Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Area Profile: Main Elk Canyon, Flat Tops Range

Main Elk Canyon is one of the major creek basins that drains the southwestern portion of the Flat Tops Range in central Colorado. While not really mountaineering, this little-known location is a great place to enjoy an alpine environment and even hone your skills. This major canyon is home to some remote alpine terrain, soaring limestone cliffs, and some of the best sport climbing in western Colorado. The creek, accessed from the small, non-descript town of New Castle, Colorado, also has a pair of significant trails that can lead one eventually into the Flat Tops Wilderness Area.

 The Main Elk area is one of western Colorado's most beautiful and least traveled places. It's semi-remote location and out-of-the-way approach have deterred many people. For those, however, that are willing to spend the time to seek out what lies within this amazing place, there are untold secrets just waiting to be discovered. The possibilities for future rock climbing seems almost limitless, and the possibility for adventure is there for those willing to put in the work. While the Pup Tent of Solitude and Main Elk crags offer only mediocre to moderate challenges, for the sport climbing master with a sense of adventure the Fortress of Solitude is one of the best climbing destinations around.

HISTORY

 The Main Elk drainage has mostly escaped the popularity that has engulfed the nearby creeks and trails of Glenwood Canyon, yet from a climbing perspective its history is more significant to the annals of rock history that any area within Glenwood Canyon. It could be said that without the attention gained by the hardwork and difficult redpoints of Tommy Caldwell in 1999 and 2003, the Fortress of Solitude would be just another obscure, if not massive and untapped, crag in the backcountry of Colorado. When Caldwell redpointed Kryptonite at last, it was the country’s first 5.14d, making the moment a benchmark in the history of American sport climbing. Due to subsequent changes in the route topography, perhaps due to natural processes or perhaps due to clandestine chipping by later climbers, Kryptonite is often now considered 5.14c.

 Nearly four years later, Caldwell returned to the Fortress and redpointed a monster project after several months of work. Famously, Caldwell refused to rate the route, claiming only that it was "significantly harder" than Kryptonite, which led to climbing media claiming Luthor as the first 5.15. To this day the route's rating has yet to have confirmation as nobody has been able to repeat Caldwell’s climb. Later rounds of development by climbers such as Dave Pegg, Matt Samet, Bryan Gall, and others have greatly expanded the climbing at the Fortress and the Pup Tent. Other walls nearby including some cliffs on the northeast side of the road are also starting to bee developed, though information about much of these routes is difficult to obtain.

 HIKING

 Two major hiking trails exist within the Main Elk Canyon system; the trail that follows along the creek into the canyon proper and the steeper Hadley Gulch trail that turns off the creek and follows Hadley Gulch up onto the canyon rim and, ultimately, onto the Flat Tops. From the parking area, follow the Hadley Gulch trail for .22 miles until you reach a prominent fork. Here is where the two routes differ:

  Hadley Gulch Trail- This trail takes the right branch at the fork and contours steeply up the hillside and ultimately into the steep, usually dry creekbed. In the spring, however, this creek can hold a substantial amount of water and even be difficult to cross, as was the case for several weeks during the banner year of 2011. A small side trail just after the creek crossing access the climbing and the first route, Gatehouse of Lonliness, is the black buttress right here at this junction. To continue up the Hadley Gulch trail, follow the steep and winding trail as it climbs in the shadow of the Fortress of Solitude (about a mile passed the creek crossing) and into a meadow with another fork in the trail. You can try to follow the creek here but the route quickly becomes overgrown and downed trees are a problem. The main route turns left and climbs up the hill side through the cliffs and topsout at some indistinct dirt roads on the canyon rim. From here you are about 2.75 from the trailhead and have gained over 2,000 feet of elevation. On top of the rim there are a number of options available by following a variety of backcountry roads. This is a barren place that doesn’t see much traffic. Be sure to remember how to find the trail again as it quickly becomes lost in the thick brush.

Cliffs along Hadley Gulch trail

Main Elk Creek/Canyon

This beautiful hike is much quieter than neighbors such as Grizzly Creek or No Name. This beautiful trail follows the creek along the bottom of a narrow, quaint canyon for two miles to a prominent fork in the canyon. There is possible camping in this area. The trail peters out here and to continue farther you will need good backcountry skills. Ultimately, if you were to follow this canyon to its source, you will emerge deep in the Flat Tops above the Crater Lake area.
Main Elk Canyon during runoff, any farther means gettin' wet....
CLIMBING

While the climbing in Main Elk Canyon will never be as popular and famous as nearby Rifle Mountain Park, there is some climbing in the area that is still world class. The rock that has been established is split into three main crags:

Fortress of Solitude

The Fortress is proud, famous, and burly. Some of the hardest climbs in North America if not the world sit up there waiting, yet it is rare to see more than a few people up here all season! There are several reasons for that, I suspect. One is that given the grueling approach, it is difficult to motivate for this out-of-the-way crag with the roadside walls at Rifle Mountain Park nearby. Still, for those undaunted by things like a steep hike or semi-remote location, it is hard to beat the Fortress in terms of challenge and adventure, especially for sport climbing! Some of the best climbs at the Fortress (left to right)

RouteTypePitchesDifficultyLocation/Description
Tommy’s 5.11Sport15.11dThe leftmost route at the Fortress. An early Tommy Caldwell creation.
The PummelingSport15.13b RThis 100 foot pitch is famous for it’s difficulty and runout after the third bolt.
Glamorama Sport15.12dNot as hard as it looks. Climb through a section of bad rock to some of the best and most interesting holds.
The Daily PlanetSport15.13dWork through a mediocre first half to an amazing 60 feet of .13d on great rock.
Kryptonite Sport15.14dIt takes a superhero to send this! A mega-famous route that has only been climbed a few times.
Flex Luthor Sport15.15aTouted as North America’s fist 5.15. Still unrepeated.
Metropolis Sport15.12cA 130 foot pitch that climbs some brilliant, sustained rock.
Orange Mechanique Sport15.13aLeft side of the eastern portion of the Fortress. Crimp. 60 ft.
Boy Wonder Sport15.12dA short climb for the Fortress but with a variety of holds.


The Fortress of Solitude
Pup Tent of Solitude

The Pup Tent is overshadowed by it’s towering neighbor, but it is still a worthy crag, particularly if you are a novice/intermediate climber. There are just over 50 established lines, most of which are bolted with a handful of short trad lines thrown in for the mix. The routes are usually short, and the rock in general is quite good. Some of the better routes at the Pup Tent (right to left, as encountered from trail):

RouteTypePitchesDifficultyLocation/Description
Gatehouse of Lonliness Sport15.8This short climb is the first route encountered at the Tent and one of the easiest. Could use a cleaning.
Total Eclipse Sport15.12aSteep, bouldery and long for the tent. 7 bolts.
SubprimeSport15.11aDifficult start on a tan-colored wall.
Stimulus PackageSport15.11dAn eight-bolt arĂȘte.
Rex Luthor Sport15.11cShort, challenging. Start on a flake and over a bulge.
CraptoniteSport15.12aone of the best routes at the Tent
Easiest Sport15.7A short climb, easiest at Tent. Can access anchors to next to climbs from top.
EasySport15.10aClimb easy terrain to an insecure flake and reachy, overhanging topout.
Easier Sport15.9A tricky climb with some fun movement at the crux topout
Deputy Dawg Lives to Fight Another Day Sport15.8Possibly the best moderate at the Tent
Country Style Pork Rib Sport15.9A challenging 5.9 with a counter-intuitive crux
First Blood Sport15.9+ On the right side of the next teir down from the previous climbs
Magical HandholdSport15.10cA fun climb with some sneaky beta
Subtle KnifeSport15.10aAn interesting arete feature with good, dark stone. Anchor chains were stolen from this climb and as of now still haven't been replaced
Puppy LoveSport15.11cOne of the Tent’s best! Long and challenging.
Nose Picking GoodSport15.9A cool, black-colored arete. Some choss on a ledge midway and possible rope snag near top.
NicklepupSport15.10aA fun long 5.10a with a easy diheadral to a great roof problem on big holds
Girls With GunsSport15.10dA long climb, one of the Tent’s best. Bouldery start to beautiful headwall
Ewok StewSport15.9An interesting climb up awesome, dark rock.
Disturbed SusanSport15.10bOne of the climbs farthest to the left at the Pup Tent sector. Some funky rock to a cool roof problem

Girls With Guns (5.10d). One of the Pup Tent's most classic climbs

Main Elk Crag

A slightly more obscure wall, this set of cliffs within the canyon proper above Main Elk Creek see even less traffic than the Pup Tent. The routes here are more advanced than the Tent as well, and the rock quality has moments of greatness and moments of ugliness. A couple of chossy trad routes are thrown in for fun.
 
RouteTypePitchesDifficultyLocation/Description
Giblet Gravy Sport15.10bA good warm-up for the area
Patchouli Sport15.11cA crack line over a bulge
Best in Show Sport15.12dOften considered the best route at the Main Elk Crag
Black Ball Retriever Sport15.12cA hard route with great rock. Identified by black hangers.
Jewel Rosena Sport15.12aJust right of a cave/roof.
Both Ends Burning Sport15.13aThe first route to te right of where the approach trail meets the cliff
Infinite Jest Sport15.12dA 80 foot pitch that crosses varying rock that improves as you climb
Mint Jelly Trad15.8+A good trad route, with some loose rock and choss to tiptoe around. Good protection.

GETTING THERE

Main Elk Canyon is accessed from the town of New Castle (exit 105) 7 miles west of Glenwood Springs, Colorado. At the exit, turn north and cross a bridge over some railroad tracks to a four-way blinking red light. Turn left. Go 1.2 through downtown New Castle and turn right onto N. 7th Street. If you cross the creek you have gone just a little too far. Follow this road for .7 miles through a neighborhood and continue straight at the junction with Castle Valley Boulevard. After another 3.1 miles turn right onto CR 243 (Main Elk Road) which is paved. Follow this road for 6 miles until it crosses the creek and reaches a trailhead and a small parking area.

SEASON

Main Elk offers various sorts of adventures in all seasons. While the main canyon gets snowy and cold in the winter, those adept with snow travel may find the quiet trails are at their best in these sorts of conditions. The Pup Tent is a very sunny crag that is often climbable even in the dead of winter. The summertime, however, can be too hot for the south-facing cliffs, especially at the Tent, but hiking within the shady canyon is quite pleasant in the hot season. In the spring, Main Elk Creek can be very swift and the narrowest point in the canyon can be flooded, making for difficult passage.

Main Elk in winter

CAMPING

Camping is illegal at the trailhead for the Main Elk area. My recommendation would be to either stay at the nearby Elk Creek Campground (just up nearby East Elk Creek) for a small fee, or backpack a short ways into Main Elk Canyon (being sure to adhere to No Trace ethic, of course). 

 EXTERNAL LINKS 

Rifle Mountain Park and Western Colorado Climbs is an excellent guidebook not only to the world-famous crags of Rifle and the adventurous rock here in Main Elk but to the entire Roaring Fork Valley and lower Valley area. It is a must for anyone who wants to visit the area to climb. Purchase the book at local climbing shops in the area such as Summit Canyon Mountaineering or online at Wolverine Publishing’s website. 

 Mountainproject.com has a database with user-created beta on climbs at the Fortress of Solitude and the Pup Tent of Solitude

Splitterchoss.com has more recent information about newer bolted routes at the Pup Tent.

Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook


Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link


Saturday, September 17, 2011

NEWS: 9 Year Old Girl Climbs Longs Peak's Diamond

The Diamond from Chasm View
If you needed a little inspiration for your alpine climbing (or something to bring a little much-needed modesty to your own accomplishments) look no further than 9 year-old Stella Noble of Boulder, CO who climbed the Casual Route (IV, 5.10 a) on Longs Peak's Diamond August 31. Stella accomplished the feat with her father Forrest Noble, and became the youngest person ever to climb Colorado's most famous big wall.

Although Stella is young, she is already an accomplished climber. A member of the ABC climbing team in Boulder, Stella took first place in this summer's Teva Mountain Games in the Ages 11 and under category and is currently ranked 1st in the country for sport climbing in her age group.

Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook


Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link


Tuesday, September 13, 2011

NEWS: Climber Killed on Thunder Pyramid

The Pyramid-"Thunder Pyramid" ridge
In sad news, a 41-year old climber from Dillon, CO was killed on "Thunder Pyramid" in the Elk Range near Aspen on Saturday. "Thunder Pyramid" is in the Maroon Bells area and is connected by ridge to famous 14er Pyramid Peak. Pyramid Peak and nearby Maroon Bells are notorious for their treacherous rock, and the far less well-known "Thunder Pyramid" has a reputation for being even worse. Regarding this dangerous mountain, famed Colorado guidebook author Gerry Roach in his book Colorado's Thireteeners states, "After an ascent of "Thunder Pyramid," most people form the opinion that it is a hidden horror."

The victim's body was apparently in a very rugged location, and authorities still hadn't been able to recover the body. unfavorable weather also complicated the operation.

At 13,932' Thunder Pyramid is Colorado's 65th tallest mountain, making it a target for those attempting to complete the Top 100, or "Centennial" list.

While there have been a number of fatal tragedies in Colorado's mountains this season, they still are somewhat rare, but as mountaineers and human beings we hate when we loose one of our own. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victim and his family and friends.

UPDATE: 9/15/11

The climber who passed away on  Thunder Pyramid has been identified as David Morano, a 41 year old from Dillon, CO. According to reports Morano was very experienced and had climbed 129 of Colorado's 200 highest peaks. Despite rough terrain and bad weather, his body has been recovered. All of our thoughts are with Morano and those who knew him.

Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook


Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link


Monday, September 12, 2011

Why Mt. Sopris Should Remain Mt. Sopris

Recently, there has been a highly publicized and controversial push to re-name the east summit of Mt. Sopris to John Denver Peak after the late Aspenite folk singer. While I don't know if I would call myself a fan of John Denver's music, I do enjoy many of his songs (as well as the Muppets Christmas, which I grew up on), and I appreciate what he has meant to the Roaring Fork Valley and to Colorado. Despite this, I am utterly opposed to the re-naming of Mt. Sopris's east summit on his behalf.
Storm clouds over Sopris
The reason for my opinion, and my subsequent rant, is that after living in Glenwood Springs for the better portion of my life Mt. Sopris has been a source of inspiration and admiration for me for many years. On a bad day, all I have to do is look up at Sopris's twin summits and I feel some relief. It is hard to explain to people who haven't lived in the lower Roaring Fork Valley what exactly Mt. Sopris means to us. MANY businesses have taken Mt. Sopris as their namesake. Even one of the local elementary schools is named Sopris Elementary. The eponymous Mt. Sopris is a totem and a treasure for us here in the Glenwood Springs and Carbondale area.

Sopris is a singular peak. When viewed from the north, Sopris is one of the largest and most prominent peaks in all of Colorado. The effect of re-naming this magical peak would be like splitting the mountain in half. No longer could you look up and see "ah, look at Mt. Sopris today" without feeling in some way incorrect. One of the arguments put forth by the petitioner is that the east summit is "unnamed". I promise those of you that may have less experience with the mountain that it does have a name, and that name is Mt. Sopris.

By most measures both the east and west summits of Mt. Sopris are of equal height (12,953') and thus BOTH are considered "Mt. Sopris". Many mountaineers summit only the east peak (the one in question) when they scale Sopris's long slopes. Though the peaks do fit the standard criteria in Colorado (300 feet of topographical prominence) to qualify as individual peaks, when one steps back it is clear that Sopris is one mountain.

I suppose it is a pointless rant, as the likelihood of the U.S. Board of Geographic Names changing Mt. Sopris is slim, and even if such a change did occur, I suspect most of the people in the Roaring Fork Valley would never accept it (except maybe a few in Aspen, but in my mind they have no say as the mountain is not visible from their backyards). Let me say this, however. The individual behind the petition, whom I believe is from Denver, has claimed that the resistance to the proposal is based on the misunderstanding that they want to change the name of the entire mountain. This is not true. We here who this change will most effect understand their proposal perfectly. The other claim put forth (in a recent Aspen Times interview) is that the opposition is very small but very vocal. This couldn't be further from the truth. Of all the many locals I have talked to, almost all are outraged by this ludicrous idea, and if the petitioner could read the letters to the editor in the local newspaper it would be clear that the opposition is not so small.

Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook


Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link


Thursday, September 8, 2011

PEAK OF THE WEEK: Conundrum Peak (14,064' / 4287 m)

Conundrum Peak as seen from the route up Castle
INTRODUCTION
As an "unofficial" 14'er, Conundrum Peak is probably the least famous and least climbed of all the Elk Range 14'ers. Despite Conundrum being shunned on most 14'er lists, it is a worthy mountain with a beautiful profile and some high quality route.

GETTING THERE
Conundrum is found by taking the Castle Creek turnoff towards Ashcroft from a large roundabout just north Aspen, Colorado on Highway 82 (the same way you get to Castle Peak). After 13 miles (after you have passed the tiny burg of Ashcroft and some very well-to-do homes) turn right onto a dirt road. Occasionally, some very hardy souls will park here. Continue 1.5 miles along a rough road to a creek crossing that will be difficult for low-clearance vehicles. Many people park here. 4WD vehicles can continue, however, along a very rough road all the way to 12,700' where there is a good parking lot. This 4WD approach does not allow you to comply with the 3,000' rule but does highly abridge your day.

ROUTES
South Ridge
snow on Castle Peak
The snow pitch in September
From the parking lot (whether you got there on foot or by car) continue along a strong hikers trail into the basin in-between Castle and Conundrum peaks. This will require, in all seasons, some snow and ice travel, so an ice-axe and crampons might be useful. Continue through the scree past a small lake and climb the steep slope to the saddle between Castle and Conundrum Peaks. This snow pitch is the crux of the route. If the top part of the route is dry (late summer) it is a nightmarish ascent on steep, loose gravel. Once you have reached the 13,800' saddle, turn right and ascend to Conundrum's south summit (class 2). The conundrum here is that this summit appears higher (it is actually about 40' lower). Descend into the notch at the top of Conundrum Couloir and climb to the higher, true summit to the north.

This route can also be reached from Castle's northeast ridge by ascending to Castle Peak's summit and traversing over to Conundrum.

Conundrum Couloir
Conundrum Peak and Conundrum Couloir
Conundrum Peak from Castle Peak
Conundrum Couloir is one of the better snow routes in the Elks (save perhaps the Bell Cord Couloir). It is a popular difficult ski route and a good spring ascent. Follow the South Ridge route into the basin between Castle and Conundrum Peaks. Instead of climbing up to the saddle between the two peaks, turn and ascend the steep, obvious couloir up the middle of Conundrum's east face. The climbing in the couloir is very steep and there is often a cornice (crux) the caps the top. Still, this route is only considered class 3. Descend by ski or by following the South Ridge route.



Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook

Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link


Sunday, September 4, 2011

Capitol of the Rockies

Capitol Peak in the Elk Mountains of Colorado

When our water filter broke, it seemed that the mountain had conspired against and defeated us before we’d even begun to climb. The summer of 2011 was one of the wettest, stormiest, and strangest seasons in memory. High snowpack combined with very late storms and cool spring temperatures kept the rivers running high and the mountains packed with snow far later into the season than an average year. Our several planned attempts at Capitol were repeatedly pushed back due to strong monsoon patterns that generated weather predictions like “70% severe thunderstorms” and “60% chance of rain and snow” for weeks on end in the high country. But now that September had arrived, we hoped that the monsoon pattern was behind us and we might have a chance at good weather for a summit attempt on what many call Colorado’s hardest 14er.
Despite it being Labor Day weekend we set-out for Capitol’s trailhead hoping that our local position (1 hr drive from doorstep to trailhead) would give us a head start for the good campsites at Capitol Lake. The weather report was as good as we had seen it in weeks: Mostly Sunny, 20% chance afternoon showers. We decided to do Capitol at a leisurely 3-day pace, allowing one for the somewhat lengthy approach, one for the summit, and the last for the hike out.

We arrived at the Capitol Creek trailhead and were greeted a cow and her two calves. Though she refused to budge from her spot at the parking lot, she eyed us curiously and not without some suspicion as we yanked the final straps on our backpacks tight, cinched down our boots, and started down the trail. A large, slow-moving storm was rumbling to the north of us, but it seemed at worst that we’d catch the side of it and move on, the weather was supposed to be perfect, after all.

Capitol Peak in the Elks
Capitol looms from the trailhead
The Capitol “Ditch” alternative is a pleasant stroll that starts off mostly flat before climbing up into a beautiful meadow high above the creek. The north face of Capitol towered above most of our approach, capping off a green and lush valley with one of Colorado’s most impressive rock escarpments.

It was about the time that we reached the junction with the main Capitol Creek trail that the rain began.

It was a steady, soaking sort of rain, one that penetrates all but the most well sealed of shell layering. Bouts of hail came down in-between torrents of rain, and the skinny trees that populate the 10,000’ riparian zone didn’t provide much shelter. A few semi-close clashes of thunder brought back all sorts of backcountry memories: our Gore Range backpack trip where we had to wait out a vicious 3-hour storm the nearby town of Breckenridge called the worst in a hundred years, a multi-wave thunderstorm that ushered in the first night of an eight day stint in the Wind River Range, Wyoming, and the worst of all: a fifteen-hour onslaught that pinned us down for a sleepless night and then some at Geneva Lake last summer. We couldn’t believe that the good weather we’d waited impatiently for all summer had been replaced instead by more of the same.

Capitol Peak
The approach hike to Capitol
It hailed hard on us as we crested the last hill to Capitol Lake and selected a campsite. You could feel the ice pelting off your head like so many stones. Pitching a tent in a storm is a messy and sloppy process, and I could sense the mounting frustration in both of us as we tried to erect our flimsy shelter. Of course by the time the time was up and our gear inside the storm had stopped, so we decided to take the window of good weather to eat our dinner and pump water for the climb the following day.

It was hard not to stare up at Capitol’s rugged battlements in both wonderment and some terror. K2, a major false-summit and obstacle on the class 4 standard route which we were planning to attempt, was clearly visible, and it wasn’t hard to ascertain the approximate location of the Knife Edge from there. We sat silent in the shadow of the great mountain as we ate our dinner, reflecting on the wilderness and mountains and mountaineers.

Once dinner was through, disaster struck.

It started when I kicked the stove into the lake, which luckily floated as the propane canister had just enough to get us through the three days. Only minutes after the soggy retrieval, a gust of wind up-ended what remained of our macaroni and cheese onto the rocks at the lakeshore. We laughed off these two errors a small, albeit annoying, inconveniences and prepared to refill our water bottles for the following morning. Already, the alarm on my phone had been set for 5:00 am. That was when the water pump broke. Something, it seemed, was conspiring to keep us off the mountain.

But thanks to the goodwill of some fellow campers, allowing us to borrow their pump on the contingent that we’d fill their bottles while we were at it (we offered, they didn’t insist) we were able to top off our water bottles and camelbacks and carry on with our bid for the summit. Almost predictably, however, the rain started once again as we pumped, and the bright stroke of a thunderbolt reminded us that many things can end any mountain attempt and any illusion you might have of control is just that, illusion. It was the mountain that was in charge, and we weren’t here to “conquer” it.

campsite near Capitol Peak
Sunset on Capitol from camp

The next morning we awoke from a fitful slumber to clear skies. We made oatmeal trying not to think of the line from the John Prine song “Illegal Smile” “…a boat of oatmeal tried to stare me down, and won….”. Already we could see a number of headlamps weaving up the steep, grassy slope to the saddle between Capitol Peak and its neighbor Mt. Daly (13,300’). Once breakfast was down, the gear, water and food for the day sorted, and the boots cinched tight, we began our way up the long slope for ourselves. Ahead we could see six headlamps. The three we’d seen first thing in the morning were near the top of the slope and the other group was about midway when we hit the bottom.

That was about when we saw the fox for the first time.

It was still dark; the pale glow of starlight dimly illuminated the jagged corners of Capitol’s north face. Suddenly, not forty feet away, two green eyes caught my headlamp’s dim glow. The animal was still but didn’t look afraid. I could tell right away by the tail what it was.

“Fox!” Ella cried out.

The fox was on the slope above us, and as we crew nearer he trotted ahead, following the  trail as it switchbacked through the grass. Several times the fox would stop and turn to watch us only to continue along the trail ahead. At one point it let me come within fifteen or twenty feet before leaping on ahead just like a nimble-footed dog. This went on for a strangely long time. But suddenly the fox darted off the trail south towards Mt. Daly. We lost it in the darkness. Still, for an such an otherwise elusive creature it was a strangely long encounter.

Ella caught up and we continued up laughing, already our prospects seemed brighter and not even a hint of a cloud graced the sky. The sun was about to come up and the mountains around us were coming alive with color. A dim red glow was cast over Capitol’s imposing face. Strangely, despite Capitol’s jagged aspect and intimidating stature, I didn’t feel the anxiety that I had always expected I would on Capitol Day. You can say what you want about whether Capitol is Colorado’s hardest 14er, but it is hard to deny that Capitol has a certain reputation. And I wouldn’t doubt that if you polled the mountaineering community to name the hardest 14er in Colorado, no mountain would get more votes than Capitol.

A few switchbacks later, I stopped to rest and let Ella catch up when I saw behind her, trotting casually up the trail, the fox had returned. I called out to Ella and she turned just in time to see it veer off the trail not fifteen feet from here and disappear once and for all into the bush. We couldn’t help but laugh in amazement.

North Face of Capitol Peak
Capitol just before sunrise
When we reached the 12,500’ saddle, we had already climbed over a thousand feet, and a cold breeze was sweeping forcefully in from the west. We stopped to throw down a quick snack and adjust our layers to the changing temperatures. From here the route drops behind the northeast ridge proper into Moon Lake Basin. It was here that the class 1 trail hiking came to an end. Contoured south and then southwest up the basin below some jagged cliffs, turning at last toward a distant point that materializes into the infamous sub-peak “K2”. K2 has only 84 feet of topographical prominence and therefore is not considered a true peak, but it has stature nonetheless. After much class 2+ and even some class 3 (possibly avoidable) scrambling up the boulderfield, K2 was the first real obstacle on our route to Capitol.

There are several options for dealing with K2. Some choose to climb to its summit, a nifty throne whose view of Capitol is famous, then traverse west and downclimb some class 3-4 rock onto the ridge. We chose to forgo the energy expense and instead traversed west into a steep gully on the north face. A group of three post-college age boys had been leap frogging with us for so long to this point that our groups had merged. As we descended down the steep 2+ gully one at a time, it was already becoming apparent which of the five of us was going to struggle with Capitol’s unique difficulties. At the bottom of the gully there was an intimidating class 3+ pitch up some very loose rock to escape off the north face back onto the relative safety of the ridge. We did this pitch one a time to minimize rockfall. At one point near the top I was drawn into a variation that ended in a choss pile where it seemed every rock was loose and ready to tumble down 1,800 feet down the north face to Capitol Lake.

I hesitated for a minute at the crux move, feeling particularly uneasy about the stability of the rocks above me.

“I don’t know what I can trust,” I said to our new friend Rob above me, as I gingerly tested the most promising candidates for my next hold.

He laughed. “None of it.”

I could tell he was right. Trying to move like a feather, I climbed up the final eight feet to the ridge next to him and waited for everyone else to follow. It was at this gnarly pitch that we lost the first of our companions.

a gully on the North Face of Capitol Peak in Colorado
A gully on the north face

Unnerved by the loose rock and exposure down the north face, one of our new friends called out that he was going to be spending the rest of the day at K2, tracking our progress and patiently awaiting our return. I understood; it was a maxim I’d learn to live by in mountaineering: prudence over pride. But for me, after years of high ridges and my latest addiction traditional rock climbing, had brought me a confidence that kept the nagging threat of exposure at bay.

After the loose pitch, we rounded an easy class 2 corner and next to a notch between K2 and the northeast ridge. Here a dramatic cliff to our left got whatever was left of my attention to get. Thousands of feet of air was all around. I surveyed the ridge ahead and the breathtaking view of Capitol and tried not to imagine the entirety of the task before us. Though the summit was closer than ever, it still seemed a very long ways away. And it was obvious from our new perspective that a great number of difficulties were in our near future. This was clearly no place for the “gaper” or “neophyte” crowd you might find on the summit of Mt. Elbert.

The Knife Edge and Capitol Peak
Capitol ahead...
We waited a few minutes for our two remaining companions to catch up in quiet contemplation, neither of us speaking of what stood before us. It was of course, what we had expected from Capitol: a skinny and jagged ridge with 70 degree drop-offs on each side, sharpening, at times, to a fin small enough to fit our hand over that led to a steep and complicated face with plenty of class 5 cliffs and loose boulders to circumnavigate. “Spicy” was the preferred term for our newly companions of Capitol’s complicated terrain. It seemed a modest term for what we were looking at now.

Most likely due to nerves, I was unable to sit for long and I stepped carefully out onto the ridge. Focused but un-anxious, I gingerly moved along the increasing exposure, passed a grippy false Knife Edge to a small point where the actual Knife Edge appeared before me. Here I stopped and waited as the rest of the group caught up. Ella was the first to join me.

“We’re at the Knife Edge,” I said in what I hoped was a calm voice.

“We are?” she asked timidly. I could tell she was nervous, but like me she was not unnerved to the point of debilitation. That was more than I could say for several people we had already encountered that day. I pointed ahead along the ridge where you could see the Knife Edge just below us. It looked pretty spicy indeed.

The other two joined us. The first one, Rob, looked confident and excited like us. J.C., the second, was obviously shaken by the airy position and unnerved by the obvious obstacle ahead.

Ella and I decided to start across the Knife while Rob attempted to coax J.C. into continuing.

I started across the Knife feeling strangely calm. My initial strategy was per the advice of Gerry Roach to “grab the edge with your hands and walk your feet underneath you on the south side of the ridge”. This worked well, but briefly, I admit, there was some of the “awkward” scooting on my part.

As I had predicted, our group was reduced to three at the Knife. J.C. spent the rest of the day, not retreating to safer ground, as I would have done, but actually on the northeast ridge napping in the same spot we’d left him, awaiting our return!  

the Knife Edge of Capitol Peak in Colorado
Ella crossing the Knife Edge
We continued along the ridge slowly, negotiating some tricky class 3 and 4 on some of the most exposed terrain on a 14er standard route. It was exhilarating and exciting. I always focused on the move just ahead of me without thinking too much about what still lie ahead. I tried not to look at the summit at all.

When we moved out onto the east face and off the ridge at last, we face a long section of loose and complicated class 3 and 4 terrain. We zig-zagged up a shallow gully of lighter rock to a small notch on the southeast ridge 300 feet below the summit. We traversed carefully through here, occasionally just one person at a time up a pitch to avoid rockfall. Ropes would be useless in this broken rock.

At last followed a set of cairns out on to Capitol’s south face, where we encountered some of the most difficult and sketchy rock of the climb. It was full-on class 4 with you-blow-it’s-over consequences. Still, however, I was able to keep my fear at bay. Shortly after, almost abruptly we found ourselves standing on the summit, the first to arrive on the day.

East Face of Capitol Peak
East face terrain
It was 10:00 am now, the long and complicated climb had taken us just over 4 hours. We made a few calls on the summit and took down a snack and some water. Not necessarily because I felt particularly hungry but because I knew I should. We didn’t stay long on the summit, as the descent loomed. Getting to the top is only half the battle, and we knew that stats proved more mountaineering accidents happened on descent. Slowly we began downclimbing our way back towards the ridge below us where I could see the specks of a few people milling around the Knife Edge.
K2 and Knife Edge
The Northeast Ridge and K2 on descent
We descended slowly, cautiously, trying to minimize the rocks and pebbles we kicked down the slopes below us. It was almost impossible to eliminate the trundling altogether. After what seemed like a very long time we reached the ridge and traversed back towards K2. Things seemed to move very quick now and we reached the Knife in no time. Knowing what to expect now, we breezed across it, even walking in places. Perhaps endorphins had kicked in, or maybe just adrenaline, but with the Knife behind us we almost felt comfortable enough to acknowledge our tick of one of Colorado’s most infamous mountains.
the Knife Edge on Capitol Peak
Walking part of the Knife Edge
The Knife Edge
Returning over the Knife Edge
A Video of us returning over the Knife Edge:


We relaxed with our new friends on the summit of K2 (climbed it after all) for a good half hour marveling at Capitol above us. Several groups came to us, many of which we turned back by the Knife. It was interesting to watch it all transpire below us. We downclimbed one last section of class 4 before being faced with the long scree hikeout. After what seemed like an eternity of knee-jarring downclimbing camp was in sight.

“I’m psyched,” I said to Ella. “I’m just to exhausted to know it.”

She agreed. We threw our boots off and took a brief nap in the tent knowing that since we no longer had means of getting water, our second half night was out of the question and a six and a half mile hikeout was still before us.

Visit THE ARCHIVE: A list of most of our articles sorted by department

find us on facebook


Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of www.coloradomountaineering.com and its authors. None of the content can be used or reproduced without the approval of www.coloradomountaineering.com.

Climbing and mountaineering are dangerous!! Please see the DISCLAIMER page
For information about how to contact us, visit this link