Thunder Pyramid, 13,932'
1st peak descent
Maroon Bells Wilderness
iskibc, pow4brains
3.25.07
Maroon bells
Pyramid Peak on the right, Thunder Pyramid just to the left
I have been hesitating to write this trip report as I really don't know what to say about this experience. The emotions and excitement from this day are still riding high and words to describe this outing aren’t coming easy. I will never forget this day for as long as I live. The emotions and the feelings will come back to haunt and excite me for years to come.
Uncharted ski territory in the lower 48 is becoming few and far between due to the advancement of technology and the growing popularity of our sport. The last frontier in the mountain world has become a thing of the past. On this day the unimaginable became a reality. The undone became done.
West Face of Pyramid and Thunder Pyramid. Photo taken by figureeleven.
Thunder Pyramid shares the same red, rugged, and rotten ridgeline as its big fourteener brother Pyramid Peak. Thunder sits ½ mile SW amongst the shadows of Pyramid Peak. It is 68 feet short of the 14,000-ft benchmark, yet this reclusive mountain still falls into the Centennial Group (Colorado's highest 100). There’s very little beta covering this mountain as there are no designated trails or cairns leading up either side of the peak. From what I’ve gathered the peak is lucky to see more than a dozen or so visitors in the summer climbing months. It’s regarded as one of the most dangerous climbs due to the crumbling and unstable rock along its 3,000’ west face.
The Pyramid Peak Massif splits the popular West Maroon Creek Valley from the very unpopular East Maroon Creek Valley. The Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness is filled with interesting and unique geology making for some of Colorado’s most beautiful and inspiring landscape. Thunder Pyramid’s red, rugged and rotten rock is sedimentary rock from the Permian Age. This rock is what makes the area really pop with color, which in turn is bad for climbing but gorgeous to look at.
For the past several years I’ve had the Pyramid massif on my “to-do” list. Something about this stretch of mountains really inspires me to the point of obsession. After climbing and skiing Pyramid Peak last April, I came to the realization that the terrain along this stretch of peaks is some of the most difficult, technical, and dangerous terrain in Colorado. Hands down. The Pyramid massif is chock full of large cliff bands, knife-edge ridgelines, consistent 50+ degree pitches that extend for thousands of feet, large teetering talus blocks, and lots and lots of exposure. Reaching a summit along this stretch is like leading the blind through a complex maze. There’s always a new challenge around the next cliff band or spine.
After standing atop Pyramid peak I couldn’t help but notice the amazing ski potential on Thunder Pyramid. Both the east and west faces are riddled with technical lines. A summit descent looked impossible when I gazed over at it last April. There was just too much to take into consideration. Snow conditions, avalanche danger, blind cliff bands, loose rock, difficult approach, route finding, etc. However, there was this little glimmer of hope in the back of my mind that this peak could be skied.
Much like its neighbor Pyramid Peak, Thunder has a very limited window of opportunity due to snow coverage, snow safety, and weather. Nailing that window of opportunity is like throwing a dart blindfolded and hitting the bulls eye. After carefully watching the weather and snow pack over the course of the winter I felt the time was getting close. Working two jobs doesn’t make the matter any easier as time off is limited and the odds of getting that window of opportunity to line up with a day off was slim.
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