Thursday, January 31, 2013

Storming the Castle: Jules Bowl

Jules Castle Couloir

   On Sunday, January 27th, 2013 I figured conditions looked good enough for tour in Jules Bowl.  Mike Bostick joined me.  I hadn't been in there for nearly two years.  With no snow in the Winds and little on Togwotee in the last week, the I thought the trail into Jules Bowl would be pretty good.  It was.  Didn't really have too much trouble remembering my way in.

The Video: 




   Since the forecast was calling for heavy snow by noon, and since we suspected the current snow conditions up high were pretty wind hammered... we opted to try out one of the closest couloirs before committing to any in the bowl.  We decided to storm the Castle.


Mike skins his way up.


Mike approaches the entrance- boot packing now.






Shad halfway up.


Starting to snow now... visibility getting lower... probably around 11am.


Mike nears the top.


Almost there!


Short clip of Shad making a few survival turns.

Shad drops.  I've skied this in harder pack, icier conditions... but also better ones.


Wheehoo!


Mike schralps his way down.



    After survival riding down the couloir, we opted not to try another.  Instead, we headed for north facing trees, where the snow what much better... good powder.  Snow increased and visibility decreased throughout the day.  Later, after w got home I learned of two separate avalanche fatalities that occurred this same day-- a ways away in the Tetons and Greys River areas.  More snow fell over there, and conditions became dangerous much faster.  I never felt like we were pushing it, or avi conditions were iffy at all where we were at Sunday.  The next day though, after 6-12 inches had come down... I wouldn't have touched the couloir.  That based was too steep, hard and slick to support much new snow.  Conditions will probably be iffy for a while in there now.


Jules Bowl


Saturday, January 19, 2013

The Notch

The Southern Winds Near Christina Lake
January 13th, 2013
(Cold as Hell)

The Notch
(click on photos to enlarge them)

    This was our first run into the Winds this year.  Had a storm a couple of days prior that put down a foot on top of about two feet.  Still kind of shallow... be enough to ride.  The snow was really good actually.  The temperature never got above zero all day though... it was damned a cold!

See the video... http://youtu.be/5f2oSHdVUPE


Thomas Pede on his first backcountry expedition, in the Southern Winds no less.


Chuck and Thomas headed up.


 Approaching the Notch.


Thomas, almost there.

He made it... climbed the 11,440 ft. Notch mountain.

Shad rides the Winds.


Weehoo!

 Only a few runs... it was so cold... but it sure was good.  Click to enlarge and see our lines.






Monday, January 07, 2013

Breccia Mt Tour

Breccia Mountain

     With low Avi conditions, I figured a tour up Breccia Mt and into French Spy Bowl might be fun.  So did half of Lander and Fremont County... Wow!  I couldn't believe the trail going in there.  Been a while, since I'd been in there.  It's been getting some traffic.  Along with low Avi conditions, often comes a low supply of powder.  Everything that we could see in FSB had been turned to cement by the wind.  You could make out chicken stratch tracks by folks that dropped in yesterday... survival schralpin' at best.  We opted to bail on FSB and skied our to the south side, looking for softer snow.  We found a little.  Even if the pow wasn't what I'd been getting, it still turned out to be a beautiful and a fun tour.  Definitely warmer... it was well into the twenties up there.  Back in Lander it was 5 degrees.  Good to get out!  Have a look at the video TR...



Chuck and Karla make their way up, Sublette Bowl in the background.


Nearing the top.


Chuck and Karla on top of Breccia.

Chuck points at lines in French Spy Bowl.

Shad, happy to be in the back country above FSB again.

French Spy Bowl


Mount Moran and the Tetons peer through a gap above FSB.


The best pow we could find.  


Weehoo!


Good stuff, it'd suffice anyway!


Skiing off into the sunset.