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Thread: TR: first monoski descent of Mt. Baker

  1. #1
    Join Date
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    TR: first monoski descent of Mt. Baker

    The high pressure system that has been over the PNW for the past two weeks was still hanging around for this weekend. My buddy Greg and I decided to try a winter ascent of Mt. Baker, a 10,778 volcano in the North Cascades. Cold temperatures with no no precipitation had stabalized the snow pack, so conditions were safe for avi and crevasse crossing.

    The Heliotrip trail climbs from below tree level, around 3,500 ft I think, to some great bowls with fantastic views.

    Skinning up with Baker in the background.


    Skiing conditions weren't promising. Mostly punchy wind crust or very hard pack/ ice.


    Because daylight hours are pretty limited, we decided to make it a two day venture.
    Our bivy setup around 7,000 feet.


    Baker from camp with my new skis (thanks to JustCuz)


    Things weren't looking so good the next morning, with a lenticular cloud hovering over the peak and an obvious front moving in.



    The wind was vicous on the way up, it started to snow, and our extremities were getting cold. We were about to throw in the towel around 9,000 feet, but the sun broke out again so we pushed on.

    A shot from the summit.


    We started the descent towards the cloud level, enjoying the sunshine while it lasted. Skiing was crap, but better than bootpacking.
    Me

    Greg


    At about 9,000 feet, I dropped into a face that had been smoothed by wind, the first nice crust of the day. With a little too much speed, I skied over a rollover and onto a patch of rock hard, chundery patch of hell. I rattled across it, but my ski popped off in the process and I tumbled face first down a steep pitch. Luckily, it flattened out less than a hundred feet below and I stopped my slide. I heaved a sigh of relief when I saw the ski had wedged against a chunk of ice above me. So I began bootpacking up towards it, when I noticed that my binding was still firmly clicked into my boot. FUCK. The metal had attatchment at the toe piece had ripped off, causing the crash. I was thanking God I didn't slide off a cliff, but cursing my luck for being 5000+ feet above our car with only one ski.

    the binder. Fritschi Freeride...is this warranty-able? Has this happened to anyone else?


    The rest of the way was skied on one ski. The firm crust actually made it easier until I started punching through it lower down. My legs have never gotten such a workout.



    But I was still able to maintain form at times


    Greg was a buddy and carried my ski to make it easier for me.




    Into the clouds...if you think skiing crust sucks, try skiing it with a heavy pack, no visibility, and one ski. GPS rocks.


    We made it back to the car after 3.5 hours of descending, just in time to beat the dark.

  2. #2
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    impressive

  3. #3
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    Sounds challenging but sounds like you had fun too.

    By the way, how was the BD bivy and what temp sleeping bag did you use? 0 degree + clothes?
    Last edited by Dug; 02-21-2006 at 02:16 AM.

  4. #4
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    Excellent! Nice pic! BD will warranty that binding. They are VERY good with their warranty dept.
    Last edited by Trackhead; 02-21-2006 at 02:21 AM.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZGnzo
    the binder. Fritschi Freeride...is this warranty-able? Has this happened to anyone else?
    I guess it happens when your ski gets compressed, the binding releases into walking mode and the long lever of the binding just twists (???) off that metal piece. same thing happened to me, except for: my ski took off to the bottom of the valley and it was in deep heavy snow. which makes resting your tired leg really comfortable.

    oh, fritschi replaced it without asking for a reciept and it was obviously a pretty worn of set.

    nice tr.

  6. #6
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    Another reason for nx21's. Bet you went into walk-mode and then ripped the toe out. Also another good reason to carry duct tape, you could have taped your boot to the ski.

    Thanks for TR, cool shit.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dug
    Sounds challenging but sounds like you had fun too.

    By the way, how was the BD bivy and what temp sleeping bag did you use? 0 degree + clothes?
    The BD bivy was Greg's...seemed to work out for him fine. I used a 20 degree bag + a liner (so maybe 0 degree) plus fleece pants and a light fleece longsleeve, and I was toasty, but I tend to be more hot blooded than most people at night.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by BlurredElevens
    Also another good reason to carry duct tape, you could have taped your boot to the ski.
    We did have duct tape, and the idea was definitely considered but passed up because I was afraid of torquing or edge-slicing out of the duct tape and losing a runaway ski with no brakes. I've already lost one ski this year and can't really afford to lose another.

  9. #9
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    Really impressive, congrats on making both up and down!
    There are no trees, only lines I choose not to take.

  10. #10
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    Great TR with beautiful pictures. Too bad about your ski, glad you got down ok.
    In drove this drunken madman and stopped on a dime! Unfortunately the dime was in Mr. Rococo's pocket!

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZGnzo
    Mt. Baker, a 10,778 volcano in the North Cascades
    Wow, sounds like a cool mountain, I might have to check it out sometime. Do they get much snow there?

    And who knew there were VOLCANOS in America???

    Crazy stuff.

  12. #12
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    Nice TR

    I was just thinking, "that's not a monoski - that's a snowboard"...
    fur bearing, drunk, prancing eurosnob

  13. #13
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    what a great TR!!!!

  14. #14
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    Nicely done.

    Did You have to switch legs on the way down or did you gnar it on one leg all the way ?
    Semper in Pulveris .... Only the depth varies

  15. #15
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    Thumbs up

    Nice work! Way to push on despite the conditions, weather, etc.

  16. #16
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    That sucks,

    My Diamir Frish broke at Berthoud pass couple months ago and I only had to descend 700' and that was plenty pain in the ass.

    They should buy you dinner for your hassle.

  17. #17
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    those are my old skis! hope they serve ya well, looks like you got a workout!
    Hunter
    Quote Originally Posted by 3centshort View Post
    I figure when he realized he was still 10-15 feet off as he flew the K his asshole puckered so hard it ate his nuts
    Quote Originally Posted by iceman View Post
    In the other scenario, you would be like "Peanut Butter, cool, fuck I'm stuck HELP ME HELP ME HELP ME HELP ME oh fuck I'm screwed, but at least I have time to think about how screwed I am. I guess that is a blessing. FUCK NO IT'S NOT A BLESSSING I'M STUCK AND I'M DYING.

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by ZGnzo
    The rest of the way was skied on one ski.
    Nice job, Bode!

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by BlurredElevens
    Another reason for nx21's. Bet you went into walk-mode and then ripped the toe out.
    I've got the Freerides as well, and I went into walk mode while landing a 10 footer at Whistler. Needless to say, I couldn't turn and ate it. There were some other rippers behind me and one guy told me his friend had drilled a small hole in the heel lock and added a release pin. Any of you done this? I'm thinking I should do it, as I ski too many lines where that happening could spell doom.
    yes I'm tha pirate pilot
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  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Highway Star
    I love freerides, especially when they break when you're skiing.
    ..........
    Buy nice things here.
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  21. #21
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    Cool TR. Nice to see someone going for a peak.

  22. #22
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    Thumbs up

    Good Job on the Summit!

  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by A-wreck
    ..........
    HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!

  24. #24
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    Nice TR. Glad you made it down safely. Make sure the rear piece was mounted correctly. If it were forward at all, it would be way more susceptible for a ski flex release. Stiffer skis or skis with a binding plate are less susceptible as well.

    The '06-'07 version of the Freeride solves this completely along with skiing just like an alpine binding in feel.

  25. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by wildstyle
    Nicely done.

    Did You have to switch legs on the way down or did you gnar it on one leg all the way ?
    It was probably 80% on my right leg, and then I'd switch over for a few minutes to recover. My left leg seemed pretty damn uncordinated and weak compared to the right.

    As far as the binding goes, I had lots of problems with them popping into touring mode on my previous skis (super flexi pocket rockets). Since getting them remounted on the CMH's, I've skied them a few times inbounds pretty hard without any releasing into touring mode.

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