Friday, July 31, 2009

Markha Valley & Stok Kangri, Ladakh, Northern Inda

Markha Valley and Stok Kangri
Ladakh, Jammu & Kashmir, India, July 16-30th, 2009
Geir Ulstein and Trond Jensen

Geir and I flew to Leh in mid-July to do a bit of trekking, climbing (Stok Kangri, 6,137 m or 20,200 feet) and sightseeing. Leh is the capitol of Ladakh which is part of Jammu and Kashmir in Northern India. Geir had planned it all as a scouting trip for his EcoExpeditions adventure travel company and I was more than happy to support his efforts. Leh is situated in the rain-shadow of the Himalayas and has a desert climate. Flying in, we crossed snow and glacier covered peaks and landed in extremely arid Leh at ~10000 ft amongst brown hills.
Ladakh is called little Tibet and the entire area is very much influenced by buddhist culture, both past and present. In and around Leh there were temples, gompas and old fortresses from ages past.

Typical street in Leh.

Gompa and old fortress above Leh.

Leh city-scape. Not much room for new housing.

Leh with Stok Kangri in the background. Stok valley can be seen on the left side of the picture.

Shanti Stupa in Leh.

Thiksey Gompa south of Leh.

Munks calling for prayer at Thiksey Gompa.

Indus valley. The Indus river provides water for irrigation in and around Leh. If it hadn't been for the Indus, there would be no agriculture in the area.

Every temple and gompa has their own buddha statue, some very impressive. This one as 12 m (36 feet tall) and is gold plated.

Shey castle south of Leh.

Stupas near one of Dalai Lama's summer houses.

Start of our Markha valley trek at Zingchan (11240 ft). The Markha Valley trek is usually done in about 8 days. Because of our compressed vacation schedule we decided to do the trek in 5 days by doing a few double-leg days.

Scenery between Rumbak and Yarutse before heading up to the Ganda La on the second day of the trek.

Geir approaching Ganda La (15960 ft).

A lone rose-bush in the otherwise very arid landscape.

One the way from Ganda La to Skyu (second camp) we descended an incredible deep and steep valley. With the sun beating down in the middle of the day, it must have been a 100 degrees. Combined with the altitude, the temperature and bright sun gave me a most intense headache.

The next morning we started out before 7 am to beat the heat of the day. The first few hours from Skyu to Markha were quite pleasant.

The hiking was mostly on good trails along valley bottoms, but once in a while, the river forced us up the valley sides on steep and intersting trails.

Inhabitation in the Markha valley. A few hundred people live in houses like this along the 50 mile long valley.

Mani wall and stupa along the Markha valley trail.

Markha gompa.

Markha valley agriculture. Mostly the valley was very arid, but a few places people make a living farming the land.

Old fortress in Markha valley.

Above Markha we had to make two river crossings, both short but somewhat challenging. On the second crossing, we learned to put the camera in a plastic bag in the backpack before crossing just in case.

Another mani wall along the trail. Just apile of rocks, right?

Actually, most of the "rocks" have intricate engraving of the Buddist prayer, Buddha sketches, or other Buddhist symbolism.

More "rocks" on the mani wall.

Another fortress overlooking the Markha trail. Nobody seemed to know the age of these old, abandoned fortresses or their history.

Trail above Markha on the way towards Nimaling.

High country trekking close to the Nimaling camp-site.

Nimaling camp-site (15620 feet) located on a wide plain below Kang Yatse (about 6400 m, 21650 feet), the highest peak in the Ladakh range.

After Nimaling we ascended Gongmaru La (16920 ft) and then headed down an amazing canyon to Chang Sumdo (12250 ft). From there we transferred by car to Stok Village.

Heading down the narrow canyon towards Chang Sumdo.

Geology above Chang Sumdo.

Heading up from Stok Village (11850 ft) to Stok Kangri basecamp (~16020 ft). Easy hiking and ascent all the way to basecamp.

We decided to skip high camp and make our summit attempt from a more comfortable basecamp. This would make for a longer summit day, but we felt good and well acclimatized. On July 25th we made an early morning start (3:30 am) for our summit attempt. We had already been up at 12:30 am but decided to go back to sleep for a couple of hours. The weather was unsettled and it had been raining and snowing on and off for the last couple of days. When we woke at 2:30 am, some stars were out and we decided to give it a try.

Heading up towards Stok glacier in the early morning.

Sunrise.
Summit ridge of Stok Kangri. We had been climbing in the fog for most of the morning, but on the summit ridge we lucked out with some fine views toward the Northwest.

Stok Kangri summit ridge with a view towards Nun and Kun and the higher peaks of the Karakoram.
The Stok Kangri climb is generally very straight forward, but because of fresh snow and slick rocks we decided to rope up on the last couple hundred feet.

Stok Kangri summit at 9 am.
Stok Kangri viewed from the Stok glacier at sunrise.
After trekking and climbing we had signed up for a "jeep"tour from Leh to Manali. The trip took us over 3 very high passes, including TaglangLa (17882 feet) which is the second highest driveable pass in the world.
We were now heading south and into the monsoon rains. The roads were deteriorating. The Ladakh region is supplied by lorries (small trucks) carrying everything from clothing and food to gasoline. Driving south towards Manali along this only road connecting Leh to the south, it felt like we were swimming upstream against a continuous stream of lorries. It took 15 hours driving time from Leh to Manali. We stopped overnight in a small place outside of Keylong.
Lorry traffic. Uphill traffic always has the right-of-way on these roads.

Finally ... Manali (the Aspen of India). Ski-area and lots of hotels and tourist attractions.

One of the pleasures of this kind of trip is the local food and of course the abundance of fresh fruit.
The next day our flight to Delhi was cancelled due to monsoon storms, so we ended up spending another 15 hours in a car to get to Delhi and make our international connections. But it was all part of the great experience.

I highly recommend Leh and Ladakh to anybody who likes trekking, Buddhist culture and Indian food.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Calliope July 2009

Calliope Mnt 6810 ft
July 5th, 2009

On a lovely and warm July 4th, I headed up South Fork Eagle River with an eye on climbing either Eagle Peak or Calliope Mnt, depending on conditions. The weather was holding and the snow on Calliope looked to be in good shape, so I decided on trying Calliope the next morning.

Ptarmigan 'mama' leadnig me away from her chicks.
South Fork Eagle River above Eagle Lake. Eagle Peak (6955 ft) is the prominent peak in the background.
Dall sheep on the tundra.
Lower reaches of valley between Cantata Peak (6410 ft) and Calliope
Hanging valley leading to Calliope-Cantata col.
At Calliope-Cantata col looking WNW. Triangle Peak (5455 ft) is rounded peak on left.
Looking back down hanging valley between Cantata and Calliope.
Calliope summit shot with Eagle Peak in the background.
Looking NW down the South Fork Eagle River drainage. Cantata Peak is on the right.
The ~40 degree snowfield leading back down to the Calliope-Cantata col. The snow was fairly soft and I was uneasy about slush avalanches so I only spent a minimal 10 minutes on the summit. On the East face of Calliope I actually set of a couple of smaller slush slides so I wanted to head back down and across the snowfield before it got too warm.
Looking back up at the Calliope WNW face snowfield. The rounte follows the ridge from the Calliope-Cantata col to the snowfield directly below the rock island. I went straight up and around the rock island to the summit ridge (~800 feet vertical on the snow) to minimize my exposure.
The Calliope WNW face.
Upper reaches of South Fork Eagle River looking down towards Eagle Lake.
The waterfalls of South Fork Eagle River leading down from Flute Glacier.
Eagle Lake with Eagle Peak in the distance.
Cantata (center left), Calliope (center) and Triangle (center right) peaks bracketed by the lush South Fork Eage River valley.
Panorama from the Calliope summit frmo NW to SE. Foreground peaks from left to right are Cantata (6410), Eagle (6955), Polar Bear (6614), Organ (6980) and Flute (6610). Many more of the Eagle River valley and high Chugach peaks are visible in the distance.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Tincan Crust Ski (Hurra for 17. mai)

Tincan Valley Crust Ski, May 17th, 2009
with Adam Verrier

Despite being tired after skiing Center ridge and Tincan valley yesterday, I couldn't resist an encore today. Adam Verrier and I headed to Turnagain Pass early Sunday, May 17th, for one more day of crust skiing. Yesterday, I headed up Lyon Creek and up onto Center Ridge. This involved a bit of alder bush-whacking, so today we decided to access the valley from the Tincan pullout about 1 mile north of the Turnagain Pass. We started at 7:30 am and skied until about 11 am. The crust held up quite well the whole time, even down low by the main road.

I had for a while been eyeing the saddle between Tincan Peak and Kickstep Mountain and today we got all the way up to the saddle and had a great view of Placer Valley and Spencer Glacier. The weather was so nice that we sat around for half an hour in t-shirts - there was not a breath of wind. Even for Alaska it is uncommen to have this nice and warm weather at 4000 ft at 9:30 in the morning on May 17th.

The skiing back down the valley provided varied crust skiing, from fairly icy conditions up high to awsome corn snow lower in the valley. What a way to spend May 17th (Norwegian Independence Day)!

This first photo is of Turnagain Pass on May 16th after skiing Center Ridge and Tincan Valley (about 10 am). The snow is disappearing fast and the alders made for interesting bush-whacking to access Center Ridge.
Adam traversing off of the Tincan ridge into the Tincan Valley.
Any doubts about the snow depth in the Tinan Valley on May 17th? Here it must be 10 ft!
Heading up the upper Tincan Valley.
Adam showing great skate form, both uphill ...
and downhill (making slalom turns on hard crust with old skate skis with severly rounded edges is a little different than normal downhill skiing).
Heading up towards the Placer Vewlley overlook.
Adam on the last pitch. Tincan Peak in the background.
On the Placer Valley overlook. On the east-facing slopes there was no snow at all.
Spencer Glacier across the Placer Valley.
Looking back the Tincan Valley. The upper parts of the decent was quite steep (30-40 degrees) and a little icy ... a challenge on skate skies with a bum knee (I recently tore the MCL and miniscus in my left knee ... but I couldn't let that stop me from enjoying this great spring skiing).
Adam coming down from the Placer Valley overlook back into the Tincan Valley.
Tincan Valley and Tincan Peak (~4300 ft).
Adam carving turns on perfect corn snow.
Eastward looking panorama overlooking Placer Valley and the Spencer glacier.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Spencer Glacier Crust Ski

Spencer Glacier Crust Ski, May 2nd, 2009
Round trip Portage to Spencer Glacier, ~24 miles
7:30 - 10:30 am.

Another cold and clear night prompted another crust ski up the Placer Valley. This would be my fourth time up the Placer Valley this spring. On previous occasions I has either started too late or had to return early (stupid work commitments). This time I was determined to start early and try to make it to the Spencer Glacier before the crust started breaking down. 30 degrees and clear skies at the starting point indicated that it would be a great day for crust skiing.

Pulling my skis out of the car at the little known access point for late spring Placer Valley crust skiing, I am surprised to see Rachel Steer pull up with the same plan as me. We both enjoyed the superb crust conditions all the way to the Spencer glacier. Especially on the way back down the Placer Valley did we catch some awesome corn snow as the top layer of the crust was just starting to melt.

Spencer Glacier seen across the lake at the terminus of the glacier. Observe the icebergs frozen into the lake ice.
We could safely skate across the lake and all the way up to the toe of the glacier.
Interesting ice-formations at the toe of the glacier.
Rachel catching some rays.
Looking back across the lake at the broken up terminus of the glacier.
Crust skiing past icebergs.
Great corn snow on the return down the Placer Valley.
We got back to the trail head around 10:30 am, just as the crust was starting to break down. It was quite warm - it must have been in the low 50's already.
Panorama across the terminus of the Spencer Glacier.