I hiked in with my partner Matt, looking up at dark clouds which didn't give me a lot of confidence in our proposed itinerary, but kept my mouth shut as we pounded trail up past blue glacial lakes en route to our camp at Sam Mack Lake below the Palisade Glacier.
While I cooked our delicious Tasty Bite Punjab Choley, Matt landed a small brown trout from the lake and we loaded up for the long day to come.
Morning hits the Crest.
Waking up early in the a.m. got us moving up the glacier towards the North Couloir of Thunderbolt Peak, hoping to dispatch this first crux before the snow began to get too soft. This turned out to be a wise decision, as there was a large (but not recent) slab avalanche that had swept down the couloir, and which made crossing the bergschrund an interesting activity.
Looking out from the N Ridge of Thunderbolt.
A view of things to come
The rock quality on this route is surprisingly good.
My favorite section of the whole traverse, climbing down from the summit of Polemonium.
Once on the main ridge, the climbing just seemed to flow into a perfect mix of classic alpine rock (loose!), amazing exposure and breathtaking summits (Thunderbolt Peak, Starlight Peak, North Palisade, Polemonium Peak and Mount Sill), the tallest being North Palisade at
14, 242ft.
Obligatory posing atop Mount Sill. Our route directly behind me.
After 14 hours on the move, we made it back to our camp, thirsty and worn out. A quick hike out the next morning would reward us with hot springs and cold Tecates outside Mammoth as we watched a huge storm move in and enshroud the mountains in a blanket of dark clouds.
Thanks for checking this out. The summer ain't over yet though folks!