Spring tides roll in waves of warmer temps as the ice season begins to end. As the rivers rise, my thoughts of kayaking climb from their dormant cave in my mind and the dreams of ice become a distant pull.
This Spring, the waves of warm and cold temps made it very difficult to shed my winter addiction and I found myself switching out my adventure quivers. In April, I was already paddling when Doug Shepherd called me for a quick trip to Alaska for an ascent on Mt. Huntington. After that, I was again ready for paddling season but somehow the cold temps continued to creep back into the forecast which kept my ice tools from getting dusty. I felt like I was dating two girls and was struggling to keep both happy; no matter what I did, the other one was pissed.
On June 4th, the forecast had been cold for about 4 or 5 days up high and I remembered an area I saw in the Fall that looked like it should have ice but just didn’t have the snow to feed it. I sent out a group text to some of my crew: “Dawn Patrol for ice in the morning. Be back at work by 10am.” A flurry of messages came back, “Liar,” “Not falling for that this time,” “Isn’t it kayak season?” and “Call me in November.” Chris Guyer finally bit. He is used to my tendency to sell him on bad ideas, only to end up walking in the woods for hours and hours. But, he is young and that youthful energy outweighs his common sense. We decide to meet in Red Lodge, MT at 4am.
I decide to make a recon trip up the mountain the prior day to scope out a line so we are not wasting time wandering around. Lucky for us, I find an incredible line only 15 minutes from the car. So far, everything was looking perfect for our quick morning mission. I decided to hangout until the evening for some cool shots of the clouds moving across the Beartooths.
Morning came quickly and we were stoked for the possibility of climbing ice in June, only 15 minutes from the road. Naturally, Chris wasn’t sure I was telling the truth.
Once at the base of the route, the reality of ice climbing in June set in and we were beyond excited. I wasn’t sure of the protocol on climbing free-hangers in June, but it looked good and were energized to get after it.
After the second pitch, we had one more long pitch of easy terrain to a small steep curtain of ice that put us on top of the cliff.
Chris and I finished the route and he got to work on time, just like I said he would.
The route ended up being 170m and was one of the most enjoyable routes I climbed all season. As we got to the car, we were grinning ear-to-ear like school kids who had just pulled of the best prank of all time. Climbing ice in June…15 minutes from the car…in Wyoming. We tried going back the next day to tick off another route, but high pressure brought warmer temps and within 24hrs, everything had melted out. I guess it was finally time to hang up the tools and grab my paddle.
Nice. These photos are getting me psyched for the coming winter. If only ice would hang around here until late June…. Not a chance. Nice work getting after it!
-Dave
Very nice photography, it looks like a great area for backcounty skiing…I’m get’in the itch.