South Sister, the third tallest mountain in Oregon, stands at 10,358 feet above sea level. It hosts numerous glaciers and vistas that lie to cameras.
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The specific route that I chose (which is commonly referred to as the South side) is roughly 11 miles from car to summit to car, and it gains around 6,000 feet in elevation... the last mile of walking is roughly 3,000 of those feet.
I started out the day before memorial day, and I walked in the woods alone on the approach. Footprints and intuition set me on my bearing. I was following a topo map, and all I had to do was travel uphill and shoot between two butte's in the forest. Easy terrain led me past huge, 600+ year old Hemlocks and fir's. As I kept moving, I ascended a large, snow-covered plateau which led to the shoulder of the mountain. The plateau was mostly treeless, and was about 2.5 miles long. It was nearing 4:00, and the tent in my backpack was telling my shoulders to think about setting up camp soon.
South sister was shrouded in clouds, which is somewhat typical for spring in the cascades. Just last weekend I had attempted Mt. Hood and visibility was about 20 feet the entire way.... more on that in my next post.
I worked for another hour, chugging my way up the shoulder of the mountain, all the while trying to find an appropriate spot for
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After shivering through a dehydrated meal, I zippered out the cold air in my Bibler tent and cocooned myself in my sleeping bag for the night. The clouds were still moving just above my head and the wind was whispering as the zipper's of my tent. Slowly I dozed off into alpine sleepy land.
I awoke at 3:00 AM to a pounding in my bladder. I unzipped my bag into the cold, still air of my tent and noticed a startling figure standing shrouded in light on the wall of my tent. I quickly grabbed my glasses (as I'm blinded without them) and
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The climb the next day was quiet, bright and alone. Walking on steep ridges and near corniced edges my boots made a solid crunching noise in the snow. The sun was quickly warming the mountain, and slushy mashed potato snow was on the way. The climbing was uneventful.... South Sister via the South side is more of a back country commitment than an alpine test piece. About 9:00 am I had summited, alone on the third tallest peak in Oregon in utter and complete blaring sunshine. South Sister is a volcano, so the
top is flat and acts as the perfect solar collector. I went to the tallest point in the crater and I could see from Washington state all the way down to California. Being at a summit alone in a remote area is an exhilarating experience, and it went perfectly as planned. I felt strong, confident, and elated that I made the joinery on my own.
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On the decent, I passed by many parties that were going for the summit. When I got back to camp, I cooked up the rest of mt food and packed up as the day's heat creeped up the mountain.
The rest of the walk out was uneventful, and I made it back to my car in one piece. It felt good to sit down in my car and have that one under my belt.
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