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04-17-2013, 02:54 PM #1Registered User
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- Feb 2009
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- 361
TR: Eiger W Face Switzerland. Long, steep, deep, exhausting, and worth it
Living in Switzerland, I'd been to the Eiger W Face at first 2 winters ago. I had completely underestimated the effects of altitude especially given that I live at just 400m (1300ft). Although the summit at 3970m (13025ft) is not a high altitude at all, it still requires a bit of preparation if you are living so low down, especially if you are so prone to altitude effects as I found out I am. Not only that, but it is about 1700m (5500ft) up in one go with half of it bootpacking with crampons up a steep face. Needless to say I only got to 3500m before I just could not go further. The ride down was still great though. The next year, I tried again and although I prepared better, I was still not as fit as I should have been and I just started too late in the day. Stopped at 3650m. Again a great ride down.
This year, I learned to train much better and had already done a couple of 4200m peaks in the summer, so I felt much better. Last thursday I saw it was going to dump a lot around chamonix with a lot of wind and much less around grinderwald with much less wind as well. A warm storm too meant that there was a very good chance the Eiger would be plastered with very good snow and still stay at a 2/5 avy risk. I quickly called a bunch of friends asking if anyone wanted to have a go at the eiger with me on sunday when the skiies cleared. Finally on friday evening my buddy Marc said he wanted to do it as well. Marc is an alpinist first and steep snowboarder second so it was not too hard to convince him. We decided that because it was going to get unusually warm, we should get on and off the face much earlier than one would normally do.
I headed for verbier saturday morning and rode a nice lap off the backside of mont fort with two other swiss TGR mags which I hadn't even met yet. Being april, we were able to lay first tracks down the poubelle (trash chute) couloir after just a 5 min hike from the lift at 11am. I then made my way back to my car and headed to Grinderwald, where I took the last train of the day 1150m (3700ft) up to Klein Scheidegg at 2000m (6600ft) to meet Marc.
The Eiger W Face was looking real good. As you will find out, we had to stop just shy of the summit at the point marked with the red dot.
A second view with more of the line visible. The last part which we ended up having to skip was too rocky this year anyways, so no loss there:
Marc was thinking that this line on the right shoulder of the west face would be cool do do as a new first descent. I thought the top would just be too sharky and too high to traverse to. He discovered the same when we go a look at it when climbing the face the next day:
We checked into our hostel ate a good dinner and went to bed early. The hostel being at 2000m, rather than 2300m, and much further horizontally than where I had camped before to climb the face, meant that we had an extra hour to climb in the morning.
We awoke at 4am, ate a big breakfast, got ready and set off by 5:12am:
My bindings were on the wrong sides:
6am and we were at the start of the face:
7am as the clouds parted, my guess was proven right. Deep stable pow was found:
An adjacent summit the Monch at sunrise:
We reached till just below the seracs where the glacier starts, took shelter behind a rock on the left, switched to crampons, and booted up fast to get out of the fall line at 8am:
Me following on the bootpack and stoked. Apart from the last 50m we climbed, this was the least deep the snow was on our bootpack. Note, we had started 3 hours ago somewhere far down on the top right corner out of this frame:
Continuing the bootpack:
It got deep:
In hindsight, it would have made more sense for us to have switched back to skins for a while, but we had no idea there was this much snow plastered on the face that is normally climbable only with crampons. We thought the depth would soon decrease a lot. It did not. Me struggling to make progress only 500m higher up at 11am. Verts would have been useful:
The ride down will be unreal though:
Lake Thun 10000ft below us:
Despite the "counter" camera tilt, you can see that the last hour of climbing got steeper:
Sick views of the Monch and Jungfrau:
Although we had thought we would summit by 11am, the deep snow had put as at 12pm still below the summit. We had just had 100-150m of vert left to got, but given the amount of snow and the warmth that was coming, we decided it was best to transition and head down:
Flip flops ready for when we get down:
The conditions were amazing:
Sorry for the lack of pictures for this next part of face, but I decided that it would be more fun to charge with speed and spray massive amounts of snow on this normally no fall zone 500m of vert, than to be stopping and snapping photos. Really how often is it that you find the Eiger in freeride conditions with deep stable snow? I took the camera from Marc, and then snapped a few shots of him once I was at equal height with the seracs:
1000m left to go:
Exit tracks and wet slides starting already:
We ended up thinking we could ride straight down to the car after this. Turns out we ended up at the bottom of a chairlift which we needed to go up first before heading down a slightly different path. The lift operator was nice enough to let us up for free after finding out we had been hiking up for 7 hours.
Doesn't ever get any better than that up there:
Thanks Marc for an awesome day.
We then enjoyed beers and lunch on the deck at Klein Scheidegg before descending another 1150m (3500ft) of slushy groomers all the way down to the car, making it almost 3000m (9800ft) in all.Last edited by Orash111; 04-17-2013 at 03:11 PM.
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04-17-2013, 03:14 PM #2
nice work. I want that.
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04-17-2013, 03:15 PM #3
Rad. Cheers!
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04-17-2013, 03:15 PM #4
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04-17-2013, 03:19 PM #5
Awesome. Thanks for posting.
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04-17-2013, 03:24 PM #6
but... but... you are snowboarders... just kidding. Amazing run gentlemen, chapeau.
The beatings will continue until morale will improve.
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04-17-2013, 03:46 PM #7
Very sick! Way to bring the stoke.
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04-17-2013, 03:47 PM #8Registered User
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- denver
- Posts
- 1,863
big line in great snow, well played
I can't believe you are a rando racer because I look so much better in Lycra than you.
People who don't think the Earth is flat haven't skied Vail.
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04-17-2013, 03:56 PM #9
The Antithesis of Poser...
"Eiger Dreams" read the book you bumsZone Controller
"He wants to be a pro, bro, not some schmuck." - Hugh Conway
"DigitalDeath would kick my ass. He has the reach of a polar bear." - Crass3000
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04-17-2013, 04:03 PM #10
Wow - very impressive.
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04-17-2013, 04:03 PM #11
That was awesome. The only thing that would have been better is Ghacketts mit Hornli at some restaurant. So cool to get those conditions
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04-17-2013, 04:15 PM #12
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04-17-2013, 04:25 PM #13Registered User
- Join Date
- Sep 2005
- Location
- Fresh Lake City
- Posts
- 4,579
great job arash!!!
such a cool mountain and a sweet descent!
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04-17-2013, 04:29 PM #14
Way cool!
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04-17-2013, 04:30 PM #15
Another Euro TR of wearing harnesses and not being roped...don't you guy know anything about east coast snow safety?
Sorry, couldn't resist (see Mt Blanc thread)
Anyway, fucking rad boarding and climbing, what a great day. Too bad you didn't get the summit, but if the point of the trip was great riding, you got that in spades....well played sir, well played.
The Eiger is an iconic peak, and I would love to see it, ski it, climb it someday, but in the mean time thanks for allowing us to live it vicariously.
Cheers on a job well done.
I agree it is a constitutional right for Americans to be assholes...its just too bad that so many take the opportunity...iscariot
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04-17-2013, 04:49 PM #16
Dream turns, men, dream turns. Way to get it!
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04-17-2013, 04:56 PM #17
A-mazing!
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04-17-2013, 04:57 PM #18
Well done. I remember reading Saudan's account of the first ski descent in 1970. Apparently snow was unstable enough that no one would climb it with him so he used a helicopter. A lot of traversing and kick turns involved. Much nicer your way.
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04-17-2013, 05:23 PM #19Registered User
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- Seattle, Wa
- Posts
- 57
Love it!
Clint approves:
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04-17-2013, 05:34 PM #20
Most excellent.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using TGR ForumsThe Passion is in the Risk
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04-17-2013, 07:15 PM #21
A+ spring stoke!must have been some sweet turns
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04-17-2013, 07:25 PM #22
Ya buddy way to crush it! Doesnt get much better than that!
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04-17-2013, 08:30 PM #23
EPIC.
That is all.
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04-17-2013, 08:53 PM #24
Excellent write up. Fun to read during my jetlagged-induced insomnia.
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04-17-2013, 08:56 PM #25
nice. grabbing a nice line in nice conditions is where it is at!
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