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Report Type |
Full |
Peak(s) |
Mt. Wilson - 14,256 feet
|
Date Posted |
06/19/2014 |
Modified |
06/21/2014 |
Date Climbed |
06/12/2014 |
Author |
Johnson |
Additional Members |
unclegar, sstratta |
Learning to Walk Again. (or, are we there yet?) |
WATCH VIDEO HERE!
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Song explanation at the end of the written report
El Diente to Mt Wilson traverse
2013 was to be the year that I would do El Diente and Mount Wilson.
"Was".
June 23rd was a turning point in my climbing "career". The week before I had just come off a successful climb of the West Ridge Direct on Little Bear and the summer season was shaping up nicely. Then Steve Gladbach passed away. He was supposed to carry the fried chicken on my finisher later that summer. In all seriousness, Steve was one of the first people I met on 14ers.com and was such a positive influence in helping me along on this quest. It seemed as though in every previous climbing death my brain would rationalize the "data" and believe I could just be careful enough and avoid calamity. Then, Superman died. How do I process that? Well, maybe not very well....maybe well enough. Not sure.
I had El Diente and Mount Wilson on the calendar 6 times with various partners between the middle of July to the middle of September. Between 1) being rattled by Steve's death and worry for leaving my family without a dad/husband 2) the reputation these peaks have for being particularly loose and dangerous 3) the 9 hour drive to the trailhead, I wanted ideal conditions for the climb. The weather pattern though was exactly opposite my climbing days. Maybe I should just forget this stupid thing altogether...
This year I was getting out with Alan somewhat regularly. He is training for his K2 climb and I joked that I was getting ready for my El D climb. Our schedules, as well as Garys, aligned to head south the first week of June but beta was scarce and from flying over and looking down it looked like full on winter. Again I found myself not wanting the drive that far to "take a look" and have questionable conditions. I pushed it back another 10 days or so for the 12th of June. Alan's schedule wouldn't allow it.
Fresh off her successful Denali climb, Sarah sent a note several days before on Facebook to me asking how my El D climb was. I said, "We're going Thursday. Wanna go? Happily she said yes. Our team was complete.
Arriving at the Kilpacker Trailhead at 8:00 pm Wednesday evening we quickly set up camp and hit the sack. The 3 a.m. wakeup wasn't much of a "wakeup" as I had barely slept. On the trail by 3:45 thinking "If we can knock this thing out we could drive back to Fort Collins this afternoon"! Our progress was slow. We made it to the summit of El Diente in 7 hours. I told Sarah as we approached the summit that I was calling off the traverse. I felt our speed was too slow so safely do the traverse. After a team meeting and a phone call to Britt and his encouraging words and prayer for our safety and success I was more optimistic. We decided that since Garys strength was scrambling and route finding we would make our final decision at the base of the Organ Pipes. Once there we decided to go for it. The weather looked perfect and the snow seemed ok. As it turned out, the sun beating on the south face deteriorated quickly. Between horrendous snow and the route not making sense from our route description photos we made painfully slow progress on the traverse. We thought that a worse case scenario would be 3.5 hours. At 4 hours and 45 min with snow falling from a grey cloud I looked down a snow gully and asked Sarah if we should consider throwing in the towel. We decided that the gully would be a good bail point but that we should try to get the dang mountain done! With that, we pooled what physical and mental reserves we had left and gained the ridge. From there it was several moves over exposed terrain to reach the summit. It took 12 hours. I gave a victory yell and someone broke down somewhat as I looked back on the previous year with all its pain and loss.
We descended one of the north gullies which intersected the very gully we were considering bailing on. 5 hours and one twisted knee on my part and we reached our camp. 17 hours in total. So much for driving home that night! I drank a G'Night, got the grill going, cooked chicken and salmon, built a fire and relished our 17 hours of Type II fun. I could not have done this without Gary and Sarah. Thanks for sharing this journey with me.
The song that I have placed with this video has special significance for me. I was thinking of "Time Stand Still" by RUSH but "Walk" came to the forefront at the time of Steve's death. On numerous occasions while working out or running this song would come on my mp3 player and I would break down as I thought of him. Like any song, the lyrics aren't perfect but this was the anthem for many of my workouts getting ready for this very climb. I hope you enjoy the video.
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