Trip Report
Seven Days Skiing in the Valhalla Canadian Backcountry
Thursday February 14, 2019 3:08pm
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In November of 2017 I sent an email to Fred, my cousin and the group leader on a trip to a helicopter-access-only backcountry ski lodge in BC Canada. I said I was excited and making reservations for the night before in Naksup. Fred wrote back and said, “Hey Ney – remember it was a two year waiting list? You are a year early and the trip isn’t until February 2019.” Oh damn.
A year and a few months later Betsy and I drove up a snow covered four-wheel drive road outside of Naksup BC to a small clearing marked by a 55 gallon drum of jet fuel and seven other people. Soon a yellow helicopter appeared. The trip was on. 25,000 human-powered vertical feet and about 50 miles in a week – 95% of the time spent on 25 of the miles and 5% of the time on the other 25 miles.
Some photos from a great trip:
We were stunned to see this view – we had no idea until we skied up to Sunrise Pass. Wow. We were told at the lodge the big rock is apparently Mt. Gimli but one of them is Mt. Asgard. Mt. Asgard? Did we ski into some twilight zone? It turns out there is an Asgard in BC and also in the Baffin Islands.
On this long tour circumnavigating Mount McKean (pretty much like circumnavigating Denali) we ended up at the bottom of the 2,700 foot drop but then got cliffed out. We skinned back up and traversed until we found a way down but the avy danger was high and this was the sketchiest of the trip.
The “cook” Chris was actually a trained chef and we ate extremely well. Each morning started with his homemade granola, fruit and yogurt. Then it was hot breakfast at 8:00 am such as eggs benedict or a soufflé and bacon. Hearty Hors D’Ourves at 5:00 and hand-crafted dinner at 7:00. So basically two breakfasts and two dinners each day with snacks and lunch during the day. And we didn’t gain weight.
Short version: I got up early and got this nice photo. Longer version. Even though it was about negative gazillion degrees out (F) I knew the moon wasn’t out and that the milky way was above Woden Peak so I went out just before first light and snow-shoed away from the lodge for a photo session and when I stepped outside I had to pee really bad and didn’t fully set up the tripod on the snow before I let go and the tripod fell over and hit the outdoor grill and snapped off the tripod head but peeing still came first and then I had to balance the camera on the tripod instead of screwing it in and this is a photo that is actually five portrait-mode 20 second photos stitched together so I’m amazed it worked but don’t look at the trees on the right because they are blurry.
Betsy was anxious about keeping up with the guys on the downhills – she did great and did some steep stuff. As always she was a star at going up and within a few days I heard mumbling of “Who is that woman?” Her and Fred usually led the way and with the fresh snow they had to put in new skin tracks everywhere we went.
There are some steep couloirs that occasionally get skied, but we are way back in the backcountry, avy danger is “considerable” and frankly why am I making excuses? I wouldn’t have done them anyway. This specific area is over a pass so we are out of radio coverage of the lodge and friends (we all carried VHF radios).
Look closely and you can see Dan the snowboarder shredding this hill. He was taking laps alone, broadcasting a position report each time he dropped and also when he got to the bottom. Which was how I knew to look over the valley and see him. Typically with a group you make a radio call only when you drop into something (not at the bottom). Or if you have something snarky to say.
Ney Grant
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About the Author Ney is a trad climber from Pollock Pines. |
Comments
AP
Trad climber
Calgary
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Feb 14, 2019 - 03:33pm PT
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Sounds like fun. Having a good time in BC means more than Squamish.
A friend of mine does a 1 week trip every winter back country skiing out of a lodge. If he doesn't know the area he hires a guide, not cause he needs one, but just to make sure he maximizes the good skiing.
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grover
climber
Castlegar BC
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Feb 14, 2019 - 03:57pm PT
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Sweeet trip, thanks for the awesome report!
Yep, Mt.Gimli is the big massif the person is pointing at. Midgard is the next peak to the left (above their right shoulder) and Asgard is the next peak to the left. The right skyline of Asgard is a sweet 5.6 ridge on stellar Gneiss......
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norm larson
climber
wilson, wyoming
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Feb 19, 2019 - 06:08pm PT
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Ney, thanks for the stoke. I’m flying out of Nakusp next week to a hut just over the ridge from where you were.
Can’t tell the size from your photo, but those are either pine marten or ermine tracks. Most likely pine marten.
And, Gimli has a great 10a super classic route on the right edge of the view in your photo.
What’s the best place to eat in Nakusp if you don’t mind me asking?
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i-b-goB
Big Wall climber
Nutty
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Feb 14, 2019 - 03:59pm PT
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Bitch'n!
You had me at Valhalla!
You can't say skii without smiling!
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limpingcrab
Gym climber
Minkler, CA
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Feb 14, 2019 - 04:07pm PT
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Ho
Ly
Crap
I showed this to my wife and she may finally get into splitboarding with me.
Those couloirs in the black and white photo look amazing! But, you're right, why would you scare yourself when you can have so much fun on other runs?
Thanks for sharing! No thanks for making me so jealous :)
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Ney Grant
Trad climber
Pollock Pines
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Author's Reply
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Feb 14, 2019 - 04:22pm PT
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The Lodge at Arrow Lake at Naksup is the place to eat. It is where CMH operates out of so a little more upscale than the rest of town. The Leland Hotel is where we stayed and I liked it - old and rustic. But the whole town fills up with hockey tournaments so beware.
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Ezra Ellis
Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
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Feb 14, 2019 - 04:30pm PT
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Awesomeness squared,
Just gorgeous
Woooot
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Fritz
Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
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Feb 14, 2019 - 04:37pm PT
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Beautiful photos. Glad you had a great trip & best skiing ever.
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Ney Grant
Trad climber
Pollock Pines
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Author's Reply
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Feb 14, 2019 - 06:14pm PT
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Thanks - fixed it.
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tom woods
Gym climber
Bishop, CA
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Feb 14, 2019 - 08:18pm PT
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Awesome. Skiing like that is one of those things. If you get the opportunity, you pretty much have to do it.
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Ghost
climber
A long way from where I started
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Feb 14, 2019 - 08:46pm PT
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Hah. Clearly you have no idea about skiing, or about Supertopo.
If you want to post here, you have to understand that there is nothing worth climbing or skiing outside of California.
Canada? Are you kidding? Nothing up there but wheatfields. Oh, sure, they have some ice climbs sprayed with waterhoses onto the sides of barns and grain silos, but skiing? Get real. Mammoth is where it's at.
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neebee
Social climber
calif/texas
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Feb 14, 2019 - 10:05pm PT
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hey there, say, ney... wow, i really enjoyed this...
thanks for sharing...
loved the cozy warm cabin...
and-- food sounded like good fellowship time...
:)
nice pics, all around!
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monti
Mountain climber
Basel, Switzerland
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Feb 14, 2019 - 10:52pm PT
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WOWWWWW!!! You call this decent skiing? Sounds a bit understated to me, looks more like skiing the universe. Great TR, thanks for sharing and making us envious. And you had good food, you really had it all: snow sun food friends, good for you! Hope you get more of this.
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spectreman
Trad climber
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Feb 15, 2019 - 06:33am PT
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Spectacular photos and stoke!
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Brian in SLC
Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
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Feb 15, 2019 - 06:49am PT
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Wow...fantastic!
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EdwardT
Trad climber
Retired
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Feb 15, 2019 - 06:51am PT
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Awesome trip (and report)
Trip of a lifetime.
Color me jealous.
TFPU
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Zay
climber
Monterey, Ca
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Feb 15, 2019 - 07:15am PT
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Such a blessing and priveledge to enjou such a trip.
You are a talented photographer, to boot.
May I ask how much this sort of trip costs? To an urchin like me, such a trip is a vague, abstract concept, far out of my means to even fantasize.
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Tom Patterson
Trad climber
Seattle
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Feb 15, 2019 - 07:17am PT
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What a trip! Thanks for bringing us along!
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wilbeer
Mountain climber
Terence Wilson greeneck alleghenys,ny,
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Feb 15, 2019 - 08:15am PT
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Fantastic.
I am curious as to the cost of such a great looking trip.
Cheers wilbeer
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Spider Savage
Mountain climber
The shaggy fringe of Los Angeles
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Feb 15, 2019 - 08:37am PT
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Dream vacation. Thank you for sharing.
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Ney Grant
Trad climber
Pollock Pines
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Author's Reply
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Feb 15, 2019 - 09:28am PT
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The trip was around $1,700 and about $525 of that was food and the chef. Well worth it in my opinion as its nice to come back exhausted and late. I know the trip behind us did not have a chef and were bringing in their own food. This cost did include the helicopter ride in and out. A custodian (in our case the co-owner) stays with you to tell you how to run the wood-fired sauna, heat water, etc. You fly in on Saturday and fly out the next Saturday. The helicopter is expensive to fly so guests climb in the helicopter right after other guests jump out. They also do a sling load in and out. You get 45 lbs not including skis. That's enough but not a lot. You basically just bring extra underwear, T shirts and socks and a few luxury items like some beer or a tripod. We had 10 people but one dropped out, so I think all of us threw in more beer and wine.
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Zay
climber
Monterey, Ca
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Feb 15, 2019 - 10:30am PT
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Hey Nay,
WWOW thats surprisingly reasonable for such an extravogent experience... i would have ballparked it closer to 5g!!!
TFPU
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Kalimon
Social climber
Ridgway, CO
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Feb 15, 2019 - 10:34am PT
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Way! Ney!
Thanks for sharing the goods.
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shylock
Social climber
mb
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Feb 18, 2019 - 11:39am PT
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so happy for you guys! also very jealous.
and wait a minute... sauna?
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Jan
Mountain climber
Colorado & Nepal
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Feb 15, 2019 - 10:09pm PT
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Wonderful trip report. I've heard back country skiing in B.C. is great but seeing is believing. So reasonable too. I too am envious.
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hamik
Mountain climber
Manhattan Beach, CA
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Feb 16, 2019 - 12:02am PT
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Incredible pictures and trip!
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Charlie D.
Trad climber
Western Slope, Tahoe Sierra
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Feb 18, 2019 - 05:58am PT
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Ha, sure puts those days of snow camping in perspective!!! A Canadian hut trip is the good life, great you got after it Ney & Betsy. Hope to ski with you and your beasts in March as I’m on my way to BC.
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Ney Grant
Trad climber
Pollock Pines
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Author's Reply
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Feb 18, 2019 - 11:58am PT
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Hi Charlie,
I'd love to do the big tour we did a few years back. That backside bowl is so big and beautiful, if not a little scary. Maybe we can get Ron onboard?
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John M
climber
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Feb 18, 2019 - 01:11pm PT
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holy moly.. some people know how to live.
Looks Fantastic. Thanks for sharing!
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perswig
climber
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Feb 18, 2019 - 03:33pm PT
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Fu king awesome.
$1700 seems extremely reasonable for that access and those conditions.
TFPU!
Dale
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