I. Planning and Background
I always wanted to go up to
Mount Washington's eastern ravines for a few days of both climbing and skiing.
I'd done one or the other, but not really both. If we climbed, it was to climb;
if we skied, any climbing was in the service of that.
So this December I hatched a
plan to head up and do both, and my 18‑year‑old son Tobias was my partner. He'd
been there before, skiing the lower sections of Hillman's Highway and climbing
it one year when the neve was great for climbing to the top but not yet
skiable.
We had both seen the spring
circus, which is rightly notorious for human frailty and foolishness. We
enjoyed the cold‑weather camping at Hermit Lake, which does not attract too
many others despite the area’s heavy traffic. And we wanted more.
Caveat emptor.
II. Approach to Hermit Lake
The day after Christmas we
drove up from Brooklyn early, arriving at Pinkham Notch just after noon.
Knowing the weather was supposed to be variable—even by the standards of the
area—we left our wiper blades up.
We shouldered 60‑pound packs
with camping, ice climbing, and skiing kit, plus 4–5 days of food and fuel. We
managed the hike of a couple of miles and less than a couple thousand feet of
gain and made camp without much fuss, except for the chill. That night the
thermometer registered a low of 4°F, but we wanted for nothing, stayed warm,
and slept a dozen hours.
III. Into Huntington Ravine
We woke about an hour before
dawn at 6. The cold slowed us down, and by 8
we set out for Huntington Ravine.
About five minutes after
leaving the lean‑to, we realized we were going nowhere fast in thigh‑deep snow,
so we returned for our skis. Things moved faster then, and we covered the mile
or so between the ravines (Hermit Lake sits below Tuckerman’s).
We wanted to climb ice, since
screws were the only protection we had. Odell’s and Pinnacle Gully—grade 2–3
classics offering 2–4 pitches of alpine ice—were the obvious targets.
IV. Skinning and Climbing
Odell’s
We skinned high into Huntington
with Toby leading. A snowshoer and another climber trailed us; the snowshoer
headed to Central Gully, which we had considered for descent.
Where hermit pines gave way to
scrub bushes, we stowed our skis. I thought I made a waypoint on my GPS. Toby
was using his watch and I my phone as navigation aids, having unwisely left the
map at camp.
We booted to the bottom of
Odell’s. Conditions looked decent: no open water, solid snow and ice, roughly
700 feet of climbing followed by about 500 more to the Alpine Garden.
We started climbing around 10.
Over the next 4–5 pitches, progress was slow but steady. A few screws protected
modest Grade‑3 bulges; only one belay relied on screws. Others were shrubs,
snow seats, or a mix.
We topped out around 2:20. The
sun hit us for the first time, lifting our spirits. It was Toby’s first true
technical alpine route—he even led a pitch or two. Tired and cold, we prepared
to descend.
V. Assessing Descent Options
We followed cairns to locate
the Huntington Ravine Trail, roughly aligned with Central Gully.
I had descended Central two
decades earlier, mid‑winter, with Will Mayo, after climbing Black Dike and
Fafnir in a morning. Will suggested Central—“it sets up nicely”—and he was
right.
This time, though, there was
considerable snow but not enough to fill Central. We followed markers a few
hundred feet down. The trail is considered the most challenging eastern
approach to the summit, and the iced‑over steps made that obvious.
Left of us lay Diagonal
Gully—simpler at the top, yet guarded by a long ice bulge at the bottom. We
couldn’t see the bulge, only the snow fan below, and optimistically wondered if
we could sneak around it.
We weighed hiking back up to Lion Head, then returning for skis in deep snow. Instead, we headed down Diagonal. The couloir felt well‑consolidated: loose but not too loose, with firm footing and axe placements.
VI. Rappels and a Difficult
Descent
After 400–500 feet we reached
the rollover above the ice cliffs and evaluated options. To the right,
indistinct lines trended toward Yale Gully. Left, a steep scruffy gully.
Toby spotted a small but sturdy
tree—about four inches thick. We slung it and built our first 100‑foot rappel
with our single rope.
Descending, I faced two
choices: get onto the ice and rappel off screws for an unknown distance, or
traverse left, which I did. A first screw hit snice and didn’t bite, but two better
placements higher up allowed me to equalize an anchor and bring Toby down.
Dusk was coming fast. We donned
headlamps and set a second rappel. Toby pointed out a patch of snow high and
left that could spit us onto the snowfields. I stomped a platform and brought
him down. One of my gloves—leashed—still managed to vanish into the darkness.
We downclimbed another hundred
feet to the alpine brush. Toby trended unerringly toward our ski
cache—critical, because the waypoint I thought I’d set wasn’t there. Exhausted,
we paused, then pushed on.
A tough descent led through
creek crossings and onto the cat tracks by the Albert Dow memorial rescue cache. A GPS
error led us briefly astray; Toby recognized it and we reversed painfully.
Eventually we reached Hermit Lake, refilled water, and collapsed at camp feeling
lucky.
VII. Rest Day and Weather
Trouble
The next day was a rest—or
“spa”—day. We slept in. Toby might not have risen at 8 had I not gotten up to
enjoy the warming morning. We ate and drank aggressively to fend off cramps.
At the caretaker’s porch,
Sunday crowds watched skiers drop the Tucks headwall. We had mild FOMO, but no
actual desire to ski on our battered legs.
Weather forecasts shifted
rapidly—from promised heavy snow to freezing sleet and rain. Tuesday called for
100‑mph winds.
VIII.
Meeting with Blake and Heading to the Gulf of Slides
We planned to meet Blake Keogh,
a respected local guide, at 8 a.m. Rain started at 2 a.m., with winds building. Dawn
brought classic New England misery.
We headed a short distance down
the Sherburne Trail, found the entrance to the Graham Trail (marked by rusty
tin can bottoms on birches), and contoured south toward the Gulf of Slides. We
cached big packs, skinned into fragrant pines, and enjoyed the sheltered
skinning after so much alpine exposure.
A recent D3 avalanche had ripped through Gully #1. As we approached through forest to the debris, Blake reminded us we were in avalanche terrain—though once we emerged the snapped trees made that clear.
IX. Booting Up and Skiing
Down
We reached the main gully,
donned crampons, stowed skis, and started boot‑packing. About 1,000 feet up, we
discussed descent lines. Blake recommended a line that skirted below the crown and
avoided the ice cliff.
We transitioned near the crown.
I was slow—still wearing crampons, skins still on—and wind made everything
harder. Eventually, we were ready.
Blake dropped first, radioed
back, Toby followed, then me. The snow skied well despite torrential
conditions. But it was clear that with rising winds and dropping temperatures,
ice was coming.
We reached the debris fan.
Blake suggested another lap; I throat‑slashed my veto. My legs were thinking
about the ski out with 60‑pound packs. Blake reiterated a theme: avalanche
hazards mattered, and those proved manageable that day, but this day the weather governed everything.
X. The Exit and Debrief
We whipped down the trail, wrapped around to the
traverse low point, skinned back for our packs, and descended the Sherbie.
Heavy packs made it deliberate, but still enjoyable. Warm temps softened the
ice patches.
The parking lot—sand‑covered
glaze—was the technical crux of the day. We tiptoed around a backhoe and stowed
soaked gear before heading into Pinkham Notch for a debrief. It’s a ritual I
plan to repeat.
Blake answered questions and
unpacked decisions. We discussed future options—the Great Gulf, Owens, and
beyond. Despite the freezing rain and soaked layers, we felt grounded and
content. Toby and I knew we’d found our East Coast ski mentor.
XI. Reflections on Decision
Making
I’m not happy with my decision‑making
on the Odell’s descent. The climb was fine, if late, but the descent down an
unclear, risky route was not the right call.
Toby apologized for the gear we
abandoned; I told him it was the least of my concerns. He was rock‑solid all
day—up and down—helping at key moments and demonstrating the makings of a
strong alpinist.
In retrospect, we should have
dropped skis at Lion Head and taken the known descent. It might have cost us
the climb, but I’ve descended Lion Head in the dark before; we likely could
have handled a bit more delay. Starting earlier would also have helped.
Once engaged in the descent,
though, I stand by each tactical decision. Toby handled 400+ feet of no‑fall
downclimbing with composure. When we became cliffed, he kept searching for
solutions; one worked. Later, he caught a route‑finding error when it mattered
most. Most importantly, he never quit—critical when it’s freezing and you’re
out of food and water.
We did what we could with the
situation we created. I’m content with the learning and with the calm we
maintained under stress. And it made skiing with a guide—even in freezing rain
in an avy path—deeply enjoyable.

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