Tuesday, February 14, 2012

February 12 - End of Winter?


Snowdrops, winter aconites (Winterling, Eranthis hyemalis) and spring snowflakes (Märzenbecher, Leucojum vernum) were out in full force and flower when we came back from our ski trip on February 12th. Is the end of winter in sight?

Monday, February 13, 2012

Trophy Cabin, Feb 5-11

Although we come to Clearwater and Wells Grey Park every summer to paddle the river, we have never been here in winter. Time for a visit, so we signed up for a week of back country skiing at Trophy cabin. This is also the first week-long trip where we actually skied in (after an hour long ride in Ian’s heritage snowcat). The group we joined had fortunately also arranged for a heli-flight for food and bevies, so we were sufficiently covered in this department. We had bluebird days for the first half of the week, but no new snow, and the warmer than usual winter sun had done a number on the south facing slopes. But the area has plenty of north exposure, and avalanche conditions were at an all time low, so we explored steep chutes in area aptly named ‘Playground’ and treed glades of ‘Below Lookout Lake’ and 'Cleopatra'. Probably the steepest shots I have skied in the backcountry! The more ambitious skiers in the group set out to bag Trophy summit (in high winds and challenging alpine conditions) while Pete and I decided to play some more in fluffy tree-line powder. Other than skipping the alpine touring day, we ‘old folks’ did pretty well for elevation gains and powder runs (1300-1500 meter/day). Despite the exceptional stable snow conditions, several small and one larger slide were observed, presumably caused by cornice falls. The large one went all the way down to the valley floor and across where the summit team had skied the day before. Even in stable conditions there is always a 'Restrisiko'.

Alpine explorations

Trophy Cabin in the trees


Moonrise over the Monashees















The last couple of days clouds came in. Cloudbase was low so we were occasionally in the fog. We made the trek across the valley to Midmountain. The north-facing steep chutes looked great from our cabin window, but unfortunately the area is sled-accessible and the runs had already tracks in them. On the last day we stayed closer to the cabin and Pete and I did a sweet pillowy run down the east spine of Playground ridge. Not quite over-the-head blower powder, but we got on some cool steep runs with nice snow, had stable avy conditions and most importantly met a new crew of great powder-aficionados.