2021 was a year of fails for me, I bailed from Alaska, East Buttress of El Cap, Saber Ridge. I was injured for much of the year. My elbow was wrecked, and I hurt my hand. I gained 20+ lbs and was pretty depressed. I was at a low point in my climbing career. Hence the 18 month hiatus from my blog.
I turned it all around this year, and 2022 has been terrific. Starting in January I lost a ton of weight, I am now the same weight I was when I was 22 years old. I trained and ran a tough 10K trail run in the San Joaquin river gorge back in March. I got my butt back into climbing shape, and I am quickly dispatching and redpointing old projects. I have been climbing a ton in Yosemite, Red Rock and now am back to Shuteye. Ted has emerged as my main climbing partner this year and we have had a bunch of great outing together.
One thing I have been missing with all the hard sport climbing and trad climbing is moderate adventures in the alpine. So for my birthday this year, I managed to sell Teresa on the idea of climbing The Obelisk, an obscure 700' granite monolith hidden away in the depths of King's Canyon National Park.
The Obelisk - 700' of featured granite, hidden in King's Canyon |
On my Friday May 13th (my 42nd birthday) we loaded up our packs and headed up to Wishon Reservoir and made our way to the Crown Valley Trailhead to start our hike.
Trailhead |
For this little adventure, the plan was to make the ~8 mile hike into lower Geraldine lake and make camp there. Day 2, make the 1 hour approach, climb and then spend a 2nd night at the lake. Hike out on day 3. On paper it all looks easy, 8 miles, only 3000' of elevation gain. However the trail is in fairly rough shape, combined with seasonal snow cover and 2 miles of cross-country travel to the camp from the main trail things were a little slow and harder than I was expecting.
Trail to Lower Geraldine Lake and the Obelisk |
Armed with the route pre-loaded into Gaia GPS, I was confident we could find the way. Early on we encountered our first obstacle, a river swollen with snow melt. I managed to get across on a dubious log, but Teresa looked at it, and opted to remove her shoes and walk across the river. I was rather cocky that I had crossed on the log, but my hubris came back to haunt me on the walk out on Sunday, as I slipped into the river crossing the same log!
Dubious log crossing. I fell into the river on the return trek |
We lost the trail several times, but eventually found our way up a drainage to gain the col which deposited us above lower Geraldine lake. About 3-4 miles in, we had gained enough elevation that we hit the snow line. The snow was perfect though, being well consolidated and not at all sun cupped. Easy going.
Teresa traveling on intermittent snow fields |
Despite going fairly light on gear (I only brought 7 cams and a few nuts, a single 9mm rope) the packs were quite heavy. It's been a while since I have carried overnight climbing loads! After about 4.5 hours we crested the col and finally saw Lower Geraldine lake and our camp site!
Lower Geraldine Lake |
mmmmm... birthday "cake" |
Home sweet home for 2 nights |
The next morning we had ourselves a fairly leisurely start. The climb being only 7 pitches long, not a huge approach, and long days meant no need to rush. We had ourselves a nice breakfast, and left cap around 9:30 am. The approach from the lake is about 2 miles, you first head up a drainage to gain a pass and then head downhill towards the Obelisk. Cresting the pass you get the first glimpse of the rock formation!
Sign points the way |
First view of the Obelisk! |
It took us about an hour to reach the base of the climb. The start was pretty obvious, being a fairly dank looking chimney in-between two obvious corner systems.
Start of the climbing - dank chimney |
I climbed up into the chimney for about 80' and then exited left out onto the face. This was probably the crux of the whole climb, more awkward than hard. I placed a single piece of gear on the whole pitch, protecting that move. After that it was basically a choose your own adventure. I kept the pitches fairly short, about 100'. Since I had a small rack, and 4 of the 7 cams were often tied up in anchors, it was easier to keep the pitches short so I could place at least 1 piece per pitch and be in voice contact with Teresa. We headed
Sorting the rope on P2 |
straight up for 3 pitches, before ducking left around some blocky roofs and then traversing right for 3-4 pitches of easy mega-featured chicken headed climbing, Whoa!
Teresa arriving at the top of P4 (?) |
The headwall of chicken heads. 5. fun climbing |
We picked and chose our way up the crazy featured headwall, all of it climbable at an easy grade. you really could go where ever you want. I sort of drifted right and then up, eventually arriving at the top of the dome. We were met with wonderful views of Tehipite valley and King's canyon proper.
End of the technical climbing |
Summit views |
The true summit was a boulder, and we managed to find the summit register. We were the first to climb it in 2022 and the peak seemed to get about 1-2 parties per year. I love climbing these obscure gems, away from the crowds.
Summit! |
The decent involved 3 single rope rappels with a 60m rope. I had been nervous about this, as Mountainproject noted that the 3rd rappel just makes it with a 60. The first 2 rappels were off slung knobs with recently added bolt back-ups
Slung knob - rap 1 |
The 3rd rappel was a doozy. A 100' free hanging rappel into space with no room to spare at the end with a 60m rope.
Looking down on the exposed rap 3 |
Once back to Terra-firma it was a short hour hike back to camp and some nicely cooked curry
Tese is excited for dinner! |
It took us about 7 hours camp-to-camp for a leisurely, enjoyable day! I'm certainly a lucky man to have a wife who was willing to trudge out into the back-country for my birthday climb!
Looking forward to my next venture into the mountains. Alpine climbing season is on! I just need to find partners willing to suffer a bit with me!
Thanks Teresa! Best wife ever! |
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