Alarm at 4 AM. More tired than I wish, but I swing my legs out of bed and begin my early morning express routine. Contacts in, pull on shorts, shirt, long wool socks and sturdy black mountaineering pants. I sit at the top of the stairs for a minute and rub the cat’s belly, then to the kitchen where I mix and gulp a powdered breakfast drink. I reach into the refrigerator and grabbed water and food that had been chilling overnight. I would need substantial food – real food, not the syrupy gel I had been used to taking on my running outings. It is late May in the Wasatch mountains of Northern Utah. While the season shifts to Summer and the lower trails blossom in foliage, up high the peaks and basins show off bright white consolidated snow. I was going up high.
Several miles up the canyon I pulled over at the curve in the road a hundred yards above the Tanners Flat Campground. There is an unmarked trail there, which leads into one of the longest, steepest, and most deadly slide paths in all of the Wasatch: Tanners Gulch. There is only one season I ever go in there, Spring. I will stay out of the gulch in Winter, for the obvious reason. In the Summer and Autumn months the snow is gone and loose, steep, rocky terrain is exposed. I still felt tired. Not just body tired, but head tired. It was 5:15 AM and I decided to hop into the back seat for a nap. A short time later I got up, changed into my boots, attached my mountaineering axe to my pack, and disappeared into the green alpine foliage.
Lower Tanner's Gulch (Photo: BigNick, Summitpost)
At the toe a cold stream of water rushed fiercely out of a dark, self-made tunnel. I stepped onto the snow and continued up at a quicker pace without any obstacles to slow me. The lower gulch, with its steep granite walls, has striking features – figuratively and literally. I was cautious of rock fall as I ascended higher, removing my earphones to listen for any sounds of rock on rock. The carcass of a large pine tree lay on top of the consolidated snow. I admired the dry, rich tree flesh, thinking it would be good to burn in a campfire. Other large pieces of its body lay nearby. Grey granite rocks the size of drink coolers and smaller dotted the path upward, like breadcrumbs leading me to the heights. I arrived at the first split in the gulch. I had to choose: Left over a waterfall, or right over trashy, lumpy and deeply cupped snow. I went left. Last year the waterfall was fully exposed and required a careful climb to the side to bypass. This time only its top could be seen draining into a deep, dark hole. It was very pleasant to look at, and the climb around it to the snow above was pleasantly simple and safe. It was at that place I sat and attached my crampons for the remainder of the climb. Up higher I transgress the line between the grey majestic granite slabs of the lower gulch and the broken red quartzite environment of the upper ridge massif. Fortunately I was able to ascent mostly on snow, having to hike short sections on dry rock. At the top third of Tanners Gulch I had the option of staying left in the main branch, or entering a narrow choke that leads more directly up the South face of my first intended peak. If I had an inexperienced partner with me I would have certainly chosen the left. Being alone, I favored the direct and therefore faster route to the summit, knowing of the small waterfalls I would have to work around or over, and the steepness of the slope. I entered the choke through a natural quartzite gate, then moved quickly up slope on all fours. I fatigued quickly after several steps, then continued up. I repeated this pattern all the way up. Above me I saw the waterfall that I had been able to climb up and over in past years was fully exposed and impassable. I looked to the right and left to find a work-around. I decided left. It was good and within a few minutes I was above the waterfall. A few words about the angle of the slope in this branch: It is steep and slick – steep enough that if a climber slipped and lost all grip on the consolidated snow, he would slide out of control and collide with several jagged quartzite humps lining and jutting into the drainage. After likely breaking several bones and fracturing the skull, as well as receiving deep lacerations, the limp body of the unconscious, dying or dead climber would continue to be pulled by gravity downslope, bounce once more off the left hand gate of the choke, then slip out and begin to tumble another several hundred feet into the wide upper gulch. The body would probably not stop there, but continue twisting downward until it got hung up in the trees growing on a hump of granite, or brought to a halt by friction on a less-steep section of ground.
Upper Tanner's Gulch
Sunrise Peak, 11,280 feet
L-R: Dromedary, Sunrise, Jeppsen's (Photo: Travis Atwood, May 2009)
The descent back to the saddle from the Twins was quick, and I downclimbed the crack in the wall with pleasure. As I walked up to the base of the West buttress I saw that it was nearly clear of snow. I decided to climb the 5.5 route up instead of traversing around as I had done on the way over. I had climbed this buttress several times, but my favorite alcove still held snow, so I climbed just to the left of it. I got a little out of my comfort zone, making a few committing moves, clinging to rock as my body hung over a significant vertical drop. In the case of a fall, if I somehow escaped bashing against jagged quartzite, I would bounce off a 45 degree snow slope and continue into that rocky abyss below. When I was back on comfortable rock with large hold and ledges, I sighed relief. I am not a rock climber.
Climbing back up Jeppsen’s and Sunrise went quickly without
crampons. I pulled myself up and over large rocks, staying close to the ridge
top. To my left was a sheer drop of hundreds of feet into upper Broad’s Fork.
Below me and a half-mile away as the crow flies, I could see two figures hiking
over snow up into the basin. I wondered if they could see me up on the peaks.
Upper Broad’s Fork was still completely covered in deep snow, and the Twins’
East flank was still mostly white even after the glide avalanches had released.
Further in the distance I could see the beaver pond and the adjacent meadow
were completely dry and green. Snow was melting quickly in the late May heat
wave. As I climbed up and over Sunrise Peak, only two things ahead worried me.
I could get to the summit of Dromedary with no problem, but how would the snow
in upper Tanner’s Gulch be? I was concerned about wet slide avalanches as the
temperature rose. After the incident of falling in the hole on the first climb
up Dromedary, how likely would it be for me to fall into a deeper, more
dangerous hole in lower Tanner’s Gulch? The draining water runs stronger down
below, and the gulch narrows considerably. I must be very careful and alert. I
reached the summit of Dromedary for the second time. One last meal on top, then
I descended to the notch atop Tanner’s. I peered over the edge down into
the steep, narrow upper gulch. The snow had been softening in the morning heat.
I judged it to be good enough to descend, and carefully lowered myself down at
the edge of the notch, in a gap between rock and snow. Stepping out onto the
snow, I felt it was just right for a quick plunge-step descent. Then I
determined it would be good for glissading. I sat down on the snow with my feet
straight in front of me and let gravity pull me down. I slid a thousand feet
down in a few minutes, enjoying the free ride out of the narrow top portion of
the gulch, then through the wide snowfield of the middle portion. I stopped and
stood up not far above the waterfall, and walked down to it. Where the cold
clean water poured out from underneath snow, there was a small platform before
it fell over and disappeared again into a black hole under snow. I stood there
and filled a bottle with cold, clean water. I drank it all, them refilled. I
made a short jump down from the waterfall onto snow, careful not to land directly
above the creek. The grey granite walls of the gulch rose up high to my right,
and less dramatically to my left. I listened for rock fall, and moved quickly
down canyon. I passed the battered tree trunk. I tried glissading again but the
surface of the snow was violently bumpy. I followed the long tongue of snow
downward. Ahead and below I could see the green, dry woods of the canyon lit up
in sunshine. I hiked up the bank and found the hiker’s trail, and within a few
minutes arrived back to my vehicle parked at a curve in Little Cottonwood
Canyon. My total time from start to finish was 7 hours and 57 minutes. A few
years ago my time to complete just one traverse of the same peaks was over 8
hours. Several years ago my first traverse over the same peaks was over 12
hours. I said a prayer, grateful for my safe return, and drove home.
4 comments:
Nice job Matt. A nice rendition of a really pure "triple double" is to ascend Broads to the twins via Bonkers, traverse, descend Tanners, run down LCC road a mile, up Lisa's to west twin, traverse, down Lake blanche trail. CTC.
http://spencerweiler.blogspot.com/2013/06/the-triple-double.html
Dang. Next time, maybe. I've never been up Lisa Falls. With tendonitis flaring up in one knee, I was fortunate to have stopped when I did. Hurt for a week after.
Great report. Pretty ballsy to tackle that thing solo. Nice work fella.
the thing about danger is it reminds us what is most important, which is almost as addictive as the activity itself. glad your safe and sound.
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