Everyone has a first climb, for me that was Mount Adams. 2023 was when I decided I wanted to do more splitboarding. I recruited Keenan and we did a few afterschool touring laps, along with some mellow tours in the Snoqualmie backcountry and up to Camp Muir. As the snow started to melt and spring arrived, I decided skiing the SW chutes of Mt Adams would be a great objective for Keenan and I. Since we didn’t have the overnight gear or experience, we would have to do it in a day. On the last weekend of May, a solid weather window came where we were free. On Saturday, we threw our gear in the car and started the long drive.
Mount Adams is nestled away in Southern Washington along the Cascade Crest. The drive is 6 hours, requiring one to pass through Portland . We got the car 2 miles from cold springs TH where a mound of snow signified our camp for the night. After scarfing down dinner, we sorted out the gear and made the best of the uneven trunk. We figured we could keep that same 1000’/hour pace and planned to leave at 03:00, summit around 10:00, and be back at the car in the early afternoon. Alarms were set and we settled into the back of the CRV.
Novice Car Campers
3am came quickly and we were soon walking. A full moon illuminated the mountain, towering above as we slogged up the road towards it. We reached skinnable snow within an hour and stashed our boots. Two naive young ski mountaineers(and I won't deny I'm still naive) on their first big objective. We reached a steep portion on route and threw on our ski crampons. Working our way up, Keenan split from the route and had to front point steep snow. I’d been reading too much Freedom of the Hills and yelled at him to use French technique since I thought it was safer. Quickly, we leveled out and could see the lunch counter and the climb up to Pikers Peak ahead.
Keenan skinning towards lunch counter with Mount Hood Staring out from behind
Once we got to the base of the Pikers Peak headwall, the true slog began. Thousands of feet of bootpack. We threw on crampons, pulled out ice-axes, and started up. Being a perfect spring weekend, we were joined by the masses. We were the masses and it was quite demoralizing to be the slowest ones on the mountain. We had considered ourselves fit before, but mountain athletes have a different level of sustained cardio.
A humbled keenan. Shit is tough.
Once we reached Pikers, there was a nice crowd waiting for the chutes to corn up. Keenan took a break while I darted towards the summit. He called towards me on my way down, but I didn’t hear. I got back to Pikers and took a break, watching as parties started making their way down. I radioed to Keenan but to no response. I got worried and kept radioing, but never received a response. Finally Keenan poked out, and I skied over at him, annoyed he hadn't responded. It wasn’t his fault however, as the preset channels had somehow switched on one of our units.
Standing on the Summit, my first volcano
From here, we started down thousands of feet of corn. The 35 degree slab of snow that seemed to extend forever. There were a few bumpy sections and random bits of harder snow but for the most part, it was extremely consistent. As we quickly lost altitude, we took breaks to de-layer. The conditions were primo, and we only dealt with slush for the last 500’.
Skiing down the Chutes, a placeholder from a video
Once we arrived at the bottom we had a long way out. I blasted through a field of sun cupped rocks, and we started the traverse t. By now it was about 14:30. We were a good deal behind schedule but still with lots of time to go till dark. We joined another group of skiers on the traverse, suffering through sticky skins and scorching heat. Neither me nor keenan had sunscreen, and we’d feel the effects after.
Another Party following the traverse with Helens looming in the background
Our Path to Pizza
At 17:00, we emerged from our cars victorious. We dashed down the crappy forest road and arrived at trout lake for a solid Pizza. It was our first true climb and while we were delirious, we were also destroyed from a 14 hour day. We enjoyed the cheesy taste of victory and slumped onto the tables. Another group that had sumitted sat nearby, tired but with energy. At the time, I couldn’t comprehend how you could do that and still have energy for laughs and drinks. We arrived home around midnight sunday. As I suffered through the first hours of monday morning at school, I couldn’t help but be grateful for the weekend well spent, and an incredible first mountaineering experience.
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