Mount
Carthew
- Canadian Rockies

July 2005
This is my only new
scramble for 2005. I was joined by my beautiful friend Cindy.
Wateton Lakes
National Park is the stunning setting for this scramble. It can be done in
one day but the route Cindy and I took was from the Waterton town site and an
overnight stay at Alderson Lake made it manageable
First we hiked to
Alderson Lake and setup camp. This is about 8k and 600 meters of
vertical so with full backpacks it makes for an average day. The
campsite was all ours save for a few resident deer. The next day
some folks told us a Back Bear and a Grizzly Bear were seen so they
too were probably around.
The weather was warm
so the Horse Flies and other annoying insects were abundant but this
just adds to the rustic nature of the experience.
The next day we
started out for the summit. The way involves visits to several lakes
as well as close-up views of waterfalls, a very beautiful outing.
Once on top of the
mountain we found shelter from the moderate winds by dropping down a
few feet to the north aspect of the summit.
On the way back down
I stopped to photograph some of the excellent alpine flowers on
display as well as a curious marmot. We also took the wrong way down
across some down sloping, narrow, ruble strewn ledges that were
exposed in some places. Cindy was hyperventilating on the traverse
so I had her stop a few times to calm down.
|

Mount Carthew
panorama showing the wrong route down in
red.
The correct route is shown in
green.
Marks the summit. |
Once back at Upper
Carthew Lake, Cindy and I had to cross a small area of snow
floating at the end of the lake. This snow patch is compacted snow
left over from winter avalanches. I guess both of us should not have
been on the thing at the same time because as we casually sauntered
across there came a huge CRACK and then a slight sinking sensation
as the enormous block of snow we were walking on started to sink and
bob in the lake water.
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Mountain Photography
> <
The broke-down-glacier.
Cindy and I avoided a swim in the
drink or worse. |
As the crack widened,
I jumped up and across onto the solid snow above. Then I looked
over to Cindy on her hands and knees crawling up the snow block and
I shouted "GO GO GO!". Cindy managed to make it across the
gap even though it was wider where she was. The gap would have been
a certain icy death!
That night we spent
back at the Waterton town campsite and we relaxed after a long and
adventurous day.
e will invent new
lullabies, new songs, new acts of love, we will cry over things we used to
laugh and our new wisdom will bring tears to eyes of gentle creatures from
other planets who were afraid of us till then and in the end a summer with wild
winds and new
friends will be.
Source Unknown
o
winter lasts forever; no spring skips it's turn.
Hal Borland
1900-1978, American Writer
©
CanadasMountains.com + Tim L. Helmer
Friday February 08, 2008 11:21 AM
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