Snowbird & Alta, UT 7/4/2005 - The End (Part 1)

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Yep, it's the end...but only of the lift-served season, that is. I'm already making plans to hike with my kid at Alta this weekend. :lol:

(This is another of my infamous photo-fest two-parters -- click here for Part 2, for the second half of the photos only.)

Marc_C and I dropped my car at Alta's Wildcat lot at 8:30 am, and by the time we got back to the Bird at 8:45 Lot 2 was already full! :shock: Sure, I knew it was going to be packed -- that's why I picked up today's lift ticket on Saturday afternoon -- but this was more than either of us expected. We ultimately found a spot next to the parking garage between the Cliff Lodge and the Wasatch Powderbirds heliport, and walked over to the Tram Plaza where, sure enough, the ticket line was clear back across the plaza. Tony, if you're still wondering if Snowbird is making any money on this extended season, stop wondering now.

A Dixieland jazz band played patriotic tunes to celebrate the Independence Day holiday, and the Tram cabins swept up and down the hill adorned with American flags flapping in the breeze. Dale and Pat showed up, and up the full Tram we went. With today's crowd the Tram ran non-stop back-to-back. The pitch from the Tram summit station down to the top of Little Cloud is now devoid of snow, replaced instead with the commonplace Wasatch sharp-edged rubble. Everybody downhiked to Little Cloud...everybody save for one nutcase, that is, who came screaming down the bare pitch on skis, leaving curls of P-tex strewn in his wake. The appreciative crowd roared with applause.

And that set the stage for the day -- craziness, zaniness, and just a stinkin' huge lot of people out to say that they skied on the 4th of July. One group set up a charcoal BBQ atop The Grove, and even invited us to pull in for a burger and beer. We gratefully declined, saving our appetite for our own holiday BBQ planned for the base of Alta at the end of the day.

We only managed three laps on Little Cloud, for the line snaked back 40 to 45 minutes on each run. Combine that with the 12-minute lift ride and a 10-minute ski down, and you were nearly up to 75 minutes per lap. Even one fistfight nearly broke out in the line before cooler heads in the crowd convinced the combatants to chill out and enjoy the vibe of skiing in July. The river in Gad Valley was opening up at the base of the chair -- even in the liftline -- and a dozen or so lunatics set up their own impromptu pond skimming contest to entertain the crowd. They were playing it safe, though, starting their run-in so high on the hill that everyone we watched made it across the 20 feet of icy open stream.

This was a day, though, when the best plans were not to be. Bob never called or showed up -- we have no idea what happened to him. He was to be my partner skiing down into Mineral Basin, skinning up to Sugarloaf Pass and down into Alta. Neither Marc_C nor Dale nor Pat were interested. So I gave Marc_C my planned route details, bid him farewell, and made arrangements to meet at the Wildcat parking lot before diving over the edge into Mineral. It's my understanding that I caused quite the commotion atop Little Cloud: "Hey, dude...where the hell are you going??"

Those few early turns in south-facing Mineral were among the best of the day before I hung a hard left to traverse across the face beneath the Mineral Basin Express chair, trying to stay high on the hill to minimize my skin up to the pass. I watched the University of Utah Air Med heli land on Hidden Peak just above my head before the wonderful silence enveloped me. The air was still and I baked under the hot July sun. The only sounds heard were an occasional bird and sounds of my own movement, the latter accentuated to seemingly ear-splitting levels. The loneliness was a welcome respite from the in-bounds crowds.

I reached the end of my traverse, strapped on skins and began the short climb to Sugarloaf Pass. I was now entering Alta Ski Area, closed for the season since April 17. Instead of continuing up to the Devil's Castle traverse, I stripped the skins from my skis at the pass and dropped down to Devil's Elbow, where I encountered the only soul I saw on my entire journey, another skier skinning up. The conditions were nothing like what Bob and I experienced last week, as the sun cups were unforgiving this time, but the adventure factor far outweighed the skiing quality. I headed into Cecret Saddle and found soft corn on a south-facing aspect dropping down to Cecret Lake, then climbed back out on the lake's north side and worked my way down Rollercoaster across a diminishing snowpack. By the time I arrived at the base of the Sugarloaf chair I stepped across my first brown spots, and headed down into the shelter of the trees lining what I thought was Little Cottonwood Creek to link more patches of snow.

But it wasn't Little Cottonwood Creek, it was merely a tributary coming down from the vicinity of Yellow Trail. By the time I saw the true creek, and realized my error, I was well below any remaining snow bridge to get across the raging water. Once I finally ran out of snow I began to trudge down the west bank of the creek, figuring that if I had to I could stay on the stream's left bank all the way to the Wildcat base area. After fighting my way through some thick brush I was relieved to see that I didn't have to, for one solid snow bridge remained at the base of Greeley Hill. I crossed over to Home Run and enjoyed a much more relaxed hike down toward Albion base.

The final pitch down underneath the Sunnyside chairlift revealed one unexpected last patch of snow. I removed the skis from my pack and made some final turns, slaloming between kids on sleds. I then walked the remaining mile along the Transfer Tow back to the Wildcat base where I met up with Marc_C and Karen for our BBQ.

But where were Dale and Pat? The scatterbrains, who both forgot their ski poles today, both apparently forgot about the BBQ, too. No matter, it was their loss as we fired up the grill for bratwurst and Italian sausage & peppers. Hard-earned beers were enjoyed as we watched skiers returning from runs down Baldy Main Chute, Corkscrew and Wildcat Gulch, routes that I should have considered instead of my own. Passers-by said Main Chute skied wonderfully, and Wildcat Gulch had solid snow all the way to the base.

So, another lift-served Utah season is now in the can. Now we're left only with our own low-speed quads. :wink:

(Again, this is a two-part post. The first half of the photos are below. Click here for Part 2, for the second half of the photos only. Any replies belong here in Part 1, and Part 2 is therefore locked to replies.)
 

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=D>

nice report marc, what a season you had out there! amazing that you are only marking the beginning of earn all your turns time the same weekend i closed mine out. looks like you could easily get august if you wanted to. any snow usually left in september up there? if so, you could go for 12 months straight pending a decent october storm! wow!

what a lift line that is! how much vert on that chair? with line and lift time totaling 1 hour, it might have been faster to skin or hike!
 
riverc0il":i9fw8qoh said:
what a lift line that is! how much vert on that chair? with line and lift time totaling 1 hour, it might have been faster to skin or hike!

1,300 ft, it is 1,470 from the top of the tram though
 
riverc0il":2zatexnr said:
any snow usually left in september up there? if so, you could go for 12 months straight pending a decent october storm! wow!

I'm actually casually shooting for 12 consecutive months. I'll try, but if I don't make it I won't shed any tears. August will be tricky, and September even more so. I believe based on elevation, exposure and current snowpack that I may have more luck in the late summer in the Uintas, a high mountain range 90 minutes east of here with contains summits surpassing 13,000 feet (the highest Wasatch summits are just over 11,000). The Uintas are one of the few mountain ranges in the world in an east-west orientation, and thus have lots of north-facing lines.

To ski lines that don't remain snow-covered through the summer, that would require one heluva October storm -- as Marc_C has pointed out, the Wasatch Mountains are one giant scree pile once the snow melts. We're talking sharp, jagged pieces ranging from the size of a melon to the size of a refrigerator. It takes a lot of snow to cover them.
 
Your Guardsman Pass drive illustrated perfectly the unique microclimate of LCC. Same elevation, just a few air miles away, but almost no snow left.

As I stated offline in an e-mail, it is not at all obvious to me that the Uintas would get as much snow as LCC. They will melt off slower if they are higher, but if they didn't get 400+ during the winter, you are going to be earning your summer turns at Alta.
 
Tony Crocker":3fr0zsnu said:
.... it is not at all obvious to me that the Uintas would get as much snow as LCC. They will melt off slower if they are higher,...
Based on prominence, there are 17 peaks over 13K in the Uintas and 65 between 12K and 13K. In contrast the highest peak in the Wasatch range is Mt. Nebo, at 11,928'. The La Sals, southeast of Moab, also have more than a dozen 12K peaks as do the Tushars.
 
The higher altitude still doesn't mean more snow. The La Sals are a good example: I think they are fairly dry compared to most western mountain ranges. The biggest cluster of 14ers in Colorado north of Monarch are another example. Last October flying home from NYC they were almost bare while the San Juans were already loaded with snow.

You've been in Utah awhile. Have you been out to the Uintas in summer to compare snowpack to LCC?
 
For those who may be curious, the La Sal Mountains are visible in the background of this photo I took north of Moab on April 30, 2005:

IMG_5243.JPG
 
I agree with Tony, the wasatch are a better bet. The key is finding a sun-sheltered area. From all my 1 years of experience of TAY here, you have to hike to find snow in late summer/early fall. The semi-permanent ice field on Timpanogos is a good one. Broads fork had snow into mid august at least last year. I don't think the Lone peak cirque ever melted out completely last year. Sept and Oct last year i skied on new snow though :)

Nice TR, sounds like you had an awesome 4th :D
 
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