Trip Date: May 26, 2001
Mt. Chaval Day Climb
Jug Creek Valley
Bluff Lake
Cliff Lake
Cliff Lake Saddle
Mount Chaval (7127 ft)
Trip Report Summary
Region: North-Central Washington Cascades
Sub-Region: Suiattle Mountains
Area: Glacier Peak Wilderness
Starting & Ending Point: Grade Creek Road #2642/#2643 junction (Elev. 2250 feet)
Way Points: Bluff Lake Fisherman’s Trailhead (road walk); Jug Creek & Jug Creek Meadow & Bluff Lake & Cliff Lake & Cliff Lake Saddle (trail hike & snow hike & snow climb)
Summit: Mt. Chaval (snow climb & rock scramble via West Ridge—Northwest Face)
Approximate Stats: 14 miles traveled; 6400 feet gained & lost; 9.4 hours up; 6.6 hours down.
Full Trip Report
Saturday’s perfect weather forecast prompted Laura and me to attempt Mt. Chaval, which is the prominent triple-peaked mountain located northeast of Darrington. Our route of choice was via Grade Creek Road, Bluff Lake, and Cliff Lake, then continuing along the west ridge. We had attempted a one-day climb of Chaval by this route last year in mid-July, but we were unsuccessful because of (1) a late start, (2) being slowed down by brush below the snowline, and (3) totally underestimating the time required. Our new plan called for (1) car-camping on Grade Creek Road to allow for an early start, (2) scheduling the trip earlier in the summer to benefit from greater snowcover, and (3) not totally underestimating the time required.
We left our vehicle at the Road #2642/#2643 junction (2250 feet) at 5:15am and walked up abandoned spur road #2643 about 2 miles to a sharp switchback (3150 feet), from where a fisherman’s path contours the hillside and crosses several branches of Jug Creek. This path is well-defined in some places and vague in others. Despite being familiar with the path (from last year’s approach), we continually got off-track and had to relocate it.
Two of the creek branches required a bit of searching to find safe crossings. Fortunately, the path does not cross the main (eastern) branch of Jug Creek; instead, it switchbacks up the western bank until dropping slightly to a small basin at 3700 feet.
From here, we could walk on snow-covered slopes all the way past Bluff Lake and Cliff Lake, eventually coming to a 5400-foot saddle east of Cliff Lake. This saddle provides a nice view of Mt. Chaval’s west ridge.
- Laura Booting Toward Mt Chaval
Getting to the summit pyramid involves traversing the steep southern side of the west ridge for 1 mile to a higher 5900-foot saddle, then traversing the gentler northern side for another ½ mile. Our progress was slowed by mushy snow on both sides, and the midday sun broiled us.
- Jim Nearing Mt Chaval
The summit pyramid features moderate snowfields leading to a steep, intimidating snow ramp that angles up to the right shoulder, with near-vertical cliffs above and below. We donned crampons and proceeded up the lower snowfields. Not having brought a rope and snow anchors, we opted to ascend some steep but friendly heather slopes and a rock band to the left of the snow ramp.
- Cliffy Slopes On Mt Chaval
The rock band required a few Class 3-4 moves, which would have been more fun without wearing crampons.
- Laura Scrambling Up Cliff Band
Above this, another heather slope leads to a short but very steep and exposed snowfield that arcs across the summit crest. My stomach securely tied itself into a quadruple-bowline-on-the-bight as I negotiated this last pitch, wishing we had come prepared for such dicey terrain. Finally, there was the narrow, airy summit (9.4 hours from TH)!
- View West From Mt Chaval Summit
The views were dramatic in all directions, especially toward the east, where Chaval’s two subordinate peaks projected upward like fins. Sadly, no summit register was to be found.
- View East From Mt Chaval Summit
Downclimbing the steep snow and rock band did nothing to loosen my stomach knot, but eventually we reached the base and could relax. Now, only 7 miles of snow-slogging and rough hiking lay before us.
The snow had become even softer since we originally broke trail across the hillsides, so backtracking was not much easier. Also, the increased runoff from afternoon snowmelt made the creek crossings more interesting. We reached our vehicle scant minutes before nightfall (6.6 hours from summit).
Photo Gallery
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