Trip Report
Incredible Hulk Winter Ascent - A First?
Sunday March 6, 2016 2:12pm
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Jeremy Collins invited me to climb the Incredible Hulk in winter. He hadn't heard of anyone doing it. I had not either. Anyone climbed it in winter?
We climbed B Line. Not sure I would recommend this route. Red Dihedral is much more aesthetic and is easier (B line has some weird flared cracks). Took a little less than 4 hours (we used the Kong Ducks and simul climbed). More on this topic here Approach and descent, however, took FOREVER.
Some notes on gear from Jeremy:
A couple people have asked so-
Gear I was impressed with from our day on the Hulk:
The BLack Diamond Ultralight Camalots- we had a double rack to #3 and I barely noticed. They really are notably light and just as stable. Even if just adding the 2 and 3 to your rack for when you need doubles would be worth it.
The pack- I had seen the Patagonia nine trails trail running pack and immediately wanted to try it for climbing. The double chest straps keep it stable with one strap extending to the back avoiding any waist belt. The shoulder straps have a pocket for cell phone/camera and topo. This will be my new go to for long days that don't return to the base. It's small enough you aren't tempted to overpack. I had approach shoes, alpine Houdini, GoPro and water/snacks. I generally hate having a pack while leading. Not anymore. I rope-gunned and we simuled the route in only three re-racks. I never minded having the pack on.
The Nano air hoody stayed on the whole climb and regulated well from snowing to sunshine to after sunset. I only added two holes in the offwidth/chimneys. Worth it.
While climbing I did BD crag half finger gloves, and Torque gloves for skiing and belaying. They both worked great. I only popped the half fingers off for a short tips section then popped them back on.
My Natives never fogged up and had the added bonus of Chris saying "you look so retro cool" which is why I'm grinning in this pic after six miles of skinning to the base.
Rock Shoes- I did my trusty Astromans but Chris did Evolv Cruzers which i thought was pretty cool. He wore them with small gaiters in the snow and for all climbing. COMFY!
And notes on Gear from me:
Yeah, the Ultralight Camalots were my favorite new piece of gear. Already donated my old Camalots to the American Safe Climbing Association on ebay and am replacing them all with Ultralights.
The glove situation was the most tricky. I switched between three options, full fingered windstopper gloves when belaying, mountain bike gloves when on easy climbing, and the partial "glove" of the Patagonia R1 when things got harder.
After 20+ years climbing, I finally (finally!) nailed the layering: superlight UPF 50 hoody layer for the brief time on the approach we got blasted by sun and were warm. Then the Patagonia R1. Then a super ultralight Montbell 850 fill down jacket (no hood) and then an ultralight shell, in this case the Outdoor Research Helium. I think this combo gives about the most warmth and mobility that can be imagined because of the double hood (triple with the shell) and double layer on half the hand. Just about every major manufacturer makes a version of each of those layers.
Also highly recommend the ultralight stretchy gaiters. They look dorky, but kept my feet (mostly) dry even when kicking steps down the snow gully.
The Evolv Cruzer proved super capable on the mostly easy climbing and even on the snow. The narrow profile kicks steps well in firm snow. And sooooo much more comfortable than climbing shoes on the rock.
Chris McNamara
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About the Author Climbing Magazine once computed that three percent of Chris McNamara’s life on Earth had been spent on the face of El Capitan – an accomplishment that left friends and family pondering Chris’s sanity. He has climbed El Capitan more than 70 times and holds nine big wall speed climbing records. In 1998 Chris did the first Girdle Traverse of El Capitan, an epic 75-pitch route that begs the question, “Why?”
Outside Magazine called Chris one of “the world’s finest aid climbers.” He is the winner of the 1999 Bates Award from the American Alpine Club and founder of the American Safe Climbing Association, a nonprofit group that has replaced over 5000 dangerous anchor bolts. He is a graduate of UC Berkeley and serves on the board of the ASCA and the Rowell Legacy Committee. He has a rarely updated adventure journal, maintains BASEjumpingmovies.com, and also runs a Lake Tahoe home rental business. |
Comments
Ezra Ellis
Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
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Nice job Chris, thanks!
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Vitaliy M.
Mountain climber
San Francisco
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Jeremy Collins having a pint near the summit of the Incredible Hulk. We casually waited here a few hours to get just the right light for this shot.
Ok, actually it’s just a water bottle and we were in a race with the sun the whole climb (the sun won).
LOL this is funny!
Was the summit register there? I heard a rumor that it went missing in the end of the last season...
The B line is not easy and a bit flaky. But still pretty good I thought. Climbed it in late October when it was windy as hell. Didn't enjoy the day that much. :(
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Mei
Trad climber
mxi2000.net
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The Incredible Hulk is about to keel over in the first picture.
Thanks for posting the gear notes. Love these real life use experiences. Will be checking out some of the items.
You are two adventurers. Well done!
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donini
Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
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Brrr....nicely done! Doesn't look like a lot of snow for March.
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High Fructose Corn Spirit
Gym climber
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Yeah, not much snow. Look at that fan, sheesh.
Anyways, thanks for the humor and winter-spring inspiration!!
Hope you had a moon then for that gully descent.
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NutAgain!
Trad climber
https://nutagain.org
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This looks like a very satisfying adventure!
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robSJ
Ice climber
san jose
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Nice work and beautiful pictures! Definitely not the first winter ascent of the hulk though ;)
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Bad Climber
Trad climber
The Lawless Border Regions
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Fantastic. Thanks, Chris.
BAd
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Stewart Johnson
Gym climber
top lake
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I Climbed the hulk in the winter of 1984
with Wayne Wallace via a mixed line
That left the descent gully at about
The halfway mark
We continued on to Bivy on the real
Summit and then traversed the
Western slopes to Matterhorn the
Next day.
Thanks for the report looked like a
Fun day out!
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crankster
Trad climber
No. Tahoe
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Nice work! How was the ski descent by headlamp?
Nice window of opportunity...there's probably 3+ more feet of snow there this morning.
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this just in
climber
Justin Ross from North Fork
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That's badass, thanks for the report.
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marty(r)
climber
beneath the valley of ultravegans
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For a poor man's Patagonia the Hulk's got a lot going for it.
Keep the stoke alive for us sea-level dads!
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JEleazarian
Trad climber
Fresno CA
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Nice work! Nice write up, too. Thanks, CMac.
John
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BASE104
Social climber
An Oil Field
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Judging by the pics, it doesn't compare with equally difficult routes in the alps or high mountains. Sure, it was cold, but there aren't any crevasse approaches, no overhanging seracs waiting to take you out, and I assume not too much rockfall.
Not to dis on your accomplishment, but take a look at a pic of the Dru sometime, or Nameless Tower in Pakistan.
The Sierra is a pretty forgiving environment, but other than the temps, it wasn't like alpine routes of equal difficulty.
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Vitaliy M.
Mountain climber
San Francisco
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Judging by the pics, it doesn't compare with equally difficult routes in the alps or high mountains.
Did Chris ever try to compare it to putting up a new route on K2 or something? When people go out and do sh#t, it is what it is. Not like he is about to write a book about it or making the experience sound bigger than life.
FML, I have not climbed the Dru or the Nameless tower, but based on what I know about climbing high mountains, in my honest opinion neither of those are a big fking deal, especially the Dru. Both can be done as long rock climbs with one being a big wall but doable in few days after acclimating. Not even close to big peaks with REAL objective danger.
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survival
Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
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WELL DONE MEN!!
BURT BRONSON WOULD BE PROUD!!!!!
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Roots
Mountain climber
Somewhere Fun
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Awesome!
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WBraun
climber
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Chris Mac still shredding and simultaneously running an intelligent business ....
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Impaler
Social climber
San Francisco
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Good stuff! Thanks for the report!
That stupid-looking 5.9 grainy groove on pitch 6 can be bypassed by staying in the big corner on the left. It's 10b stemming and the best pitch on the whole route. Red Dihedral is still much better and cleaner, though!
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mooser
Trad climber
seattle
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Judging by the pics, it doesn't compare with equally difficult routes in the alps or high mountains. Sure, it was cold, but there aren't any crevasse approaches, no overhanging seracs waiting to take you out, and I assume not too much rockfall.
Not to dis on your accomplishment, but take a look at a pic of the Dru sometime, or Nameless Tower in Pakistan.
The Sierra is a pretty forgiving environment, but other than the temps, it wasn't like alpine routes of equal difficulty.
Really??
Great TR, Chris. I love the Sierra in winter!
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snowhazed
Trad climber
Oaksterdam, CA
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Mar 14, 2016 - 05:54pm PT
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My partner and I chimneyed a bergshrund on the ridge between PV and the summit in early June. Whaddya mean its not alpine??? You see any trees up there???
My partner had been faux bitching about not having any chalk in his bag and after moving through the snow slot his chalk bag was full up with white stuff- hahaha.
Thanks for the stoke- one of my goals for this season is on that lovely chunk of rock!
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phylp
Trad climber
Upland, CA
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Mar 14, 2016 - 10:23pm PT
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What a cool adventure! Thanks for the TR.
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Footloose
Trad climber
Lake Tahoe
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Anyone with recent pics to share? please post.
Stoke from this CMac report strong as ever. The Hulk calls...
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