I've been looking at this line for a few months, and it was either not enough snow, early on, or bad(good actually) weather, most of February and March.
10,000 ft peak with about 4,000 vertical, 3,000 of which on the main face, most of which over 40-45 degrees.
It's in the French Pyrenees, where I'm staying for a year, or maybe two.
So, last night, checked the weather, and it looked like a go.
5 am wakeup, and 7:30 start.
Access was easy, 20 minutes on dirt until I could put my skins on.
Followed by an hour and a half of sketchy skinning, right above a nasty canyon, where falling would have been a BAD idea.
Finally, on the face itself.
Views were ok.
Looking up, only another 2,000 feet to go.
Unfortunately, booting up was interesting, winter snow, and a lot of it, up to my knees and hips in places.
Of course, so decided to go light and I did not bring my verts, so I was wallowing at a rate of maybe 400 feet an hour.
This is after I was done congratulating myself on how fast I was skinning[emoji1]
Then it started to snow!
So, faced with the possibility of skiing in a whiteout, I decided to live to ski another day.
Time to thank again to the people that designed the g3 I ions to be adj easy to step in, since the place I picked to put my skis on was close to 50-degrees.
So, time for my first turn. Even though I was sinking to my thighs when climbing, it skied firm!
WTF?
Oh, and I forgot to mention that the lower half of the face had slid, so I was skiing on the avie bed or in the few area that did not slide.
The slides looked to be about 3-4 days old, when we had a warming event, and since then we had cold
weather, with more snow, so I was feeling good about the stability.
The face skied good, certainly compared to the wet breakable crust on the flat lower part.
The only thing that worked was to start my turn with a little jump, made again interesting by skiing next to the nasty ravine.
Glad to have attempted it, and kind of anxious to try it again later this week, with verts this time.
And this might be my next project.
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