Guye Peak - South Gully/South Spur, January 2003
Rather than join the mob on Chair Peak, Paul and I decided on climbing the less technical though still enjoyable South Rib of Guye Peak. We picked up John Mefford in North Bend and continued on our way to Snoqualmie Pass. We made every attempt to shorten our climbing approach as much as possible by driving upwards through the winter chalet community at the foot of the mountain. We parked at a large snowplowed clearing below Guye's West Face (ignoring the obvious no-parking signs) and prepared for the short hike up to the base of the South Rib. We climbed upwards on frozen avalanche debris before traversing right through timber below the Southwest Face.
We intended to climb the South Rib route but wound up starting one gully too far east. Also, the sparse snow coverage on the rocky South Rib did not look particularly inviting. I led the first few hundred feet of the snowy/icy gully (class 3/4 mixed climbing with good stemming) until just before the gully narrowed at an overhanging boulder/chockstone at about 4,400ft. Paul then took the lead and attempted to surmount this overhang, but could not due to lack of snow. A 45-degree ramp to the left (west) looked feasible, so Paul climbed up the 50 feet up to the top of this ramp (loose snow over slabby rock...yikes!), but the ramp cliffed out on the left and became a class 5 wall on the right. He wisely dared not to do the necessary class 5.xxx traverse with crampons on (no place to put the downhill foot). Paul then looked over to the east and saw an open-timbered slope that would be easy to use to get 200 feet higher up. He bailed on the 5th class stuff and downclimbed uneasily back to the gully so we could get over to the timbered slope. (more...)
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