Route Climbed: Disappoinment Cleaver Date Climbed: June 13, 2002
I climbed it with a buddy of mine. We roped up with two climbers that we met from California. We had great weather and near perfect climbing conditions. Spectacular views. We were nervous as five climbers had died the previous two weeks. The Park Rangers were stressing caution, we had never done the route, and we went without RMI Guides. No problem.
Route Climbed: Ingram Direct from Camp Muir Date Climbed: June 15th, 2002
It isn't very satisfying to write about a mountain we failed to summit but after all the deaths this year it doesn't bother me to admit we were overly cautious. The weather was great and there was no reason for us to not have summited. But because we got a late start from Muir (2:02 am) and sat in a traffic jam on Ingram Flats (for over an hour) there was no way we were going to make it up and back in a reasonable amount of time.
Words of advice:
Don't leave after the RMI guide groups;
Try to sleep more than 2 hours (six would have been nice);
Don't expect to be able to pass other rope teams on the glacier (if it is sketchy, people will be using running belays and moving very slowly over narrow snow bridges, so you have to wait your turn);
Boil your drinking water before, not after cooking beans and rice in your pot;
Safety first, using every piece of protection and all the running belays is slow but it beats falling off the mountain;
Use lots and lots of sunscreen;
Remember to save some energy for the decent. If you burn yourself out on a push to the summit and have nothing left, getting back through the Ingram Glacier and Cathedral Gap will not be fun or safe.
I will be back next year for another attempt and I will have learned a lot from this year's mistakes...
an epic...i'll have to write a trip report for this one. 3+ feet of snow, wind, 36 hours in a tent at high camp, incredible descent w/ near-death avalanche incident along the way, and more. The mountain really kicked our ass...
Route Climbed: ingraham glacier Date Climbed: labor day 2000
very nice trip, not many people. The route was in surprisingly good shape for this late in the season. Unusually cold weather for this time of year and some snowfall overnight - didnt cause any problems, but enough to make the mountain look white, pristine and very alpine in character. Camped up near the summit - the overnight temperature dropped to about -15 fahrenheit (MINUS fifteen, thats right) but there was no wind at all so it wasnt too bad.
Route Climbed: DC Direct Date Climbed: June 22, 2000
This was my first real mountaineering experience. Attended RMI Expedition Seminar and spent five days on the mountain. Had perfect weather and an overall GREAT experience! Views of Adams, St. Helens, Hood, and Jefferson fueled the fire to return for more!
Our group did not stay at Camp Muir and instead made camps on the Muir Snowfield @ ~7,700' & 9,600' Camp Protectio ("Camp Condom"). Both are excellent sites if it is desired to avoid the crowds at Camp Muir.
Climbed to the summit via the DC route on August 9, 1969. I have posted the whole story under trip reports as "5 days on the mountain" I'm now currently converting my slides via scanner to digital and the pics I have posted are easily seen by clicking on my name at the top of this entry. I know this is truly ancient history, but a climb to the summit of Rainier is for many of us, one of the most memorable events we can be involved in.
Route Climbed: Ingraham Direct, DC, Kautz Glacier Date Climbed: several years
Tried it once by the Ingraham direct, making it to the summit crater, but no Columbia Crest. This was in December, the wind was screaming, knocking us all over. Of our party of four, 3 of us got light frostbite on faces, toes, or fingers. I just got over the flu, and was too weak to cross the summit crater. How pathetic.
Tried it twice by the old tried and true Camp Muir DC slog. First in early March, saw a massive avalanche sweep off the Wilson headwall, got spooked and turned around. Second time in August, nasty thunderstorms chased us back after crossing the Cathedral rocks.
Tried it twice by the Kautz Glacier, both times in June, the supposedly best time to attempt Rainier. Yeah, whatever, weather nailed us both times, never been above camp Hazard, though the route up the Kautz to Hazard is a lot more fun and direct.
Trying to work up the willpower to give a 6th attempt.
Route Climbed: Emmons/Winthrop Glacier Date Climbed: Aug. 99
This was a good alternative route for the D.C. route. We had good weather, except for fairly strong winds for 2 out of the 3 days. We camped the first night at Curtis, then had a very short hike up to Schurman, which made for an easy day before our summit attempt. Strong winds made reaching the summit a real struggle. After a long hike back to The White River Campground, we were all pretty exhausted & quite ready for a good Mexican dinner!
Climbed in a one day push leaving paradise at about 11pm. Left Camp Muir by 2:30am, summit by 8:00 or so and back down to Paradise by afternoon. Long day, but easier with 15 - 20lb packs than the normal style of 2-3 day assaults.
Route Climbed: Emmons/Winthrop Glaciers Date Climbed: July 11, 1999
Started out Friday evening, camped near the head of Glacier Basin. Hiked up to Camp Schurman Saturday, then Summitted on Sunday. A clear, sunny day and the best glissade ever from 12,500' back to high camp, and all the way down Interglacier...made possible by unusually heavy snowfall.
Route Climbed: Furhur Finger, Kautz Glacier direct Date Climbed: August 1997, August 1998
My first big mountain climb, I headed up the Furhur Finger with a more experienced partner but still made lots of newbie mistakes - his headlamp batteries died, I forgot to sunscreen the underside of my nose, we burned our water (which tastes terrible, so we ended up dehydrated). Climbing the finger before sunrise was amazing because we were in the middle of a meteor shower, and I saw a few every time I looked up. My strongest impression of the climb was that although this is supposedly the "most direct route to the summit from paradise" it kept going, and going, and going. I was beat by the summit. Clouds came in and we had 0 visibility on the summit, and ended up traversing around the summit crater for a while 'till we found the trough from the DC route. After dropping our packs for the quick jaunt to the summit register, we did a carry-over, and ended up descending the DC route.
The second time I climbed Rainier, I was still eager to avoid the crowds on the DC route, but I wanted to see some new routes, so we decided to head up the Kautz Glacier. The Nisqually Glacier was too broken up to cross that late in the season, so we ended up going from Van Trump falls instead. We camped below Camp Hazard (the picture), which was a good thing because just as we were settling in, a train-car sized block of ice calved off the Kautz and fell right on Camp Hazard.
The next morning, rather than losing altitude by dropping into the normal route chute to the west of Camp Hazard, we decided to play with our ice axes a bit and try a direct route up the glacier, to the East. After seeing the ice calf off the previous evening, we didn't screw around under that cliff, but it was some fun technical ice. Once we were up on the Kautz Glacier proper, we decided to deviate west from the normal route to summit via Point Success. It made the top snow fields a bit longer and a bit steeper, but pretty gratifying. Once again, climbing in August, we ditched the tent but did a carryover with our sleeping bags and other gear, descending via the DC route.
I will always think that the hardest part of climbing Rainier is those wooden steps on the way back down into paradise - they're always just not quite the right size for me to take two steps, and too big for one.
Zeke - Jul 8, 2002 6:53 am
Route Climbed: Emmons Direct Date Climbed: June 24, 2002Fantastic climb and a great way to summit the mountain. Less congested and very straight forward.
Jerry L - Jun 30, 2002 5:10 am
Route Climbed: Disappoinment Cleaver Date Climbed: June 13, 2002I climbed it with a buddy of mine. We roped up with two climbers that we met from California. We had great weather and near perfect climbing conditions. Spectacular views. We were nervous as five climbers had died the previous two weeks. The Park Rangers were stressing caution, we had never done the route, and we went without RMI Guides. No problem.
Noah (Oregon) - Jun 17, 2002 11:24 pm
Route Climbed: Ingram Direct from Camp Muir Date Climbed: June 15th, 2002It isn't very satisfying to write about a mountain we failed to summit but after all the deaths this year it doesn't bother me to admit we were overly cautious. The weather was great and there was no reason for us to not have summited. But because we got a late start from Muir (2:02 am) and sat in a traffic jam on Ingram Flats (for over an hour) there was no way we were going to make it up and back in a reasonable amount of time.
Words of advice:
Don't leave after the RMI guide groups;
Try to sleep more than 2 hours (six would have been nice);
Don't expect to be able to pass other rope teams on the glacier (if it is sketchy, people will be using running belays and moving very slowly over narrow snow bridges, so you have to wait your turn);
Boil your drinking water before, not after cooking beans and rice in your pot;
Safety first, using every piece of protection and all the running belays is slow but it beats falling off the mountain;
Use lots and lots of sunscreen;
Remember to save some energy for the decent. If you burn yourself out on a push to the summit and have nothing left, getting back through the Ingram Glacier and Cathedral Gap will not be fun or safe.
I will be back next year for another attempt and I will have learned a lot from this year's mistakes...
AlexeyD - Jun 6, 2002 10:24 am
Route Climbed: Kautz Date Climbed: june 10 2001an epic...i'll have to write a trip report for this one. 3+ feet of snow, wind, 36 hours in a tent at high camp, incredible descent w/ near-death avalanche incident along the way, and more. The mountain really kicked our ass...
AlexeyD - Jun 6, 2002 10:21 am
Route Climbed: ingraham glacier Date Climbed: labor day 2000very nice trip, not many people. The route was in surprisingly good shape for this late in the season. Unusually cold weather for this time of year and some snowfall overnight - didnt cause any problems, but enough to make the mountain look white, pristine and very alpine in character. Camped up near the summit - the overnight temperature dropped to about -15 fahrenheit (MINUS fifteen, thats right) but there was no wind at all so it wasnt too bad.
WScottF - May 29, 2002 11:43 am
Route Climbed: Ingraham Direct Date Climbed: May 27 2002Climbed Gib Ledges the day before, today had much better weather. Ingraham Direct was in great shape.
WScottF - May 29, 2002 11:41 am
Route Climbed: Gibraltar Ledges Date Climbed: May 26 2002Gib Ledges was in good shape, but the weather deteriorated above 13,000 feet.
climbingguy - May 12, 2002 2:32 pm
Route Climbed: DC Date Climbed: June 1996My first 14'er. Also where I realised that altitude sickness feels a lot like mono.
Spud - Apr 25, 2002 10:45 am
Route Climbed: Dissapointment Cleaver Date Climbed: September 29, 2001I managed to avoid contracting High Altitiude Espresso Edema on this, my second attempt to conquer the mountain
I even managed to avoid betting mashed or swallowed whole by my mutinous climbing partners who were crazed for starch and carbs!
Perseverance pays off - read all about my adventures by checking out Washington State in the Travel Archive of my website: www.spudstravels.com
Bentley - Apr 11, 2002 11:17 am
Route Climbed: DC Direct Date Climbed: June 22, 2000This was my first real mountaineering experience. Attended RMI Expedition Seminar and spent five days on the mountain. Had perfect weather and an overall GREAT experience! Views of Adams, St. Helens, Hood, and Jefferson fueled the fire to return for more!
Our group did not stay at Camp Muir and instead made camps on the Muir Snowfield @ ~7,700' & 9,600' Camp Protectio ("Camp Condom"). Both are excellent sites if it is desired to avoid the crowds at Camp Muir.
mntnrmichael - Apr 8, 2002 5:37 pm
Route Climbed: Disappointment Cleaver Date Climbed: AugustA wonderful trip, I will definitely be making more attempts!
Dean - Apr 3, 2002 2:55 pm
Route Climbed: DC Date Climbed: August 9, 1969Climbed to the summit via the DC route on August 9, 1969. I have posted the whole story under trip reports as "5 days on the mountain" I'm now currently converting my slides via scanner to digital and the pics I have posted are easily seen by clicking on my name at the top of this entry. I know this is truly ancient history, but a climb to the summit of Rainier is for many of us, one of the most memorable events we can be involved in.
More pics to come as I get them scanned.
darinchadwick - Mar 29, 2002 5:26 am
Route Climbed: Ingraham Direct, DC, Kautz Glacier Date Climbed: several yearsTried it once by the Ingraham direct, making it to the summit crater, but no Columbia Crest. This was in December, the wind was screaming, knocking us all over. Of our party of four, 3 of us got light frostbite on faces, toes, or fingers. I just got over the flu, and was too weak to cross the summit crater. How pathetic.
Tried it twice by the old tried and true Camp Muir DC slog. First in early March, saw a massive avalanche sweep off the Wilson headwall, got spooked and turned around. Second time in August, nasty thunderstorms chased us back after crossing the Cathedral rocks.
Tried it twice by the Kautz Glacier, both times in June, the supposedly best time to attempt Rainier. Yeah, whatever, weather nailed us both times, never been above camp Hazard, though the route up the Kautz to Hazard is a lot more fun and direct.
Trying to work up the willpower to give a 6th attempt.
Zeke - Nov 28, 2001 12:35 pm
Route Climbed: Engraham direct Date Climbed: July 2000Great experiance and one of the best sunrises ever. Climbed with the Climb for Clean Air, raised money for the STate of Washingtons Lung Association.
Left the hut at midnight and was on top by 7am.. got very cold toward sunrise, reccomend a down jacket in your ruck sack to use when you make stops.
Oh, lost a water bottle in a cravasse, in a black OR waterbottle parka. If anyone finds it, will you please email me to return? Thanks!
This is a great mountain and cant wait to go back and try other routes... anyone intersted......?
joeweinert - Nov 5, 2001 12:50 pm
Route Climbed: Disappointment Cleaver Date Climbed: August 9-10, 2001Read my detailed, introspective trip report here:
www.geocities.com/qker/rainier.html
Elwood - Nov 3, 2001 7:58 am
Route Climbed: Emmons/Winthrop Glacier Date Climbed: Aug. 99This was a good alternative route for the D.C. route. We had good weather, except for fairly strong winds for 2 out of the 3 days. We camped the first night at Curtis, then had a very short hike up to Schurman, which made for an easy day before our summit attempt. Strong winds made reaching the summit a real struggle. After a long hike back to The White River Campground, we were all pretty exhausted & quite ready for a good Mexican dinner!
Bronco - Oct 30, 2001 3:24 pm
Route Climbed: DC Date Climbed: June 23, 2001Climbed in a one day push leaving paradise at about 11pm. Left Camp Muir by 2:30am, summit by 8:00 or so and back down to Paradise by afternoon. Long day, but easier with 15 - 20lb packs than the normal style of 2-3 day assaults.
kujayhawk - Oct 23, 2001 12:54 pm
Route Climbed: DC Date Climbed: Sept 28-29It was a dream come true and possibly the most physically challenging thing I have ever done in my life. I loved every moment of it!
D Smith - Oct 18, 2001 3:32 pm
Route Climbed: Emmons/Winthrop Glaciers Date Climbed: July 11, 1999Started out Friday evening, camped near the head of Glacier Basin. Hiked up to Camp Schurman Saturday, then Summitted on Sunday. A clear, sunny day and the best glissade ever from 12,500' back to high camp, and all the way down Interglacier...made possible by unusually heavy snowfall.
ben - Oct 5, 2001 3:02 pm
Route Climbed: Furhur Finger, Kautz Glacier direct Date Climbed: August 1997, August 1998My first big mountain climb, I headed up the Furhur Finger with a more experienced partner but still made lots of newbie mistakes - his headlamp batteries died, I forgot to sunscreen the underside of my nose, we burned our water (which tastes terrible, so we ended up dehydrated). Climbing the finger before sunrise was amazing because we were in the middle of a meteor shower, and I saw a few every time I looked up. My strongest impression of the climb was that although this is supposedly the "most direct route to the summit from paradise" it kept going, and going, and going. I was beat by the summit. Clouds came in and we had 0 visibility on the summit, and ended up traversing around the summit crater for a while 'till we found the trough from the DC route. After dropping our packs for the quick jaunt to the summit register, we did a carry-over, and ended up descending the DC route.
The second time I climbed Rainier, I was still eager to avoid the crowds on the DC route, but I wanted to see some new routes, so we decided to head up the Kautz Glacier. The Nisqually Glacier was too broken up to cross that late in the season, so we ended up going from Van Trump falls instead. We camped below Camp Hazard (the picture), which was a good thing because just as we were settling in, a train-car sized block of ice calved off the Kautz and fell right on Camp Hazard.
The next morning, rather than losing altitude by dropping into the normal route chute to the west of Camp Hazard, we decided to play with our ice axes a bit and try a direct route up the glacier, to the East. After seeing the ice calf off the previous evening, we didn't screw around under that cliff, but it was some fun technical ice. Once we were up on the Kautz Glacier proper, we decided to deviate west from the normal route to summit via Point Success. It made the top snow fields a bit longer and a bit steeper, but pretty gratifying. Once again, climbing in August, we ditched the tent but did a carryover with our sleeping bags and other gear, descending via the DC route.
I will always think that the hardest part of climbing Rainier is those wooden steps on the way back down into paradise - they're always just not quite the right size for me to take two steps, and too big for one.