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06-12-2018, 12:33 PM #1Registered User
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TR: Mt. Olympus, Tour of the Gods, 8 days
I used to post my TR's here, but it's been a number of years. Too long! Anyhow, for those that know, I like to spin a good yarn with lots of pics. The entire story looks better here: http://www.myadventurecrusade.com/20...r-of-the-gods/ I'd put the whole dang thing on this page if it were easier to right click and paste 100 pics and 5k words without limits and multiple posts. As such, if you love Washington State and it's lesser known corners then an extra step is worth it. If not, call me lazy I enjoy the stories I see on here, so I thought I'd come out from lurker status and give back
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Mount Olympus: Athena II, Mercury and the hubert, hoh, blue, black, white, university, Jeffers glaciers, etc.
5-25 to 6-1, 2018
"Hey, did you go to the top of a mountain and ski it," a six year old boy blurts as I exit the Olympic Mountains after 8 days. When I tell him we most certainly did, he thrusts his chest out and loudly declares, "I'm going to do that!" Looking up to his mom a moment later, he seeks affirmation, "Can I do that?"
Herding her boy, the mother fans his dreams by saying, "Yes, you can ski mountains when you grow up." As he looks about to ask more questions, she shoes him off. "Now leave the skiers alone."
During the remaining few feet to the car, the kid disappears into forest with family, and my memories join him, reversing back through days of sweat and shoulder-crushing packs, as heavy as a bear and twice as mean, to relive an adventure of a lifetime. Fortunately, recollection is like an LP record that skips past suffering and focuses purely on the best soul-soothing, mind-bending and awe-melting summits and descents. I suspect the most successful mountain adventurers rewrite their exploits to the point where suffering is only an asterisk and joy an orchestra.
According to Gods and Goblins: a field guide to Place Names of Olympic National Park, the name "Mount Olympus" comes from John Meares, an English captain who viewed the peak from the deck of his ship, the Felice Adventurer, in 1778. Alternatively, to the Quileute Indians, the Olympic Mountains were known as O-Sky, but unlike Olympus, the meaning of that word has been lost, as so much native culture, to the ravages of time and White Man's conquest of the Americas.
Modern day exploration of Mount Olympus by climbers took another century to begin. The first parties to attempt a summit failed to surmount the highest point and, presumably, mistook sub-summits as their ultimate destination. Only in 1907 did a team of 11 Seattle Mountaineers summit the West Peak, the tallest point on the massif, and become the first to stand atop Mount Olympus.
For skiers, another half century passed before IGY (International Geophysical Year) scientists built a research station near the Blue Glacier in 1957. In the 1959 Mountaineer's Journal is an entry that reads, "During the winter months the heavy snowfall required the use of skis as several trips were made each month to the [Blue Glacier] cirque to survey movement stakes in the accumulation area." This was the first time skiing on the peak in known to have occurred.
Decades more would pass before skiers approached the peak again with skiing for recreation in mind. The earliest mention comes from Lowell Skoog's ski-history website, alpenglow.org where he lists a July, 1979 ski trip via the Hoh River. Skiers in years to come rarely deviated from this party’s route. Lowell himself was likely the first to come at Olympus from somewhere other than the Hoh Valley with skis. His route extended the Bailey Traverse from Bear Pass to Blizzard Pass via the Humes Glacier and Camp Pan to Olympus in 1989. I retraced his route from the Bailey's in 2011, but included the Olympus Traverse (a 1938 climber's route that tags all 3 summits of Olympus) and descent of the East Peak of Olympus. Much of the terrain of that adventure retraced what I'd visited two years earlier. At that time, in the spring of 2009, I spent 7 days camping atop the Snow Dome, during which I skied the North Face of Athena, North Face of the Middle Peak, SW Face of the West Peak, and West Face of Hugin, located in the mythical Valhallas (STORY: 7 Days of Wonder). No other information on skiing any of these areas before these trips is known.
After these adventures, I was content to never carry boards to Olympus again, but my Washington Glacier Ski Project piqued my interest once more. At first I studied the glaciers trying to learn the best ways to get to them. Eventually, I discovered more about the peak than I'd known before. That its 7,939' stature, while considered short by some, is actually the 26th most prominent peak in the country. Or that it's the third most glaciated peak besides Mount Rainier and Baker outside Alaska! This latter fact was the most relevant to me, as I'd set a goal of 20 new glaciers visited a year (with a hoped for project completion date of 2020). Given that there's around 250 official and unofficially named glaciers on my list so far, I'm beginning to run out of locations where I can tag more than a couple per excursion. Olympus is among the few exceptions remaining. Even though I'd been to it several times with skis, I'd still missed six glaciers. However, proximity doesn't equate to easy. Convoluted terrain, large bergschrunds and conditions were only a few of the difficulties. No matter how I cut it, inclement weather was the biggest factor. Per year, over 200 inches of moisture accumulates on Olympus, mostly as snow. Another fun fact: if measurements were taken, it'd likely rank as the snowiest place on Earth.
My ultimate goal in going to Mount Olympus again was to nibble at the corners, to ply away at the glaciers that nestle between cliff and icefall, waterfall and jungle. It was to go to the farthest place out there, and ski off the backside!
The rest here: http://www.myadventurecrusade.com/20...r-of-the-gods/
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06-12-2018, 01:50 PM #2registered abuser
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Fuck yeah man!!!!!
Welcome back
You’ve been missed
Stoked to do the extra click after work tonight
Love your style in adventuring and writing
++++++
Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
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06-12-2018, 02:10 PM #3skier
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- Dec 2002
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And all is right in the world again. Pure.
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06-12-2018, 02:43 PM #4
Stunnerz.
Merde De Glace On the Freak When Ski
>>>200 cm Black Bamboo Sidewalled DPS Lotus 120 : Best Skis Ever <<<
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06-12-2018, 02:51 PM #5
Yeehaw
Thanks for the share and congrats.
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06-12-2018, 03:47 PM #6Banned
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Breathtaking. Fan-fucking-tastic.
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06-12-2018, 06:32 PM #7
Wow, what a cool route. Well done! Good write up and great pics (which I always expect from you.) I would imagine those S side glacier haven't seen too many humans.
It's always cool to read about explorations of the Mt. Olympus massif other than the standard Blue/Snow Dome stuff, but this takes the cake. You guys handled some bad ass remote terrain. So cool
FWIW, we did the reverse on foot in 2002, then did the BRT northward to High Divide. On that trip, while camped at Camp Pan (a lifetime top 3 camp) we talked about someday packing in skis, but we were working stiffs back then and didn't make it happen.
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06-12-2018, 09:39 PM #8Registered User
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Dang. Nice work.
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06-12-2018, 09:42 PM #9Rod9301
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Incredible.
You should contact penteraide.com, in France, to show your videos.
BTW, in coastal Spain, on the Atlantic, there is an area that reminds me of the Olympic peninsula.
Pico de Europa.
Haven't been, but it's on my list
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using TGR Forums mobile app
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06-13-2018, 09:39 AM #10
Impressive work!
You are truly a gifted photographer. Some shots with amazing composition and lighting in there. Particularly liked the B&W of the runneled snow patterns.
Inspiring, to say the least.
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06-13-2018, 11:58 AM #11
Awesome T.R. Great pov ski footage in 'mercury rising'...nice lil runnel hit and run at 4:10. Beautiful ski lines!
Master of mediocrity.
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06-13-2018, 12:36 PM #12
TR: Mt. Olympus, Tour of the Gods, 8 days
Ski Pic of the year? Spring at least..Nice f’in form
Last edited by Self Jupiter; 06-13-2018 at 02:25 PM.
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06-13-2018, 12:39 PM #13
Dude, well done! Write another book with more stuff like this!
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06-13-2018, 02:19 PM #14glocal
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Well written.
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06-13-2018, 03:27 PM #15Registered User
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Bravo, well done!
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06-13-2018, 08:28 PM #16Registered User
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Thanks all! It was a heck of a fun trip.
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06-13-2018, 08:31 PM #17Registered User
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I'm working on a glacier project book for when I finish that project, but realistically 3-4 years off. I may work on something else in the interim, but books are expensive to print, somewhere around 50k for hardcover, even for a small run of 2-3k books. If softcover like last time, and lower quality, it's still 20k. If I do it again, I want to do something that I put more elbow grease into and make really special.
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06-15-2018, 07:34 PM #18
Amazing. Easily my favorite trip report you've done. Cheers!
god created man. winchester and baseball bats made them equal - evel kenievel
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06-18-2018, 03:30 PM #19
That was awesome & inspiring. Cheers.
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06-19-2018, 11:19 AM #20Registered User
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That was great. Reports like this make up for all the other crap posted here.
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06-20-2018, 10:49 AM #21Registered User
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Thanks! I wish I could get another trip this season but the snow went fast!
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06-24-2018, 09:42 AM #22
Took me till this morning to sit down and read your full story. Awesome trip and great write up. My wife's from Quilcene and TR's like this only fuel our desire to dedicate some time in the PNW and do a proper ski on Olympus (in a much more mortal fashion that you three). Thanks Jason!
IGY - I do love me some Donald Fagen
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06-28-2018, 03:44 PM #23Registered User
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Really inspiring work, thanks for sharing OP.
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06-28-2018, 06:23 PM #24
Excellent. I've shared this with many pals. Really enjoyed the mixed format - I thought the little videos tied in nicely with the words and photos.
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06-28-2018, 06:49 PM #25Registered User
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- Feb 2018
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- Salt Lake City
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Man, my winter sucked... LOL
Best write up I've seen in a long time. Thx dude.https://GearLobo.com
"Good things come to those who bait"
My greatest fear is that after I die, my wife will sell my gear for what I told her I paid for it.
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