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Mt Baker Backcountry, WA
Herman Saddle/Table Mountain
December 8, 2007
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Earlier this week, I wasn't optimistic
for good snow over the weekend. After a couple feet of snow
last weekend, around 5 inches of rain fell on Monday, give
or take a couple inches, then the freezing level dropped
to near the surface the rest of the week and it was mostly
dry, so I figured snow in the mountains would be bullet-proof
ice. But reports starting coming out of Mt. Baker that they
had received several inches of dry snow towards the end
of the week, so Kirsten, Andy, Pete, Becky, and I headed
up on Saturday. Pete & Becky decided to join us at the
last hour when Pete bailed on his surfing plans due to reports
that there was possible contamination in the water from
the flooding, and Becky found out she didn't need to stay
in town for work.
It felt a little weird to be going out in the backcountry
after the deaths, injuries, rescues and disappearances of
around a dozen people in Washington last weekend related
to the big dump of snow we had, and there was a bit of a
pallor over the backcountry community all week. In fact,
Marcus, whose enthusiasm for skiing is mostly unbridled,
chose to stay home. But snow conditions this weekend were
about as stable as they get. All the previous snow was consolidated
down into a solid substrate that the new snow was well bonded
to. And to make things better, the weather was picture perfect.
Cold. Really freaking cold. But clear, and it's hard to
beat a clear day in the mountains in the winter.
Skinning in, we passed several large
groups practicing avy rescue. It was nice to see so many
people take it upon themselves to learn the skill. After
a while we arrived at Herman saddle and thought we saw some
nice snow on a slope southwest of Herman Saddle, but when
we got to it we found a thick, wind-scoured crust. So we
skied the east slope of the north subpeak of Table Mountain.
The snow was pretty decent, though the crust below the new
snow was more apparent than we would have liked. We couldn't
head out with just one run skied, so we headed back up the
skin track, circled around across Herman Saddle, then headed
toward the prominent gully running down northeast from Table
Mountain's summit, stopping once to yo-yo a short pitch.
We skinned all the way up to the ridge crest just north
of the summit, and as the sun dipped close to the horizon,
we started down. The snow here was great -- no evidence
of the crust for most of it, and after picking our way through
a cliff band, ran it out all the way to the valley floor.
After skinning back out through Bagley
Lakes and down to the parking lot, we planned to cheer the
good day at the North Fork. We had a fun day, despite an
abnormal amount of gear problems: Kirsten's Dynafit binding
toepiece kept releasing on one traverse, then her skin glue
failed; Andy lost the tail clip for one of his skins, then
the toe loop on the same skin broke. The North Fork was
packed though, so we stopped farther downstream at the Skagit
Brewer, which it should be noted is not a bad fall-back
plan at all, and then you've a shorter drive to endure the
food & beer coma.
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