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With the arrival of June, north facing snow was about all that
was left. The view of Missouris' north side from LaPlata
the week before showed it was still in from the top or so it
appeared. Christy and I were excited as we made the quick trip over
Independence Pass, we didn't know the day would become an ethics
litmus test.
We walked the dry Missouri Gulch trail to treeline. Upon hitting
continuous snow we switched to ski boots and skinned up to Missouris
north side. Opting to skin up towards the long northwest ridge rather
than boot up the couloir, we gained the ridge, passing over the
often mistaken false summit and made the top early. There was plenty
of snow on the north side but the last thirty feet or so(linear,
not vertical) to the summit were dry. Bummer.
The sensible decision here would be to ski from the start of the
snow. But no, that would be lame. All winter long this peak can
be skied off the top and just because we were late shouldn't allow
us any slack in the rules. We could come back later to redo it right
but we were already here, and it was so close to being a true summit
ski. Lou managed it from the top as well....
So there we were, laying my jacket down, shoveling it full of snow
and hauling it up to a point to dump it out, over and over, until
Missouri once again skied from its summit! We were waiting for the
snow to soften anyway and now we could ski and know it was done
right. There would be no stigma, no asterisk next to it on my list,
no lying to someone down the road about style and rules practiced.
It was incredibly silly at the time but felt right when it was done.
I don't suggest everyone needs to subscribe to the same rules,
they don't. But for me(and Christy) it was easy. Lou did this first
and therefore set the standard that others must at a minimum match
if not improve upon. Standards are a good thing, all other sports
have them including all disciplines of climbing and mountaineering.
If you don't care to abide you'll still have a great day on the
mountain but with loose standards and definitions comes questionable
claims of acheivement and a dilution of true accomplishments.
Count it!
Lou's take here. The
following year Chris davenport extended some credit to the concept
while on Mount
Belford, and a year later, Christy and myself along with the
Dawsons and Jordan White rebuilt the 'Belford
Kicker'.
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