Trip Report
AK May 2015 - West Butt, SW Ridge of Frances, and W Face of Kahiltna Queen
Monday June 8, 2015 1:25pm
This May, Kyle and I went to the Alaska Range. We intended to climb the West Buttress of Denali and attempt the Cassin Ridge, but we only got the weather window for the WB. Instead of the Cassin, we descended to the airstrip and climbed the SW Ridge of Mt. Frances (5.8) and the West Face of Kahiltna Queen (60 deg snow&ice). We landed on the glacier on the 3rd and flew out on the 29th. It was an awesome trip.


Visit on photobucket.com


Yrstruly

Visit on photobucket.com


Kyle (that’s “Doctor Kyle, PhD” to you)

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


There should be a team somewhere on the Moonflower in this picture, but I’ve never found them.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com





PART I: The West Buttress

We brought WAY too much stuff. Mostly food, which was at least good for moral and karma when we gave it away.

Visit on photobucket.com


Butter was the secret to our success.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Prior to the trip, I never truly realized that hauling loads on the glacier would be the defining experience of the West Butt. And it sucks. We single hauled the first day, which was brutal, then switched to double carries.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The spell of good weather which started a day or so before we landed ended after we got to 11K. A storm blew in for 2.5 days.

Visit on photobucket.com


On the first day of the storm, we got a load to the top of Motorcycle Hill before caching it and turning around due to wind and low visibility. We spent the next two days in the tent.

Link to video of the storm:
https://vimeo.com/130123135


Visit on photobucket.com


We did not have the cook tent set up, so we had to improvise a little.

Visit on photobucket.com


Once the storm broke, we took two days to move camp to 14K.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Early in the season, 14K was positively quaint. The first ranger patrol of the season had been stuck at 11K with us. Only a few of the first teams of the season had reached 14K before the storm, and no one had summitted since Lonnie Dupre in January.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We rested, then took an acclimatization run to the top of the fixed lines.


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


More weather moved in. NOAA even called the NPS to warn them of serious (80mph) winds forecasted. The NPS folks came over from their campsite and hinted that we should all build massive snow walls, pronto. Which we did.

Visit on photobucket.com


We also ate bacon and made quesadillas.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


During a lull in the weather, this little guy appeared while we were reinforcing snow walls. He seemed content to chill where he was.

Visit on photobucket.com


After two days, the weather broke late in the morning and Kyle and I set out to put in a boot-pack to the fixed lines. If we felt good, and the weather cooperated, we'd go farther. We made it almost to the 17K camp before we hit our turn-around time.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The next day we headed out intending to make it to Denali Pass, or further if the weather was good and we felt strong. We reached the 17K camp in roughly four hours and started up the Autobahn, punching through wind-crust the whole way.

Visit on photobucket.com


Looking back at the 17K camp and the ridge.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The wind was blowing right down the face and filled in my tracks as I made them.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Although the day started out very windy—a few parties and soloists left for the summit before us, but all turned around as the day went on—the wind dropped as Kyle and I rounded Denali Pass. The cloud over the summit cleared out and somewhere around the Football Field it seemed like we were almost there.

Visit on photobucket.com


Then we spent an hour-and-a-half postholing up Pig Hill through more windcrust—at times thigh deep. Awful.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We summitted 11 hours after we left the 14K camp.

Link to summit video:
https://vimeo.com/129469379

As luck would have it, just as we reached the top, a sightseeing plane out for an evening flight was passing over. The passenger got some good shots of us, which she was kind enough to share.


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Kyle summit pose

Visit on photobucket.com


Yrstruly summit selfie

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


After we summitted, the 14K camp swelled rapidly, but weather moved in.


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Folks were anxious to move up to 17K, but the weather did not cooperate. It was roughly a week before the next summit by a soloist from Colorado, and about 10 days before a stretch of good weather allowed allegedly 40(!) people to summit on the 27th.


Visit on photobucket.com


Kyle and I wanted to do the Cassin, but with the weather it wasn’t in the cards. We took a trek out for some shots from the Edge of the World, and then descended to the airstrip to climb two smaller routes: the South West Ridge of Frances and the West Face of Kahiltna Queen.

Link to Edge of the World video
https://vimeo.com/129470464


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com





PART II: The South West Ridge of Frances & the West Face of Kahiltna Queen


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The SW Ridge of Frances climbs the left skyline up, around, and down 4 gendarmes (5.8), and then up steep snow, along a corniced ridge past the false summit (visible) and onto the true summit (not visible).

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We simulclimbed most of the route. Kyle and I felt the rock was easier than advertised.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


However, in part because it was too warm, we felt the snow was sketchy and heads-up.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Kyle on the 5.8 crux.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Traversing under the false summit’s cornice. It was snowing and rather windy at this point and my glasses froze/fogged up. Visibility issues (everything was goddamn white) made the traverse feel much more interesting than it probably was.

Visit on photobucket.com


Approaching the last rock-band before the summit.

Visit on photobucket.com


Summit. Windy.

Visit on photobucket.com


Link to summit Mt. Frances video
https://vimeo.com/130123138

East Ridge descent.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The internal dividers in Kyle’s thermarest popped during a particularly hot day at the airstrip. The resulting blister just got worse as the trip went on.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Some departing friends we made on the West Buttress left us two bags of frozen, seasoned, and pre-cooked taco meat (pork and steak). We promptly switched to a diet of 90% tacos.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


The West Face of Kahiltna Queen goes up the couloir right of center to the ridge, and then follows the ridge to the summit.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We soloed the lower half of the face, and roped up where the gully tightened down.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


Kyle led a long simul-climbing pitch all the way to the ridge.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


And then I took us to a rap anchor just before the summit.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We reached the top with the sun.

Visit on photobucket.com


Link to Kahiltna Queen video
https://vimeo.com/130123134


Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We rapped most of the route, finding v-threads in old ice under the snow. It took longer to descend than it did to climb the route.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com


We dried our stuff, and flew out.

Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com



Visit on photobucket.com

  Trip Report Views: 4,603
Mr. Rogers
About the Author
Mr. Rogers is a climber from The Land of Make-Believe.

Comments
Gnome Ofthe Diabase

climber
Out Of Bed
  Jun 8, 2015 - 01:32pm PT
To day is the day That the old lyric fits
Too much of everything is just enough!
Thanks for taking us with you!
Mr. Rogers

climber
The Land of Make-Believe
Author's Reply  Jun 8, 2015 - 10:04pm PT
Here's a list of links to our videos from the trip. I'll update this post as I upload more.

11K Camp in a storm

Windy Corner clouds

Summit of Mt. Whatever-the-&#%$

Denali Summit

[url="https://vimeo.com/129473528”]Crowds at 14K[/url]

[url="https://vimeo.com/129470464”]Edge of the World[/url]

[url="https://vimeo.com/130123138”]Summit of Mt. Frances... windy[/url]

[url="https://vimeo.com/129491521”]Foggy take-off[/url]

[url="https://vimeo.com/130123134”]Summit of Kahiltna Queen[/url]

[url="https://vimeo.com/129470467”]Flight out[/url]
EdwardT

Trad climber
Retired
  Jun 8, 2015 - 02:03pm PT
Great pics.

Thanks for sharing.

feralfae

Boulder climber
Montana, on the Divide and around.
  Jun 8, 2015 - 03:16pm PT
Outstanding TR, thank you for sharing.
Great photos, too!
Bravo!
feralfae
10b4me

Social climber
Lida Junction
  Jun 8, 2015 - 03:38pm PT
very cool. thanks for the trip report.
Kalimon

Social climber
Ridgway, CO
  Jun 8, 2015 - 04:22pm PT
Awesome photos! What are you shooting with?
johntp

Trad climber
Punter, Little Rock
  Jun 8, 2015 - 04:26pm PT
I hate it when people post climbing threads. BBST
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Jun 9, 2015 - 12:03pm PT
Thanks for a stellar tr , way to go!!!!
climbski2

Mountain climber
The Ocean
  Jun 10, 2015 - 08:39am PT
Loved all the pictures! Postholing to you waist near the summit... that HAD to suck.

Super cool the plane got pictures of you on the summit.

Thanks for the share!
Mr. Rogers

climber
The Land of Make-Believe
Author's Reply  Jun 15, 2015 - 11:27am PT
Awesome photos! What are you shooting with?

Kyle has a Canon PowerShot ELPH 330, and I use a Sony RX100 II.

Here's a link to one last video - me staggering like a drunk to the summit.
https://vimeo.com/130780691

The Lisa

Trad climber
Da Bronx, NY
  Jun 15, 2015 - 11:46am PT
Those West Butt photos brought me back, sigh. What a beautiful place. You packed a lot into that trip.
Capt.

climber
some eastside hovel
  Jun 15, 2015 - 12:44pm PT
Excellent! Thank you.
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
  Jun 15, 2015 - 05:31pm PT
Thanks for taking the time to post all those photos------and for a most interesting trip report.
Go