The route is moderate and with the exception of one ten foot step, the bulk of it is between fifty and sixty-five degrees. That one step is perhaps eighty degrees, but it is very short and sometimes isn't even iced up. The first time I climbed the peak, that last section was 5.6 rock.
Chair Peak Approach Route
Click on map to enlarge.
Approaching Chair Peak. The face in the center is the east face
To get to the north face, you must drop over the saddle on the right.
The approach to this climb is relatively straight forward. You simply park at the Alpental Ski Area and then make your way up the Alpental Valley to the end, where Chair Peak oversees the bowl beneath it.
(Click on the image to view a larger version.)
This photo shows the north face on the righthand side and the
two variations that one can take on the northeast buttress which
is a route of a similar grade to the north face.
There are two routes that should be considered on the mountain. The north face is the obvious one, but the northeast buttress is just as good. However, the northeast buttress often requires a bit more mixed climbing than the north face.
Approaching the north face.
The first pitch of the route climbs up a cool corner and gully on thin alpine ground.
The second pitch works it way up steep snow and ice to a tree belay.
A climber approaching the tree belay.
The third pitch makes its way up more thin terrain to another belay, before the last pitch goes over the aforementioned step up to the summit.
The descent off the mountain is straightforward. A couple of rappels bring you down a gully on the south side of the east face.
On a short winter day, you really can't beat an outing on Chair Peak!
--Jason D. Martin
FYI: the North Face route is not accurately drawn on the overview image above. Note the trees 2/3'd up depicted in the route photos also above. The route uses a shallower corner system to gain these trees to the left of the larger corner system marked. The route drawn is indeed an established route (only recently) … but much harder and more involved.
ReplyDeleteMy mistake. That's the line I climbed both times I've done the peak...
ReplyDeleteJason
I'd love to see more single day route profiles like this on the blog in the future, this is great!
ReplyDelete