The Picket Traverse, 2/17-22/10
~by Jason Hummel
“Where am I?” I’d wonder, once again awakening cold and shivering. It was then, looking up, I’d see the specter of my nightmares – the Picket Range looming overhead, beguiling me with her contours of ridge and arcs of slope. Answering my own question, sprinkled with obscenities, I’d try to fall back asleep, sporadically waking over and again, each time grasping that I was indeed in the Pickets and scared as hell they’d keep me there forever entombed in those moonlit fingers of snow and ice.
For six days, Forest and I would cross Stetattle Ridge, down into McMillan Cirque, over Mount Fury, down into Luna Cirque, over Mount Challenger, down Perfect Pass, then out via the Mineral High Route to Hannegan Pass Road. We would complete a high traverse of the Picket Range in the middle of winter, crossing perhaps 50 miles of some of the most wild and remote mountains in the lower 48.
Monday morning, before the trip, I’m staring at an e-mail from a guy I don’t know. It says, “I'm headed to the Pickets for a ski traverse during the approaching high pressure system, and I'm looking for a partner.” Forest McBrian turns out to be a single test away from becoming a fully certified AMGA guide; he will be one of a handful in the entire country to receive all three certifications. Having completed his alpine and rock climbing disciplines, he has one remaining – ski mountaineering. I can attest that he won’t have much difficulty passing, and I couldn’t have asked for a better partner for a journey such as this.
In May, 1985 Jens Kieler along with brothers Carl and Lowell Skoog pioneered a ski traverse through the esoteric Picket Range. They would be the inspiration for our trip. In the quarter century since, to their knowledge, no one has repeated this impressive feat. You can read more about their adventure in the 1986 article Lowell wrote for Rock and Ice Magazine (see link http://www.alpenglow.org/skiing/pickets-1985/index.html). Lowell says near the conclusion of his article, “…as we plodded slowly down the steep trail to Diablo, our legs were wobbly, our hands and faces sunburned, and our feet aching. But our mountain souls were soaring. We had skied the Pickets, and in so doing had found the climax of the North Cascade high routes.” My hope was that our mountain souls would also soar and stay aloft through any number of failures that could beset us and force an early retreat.
Leaving Diablo Lake at the 900-ft elevation with skis and boots, overnight gear, and a healthy dose of optimism, Forest and I, joined by Kyle, would begin our climb through thick woods along a steeply winding trail up to Stetattle Ridge, near where beat poet Gary Snyder spent the summer of 1953 as a fire lookout. His story among others is featured in the book, Poets on the Peaks. As we raise high enough to put on our skins, and higher still where we could peer over ridge top, I could understand why vistas such as these would inspire poetry. Their fire and brimstone, brick and mortar gathers up your breath and steals it away, sheltering you with only their shadows.
I often become lost on my hike forward, up and down ridge, ever nearing the heart of the range. There are times I look deep into mountains such as these, noticing not just a peak, but arms and legs, torsos and heads; where one mountain begins another peeks out, so much so that within this tightly bound range there are at least 21 summits over 7500 feet high. I can imagine there ahead of me, then, the convolution of alpine seductiveness! So far I’ve seen no place more promiscuous than the Picket Range. As I carve out my bed from the snow and set up my bivy, I could only think about getting closer … much closer.
In the following day and a half feet and skis reach forward, and then pull back … forward and back, over and again. Terrain rolls away before eyes. Overhead, up beneath McMillan Spires, a spine of rock and snow bristle with trees. It's amazing where a tree will gain purchase. There is no better example of this tenacity than in the depths of the North Cascades where avalanches, icefall, and glaciers encroach on every aspect. Where life has a will, there is a way.
Night grows out of shadows like ninjas crawling up from the valleys, cornering us to our bivies, or as I joke to Kyle, “…our ice coffins.” Stoves roar and cooking persists for an hour. Stars tumble from the moon’s glow as the night goes on and on and on – too much for a man to sleep.
Early morning on our third day brings warmth as our bodies begin to move. A few hours work and we look down into McMillan Creek Cirque, our three brains firing off – dismantling confidence with the same ire of a bomb specialist in the midst of disarming a potentially destructive device. Each thought of ours rings with a similar note. “Oh my God, I go down there, I am committed!” This is the bomb in the closet: red or green wire? Five, four, three, two and CUT. Then the countdown shutters to a stop. Kyle finds his splitboard the wrong tool for the job – it is like riding a mountain bike alongside a road bike on the highway. Each section of hard snow, ice, avy debris has him stymied. This traverse is not a place for a boarder, and he knows it. Our ski edges gain purchase where his simply can’t. So Forest and I bid farewell to him as he turns back the way we came. It only takes a moment. I look around and he is gone. Up ahead I still think, “I must get closer!” So close now, I can feel the cold breath of wind sucking me in.
>>>>Continued BELOW
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