|
It would be a month after Pyramid before
I skied another 14er. An eight day trip to Valdez, AK followed by
a ski expedition to the tallest peak in Greenland, all sandwiched
around buying and remodeling our condo kept me busy when Chris was
stepping up his efforts on the 14ers. I was particularly bummed
to have been gone when he and Neal skied Capitol Peak, but so it
goes.
After his remarkable thirty peaks in spring marathon, or whatever
it was, I met up with Chris and his family in the RV near Bierstadt.
They 'tagged out' and I drove south with Chris to Pikes' Peak. It
was fun to hear all the spring stories.
The start was quite casual, picking up coffee in Starbucks before
driving to the summit via the Pikes Peak Highway upon its opening
at 8 or 9am. Once parked, Chris and I walked along the north edge
of the mountain, looking for snowy couloirs. I actually called Christy
from the top of the Railroad Couloir to tell her we might be coming
home early(Chris wasn't nearby to hear), I couldn't see much skiable
snow. But just as Chris's luck typically had it, he found a line
in the area of the Y Couloirs and we were putting our boots on.
The partly shaded, recessed, north couloirs held really good snow(for
the date) and we managed to make a fun ski of it. Hiking back up
from down in the 'Bottomless Pit' cirque was hard, I had been at
or near sea level for a few weeks and Chris had been hanging out
at 14,000 feet on a daily basis for nearly a month now. He kicked
my ass.
Back at the summit we met two guys from the Colorado Springs Gazette,
Chris had built up some real momentum by now and had lots of people
following his progress. It was cool to see, and while downing some
of the lousy doughnuts they are so proud of in the Pikes' Peak summithouse,
I thought a lot about my 14er ski goals.
In 2005 I made a lame, albeit official
ski descent down the west side of Pikes'. I was really happy to
get the more aesthetic line down the north today, and next week
I would go back for another 'redo', this time on the remote Snowmass
Mountain.
Chris's take on the day
here.
|