Tuesday 15 July 2014

Weekend in the Tetons

Hey family!

Thought I would just send an update report about my activities. I’m just riding home from my first weekend in the Tetons and it turns out they are completely breath taking in more then one way! Yesterday (Saturday) Adam and I hiked up to the lower saddle of the Grand Teton, which is a four hour trek to around 1200 something ft and spent the night there.


There’s the peak!

And this was our view that evening..
Even though the hike to the saddle wasn’t anything special we had a couple exciting events along the way including running into a really small bear cub and having to sprint out of the path of a rock fall that was triggered from the peak of the middle Teton.

We woke up at 4:30am to summit before the afternoon thunderstorms that are notorious for sneaking in unannounced. I was told the freakiest story by a mountain guide, whom we met at the saddle, about one storm two years ago that was suddenly upon the grand while he was still on the summit. Him and his crew ran the descent, passing groups and telling them to turn around. One group of five from Bozeman ignored the warning and continued up until the lightening storm was surrounding them. At one point they were all thrown by a ground charge and one of the men, whom was accidently clipped into the wrong part of his harness in the panic, fell 1000ft to his death. Needless to say we were very careful, roping up on technical scrambles that were exposed but we couldn’t have picked a better day in terms of weather!  
Sun rise over the middle Teton

We picked a route that has apparently been ran from car to car, to the top and back in less then three hours but for us mere mortals it took around the same amount of time to get from the saddle to the peak. We made it!
One of those exposed areas
13700+ft looking over Idaho and Wyoming.

We even got to watch Old Faithful go off in Yellowstone National Part from this vintage point! You can also see some smoke still lingering from the forest fires in the NW Territories. After an hour on top there was a group of five 60+ year olds that joined us and all instantly whipped out their Iphones to take pictures, text their wives and make phone calls… can you believe the senor generation these days?!

 
From the top the best way down was to repel off an over hung cliff face. I’m still new to repelling and was told by Adam, “I get a twisted satisfaction seeing you so uncomfortable, I didn’t think a world cup downhill racer could be scared of anything.” Well I beg to differ when I’ve never had the experience of free-hang (no limbs on the wall) dangling like a worm on a thread.
 

Turns out it is not only bungee jumping that gives you that feeling!

After that the descent was mostly glacading/butt sliding. We met the wives of the men from the peak waiting for their hubbies in the meadow with cookies and watermelon, which they shared with us when they found out we had summited at the same time as their husbands!
 One of the most impressive things about the Tetons were the lazar cut fault lines that caused huge dikes which ran up the front of the mountains. There were also mica and quartz that made the mountains sparkle. It made me miss all my geologist-hiking partners.

Check out that dike!

Can’t wait to see you all this Thursday! I have another math exam and will leave right after, about noon Thursday, so will be some around supper-time! Love to all!

Xoxox Bear child