mid-winter standards: LINK
The start of the Iditarod Sled Dog Race had to be shifted
some 600 miles north from its usual start and it’s still challenged: LINK
The annual Tour of Anchorage Nordic ski marathon has been canceled: LINK
Collegiate Nordic races held a week ago in Anchorage looked
like a cross between a pond-skimming event and a snowmaking exhibition: LINK
By all accounts, this is a winter to forget.
Despite all this, when winter has been on, it’s really been
on.
See below:
Friday, Nathan and I had a fairly mellow day under
Skyscraper Peak in Eldorado Bowl. We got greedy on the first lap and went for one of the main guts. We quickly remembered
how lean the snowpack is when some Talkeetna gremlins jumped out and chomped
our bases. We backed off a bit and did three more laps in the bowl, got bored, and
went across the street and did one more on the west side of Marmot as the
clouds rolled in.
Nathan on one of several laps in Eldorado |
Saturday was gray and snowy, so Cody, Nathan and I went and looked
for a classic Hatcher, skinny, deep line that would ski well in the reduced
viz. It didn’t take long, and we were hardly disappointed.
The chosen line, looker's left, was part of a Y. In a deeper year, the right would go too, but this year ends in a face, and is littered with some sizable rock. |
This line further up was worth a look for another day. |
Cody fights upward. |
I walked up the ridge a ways to see if there were any other entrances to other lines. Nada. Looking back was pretty spectacular though. |
Face full of cornice. Photo C.G. (https://gravitypowered.wordpress.com/) |
Sunday, with a skiff of fresh snow, clear skies, and cooler
temps, we went hunting for something a little more sizable. We picked an
aesthetic, switchbacked couloir in one of the nameless tributaries of the Lil
Su, knowing the likelihood of getting it in its entirety was low.
The line featured a “gated” entrance about 1-turn wide, that
opened into a ballroom-sized chamber, before choking back down as it went into
the first hard switchback. Conditions on the apron and up through “the
ballroom” were relentlessly deep, but stable. The line had partially sloughed
out at some point recently lower down, and when we made the crossover of the
hangfire, the tension was high. I plunged my pole as deep as I could into and
tried to find the weak layer it had popped on but couldn’t get it.
Adrenaline on high, I pushed over it and into the safety of
a large boulder, planted in the middle of the line.
As we pushed above the ball room and into the first
switchback, conditions changed dramatically. Deep turned to shallow, with
exposed blue ice and granite. It was hard to say if the line had slid, or just
never filled in.
Light gusts of wind and snow swirled down from above.
We accepted that this was the limit, and set up for the
drop.
CLICK, CLACK: ROCK!
A rather small piece of shrapnel whirred and bounced down
from somewhere above.
Yikes. Time to go.
The line skied really well though, soft, deep, and steep. We
opted for another lap in the high bowl, and on the second transition, noticed
the wind had increased a bit more off the ridge above us, and snow was
sloughing from nearly all the rock faces, while the sun was starting to tag
some of the overhanging cornices.
Very happy with the decision-making.
Back to blue. |
Off-angle shot looking down the skin track in the bowl. |
Mint Glacier. |
Obsessed. |
Cody passes through the gated entrance to the line. |
Upward through the ballroom. |
It's not glorious. |
Calling it. |
Worth it. |
Also, the Front Range is finally coming into play. After-work
snowboarding was not only do-able, but quite pleasant last week, with boot-top
snow on a hard but carvable base. Daylight allowed for one lap in the
alpenglow, and one with a bike light, and ample moonlight for the skin.
1 comment:
great front range shots
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