Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Mt Prophet

Date: 6/19/2017

Trip Report:
Mt Prophet 7,644'  has long been on our to-do list. 3 feet of new snow last Thursday changed our original plan up a volcano to this rarely visited summit by Ross Lake.  The cool thing about Mt Prophet is that it has over 4,000ft of prominence. 

We enjoyed 12 miles of hike into 39 mile creek camp.  it was a nice change to camp in a forest as it also mean a nice camp fire.

On day 2, we headed up the southeast ridge. a little bit of brush in the bottom but got better once we reach the 5,000ft notch. Snow started around the 5,000ft level which made traveling easier. Cloud ceiling was low, we could see most of the foot hills of the Picket range across the valley.










we followed the ridge up and found tracks of some company.


















with the exception of one spot, it was a simple and straightforward scramble. Here is a shot of the little spice we got











a low cloud ceiling all day, we see the foothills of the pickets and got a few glimpse of some peaks from our tent during the evening. a few sparse rain drops as we got into the tent and call it a night.



The next day, we woke up to beautiful weather with the entire pickets range in clear view




we also see the first view of Mt Prophet for the first time














we cross the magnificent valley for the last 1,000ft to the summit



we love finding the summit register placed here by Fay Pullen in 2014. the summit register indicates that the peak gets about one visit a year. we're still signing in on page 1.


We enjoyed the hike out on the big beaver trail, it was wonderful with big old growth cedars.











Panoramic photo from the summit

More photos https://www.amazon.com/photos/share/H3HJf7kOq4XMMvR4NtDrTP0LFM1OC4UHzN84d0Aett3


Map:

Gear Notes:
Crampons, Ice Axe, Hiking pole, licorice

Approach Notes:
bug juice is a must at this time. approach shoes were very nice for the 12 miles from hwy 20 to 39 mile creek camp. exit was 16 miles from Luna camp back to hwy 20. 

If you want to splurge, you can get a boat ride and save yourself 6 miles of hiking each way

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Iceland 2016

We spent 10 days in Iceland over the Memorial day weekend.  We visited the Golden Circle, Snaefellsnes Peninsula, the Westfjords, and Reykjavik.  Here is our experience to share.

Highlights
Hotpool in Drangsnes

Geothermal hotpool in Drangsnes, Westfjords. The 3 pools are built into the seawall.  they mix the water so each pool has a different temperature. the natural hot water drains directly into the sea with a magnificent view of snow cap mountains across the fjord. what's more incredible is that it is free!  We had a fantastic time meeting other travelers and renew our inspiration to travel - priceless!


camping at Pingvellir



With the exception of a night in Reykjavik, we camped for the entire trip.  Camping was an amazing way to experience the environment.  We happened to visit when the bird life is prolific, Arctic Terns, swans, Common Snipe etc.  While the hotels were all booked out, there was hardly anyone camping.  We spent two nights at Pingvellir National Park, one of the 3 stops in the very popular Golden Circle. We had the campsite all to ourselves.  There were many fishermen with waders in the water, it was nice to chat with them.


Camping in the lava field

 Camping in 30+mph windstorm:  The weather came in during our first night in the Snaefellsnes Peninsula. We camped in 30+mph windstorm.  We visited the house by the campsite to pay, and lady exclaimed "Camping?  now?!"  Classic.


Lava Field:  one of the coolest campsite was in a lava field (picture right) in Hellinsandur, in Snaefellsnes Peninsula.  The Snaefellsnes Peninsula is one giant lava field filled with craters. 


Food was amazing. expensive but well worth it. We'd spend $0 to $10 on accommodation, $25 on
lunch, and $50 on dinner - per person. I never had a travel expense like that.    Fish soup, in Gamla Rif, the only store in a tiny fishing village in West Iceland.  Lamb soup and fish at Old Iceland in Reykjavik. Skyr, the Icelandic Yogurt, is amazing. It was thick and creamy yet non-fat. We tried a different flavor every morning.  Baked Apple and good old blueberry were our favorite.  We also enjoy the rich selection of Licorice and the Krispbread, which was quite a treat for Peter.

24 hour daylight.  Sunset was at midnight and the sky never got dark before sunrise.  you can read through the night without needing light.  we were jet lag during the first few days, since we were in the wilderness and we weren't waiting for shops to open, we were moving and doing things at our own timezone.  Golfers were teeing off after midnight - carpe diem!

a mountain hut for emergency stay


Itinerary
Day 1: arrived at 7a.  picked up grocery at Reykavik, drove to Pingvellir National Park, First of the 3 stops of the golden circle. we toured Pingvellir and camped in the park.

Day 2.  The Common Snipe flying over our tent.  next 2 stops of the Golden Circle.  Geysir and Gulfoss. took a nap at Gulfoss. decided we had the best campsite by the water after touring others, so spent a second night in Pingvellir.

Kirkjufells
Day 3.  Drove North to Snaefellsnes Peninsula.  it is one big lava field.  reserved ferry at Stykkisholmur in 2 days, paid the last day of the winter rate.  Great dinner at Stykkisholmur.  still energized so we started the loop in the peninsula, then windstorm came and we pitched camp at Grundarfjordur in 30+mph wind.

puffins at Latraberg
Day 4.  woke up to a beautiful blue bird day after a windy and wet night of camping.  First stop is one of the most photographed mountain in Iceland, Kirkjufells, and Kirkjufellsfoss right across the street. Drove on and found the best fish soup in a tiny fishing town called Rif.  drove to the western tip and hiked the amazing Lava fields and craters. we could see Snæfellsjökull.  camped in a lava field in Hellissandur.

Day 5. continued the Snæfellsjökull National park loop counterclockwise.  more hiking in lava fields.  back to Stykkisholmur and camped by the golf course, where golfers teed off after midnight.

Day 6.  picked up goodies at the Stykkisholmur bakery to get on the ferry ride at 9a. about 3 hours North and we arrive in Westfjords. We drove to a big bird cliff, Látrabjarg. Amazing bird colony. puffins, seagulls, guillemots. We found a beautiful spot on our drive and we freedom camped over a fjord.  It was amazing.
Dynjandi - the top waterfall is 90M high

Day 7.  Westfjords: Dynjandi waterfall.   had my first icelandic hotdog in Patrekfjordur.  magnificent fjord. took some short hikes to a local summit.  found another beautiful spot and wild camped.

Day 8 Westfjords: Geothermo hotpool in Drangsnes.  camped among the sheep by a river

Day 9: Reykjavik. toured the city and enjoyed some amazing food.  finally stayed up late enough to catch the sunset at 11:38pm.

Day 10:  Reykjavik in the morning, found a good bakery.   Spent 2 hours at the Blue Lagoon spa.  picked up some Skyr for the flight home.












Wednesday, January 27, 2016

New Zealand Photos

click on any photo to see them in the original size

  
Sheep freely roaming in Eden Park, Auckland

  Queenstown sits on the southern end of the beautiful Lake Wakatipu

++++3 day kayak in the Doubtful Sound+++++

A light drizzle on Lake Manapuri
on our bus - ferry - bus route to Doubtful Sound
In Doubtful sound, loading the kayaks.  the bald inverted V behind Peter is evidence of tree-avalanche.  Tree are only holding onto the moss which grows on the steep fjord.  you get travalanche when it gets too heavy.   


Rain fills the temporary waterfalls everywhere, no rain, no waterfalls.

 at our camp in croaked arm. 

perfect day 2 morning with no rain and no wind



incredible waterfalls and there are so many waterfalls






++++Routeburn Track Great Walk 3 days++++++

Routeburn track Great walk.  beautiful weather 

Lake Mackenzie - we stayed in the hut on the lake side at the end of the first day

day 2 is a ridge walk up and over Harris Saddle

Tussock field with panoramic view of snowcap mountain on day 2 of the Routeburn track

Beautiful view at Harris Saddle

view down to the Routeburn Flats, where we camped.  

Camping at the beautiful Routeburn flat camp on our 2nd (last) night of the Routeburn hike

+++++++++Arthur's Pass National Park ++++++++
 Hawdon hut -> Walker Pass ->  Tarn Col -> Edwards hut route 3 days
Braided River at Arthur's Pass National Park


shallow and beautiful river is our route of our 3-day Edwards - Hawdon hike 


Tarn Col is one of the two high passes of this 3 day route.











An Adventure to the Great White North - Joffre, Matier and Slalok




1/27/2016 - found a half written trip report in the draft. posting it - Suz

The Cerise Creek Trailhead described in Alpine Select (P.59) has been decommissioned.  Access is now directly from Hwy 99. On Hwy 99 (aka the Duffy Lake Rd). 60km north of Whistler or 70 km southwest of Lillooet, you will find the Joffre Lake trail head (provincial park).  From Joffre Lake TH, cross the bridge across Cayoosh Creek, and pass the road work sheds on your right. Shortly after you pass the road works ("Salt Shed") lot you will see a "no stopping avalanche zone" sign. This marks the beginning of the run-out zone for the south-facing Rohr avalanche slide paths that rise up on your left. The Cerise Creek TH is the pull-out past the end of this no-stopping zone on the right hand side, where you'll see a valley open up on your right. This is the Cerise Creek watershed. There used to be a sign for Cerise Creek Trail head, the hanger is still there but the sign is gone as of July 2013. Park at the pull out, no parking permit is required.  Note that the TH is in between two different avalanche run-out zones from Rohr. If you enter a second no-stopping zone, you have gone too far. 


There was running water 800 feet below the Matier-Joffre col.  Beautiful dry campsite on Matier-Joffre col that would fit half a dozen tents.


Gear notes
Standard Glacier gear, ice axe, crampons, 
4 pickets, which were used on the steeper slopes with bad run out on Joffre and Matier
shovel brought but did not use.
NTS Map: 92J8 (National Topographic System - Canada)

Reference: Alpine Select by Kevin McLane
View 130706 Joffre, Matier and Slalok in a larger map

Sunday, January 17, 2016

New Zealand 2015

We spent a glorious 30 days in New Zealand over the holidays (Dec 9th, 2015 to Jan 9th, 2016). It was amazing and here is our experience to share. 

Best moments
- over 2 dozens bottleneck dolphins swam around and under our kayaks on day 2 of our 3-day kayak trip in Doubtful Sound. caught on this 20 sec video

Mt Ruapehu on day 2
- Caught a weather window for our Northern Circuit great walk in the Tongariro National park.  We started at 3p on day 1, it was windy and the clouds shrouded the mountains, but no rain for our 3 hours hike to the hut. It had rained earlier in the day as there were lots of wet clothes and shoes in the hut.  We caught our first glimpse of Mt Ngauruhoe (aka Mt Doom) over dinner while we were in the hut.

The next morning, we woke up to perfect blue sky. We had perfect view of Mt Doom and the much bigger Mt Ruapehu as we hiked the 20+km day completing the Northern Circuit (part of the circuit is the Tongariro Alpine traverse).
First glimpse of Mt Doom as the cloud lifted in the evening
Magnificent emerald pools and volcano vents.
lots of people on the Tongariro Alpine Traverse

- Brunch at the Vudu cafe in Queenstown
- Pizza at the Cow in Queenstown. After 3 days hiking the Routeburn Track great walk, amazing pizza hit the spot.

beautiful Tussock fields and braided river in Arthur's Pass NP
- A cold dip in the braided river at Arthur's Pass National Park on day 3 of our hike.  This was a magical moment when I am reminded how the most simple thing can bring so much joy.

 - It was X'mas Eve.  We had hiked 2 days into the wilderness to a hut at Arthur's Pass National Park.  We met 6 other hikers from all over the world.  The two Germans carried a bottle of wine 2 days and shared the the group.  We played Durok all night!  Durok is a card game often played at work in our team. I'd never guess that I'd be half way around the world, days into the wilderness and I'm playing the same card game!

Beach and Sunshine on the Abel Tasman
- 4 days on the Abel Tasman great walk where we walked on the beach, swim, eat, repeat.  3 days of warm blue sky weather.  I'd also count the last day of torrential rain as an experience.  We had a short 6km to the trailhead to meet the shuttle.  Totally drenched, we stopped at a hut in the middle and brewed up some coffee which hit the spot.  Our last shower was 4 days ago, backpacks were 100% water logged, we still managed to get on an earlier flight to Wellington - score!


- First time mountain biking.  full suspension bike and hydraulic seat. 130km of bike trail in tree fern and redwood forest was a great intro to mountain biking - I'm so spoiled.

- 16 hour daylight in Dec and Jan.  I can't tell you how much sunshine and warm temperature makes me happy.  How about skipping winter solstice and have two summer solstices a year? I'll definitely be looking to make more trips to the southern hemisphere in Dec/Jan.

Pancake rocks, West coast of the South island
Thoughts and observations
-Kiwis love walking around bare feet.  we were surprised to see many people walking around bare feet in the city and in the wild.  Frodo is a real kiwi!
- when kiwis are not bare feet, you'd likely find them wearing flip flops, which they call jandals.
- The song of the birds in New Zealand were captivating.  you can hear the bell bird, tui, the fantail. I have never paid much attention to birds.  but the bird calls in NZ instantly captured my attention for the entire time i was there.

- Food:  savory scones, we have found more savory scones than sweet scones in the cafes and we love savory scones. Cheese and rocket scones.   Why are savory scones so rare in Seattle cafes?  (the rare exception being savory scones at the Mazama store and Wake n' Bake in Glacier, which we love)

- The Kiwi name for Arugula is Rocket. We bought a bag of rockets on our hikes.

- We found vibrant cafe scene in all the cities and small towns that we visited with great pastry selections. kiwis take their coffee differently than what we're accustomed to.  Tall Blacks is like a 4 oz Americano.  you can ask for an Americano but you will have to ask if you are used to taking cream with your coffee. ask for cold cream, else they'll try to give you warm milk.  oh they use real cream, not half and half, and it's soooo good!  Flat white is like a 4oz latte

- NZ has an amazing network of backcountry huts. we stayed in or passed by over 10 of them during our time there and all were well maintained and well situated. New Zealand Dept of Conservation (call the DOC) maintains over 950 huts. The huts on the great walks (there are 9 great walks in NZ) were not the cheap but not prohibitively expensive.  Other huts (non-great walks) range from free to NZD$15 (US$ 10) per person per night.  It's amazing to hike in the wild for 2 days and come upon a hut with stove, running water, flushing toilet, beds, fireplace and supply of firewood.

- energy and water conscious.  Every power plug has an on-off switch, I suspect it's code there.  There are a lot of signs reminding you to conserve water.  The city of
Wading in the braided river, Arthur's Pass NP
Christchurch is supplied by the underground aquifer.

- no need to filter water!  we brought our filter and didn't need to use it.  you can drink straight front the streams, the huts get water from streams and consider the water safe to drink. don't need to bring water filter next time.

- Showers at Auckland airport. You read that correctly - The Auckland airport offers complimentary showers. Such a great and idea when half of the passengers on the 24 hour international flights arrive  to the airport directly from their latest outdoors pursuit.

- Christchurch: 5 years after the 2011 earthquake, Christchurch downtown is the closest i have felt i was in a post apocalyptic sci-fi book. The city is making major effort to clear out affected structure, half the main city block is of dirt parking lot.  It got me thinking as Seattle is expecting the big earthquake.

- Tree ferns! 
Amazing Mountain Bike park in Rotorua

-I was surprised to learn that the islands of New Zealand do not originally have mammals.  the two token mammals that were originally found there were two kinds of bats.  that's why there are so many ground running birds, the kiwis being the most well-known, there were no ground predators so birds don't need to fly.  so when the brits moved into New Zealand, they found there were no animals to support their gentile sport of hunting, so they introduced rabbits.  guess what happen with Rabbits when there is no predators?  they ballooned in numbers.  to keep the number of rabbits in control, they introduced stouts, weasels, and possums.  Rats also escapes from ships onto the island of New Zealand.  These predators found that it's easier to hunt down the ground running birds, which didn't know to run away, than the rabbits.  so many of the ground running birds are extinct or endanger. Now, DOC is spending major effort to eradicate the introduced predators and bring back the native birds.

Our itinerary.  We spent about 2/3 of our 30 days in the mountain.  2/3 in the South island and 1/3 in the north island.  We rented car for about 12 days in total. first 6 days from Queenstown, returning in Nelson.  second 6 days from Wellington returning at Auckland airport.
  • Flew into Auckland and spent 2 days in Auckland
  • flew from Auckland to Queenstown
  • Bus from Queenstown to Te Anau
  • 3-day Kayak trip in the Doubtful Sound, Fiordland National Park
  • a day in Te Anau, visited a cave with loads of glowworms!
  • 3-day hike Routeburn Track Great walk
  • rented a car, car toured to Christchurch
  • 3-day hike in Arthur's Pass National Park (X'mas)
  • Car tour up the beautiful west coast, visited the Pancake rocks, returned car in Nelson
  • 1 day in Nelson, biked to the beach and spent the whole day at the beach
  • 2-day bike on the Great Taste Trail from Nelson to Marahou
  • 4-day on the Abel Tasman Coastal Track Great walk. Welcome 2016 under
  • 1.5 day in Wellington, Te Papa was perfect for a rainy day.  Wellington offers lots of good international food.  rented a car to drive out of wellington
  • 1.5.day on the Northern Circuit Great Walk, hiked around Mt Doom in the Tongariro National Park
  • Rotorua, Mtn biking, hiking, geothermal stuff and Maori culture
  • 1 day on the Papamoa Beach, swimming in the pacific ocean on the other coast
  • back to Auckland, return car and shower at the airport, and flew home.