Trip Date: June 7-9, 2013
Kimtah Peak Climbing Trip
Kitling Lake
Kitling Pass
Katsuk Cirque
Kimtah–Thieves Notch
Kimtah Peak (8600′+)
Trip Report Summary
Region: Northeastern Washington Cascades
Sub-Range: Ragged Range
Area: North Cascades Scenic Highway Corridor & North Cascades National Park
Starting & Ending Point: Easy Pass Trailhead on Highway 20 (Elev. 3700 feet)
Way Points: Granite Creek & Kitling Creek & Kitling Basin & Kitling Tarn & Kitling Lake & Kitling Pass (trail hike & off-trail hike & snow hike)
Campsite: Kitling Pass (Elev. 6000 feet)
Sidetrip: Panther Creek Bowl & Katsuk Glacier & Northeast Kimtah Ridge Saddle & Kimtah Glacier & Kimtah–Thieves Notch & Kimtah Peak summit (snow climb)
Summit: Kimtah Peak (snow climb via Southwest Face—South Rib)
Approximate Stats: 16.0 miles traveled; 8300 feet gained & lost.
Related Post
Kimtah Peak attempt via Easy Pass—Mesahchie Col—Katsuk Glacier—Southeast Ridge – June 2011
Full Trip Report
After getting stymied on our Kimtah Peak attempt two years ago, Eileen and I were eager to return for another early-season try from the north side of Ragged Ridge. This time, however, we chose to approach the peak via Kitling Creek, Kitling Pass, Katsuk Glacier, and Kimtah Glacier. Kevin K enthusiastically signed on for the climb, and Fay joined us for the hike up to Kitling Pass.
Day 1: Trailhead to Kitling Pass
We started at the Easy Pass Trailhead and hiked up the trail to about 4000 feet, then contoured northward at elevation 4100 feet for about 1 mile through reasonably open forest to reach Kitling Creek. Patchy snow started around 4200 feet in the creek valley, transitioning into solid snow around 4500 feet.
We followed Kitling Creek 2 miles to frozen Kitling Lake and then onward to 6000-foot Kitling Pass (5.9 hours + 2500 feet from TH). This unusually long and level pass—almost a coulee—provided an excellent campsite with running water, plenty of flat snow, and a marvelous view of the huge Mesahchie-Katsuk nordwand. You would be hard-pressed to find a better mid-elevation campsite vantage of Ragged Ridge than Kitling Pass.
- Kimtah Peak From Kitling Pass
- Mesahchie Nordwand From Camp
Day 2: Kimtah Peak Summit Climb
The morning was overcast and cool when Kevin, Eileen, and I departed camp, leaving Fay behind to tuck in some unnamed peaks north of the pass. We dropped and traversed around the head of Panther Creek, ducking just below Mesahchie Peak’s immense north buttress at 5400 feet, then ascended the Katsuk Glacier to a 7100-foot snow saddle on Kimtah Peak’s northeast ridge (2.9 hours from camp). The snow was quite firm below 6500 feet but became increasingly soft and deep above due to the recent snowfalls.
- Heading Toward Saddle 7100
- Eileen and Kevin ascending the lower Katsuk Glacier
- Mesahchie Peak From Katsuk Glacier
From the snow saddle, we crossed onto the Kimtah Glacier and ascended southwesterly to an obvious 7900-foot snow step above the upper icefall. One large crevasse guards this snow step, but a solid snowbridge gave us an easy passage. We then descended and re-ascended the upper glacier to reach the Kimtah-Thieves notch at 7800 feet (5.3 hours from camp).
- Traversing Toward Saddle 7900
From the notch, we began traversing across a series of steep snow gullies and rock ribs on Kimtah Peak’s south face. The climbing was never technically difficult, but most of the snow gullies had deadly runouts. Eileen and I used running belays and snow pickets for the worst places, whereas Kevin usually forged ahead unroped.
- Kevin Traversing Steep Snow Patch On South Rib
After cresting a major rock rib directly below the false summit, we climbed straight upward to the true-false ridge and then scrambled Class 3 rock up the true summit (9.0 hours from camp).
- Scoping South Face Of False Summit
- Climbing Upper South Face
- Eileen Climbing Final Snowfield
It had been a long climb, and we were all a bit distressed to notice that it was now 5:03pm. Luckily for us, our predetermined turnaround time just happened to be 5:03pm. High clouds were forming overhead, and valley fog was wafting in from the west, so we kept our summit visit short.
- Eileen and Kevin On Summit
For our descent, we generally followed our tracks back down and across the south face. One exception was on the last major gully crossing, where Kevin was able to tease out a higher and safer route to the Kimtah-Thieves notch (2.1 hours from summit).
- Kevin Crossing Back Over South Face
From this notch, we entered a thick fogbank and kept following our tracks back over the Kimtah Glacier. Dusk replaced fog as we hurried down the Katsuk Glacier, and headlamps came out for our nighttime traverse back up to Kitling Pass (5.7 hours from summit). Fay was waiting in camp, having returned several hours earlier from her enjoyable two-summit day.
- Last Sun On Kimtah Glacier
Day 3: Kitling Pass to Trailhead
We awoke to sunny weather and slowly packed up camp. Our return trip down Kitling Creek was pretty uneventful, and we were pleased to find a slightly better forest traverse route back to the trailhead (4.5 hours from camp) by making a descending traverse rather than contouring at 4100 feet.
Route Map & Profile
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Photo Gallery
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