[pct-l] Hood and Rainier

jomike at cot.net jomike at cot.net
Tue Apr 5 12:35:42 CDT 2011


Message: 7
Date: Mon, 04 Apr 2011 14:39:33 -0400
From: bighummel at aol.com
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Hood and Rainier on a Thru-hike
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Message-ID: <8CDC10EC6BF53F3-1698-1FC58 at webmail-m070.sysops.aol.com>
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Jeff Zimmerman, Paul Hacker and I climbed Mt Rainier in '77; the lowest snow year on record. It was melted back down to the core glacial ice and made for a great climb, considering the great shape we were in having walked about 2,000 miles to get there! I climbed middle Sister also, an easy scramble up.  In 2009, after meeting with the NGS film crew, Jeff Zimmerman joined Paul and I for a Mt Shasta attempt in September, against local recommendations.  We went up the northern-most ridge, camped at about 10,500 and Jeff and I left the next morning for a summit attempt.  A very high velocity wind, cold as hell was freezing us and shifting our weight off balance at 11,500.  We found the glacier that we had to cross melted back to core, hard glacial ice, so hard that a full swing of my long wooden ice axe just bounced off with a minor impact point.  We decided to back off and climb under better conditions another year.  
Now, that area has seen a LOT of snow this year and this may help the climbing conditions further into summer.  JoAnn, pipe in here on your conditions, if you please.
I highly recommend a PNW volcano summit attempt on your thru-hike, IF you have previous climbing experience and can either borrow, rent or have technical gear sent in.  You'll find that your conditioning is the least of your concerns.
Greg Hummel


Samuel Ward and his brother have made arrangements with me for a climb. I also suggested Lassen which is a steep hike, not a climb. Yes, the mountain has received 166% of normal snow; just read in this a.m. paper out of Redding. I have an ice axe if anyone needs when for the climb.

are we there yet


...going to the mountains is going home.

John Muir


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