
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Fallin'

Monday, September 5, 2011
A Walk in the Park
Craig and I decided to climb Longs Peak this past Saturday. We've lived on the Front Range for so long, have looked at this 14, 255 foot peak so many times and finally thought why not, something different and we both needed a release from the day to day world. It gets sacred above 10, 000 feet, like a different world all together and that's what we were looking for, some sacred ground. We knew it would be a busy climb but we had no idea that the parking lot would be full at 3AM or that the trail would spread out in front and in back of us with a line of tiny head torches. It gave the effect of a pilgrimage. I could have done with about 90 percent less people but everyone was really nice a long the way, greeting each other as you passed or were passed. There were so many different kinds of people out there in the middle of the night on their own quests, it was kinda cool in it's own over crowded way. We hiked for a couple hours in the dark under a canopy of dense stars, this was very special to me, to be out in the darkness in the woods, Craig and I both enjoyed it.







No sun yet, exposed to the wind and the deep Glacier Gorge below you and to the West. There was a part of me that wanted to stay in the sun at the Keyhole. The height we were at was dizzying at first but the route was solid.


Once past the ledges you are greeted with a large, vertical couloir called the Trough. This couloir descends all the way into the basin below but we had to follow it all the way to the top and to the notch in the center top of the image. It was a arduous climb, my legs were gonna feel this after climbing up and down it. There was a lot of potential for rock fall here as well. Apparently this Trough is full of snow well into July.

The Narrows are a set of, well, narrow, exposed ledges. This took a deep breath for me as there are towering cliffs above and below you that drop off into the expanse and a set of dramatic cliffs known as the Palisades in front of you. However it is quite thrilling to be able to be in such a dramatic place and having worked hard to get there. We headed on to the Homestretch which is a less then vertical slab to the top of Longs. There were people the whole way, it wasn't too bad on the way up but more crowded on the way down with people coming up, you never felt totally alone. However it was nice to see people helping and encouraging others a long the way, there was a spirit of camaraderie out there.


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