The Whistlers

   
Canadian Rockies scrambles, panoramas and photography - Canadas Mountains




Canadian Rockies Scrambles and Panoramas
by T. L. Helmer
   
 
 
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The Whistlers - Canadian Rockies


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The Whistlers
This is not the true summit but a false summit that the Tram upper terminal sits on.

Wednesday September 6th 2006

The Whistlers is a minor summit near the town site of Jasper Alberta,

To get to The Whistlers summit is either a fairly good hike or you also have the option of flying up a good deal of the way to the summit on the Jasper Tram.

The Jasper Tram is not like the usual Chairlift or Gondola. When I examined it I noticed a few differences. First and most interesting is rather than the usual multiple towers to support the weight of the cable and cars, there is only one tower. The lone tower lies just short of the half-way point up the mountain.




The top of the Tram is now visible. This image is from just before the halfway point. You can see the other car coming down.

The immense distance makes the cable sag in a hyperbolic curve




The view from the upper terminal. A car is on the way up.




The car arrives at the upper terminal

The Jasper Tram is also bi-directional. This means rather than the usual circular loop that multiple gondolas-chairs take, the two cars go back and forth up and down the mountain. They ride on a stationary cable and are towed by a smaller one inch cable.

The trips are referred to as flights. Because of the great distance between the terminals and the lone tower, the distance off the ground is more than the usual height of a chairlift.



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The upper terminal from the trail above



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Looking down to the upper terminal from higher up

"The Whistlers" is apparently named after the Hoary Marmot although my own guess would have been the Pika. I did not see either species of rodent on the upper peak. I did see two Ptarmigans though.



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Male Ptarmigan



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Female Ptarmigan

 



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View of the Town of Jasper from near the summit



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Indian Ridge
Indian Ridge is also a scramble and is in Alan Kane's book.

 




The view south towards Mount Kerkeslin




Telephoto shot of Mount Robson, highest peak in the Canadian Rockies at 3954 meters or 12972 feet.

I took a few photos of the surrounding peaks at the summit and then got back down. Cindy was feeling unusually vertiginous this particular day and decided to hang back down the trail.


Panorama of the Victoria Cross Range to the north of the Whistlers. The Whistlers are at the northern most tip of the Trident Range.

Pyramid Mountain is at the right.

CANADIAN MOUNTAIN PANORAMAS

Famous Quotes   <-- click

lowly, but very deliberately, the brooding edifice of seduction, creaking and incongruous, came into being, a vast Heath Robinson mechanism, dually controlled by them and lumbering gloomily down vistas of triteness. With a sort of heavy-fisted dexterity the mutually adapted emotions of each of them became synchronized, until the unavoidable anti-climax was at hand.

Anthony Powell
1905-2000, British Novelist




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© CanadasMountains.com + Tim L. Helmer
Friday February 08, 2008 11:21 AM

 

 

 

 

 

 

The First Fifty
Mountains

The Second Fifty
Mountains

51. Belmore Browne Pk. 
52. Kindersley Summit
53. Mount Edith
54. Mount L. Grassi
55. Saddle Mountain
56. Mount Aylmer
57. Mount Field
58. Redstreak Mountain
59. Sanson Peak
60. Sulphur Mountain
61. Mount Collembola
62. Tower of Babel
63. Panorama Mountain
64. Mount Goldie
65. Vermilion Peak
66. Mt. Sparrowhawk
67. Tangle Ridge
68. Gap Peak
69. Rimwall Summit
70. Banded Peak
71. Middle Sister
72. Mount Burgess
73. Mount Carthew
74. Mount Whitehorn
75. Grizzly Peak
76. The Whistlers