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Six days, two couloirs. That's what this
pair of trips to Preacher Mtn yielded. The forecast for
MLK weekend was looking good (although cold), and Becky,
Pete, Kirsten and I were pretty resolved to get back in
and finish our business, so even though snow conditions
were not encouraging, we went for it anyway. I also had
my new AT setup which I was excited to try out on a big
outing. The report on the snow was that there was six inches
to over a foot of loose powder sitting on a boilerplate
crust. We feared that if we made to the entrance of the
couloir, that after one or two people skied it, there would
be nothing left but the unbreakable crust.
We left early on Saturday, and Marcus and Anastasia joined
us this time, but no Murray. It was 15 degrees at the pass.
It was going to be a cold trip. We went all the way in to
Lake Caroline this time, so we would be in a better position
get up Preacher. The going was very difficult. Skinning
up from Snow Lake to the Roosevelt saddle was terrible as
anytime it got steep, the snow just kept sliding right off
that crust. Eventually we just had to boot it, and that
became the technique of choice for getting up anything steep
the rest of the weekend. We rolled into Lake Caroline after
8 hours, shortly before sundown and quickly set up camp.Snow
was falling and it was late, so we didn't build a group
kitchen this time. I nearly spoiled the entire trip by spilling
Kirsten's and my pasta while I was trying to drain it. Fortunately,
pasta is one type of food that is easy to pick up off the
snow, so other than having it cool a little faster than
we'd like, it turned out fine.
We got a much earlier start for our "summit"
day -- got up at 6:30, an hour before sunrise and headed
off by 8. Marcus and Anastasia stayed behind because they
were a little tired from the ski in. And given the uncertainty
of how many people the couloir would be good for, they decided
their day would be better spent sleeping in and skiing around
Lake Caroline.
After skiing nice powder down to Hatchet Lake and crossing
the lake, we started the steep climb up to the east ridge
of Preacher. Boots & crampons for most of this before
topping out on the ridge. The next phase was a ridge run
up to the top of the couloir. This was not as straightforward
as we hoped. The ridge cliffed out frequently, so we were
forced on to the north side of it. After skinning and booting
across snow ranging from knee deep powder to wind crust,
we reached the couloir. Our hearts sunk and stomachs churned
as we looked down the first entrance. It was shiny, wind-scoured
ice. We moved up a little further to the higher entrance,
and thank the preacher, it was protected enough from the
wind to have plenty of decent quality snow all the way up.
We looked down the gully with it's steep rock walls and
gazed around the deep valleys, jagged ridges, and frozen
lakes all around us and Kirsten said, "I can't believe
this is Snoqualmie Pass." It was true, the landscape
just seemed so dramatic, it was hard to believe we were
only an hour drive from home.
The question now was how would the snow hold up on the
crust. Would it all slide down the couloir? Conversation
turned off as we got ready to ski. Pete entered the chute,
took a couple awkward turns on punchy snow, then gradually,
turn-by-turn, he seemed to be skiing easier and pausing
less, then before long he was linking one turn to the next.
A couple hundred feet down, he called up, "It's good!"
We all breathed a sigh of relief and one by one we all headed
down. There were a few nice pockets of unaffected snow,
but most of it had a pretty thick suncrust on it and the
bottom was all sun-softened avalanche debris. Thank God
for my fixed heels. Below the couloir the snow in the shade
was nice, cold powder.
It was 1:30 when we reached the valley bottom, and even
though we were satisfied having skied the central couloir,
we agreed to push up the second couloir until 3:00. As we
rounded the large buttress that hides the second couloir,
we were all inspired by the awesome line and worked hard
to get up as fast as we could. We pushed our turn around
time to 3:30 and got most of the way up the couloir before
turning around because the sun crust was getting worse towards
the top. Most of the couloir was fairly tough skiing, but
like the first chute, below it in the shade, it was real
nice. We rolled back into camp at 5 after a nine hour day.
Normally on these winter snow-camping trips when you're
in bed by 8 every night, it's tough to sleep straight through
the second night. Not this night.
Sunday morning we broke camp early and started the trek
home by 9. On our last trip, Pete had scoped out a nice
gully above Upper Wildcat Lake that gave us a great exit
from Lake Caroline. As I stepped into my bindings after
crossing the lake and reaching the drainage above Lower
Wildcat Lake and getting ready to ski down, I noticed something
pop off my boot. It was the Dynafit heelpiece fitting! My
boots were less than two weeks old and the screw had completed
stripped out of the boot. We tried to cement it in place
with Kirsten's dental repair kit, but that didn't work,
so I just stepped in the binding and Marcus strapped my
boot down with a couple Voile straps. Those and the plastic
molding did a good enough job to keep my heel down and I
was able to ski the rest of the way out without too much
trouble. I sure like having a fixed heel with a heavy pack.
So yes, it may be true that we spent six days of our lives
trying to ski two couloirs. But it was so rewarding to take
an idea that is not in any skiing book, that Pete just cooked
up when he saw them from a distance on another trip. Then
to work so hard to get it, in an area that is so remote
and seldom-visited, and despite uncooperative conditions.
I'd say it was definitely worth the six days.
Other Links:
:: Repete.us TR
:: Preacher Mtn: Part I
:: Pete's
post on TAY