SKAGIT ALPINE July, 2002 Newsletter of the Skagit Alpine
Club Volume 40, Issue 7
ANNUAL SUMMER POTLUCK JULY 11 5:30 AT
BOWMAN'S BAY The Annual SAC Potluck is postponed a week this year so as not
to fall on the 4th. So mark your calendars for Thursday, July 11th at 5:30 pm
at Bowman's Bay. Plates, silverware, cups, & juices will be provided. I
know what you're thinking. What shall I bring? Bring: If your last
name begins with A-G = desert If your last name begins with H-Q =
salad If your last name begins with R-Z = main dish People that
have middle names that begin with letters J - P should arrive barefoot.
Guys with middle initials R - Z will wear kilts. Optional attire for
all others. New members and mountaineering class students are especially
welcome!
SECRETARY'S REPORT: Lynn Postler opened the meeting last
month at Jefferson School. The meeting place is still top on the list of
business. July's meeting date falls on the 4th this year, so it was decided to
reschedule it to the following week, July 11th. July is our annual potluck at
Bowman's Bay in Anacortes. Find us in the shelter that is filled with food,
drink, and assorted dogs. With great weather, plan to come early and bring
kayaks and/or water toys. Otherwise, you'll find us gathered Œround the
shelter's fireplace!
In August, we decided to meet at the 911 building
on College Ave in Mount Vernon (east of the college). Lots of people showed up
there for Fred Beckey's slide presentation of climbing in China. Not only was
Fred's talk wonderful, the place looked like a great spot to meet.
Unfortunately, it is only available on Wednesday, which is a conflict for many.
Jefferson School may become our usual home. If so, please keep in mind that e
need to be courteous and make sure that we are cleaning up after ourselves (no
cookie crumbs). We also need to be out by 9 pm and no later. Also, no dogs,
alcohol, and the kitchen use is on a case by case basis.
The exciting
topic on the agenda was a proposal by Allen Grenz for a new SAC website. This
is detailed later in the newsletter, but the big news is - - - Check out
www.skagitalpineclub.com !!!!!
Doug Stufflebeam was the featured speaker
who brought us highlights of the trips he does through International Collegiate
Expeditions . We vicariously skied in South America, wandered the jungles of
Ecuador, mountain biked high passes in Africa, and kayaked Alaska. He's been
doing this since 1977, developing enduring friendships with participants and
locals along the way. This is the way to live. Thank you, Doug!
SKAGIT
ALPINE HAS A NEW WEBSITE! At the last meeting, Allen Grenz presented his
proposal for a new Skagit Alpine website. It looks slick. It's easy to find.
It will cost us. After great deliberation, the members unanimously agreed to
give the green light! Tom Winn has been doing this for the club for years and
has done a great job. We thank you much, Tom, for keeping the site up for so
long, free to the club.
So why switch? Currently the site can be found
at http://home1.gte.net/res17qb5/sac.htm This isn't an address that comes to
mind readily when you meet people on the trail who are interested in the club.
There is no way to search for it on the web. You could tatoo it on your arm,
but it's long. Allen has offered to take on the development and upkeep of the
site with help from his web developer at his office at no cost to the club. The
website would have it's own domain name, allowing it to be located by search
engines. Like Tom's current website, you'd be able to read the latest
newsletter, find links to conservation issues, and find valuable trip
information. You'd also be able to post and view photos from trips. He wants
to make this a valuable information source that also serves to draw new members
and promote the club. Here's his synopsis:
http://www.skagitalpineclub.com
Advantages Disadvantages
€ Promotes our club €
Costs money to host € Valuable information source
Domain Registration is $35/yr. € Search engines will
locate Hosting for Fidalgo Networking is $180/yr €
Donated design plus a one-time $50 set up
fee € Possibly draw new members € We can afford this without
raising membership fee (1 yr = 15 memberships) or We can offer advertising
banners to local outdoor stores to help defray the costs What does he need?
YOUR PARTICIPATION!!!! Allen is looking for someone with artistic flavor to
help with ideas and design. He's also looking for trip photos, reports, or
recent events relating to the outdoors. - If you go to look at it, please
let Allen know if the download time is short or long the first time you go
there. Thanks. Allen Grenz President/G.M. OASYS,
Inc. allen@gotooasys.com 422-7593
CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES!
Below are the 2002 SAC/SVC Mountaineering Course graduates who made it
through lousy weather, grueling hikes, weekly classes, and more than a few
inspiring climbs: Alicia Brunson James Caprio Katherine
Clark Stephen Clark Leah Dietzen Larry Hoover Don
Jenkins Melissa McKay Margaret Miller Kean Mohler
Megan Reedy Meredith Schulte Richard Schulte Kari Sherman
Laurie Sherman Paul Sherman Thomas Veitch Jill Youde
Thanks goes out to Rick Rogers and all the instructors and assistants
who volunteered their time and skills. Each year, it is the efforts of Alpine
Club members that make the class a success. (and provides us all with more
potetial climbing partners!)
TRIP REPORTS: There's More Than
one Hike on Sourdough Mountain by Eric Sandbo Sourdough, just above the
town of Diablo, seems to have a reputation. Something to do with steep, hot,
dry, endless switchbacks, I guess. The fact is, the switchbacks can be rendered
bearable, the views are spectacular, and there's more variety than you'd expect
from just reading the guidebook. You just have to be willing to explore and
push yourself. The Classic: This is the trail that Sourdough's
reputation is built on. Yes, it's steep, and the switchbacks are uncountable.
It's 5 _ miles to the top, with a 5,100' elevation gain. I've heard people say
it's too long to do in a day, and it's not worth carrying camping gear for an
overnighter. There are a couple of things you can do to make it bearable, even
enjoyable. 1.: Get out of bed early. The first 3,000' of elevation gain
is on a SW-facing slope. You start this one at 11:00 a.m. on a hot July day,
and you'll want to swear off hiking forever. Do a little arithmetic when you
plan for this one: How early do you have to start to finish that 3,000' by, say,
9:30? 2.: Travel light. If you carry camping gear, it will take you all
day to reach the summit, and of course you'll have to camp. Carry a light day
pack (with lots of water), and start early, and you can reach the top early
enough to enjoy the views, and easily enough to enjoy the hike. Here's how
you start: drive Hwy. 20 until you find yourself beside Gorge Lake. Where the
highway turns right to cross the lake, you stay left and drive into the town of
Diablo. The town has an indoor swimming pool right at the base of Sourdough.
The trail begins right behind the building (about 900' elev.). You should
probably drive past the pool to the tourist parking lot near the
powerhouse. Walk back to the pool, go around the left end of the building,
and you're on your way. Don't expect your heels to touch the ground for a
while. At 3,800' the trail crosses the ridge crest eastward, heading for a
crossing of Sourdough Creek. Don't go that way in early season; avalanches down
that valley have swept all the way down to Diablo Lake, rearranging the resort
cabins on the shore. A safer choice is to leave the trail at 3,800', following
an unmarked trail straight up the ridge crest northward. You'll miss the
lookout, but get all the views. In mid-summer and later, you can stay on the
trail across the gully and up to the lookout (5,985'). The upper sections
of the trail gave you hints of the scenery, with views of Diablo Lake, Ruby
Mtn., Colonial Peak, and Davis peak. (Look in Beckey's guidebook to see which
SAC member did the first ascent of Davis' NE face, the only place in Washington
where the terrain drops more than a vertical mile in less than one horizontal
mile.) When you top out, the views expand to include Ross Lake, Jack Mtn., the
Picketts, and more. Sit around, take pictures, eat lunch, go down. € USGS
maps Diablo Dam and Ross Dam € 100 Hikes in the North Cascades, The
Mountaineers Alternative 1: Continue North Sourdough is not some simple
hump of a peak; it's a ridge, and we've just touched the southern tip of it, so
far. Remember back at 3,800', where we had that choice of avoiding the
Sourdough Creek gully by going straight up the spur ridge? Do that. You'll hit
the crest at the same elevation as the lookout, but over a mile NW of it. From
there you can wander rocky, open meadows NW for about 3 _ miles before you drop
below 6,000' again. The views are astonishing and endless. So are the
choices of perfect, level, protected campsites, if you brought a filter pump for
purifying snowmelt. Years ago, when the mountains were even higher, Mike
Woodmansee dragged John Semrau & I on a killer day hike along Sourdough
Ridge. We left Diablo about 5 a.m. Sunday, hiked up and along the ridge,
dropped west to a pass at 4,920'+, and picked our way up between the cliffs to
the summit of Elephant Butte, 7,380'. Then we went back. Racing daylight along
the crest of Sourdough, our only concern was that we find the trail before dark.
I think it was past sunset when we found it, but there it was, and we knew we
were fine. We followed it down by headlamp, and reached the car about 1:00
Monday morning. I was kind of tuckered at work that day. Mike sat down
with the maps afterward and counted every contour line we'd crossed. He says we
gained 11,000' that day. Lost that much, too, of course. I haven't counted.
That route is one of the approaches into the Southern Picketts. It's hard, but
so are all the other approaches. € USGS maps Diablo Dam and Mount
Prophet Alternative 2: Continue East From the lookout, look down to the
ridge that extends E. That's where the Forest Service wants you to camp up
here, and there are some nice sites. Again, be prepared to purify
snowmelt. There's also a trail along the ridge known as Sourdough Lookout
Pack Trail, or Pierce Mountain Way, after the 4,973' lump at the E. terminus of
the ridge. The trail stays on the crest for about _ mile from the lookout, then
switchbacks down the south side to connect with a little sub-ridge at 4,000'.
That slope burned back in the Eighties, and new undergrowth was beginning to
obscure the trail when I hiked it. Find out if the trail's still being
maintained. The trail descends ENE at a knee-friendly pace to a junction with
the West Bank Ross Lake Trail at 2,100', near Cougar Island. Unfortunately, by
this time you are long out of water, and the lake is still 500'
below. Turn right, and follow the trail south and west 2 _ miles before
you reach the lakeshore. I usually avoid drinking from lakes with a lot of
campgrounds and powerboats on them but this was an exception. I dunked, I
guzzled, and I filled my bottle. You're only a few hundred feet from Ross
Dam. Go there. From the N. end of the dam there appears to be a trail heading
W. Don't. I tried it, and it dead-ends. Cross the dam, then follow the road
to the right. A trail leads _ mile and 500' uphill to Hwy. 20 and a big parking
lot. If you had two cars, this would end the trip, but you'd miss out on a
great secret. Skip that trail, and continue down the road to the
powerhouse. There's a dock on the river there, and a foot suspension bridge
across the water. It doesn't look complete on the map, but a good trail climbs
to the level of the highway, but on the N. side of Diablo Lake. It offers
spectacular views of the gorge and easy, level walking all the way to Diablo
Dam. Follow the road past the dam don't cross it to near the top of the
incline railway, where you'll find a trail down to the picnic tables and your
car in Diablo. The whole loop is 19 miles, I think. I did it in just over
12 hours with a fanny pack, tennis shoes, and not enough water. That last
stretch, from Ross dam to Diablo, could be a good lowland winter hike. Don't
bring little kids, though. Parts of the trail are very exposed, high above the
lake. € USGS maps Diablo Dam, Ross Dam, and Pumpkin Mtn. Alternative 3:
Winter Take a good look at Alternative 1 on the maps, and you'll see that
it's one of the least avalanche-prone routes in the North Cascades. We once
tried a 3-day snowshoe ascent of Elephant Butte over New Years weekend. We make
it onto Sourdough Ridge and set up camp with a terrific view of well,
everything. Remember that advice about travelling light? Forget it. This was
back in the Wool Age. I brought a thermometer. It reached -22°F outside
that night, but it was four degrees warmer inside the tent. I did OK with a hot
water bottle inside my duck down bag, a wool balaclava over my face, and my
sleeping bag cinched to about a 4-inch opening. I did have a problem with my
breath forming frost on my eyelashes. Once every few minutes a crystal would
drop into the puddle of water over an eye, and a drop of icewater would roll
down that side of my head. Everybody else hunkered deep into their
sleeping bags. Moisture in their breath degraded their insulation, and by
morning they were too cold to consider spending another night up there. We had
a good hike down. I would have enjoyed snowshoeing along the ridge, but there's
no way I could have made it to Elephant Butte & back, even from our camp.
That ridge cries out for skis. Alternative 4: Stay Low Say you don't
have time to hike up a vertical mile. You're driving across the Cascades with
non-hiker family or friends and just want to give them a little close-up sample
of deep forest to complement the grand views from the drive. Pull into Diablo,
find the northernmost street, and park. Walk across 100 feet of lawn between
two houses, and you're on the Stetattle Creek trail. The creek beside you is
cold, fast, and astonishingly clear, even by North Cascades standards. Thick
moss hangs from vine maple overhead. In just a few hundred feet the trail
leaves the creek to climb to dry pine and salal forest on the side of Sourdough.
It goes for miles up the valley. I haven't hiked it all, but I can tell you
parts of it offer good jogging, and that there's an avalanche gully that fairly
reeks of educational opportunity. I found almost no views of that NE face of
Davis, but there may be more, further up the trail. But that's the story
of hiking, isn't it? There's always more further up the trail. The trail
mileages above are simple eyeball estimates from the maps. Don't blame me if a
section I said was 3 _ miles turns out to be 3 5/8. -Eric
UPCOMING
OUTINGS June 24-28- Trail Maintenance with WTA on the Hidden Peaks Trail
Come any or all days this week to do seriously fun and rewarding work
on puncheon (that's a wooden walkway in a boggy area). We'll be replacing the
rest of the old slimy puncheon in the boggy area just before leaving the woods
and entering the valley. You may remember slipping at least once in this area.
Sign up on the Washington Trails Association web site www.wta.org or call Tom
Winn for more info at 360-466-3706. Many other dates all over the
state.
June 29 - Trail Maintenance with the Pacific Northwest Trail group
The PNT is a very organized and fun group of people. They bring all
the tools for trail work. Meet at the Cook Road park-n-Ride. Bring work gloves
and lunch. Done by 3 PM so you can still go out dancing Saturday night! For
more info, call Lynn and Sancho at 428-4237 July 13 - Sauk Mountain
1300 eg, 4 mi. RT. Wide open switchbacks and meadows with great views in
all directions as well as down to the Skagit Valley to the west. 8am meet time.
Call Ruth if interested at 360-428-6813 or rib@cascadeisp.net. Late
Sept. or Columbus Day - Baker via Coleman - Naked ice (the ice, not you)
glacier climb, Coleman rt Baker 3 days sometime late Sept or Columbus Day
weekend, depending on ice and weather conditions. Climbing on hard ice when
conventional ice ax arrest is impossible. Will practice picket and screw
placements, advanced footwork and protection techniques. Pre -reqs of 2
previous Cascade volcano summits and/or trip leader invitation. Who's
invitation? That would be Rick Rogers, 856-4517 or ricknbeth@valleyint.com
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