Day 5, Monday

 

This was a 14 hour hiking day and 20 hour adventure day so be warned it’s a long post.

We woke up at 2am to start our summit attempt. I was so super excited that I didn’t really care about how early it was. While getting out of tent I heard an unfamiliar voice. A guy, severely under-dressed, and shivering had entered our campsite asking if we were the pros and telling us not to dump any of our water because he needed some. Other guys in the group chatted with him and directed him to the cistern we had dug, but little did I know he would try tagging along with us the rest of the day. The first thing I had to deal with in the morning was breakfast. Because of my Hunger attack on a previous day, I was only left with Peanut Crunch Clif bars, which aren’t exactly tasty. I knew today was the last day, though, so I thought it wouldn’t be a big deal. As I gnawed on my chunky wedge of food, Dave came over and told me that a cold Clif bar just wouldn’t work for the summit morning. He had made four packs of oatmeal and insisted that I eat some. He finally handed me the bowl and told me to finish it off. With all of our gear in place we attached to our rope lines and headed off in the dark towards the summit. Our headlamps lit the way and to conserve energy we were constantly looking at the ground to step where our guides had kicked steps in the snow and ice. Jenny had acquired severe shin splints, and to accommodate her our rope line was going very slowly and making painfully small steps. We trudged onward through the dark for hours. As the sun rose we had reached the cloud level and the view was spectacular. The point when the sun rises is my favorite moment while mountain climbing. We continued onward intermittently making contact with our leech from earlier in the morning. At one point we found him wandering in a crevasse field in the dark; Margaret gave him a warning about his lack of safety which was obviously ignored. Later we came across him lying in the middle of the glacier, apparently exhausted. Margaret once again asked if he was ok, and told him, “You do realize we’re on a glacier, right? You know, with crevasses?”. When he replied, “I liked to climb alone”, we moved on. We continued onward as the wind began to pick up and the ice crust on the snow became thicker. It was at the point when the wind was whipping me in all directions, as I anchored each step with my ice ax and hiking pole, that a familiar sensation often felt on my vacations struck. I began wondering why I couldn’t just do a beach vacation, a sunny warm beach with the ocean.

After a couple more hours of hiking, we finally reached a col below the summit ridge. Here, we stopped to put on our crampons. Crampons are sharp steel spikes that attach to the mountaineering boots to provide better traction on ice. The wind at this point was indescribable and nearly unbearable. I was truly miserable at this point. The only thing getting me through was the view of the summit. The summit was hardly visible, however, because of the snow and clouds aggressively blowing over it. I tried to take some photos of this but the photos couldn’t do it justice and did not capture the wind. As we climbed up the huge ridge towards the summit, it started becoming apparent that we would not reach the top. Dave, a software engineer, had already made the calculation that we were moving too slowly to accomplish it. Forest, not wanting to crush team morale tried to tell us that the summit was still possible although we knew otherwise. After some time, Forest and Margaret collaborated and informed us that we would indeed not make it but that we could climb for another fifteen minutes to get more experience. Turning around is an important learning experience and the whole situation brought to mind the basketball quote, “Your team is only as good as it’s weakest player.” On a rope line if a single member is having a problem it affects the entire group. That, combined with the nasty wind and poor snow conditions, made our guides concerned that they could account for our safety. We started climbing back and we stopped at a somewhat sheltered area to have a group talk and eat. My stomach had been audibly rumbling for hours by this point. As I pulled out yet another Peanut Crunch Clif bar (I had eaten at least 4 earlier in the day), I watched as a smile grew over Steven’s face and he reached in his pack to produce a pristine, non crumbled PAYDAY bar. The Hunger took over. A fight ensued over Steven’s hoarding of this delicious commodity. I won’t go into details here but Steven did give me half the bar, despite me having already eaten half his Twix bar and not having shared any of my own candy. As we continued to descend, the clueless leech, who had at one time cut in between our two rope lines (a serious no-no), and who had been following us for hours because he didn’t know the route, continued up the mountain. His crampons were not on correctly, his food source was a value pack of Hersey bars, and he was carrying a JanSport backpack. Every so often he would flop on the glacier to rest, because he wasn’t pacing himself. We were concerned about him going on, but there was no stopping him.

After eleven hours of climbing we finally made it back to our camp. Everyone sprawled on the ground around our tents, and pulled out more food to eat. We started packing up camp when we noticed a man glissading down the mountain. Glissading is basically sledding on your backside, using your ice-axe to control your speed. It is a dangerous practice because you cannot see crevasses or other obstacles that might be in your path. As he slid down the mountain, we noticed he was headed straight towards a moat, a place where the snow has melted away from a warmer surface (in this case a ravine with a creek). The moat dropped down about ten feet to the creek. He was several hundred yards from our campsite but we all began yelling in hopes of catching his attention. Jumping up and down while waving our arms we yelled and yelled. Finally hearing us, he frantically began trying to stop himself. Forgetting his ice axe, he flailed wildly at the slope with his arms and legs. He skidded to a halt with his feet resting on the edge, sending piles of snow cascading down into the gap. It was another extremely close call.

After watching this near-miss, we were slightly shaken and decided it was time to leave the mountain. Camp was quickly dis-assembled, and after the gear was all packed up, we headed back down. We were all tired and somewhat miserable, but Jenny, who had never been in the backcountry before, was especially worn-out. Her shin-splints were killing her, she was out of energy, and she just wanted to be home. She was so tired that she didn’t bother to properly pack her backpack, tying a large trash bag of debris to the bottom of her pack (so that it swung and hit her legs on every step), and carrying her tent poles in her hand instead of trying to find a spot for them. Dave took pity on her, and stuffed the poles in his own pack, but it was a miserable slog for Jenny. She fell at least 4 times, sliding down the path on her backside, her boots completely filled with water as she slogged through the middle of a creek carelessly (her gaiters and boots were open to try and relieve the pressure on her shins), and that trash bag smacked her with every jolting step downward. Then, when it was nearly over, her nose started to bleed, just to add insult to injury. When we finally reached the parking lot, she tossed her bag onto the ground, collapsed, and proceeded to pour a river of water out of each boot (which prompted a “That was the most awesome thing I’ve ever seen!” from our guides).

We all piled into the cars and headed back down the mountain to the small town of Glacier, a short drive away. There, Steven and I picked up our car and we all met at a local diner for our first non-dehydrated food in a week. Each of us ordered a huge, 1/3 pound burger and a large order of fries, and nobody left anything on their plate. We all had a great time reminiscing about the trip, telling stories, and finding more out about what its like to be a guide. We also asked why more people like our unwelcome lone warrior from earlier in the day didn’t die or get injured, and our guides explained that because guides were always present on Mount Baker, clueless people were able to avoid disaster by watching what the guides who were around did. That doesn’t mean people don’t die, however, as they told us about a climber who had died in very similar circumstances to our leech only a week earlier.

When all the food was gone (which took a surprisingly short amount of time), and the conversations were done (which took a lot longer), it was time to split up and head our own separate ways. We said our farewells to the people we’d lived with (and come to really like) in the past week, hopped in our car, and sped off. 3 hours later, we pulled into the parking lot for our beautiful tree-house, took our first shower in entirely too long, and collapsed into bed. Total time awake for the day? 21 hours.

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