Monday, May 18, 2009

Jasper: May Long Weekend (are there any snow free peaks?)

Long weekend. Tent in car, bags packed, eyes towards the mountains and the peaks. Here they were all snow covered - cloaked in a blanket of white. Eastward, to Jasper we went, in search of bare rock, dry soil, arduous peaks with now crystaline water upon them.

And dry we found. Sort of. Many hikes were perfectly summery, but once we got to the actual peak....yikes! We suffered low battery power so there are not many pictures overall, but the peak picutes that we normally aim for were forgotten as the wind tore a layer of flesh off our bodies and the cold drank itself inward, chilling the bones and the marrow. Awsome hikes, awsome views....we explored a totally new area of the park (it was actually the tip of Banff). Enjoy! Especially the embedded video!


Our tent, poised against the frigid memories of the winter snow!

Hike 1 - unnamed peak within the wilderness region just outside of both Jasper and Banff National Parks. You can see the remains of a forest fire that burned its way up the ridgeline. When we got to the peak we could see the actual size of the whole burn, which was significant, but also that it ended exactly along the ridge. The wind that dominates from the lee of the ridge must have been the barrier from it continuing over and up?

Me, climbing up the first section of the hike that took us out of the treed area and into the alpine.

A view from the first knoll that led to the peak.


Crystal, as seen from where I stand in the previous picture. Ahead of her is the first peak along the ridge. At this point the wind went from 'crazy' to 'absolutley crazy-blow your hat off'. Further along, it was raised to 'absolutley freaking unbelievable as it tears the flesh off your bone'. The points where you can see snow up the peak was almost impossible to walk upright - we had to constantly bend over and gain purchase on the rocks for balance and stability in the wind!

A finer view to the peak...did I mention the wind at this point?!?!?


...but before we tackle that "what about a little lunch?". We found shelter behind a massive boulder and sat down for some cheddar and bread. And a wee overconsumption of peanut/raisin/grape-nuts stylin' trail mix.

Me, unhappily trying to catch my breath and force a smile (inside I was filled with glee...it was the outside that was feeling the brunt of the weather!). Behind me, the peak approacheth!

Camera set. Timer on. Run to get in the picture....in 3...2....1....*wind gust - camera falls* ...1..FLASH!
D-oh!

Crystal, pausing to count snowfalkes. Or pick our next route to our next peak. Although this was our goal...we kept going up, up, up. The faint peak behind her was our next goal of the day.

And this is the view from that point. This part was crazy technical and steep...but the limestone was nice and weathered and rough so our feet stuck like it was sandpaper. Walking on a 45 degree angle with a skip in our step! Did I mention the wind?

Me, managing an actual gimace, if not a smile, this time.


Fuzzy little cutey pie. We saw this character on the side of the road....early evening after our hike.


Me, upon our return to the campsite. Priorities are priorities, and after 7 hours on a mountain ridge, hydration takes priority.

Next day, early morning mist hanging in the air, we approach another mountain along the Icefields Highway from a rockslide. Chunky boulders, light feet, and up again we go!
Now....this day turned out to be pictureless for myriad reasons. One, batteries died (dont mention this to Crystal). Two, scared (terrain was either slippery rock or steep slippery rock or steep slippery rok with mud on it). Three, peak attempt foiled by steep snow covered approach. Four, the batteries died. Honestly, dont bring this up to Crystal..... :)


And to the mountaineers are given the spoils: two days of rugged mountain climbing and tent living deserve a reward. Nachos and pints of Alberta's finest.


And on the blizzardy Monday morning that ended this long weekend, we decided to explore a wee bit more. We headed south towards Maligne Lake and took in some sights. All the snow you see in these next pic's came the night before!


ABOVE and BELOW: We fond an awsome stream that carved its way into a canyon....and spotted some killer rock climbing routes for future trips!

And, after all was said and done, we returned home to craft ourselves a pizza, a few pints of beer and an evening with James Bond, retro style.

Wildlife tally for this wee little jaunt into the mountains:

11 Black Bear

31 Mule Deer

25 Elk

1 Rabbit

1 Timber Wolf

1 Grizzley Bear

4 Mountain Goats

1 Moose



1 comment:

Dan the Mountain Man said...

Great Pictures!