Sunday Part 1
Sunday, with its fair weather and hopefully slightly more stabilized avy conditions, was to be our big day. And it was a big day. We settled on Birch Mountain (13,609'). Birch is normally a spring tour, but I'm not sure anyone has done it as a spring tour since 2011, the last descent snow year in the southern Sierra.
4:45 a.m. We scouted out the road situation the afternoon before, after we had skied Red. It was clear to about 5,700', or about 2 miles and 700 vertical feet to the normal trailhead. Headlamps were unnecessary given the full moon. Because there was a cloud cover the day before, this was our fist view of Birch, whose summit is about 7.5 miles and 8,000 vertical fee above us.
We made good progress climbing up the frozen gullies in the moonlight.
There she is! You can't see the true summit, which is another 1,000 vertical feet above the east-face chutes.
Tinemaha looks so damn rad. It looks like a gnarlier Elderberry Canyon mated with Esha's summit. Add it to my forever-growing eastside tick list.
iPhone panorama feature from about 8,000.
We made pretty pretty swift progress for the first 5,000'. We had lunch at 10,700' at 9:30 a.m. With only 3,000 vertical feet to go, we felt good. But at about 11,000, as we were crossing from Birch's eastern flank to the southeast face below the summit, we hit about 1,000 vertical feet of steep, spirit-crushing postholing that varied from crotch-deep stair-master to 6" of fluff on ice. (We stupidly left our boot crampons behind.) I'm guessing it took two or more hours to do that section.
Thankfully, after a moraine crossing, it led Birch's southeast face, which offered sublime skinning all the way to the summit. Here's Franz with Tinemaha on the left and Split, looking very angry, on the right.
Franz now lives in Connecticut whose highest peak, Google informs me, is 2,316', which is about 10,000' lower than where Franz is in this photo. But he nevertheless gutted out a huge day at elevation. Props! By the way, that banana-shaped line on Tinemaha in the background looks epic.
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