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MOUNTAINS: Mt. Bross (or did we?), Mt. Cameron, Mt. Lincoln ROUTE: Mt. Bross' East Slopes from the Moose Creek TH, standard traverse over Mt. Cameron to Mt. Lincoln, down Mt. Lincoln's East Slopes to the Quartzville TH and a road walk back to Moose Creek RT DISTANCE: ~12 miles RT GAIN: ~3,700' RT TIME: 8.5-9 hours, but we weren't concerned with time CLIMBERS: Dan (dmccool), Greg (gregory_fischer), Rob (RJansen77), Clay (Claybird), Jeff (SurfNTurf), Brian (darkhelmet1983) and Breanna D.
Before we get started, a few important tips about this route. Parking around the Quartzville TH winter closure is a sticky situation. I lost count of the "No Parking" and "Private Property" signs. We elected to start from the Moose Creek TH at the junction of Quartzville and Zinc roads and left two large 4x4 vehicles there all day without issue in an obvious pullout.
If ascending or descending Mt. Lincoln from the Quartzville TH, STAY ON THE ROAD until breaking treeline. We took a few shortcuts while coming down and drew the attention of the landowner, despite being extra careful to stay as far away from houses as possible. He was very nice and said the route is legal, just stay on Crest Drive or you're on private property.
(Photos by SurfNTurf, dmccool, Claybird and RJansen77.)
After attempting the full Decalibron a week ago from Kite Lake and being turned back by a whiteout after only Mt. Democrat, the remaining three (or two) peaks jumped to the top of my winter list. Dillonsarnelli suggested them for this weekend, but he was only available Sunday. The planning began. Unfortunately, as the weather forecast unfolded and more folks joined the party, it became obvious Saturday was the preferred day. I'm beginning to think the NOAA forecasters responsible for the Alma region make their predictions drunk, however, as the "9-14 miles an hour with gusts to 20" winds in reality were "so this is what skydiving must feel like" winds.
The group that showed up in Alma at 7 a.m. Saturday was a Who's Who list of my preferred climbing partners, with a few notable absences. The two I didn't know beforehand, Greg and Brian, are now new additions to that list. Dan even broke out his all-powerful 1980s The North Face one-piece suit.
We started from our parking spot at Moose Creek around 7:45 a.m. We walked a short distance up the Quartzville Road and then took a hard left directly at Mt. Bross' East Slopes. We experienced some unexpected trailbreaking, sinking to our knees and waists for several hundred vertical feet until we emerged from the trees and were staring our route in the face.
Finding an avalanche-safe option didn't require much thought and soon we were on the East Slopes, which were wind-blown and mostly bare. Be warned: the ridge looks short and sweet from CO 9, but in truth it's a heck of a slog. The wind didn't help. We'd noticed spindrift on North Star while driving to Alma earlier that morning, and had experienced a few gusts in the trees, but we held out hope the forecast would prove true. Then we started getting slammed on the ridge. Faces were covered, layers went on, and straight into the downslope winds we trudged. With the wind and several extended group pow-wows to talk about everything from gear to the possibility of getting frostbite on nether-regions, the 2,000-foot-plus ascent took a while.
We may or may not have summited Bross. Ahem. It's possible to bypass the summit around to Mt. Cameron. It is! Anyway, at one point we were on the East Slopes of Bross and then we were deposited either by foot or wind to the Bross-Cameron saddle. Ooooo. Magic.
Past Bross the wind only got worse. For the second time in my life, I put on my puffy to wear while ascending. Even Dan's mighty one-piece suit wasn't enough and he had to pile his down jacket on top of it.
The trail was bone dry over to Cameron. The standard route traverses across to the Cameron-Lincoln saddle and crosses a slope that had obviously slid several times. Rather than cross it, we just continued straight on up Cameron on dry scree and talus. We were in a brief wind shadow while hiking up from the saddle, but once on the summit we started getting blown around again.
Wind or no wind, it was a stunning day. Holy Cross looked like it was right in front of us. We didn't linger on Cameron long, knowing Mt. Lincoln was a short jaunt away. The worst wind we encountered all day was descending Cameron toward the Cameron-Lincoln saddle. No one had a wind meter, but it was so strong and sustained I could literally lean into it and it would hold me up. Luckily winds that strong didn't last long. When we reached the low-point in the saddle it calmed back down to 25-30 miles per hour sustained, so obviously we had another group pow-wow.
The grand prize of the day was 14,286-foot Mt. Lincoln. It was also the most fun section, in my opinion. A short climb over a false summit and a snowy ridge walk later, we were on top. We even found a large area sheltered completely from the wind and took a long time to enjoy the 20-degree temperatures and see-forever views. And also to Newton.
Down Lincoln we went. There was one large snow slope immediately after the summit with a scary snowpack, but it was shallow and I measured it at about 26 degrees. The first few went one-at-a-time, and then everyone else followed. We decided against following the meandering road and instead side-hilled across scree to intersect it down in the Cameron Amphitheater. From there, we followed Crest Drive out, cutting switchbacks at times.
Again, I implore you to stay on the road below treeline. The landowner was friendly and understanding. One of the main reasons I wrote this TR was to help keep people off his land.
From the intersection of Crest Drive and Quartzville Road it was a short road walk down to our cars, which we reached at something like 4:30. Sadly, Dan didn't wear The Suit into the South Park Saloon for our post-hike meal.
Thanks again to everyone in the crew for a terrific winter day and three (or two?) summits. I hope y'alls wind burn is healing in an expedient fashion. As an addendum, I learned while writing this that Dillon successfully followed our tracks (aka poached our trench) today.
Thumbnails for uploaded photos (click to open slideshow):
I was over on North Star while you were up there and am sooo glad we were only dealing with a few gusts, the 14ers must have blocked the worst of it. I def saw the group on the top of Lincoln.
Also glad the routes we all did were very avy safe after the scary forecast. Sometimes you just gotta get out and see for yourself before writing a weekend of climbing off.
Again, great job all around, looked like a fun group
Another classic TR from the Golden Boy. I can't say enough about the compatibility of the group members. Thanks to Jeff and Rob for organizing the trip. Oh, and no one needed any of their ”nether-regions” amputated - which always makes for a great day.
I'm no Tebow fanatic, but I need to see hard evidence/calculations how ”Newtoning” is at least 6x better than Tebowing.
Great job to the team! Goes without saying but enjoyed the read Jeff.
”the ”9-14 miles an hour with gusts to 20” winds in reality were ”so this is what skydiving must feel like” winds.” We got a little of this over the weekend also.
Thanks Jeff for the good and humorous TR. It was a great group and the first TR I was a part of! I hope I have honor of climbing with some (or all) of you guys again!
This was a fantastic day with an even better group, glad I was able to be a part of it. Would have been much tougher if I didn't have The Suit to take my mind off of the brutal wind!
Yesterday was an off-day of climbing for me! javascript:emoticon('')
While it was no Longs-El Diente traversejavascript:emoticon(''), it was nonetheless very enjoyable. Thanks for taking the time to put up a Trip Report, Jeff, and thank you for the personal compliment. Let me know when you're in search of a climbing partner in the future.
~Greg
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