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2 photos
Beware of: snow conditions

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Slept in my car on Saturday night. Around 25 vehicles that consisted mostly of hikers with a few snow mobile rigs. Shelter is open and provided a nice place to warm up for a rainy Saturday evening. Early Sunday, we woke up around 4am ate breakfast and hit the trail at 5:30am. I chose to carry my downhill skis and boots which added 20lbs in my pack. With snow on trail from the very start we put on our micro spikes which provided ideal traction the whole way up. Weather was suspect with light snow for most of the route with intermittent visibility as low as 15'. Some groups chose to turn back due to the lack of visibility. Towards the top we needed to create our own foot holds due to snow and wind covering the group ahead of us. We made it to the summit in around 5:30 hours. Skiing down was a blast and only took us around 30 minutes. Definitely worth the extra weight up. 

2 photos
Beware of: snow, trail conditions

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With our failed summit through the summer route in a windy white-out condition on 2020 Oct 11th, we want to be 100% prepared for this spring summit just in case. In April, field reports started coming in with beautiful sunny days and relatively easy hikes up there. We started checking the mountain forecast and avalanche forecast about 2 weeks before the trip. As we get closer to the climbing day, the April 24th forecast for Saint Helens worsened. What was forecasted to be a couple of inches of snow in the afternoon, then became an inch of snow every 2 hours from Friday night to Sunday morning. On top of that, it was forecasted to be 19' with 20 to 30 mph wind at the summit from 5 AM to 5 PM. Knowing how brutal the wind can be, even on a clear sunny morning above timberline at Saint Helens, we prepared to stay warm and dry.

We were fully geared up. 3 top layers and 2 bottom layers with shells, climbing and ski helmet with new ski goggles, balaclava, glacial gloves, best all-around 4-season boots, gaiters, crampons, ice ax, avalanche safety kits, and plenty of food and water (4L each person).

The trip started fairly slowly through the tree. It was snow from the trailhead with light rain. We were slowing the pace with another pair of hikers want to tag along. We started as 2nd to the last group set out to the summit. The last group of 4 hikes overtook us before reaching the timberline. The pair of hikers tagged along decided to head back. It started snowing while we were moving out of the timberline into snowfields. 

We met many hikers, skiers, and snowboarders turning back due to horrible visibility and wind/snow condition after the weather station. After not encountering any climbers who had successfully summited for several hours, we were a bit discouraged, but we trekked on, pushed ahead not to repeat last Oct 11th failed summit. After ascending the snowfield for a couple of hours, we finally encountered a lone hiker coming down. Lo and behold, he told us he was able to reach the summit solo and it was pretty nasty up there. That encouraged us to trek on, also because of a false statement he told us that it was only 1.2 miles to the summit from the weather station (it was a little more than 2 miles from the weather station to the summit).

As we climbed closer to the weather, we encountered skiers and snowboarders coming down, and we started catching up to the 4 hikers who went past us in the tree zone. After a brief rest at the weather station, we trekked about 100 yards behind the 4 hiker group until we overtook them near the top. The visibility ranged from 100 yards at lower elevations to 20 feet around the top. With the crampons on, we had no difficulty ascending even a couple of really steep sections around 750 ft and 250 ft of elevation from the top.

It was poor visibility at the crater rim. We just imagined what the crater looked like in the summer, and called it good. Miraculously, the snow stopped about 40 minutes at the summit while we ate a snack and rested a bit before trekking down. 

We descended with the 4-hiker group for navigating in the near whiteout condition. The last thing we wanted to do is descending the summer route (we did and had to traverse left about 200 yards back to the winder route; 2 of us including me lost footing during the traverse and were lucky enough to self-arrest before falling too far). Make sure to check some GPS mapping constantly while descending. We arrived back at the trailhead around 7 PM.

All in all, great climbing in light winter conditions. Having the right equipment made a big difference.

Beware of: snow conditions
 

this double posted sorry, see below.


1 photo
Beware of: snow conditions

7 people found this report helpful

 

tl;dr Crampons A+, snowshoes made life easy for a small section.


Camped at Marble Mountain, had no issues with partying, everyone was respectful and quiet once the sun went down.

Started 3:40AM and ended at 4:10pm. (we are slow)

We probed at the false summit and were able to hit the ground and get some views into the crater rim, your call if it's safe or not for you. We stopped at the false summit as the views looked to be the same at the true summit and the cornice looked pretty bad (hard to say what ours looked like). 

Snow was crap 1st half as temps were hot.

Top half had great bootpack. 

Our first "big" climb and it was amazing. 

We used poles a lot, ice axe only for glissading. I feel anyone can do this route if they have experience hiking. Nothing technical. No exposure except for your risk tolerance at the rim with cornices. Everything seemed well out of avy danger. ymmv. We have AIARE 1 but limited winter backcountry experience. I'm happy we did the route but wouldn't do it again without skis. 

https://www.strava.com/activities/5152677993
https://photos.app.goo.gl/RQEeHq1LhAwdM2Br8

Beware of: snow conditions
 

FOUND PHONE: Summitted yesterday (4/17/21) and found a phone in the snow (OnePlus 7T in a black protective case) about a third of the way down. If you might know who the owner is, shoot me an email at scootermcnugget9@gmail.com so they can get it back. Thanks!