Sunday, March 23, 2014

S. Three Lakes Peak - Ninemile Valley





Distance: ~7 miles
Vertical: ~3,400ft

The transfer to spring is being made, which is probably my favorite season; activities of winter with the pleasantries of summer. This weekend my wife and I took a very good moderate tour to S. Three Lakes Peak located in the Ninemile Valley west of Missoula, Montana. Plenty of burn areas available west of McCormick Peak along the Ninemile road. Specifically road 5498 which is open for snowmobile access. The adventurous snowmobile rider could cut this tour in half as there is an old road that breaks off from 5498 (keep a sharp eye out) and will bring you about half way up. 


Merete and SW Ninemile Valley.
Point west of Three Lakes Pk.


Merete w/ Three Lakes Peak coming into view.



Looking SE towards Ninemile and Missoula



South Summit.

Looking towards Missoula

Dynafit Cho Oyu posing for the scenic shot!

Looking west, the camera, not me. :)



Action shot!


Merete w/ our turns barely visible in the background.

The Stats.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Sheafman Point - Winter fun when options are limited



Distance: ~6mi
Vertical: ~3,800ft

It's been a temperamental last couple months. Avalanche danger is on the alert, especially just before and after the recent blizzard. Luckily, the winds and snow didn't hit the Bitterroot nearly as much, in fact, there was 5" of undisturbed fluff at the base of Sheafman Point, and quickly worked up to 10" of the standard Montana cold smoke.  A bit of an inversion going on though, the snow got better and better on the way back down.

Sheafman Point - via W. Crow approach (alternate would be Mill Creek trailhead)

I was about to throw it in for the weekend, but after a thorough read through of the most recent report from MissoulaAvalanche.org I decided Sheafman would be a safe option. Using HillMap.com and its slope overlay, with exception of a few isolated areas, the entirety of Sheafman has no extended slope over 27 degrees. Moreover, the abundant downfall left behind by the fire creates lots of anchors aside from the trees/stumps.

That moment you know it's going to be great.

Plenty of stuff to duck-dive-dodge.

TIPS UP! Lots of downfall equates to plenty of tree limbs laying in wait to grab your ski tips and pull you under in a flash. Be careful!

Excitement building...

Rock 1

Rock 2

JetBoil - Zip

I ran out of water whilst atop Ward Mountain during the last tour. I'm now bringing along a JetBoil (Zip version: basically, no push button lighter.) Melted down some snow and now I'm free from the choice of either monitoring my water intake, or carrying an extra bottle. The entire kit fits inside of the cup, and weighs less than an extra 16oz of water.

Two false summits.


Trying to spy Mill Point south of Sheafman...



Sheafman Point looking dapper.

The chunky-monkey that prevented me from safely getting to the tippy top.

The second shelf looks like a good potential ski line, both in person and on Google Earth.

Dynafit Cho Oyu skis! 


About 1 mile before the trailhead.
SPOT GPS tracker points

The Route.