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Oct 24 2008
 

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niblock_from_stpiran.jpg (43547 bytes)
whyte_and_niblock.jpg (46706 bytes)
Top: Mount Niblock from Mount Whyte
Middle: Mount Niblock from Mount St. Piran
Bottom: The parking lot and the pair of peaks. Whyte on the left and Niblock on the right. Big Beehive is in the foreground.

A few years have passed since this outing, but the events of the day, like all great days, are still with me, despite time. Bagged two peaks on this particular outing and I was a little bagged too, but not like you might think.

The day started at the Lake Louise parking lot, and before I got under way I took a photo of the pair of peaks together.

First I hiked along with vast hordes to the Lake Agnes tea house. There, we observed the usual feeding of engorged and obese members of order Rodentia. Then we marched away from the crowds along the north shore of the lake to the far end where last water was had.

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The far end of Lake Agnes

 

Then the scrambling started. No snow remained on the talus below the first rock band so it was easy to reach it. We climbed up through the band, and I scrambled a different way than my partner for the day, and in my scramble lust didn't look where I was going. Before I new it, I was out on a steep cement like agglomeration of glacial debris that had rounded boulders embedded loosely on the surface.

Stubbornly I continued to grovel up the slope till it happened; several large rocks, some perhaps as big as a head, rolled down and bounced violently trough the narrow gap I had just penetrated.

I freaked out!....
ROCK! ROCK! ROCK! ROCK! .... I bellowed at the top of my lungs, almost coughing up one in the process.

 


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lakes_louise_agnes.jpg (36692 bytes)
Top: Looking up from Lake Agnes. The infamous rock gully is at the top of the triangular talus. I hope you enjoy it more than I did.
Bottom: Looking down on Lake Louise and Lake Agnes.

I was really worried about the nice folks that we had just been talking to. No response came back.

I finished off my gravel grovel and topped out to the comment; That was a pleasant scramble.

Uh huh !

After all that, we traipsed across flats to the next part of the process, a long gully. Kane's usual thin line in his book suggest that the proper way is straight up a prominent gully, or to the side of it. Our route was further to the right.

Once on the ridge below the summit block I stopped for lunch and joined a Catalonian couple on vacation from Europe. They were older than me, but I took from Lake Agnes to "reel them in". These people are of the type that I want to become, old and fit.

I refused an offer of nuts, content to talk, with a disgustingly thick peanut butter and honey on brown bread sandwich glued to my tongue.

After that, I continued to the summit. The Catalonian woman passed on an offer from me to join us over the last bit to the summit. Her husband had just took off; somehow I guess he just knew she wasn't into it. She was however very impressed with Canada's Mountains. "The Alps are taller, but these mountains are so BIG" she said.

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The East ridge of Mount Whyte. This is a popular route. I met a couple of dudes on the summit of Whyte that had climbed this.
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Looking across to Mount Whyte

Next I traversed over to Mount Whyte

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Top: Mount Victoria with the west flank of Mount Whyte visible on the left
Bottom: Mount Daly
panorama

I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good therefore that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again.

William Penn
1644-1718, British Religious Leader, Founder of Pennsylvania

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