Mount Washington Snowfields: 05/28/06

riverc0il

New member
After many weeks of anxious anticipation, the Mount Washington Auto Road finally opened to the summit this weekend to the delight of many a New England Skier. With exception of Left Gully and Airplane, the East Snowfield currently has the longest continuous vertical drop in New England for skiing. This bright, sunny, and hazy afternoon brought well over a hundred people to the East Snowfields to partake in a final farewell to winter in New England.

Plans to carpool up the auto road with fellow forum member awf170 were scrapped yesterday (sorry man, hopefully next time!). Since my Saturn does not have low gear, it would not be allowed on the Auto Road. Believing that the Auto Road folks would not look kindly on my sticking a thumb out near the gate, I opted for a one way ticket for $26 big ones planning to either Hitch a ride or hike back down. Since I paid for the lift, I am unsure if this afternoon qualifies for my ?One Run for the Price of None Tour.? Doesn?t much matter about the payment as all turns had to be earned regardless.

Crowds were already filling the Snowfields upon my arrival at approximately 9:30 A.M. It did not take my long to realize I had over packed, but without a car to base operations from and a potential hike down, I took no chances on over packing gear. I booted up practically laughing with glee, this looked like it would be damn fun.

And damn fun it was! A maximum of around five hundred vertical feet could be skied, though it was getting mushy down low fast. I exclaimed with delight as I linked my first few turns on untracked soft corn snow. Sweet! The snow got progressively softer and mushier the lower you went. A nice boot ladder had already been established, so up I went for round two!

Seeing that the crowds were chewing up the center of the Snowfields quickly, I dropped in far skiers left next run to harvest more untracked soft corn, yum! Views from just above the Alpine Garden where the snow ran out were fantastic. Though long distance viewing was not optimal due to the haze.

For my third run, I spied a few lone skiers descending down far skiers right which looked enticing. A narrow stream of rocks separated far skiers right from the main Snowfields. Even Back Country skiers often forget to look past simple obstacles and hike a little further to get the best snow. While the main Snowfields were getting mushy and turning to mashed potatoes, I continued to sample fine untracked corn far skiers right, freaking sweet! I merged back onto the main route about two thirds down the Snowfields to find a mashed potato mess. I decided to click out and make my own boot back straight up the nice section of skiers right. This section was steeper and had no boot ladder, so going was slower than ascending the main ladder, which I decided would have been faster.

I took three more runs down far skiers right for a total of six. The sun was obnoxious and Murphy?s Law was in full effect: I forgot my sun screen. After realizing I was burnt to a crisp, I switched to my long sleeve T-Shirt but the damage had been done. My afternoon skiing the Snowfields had reached an end due to the ludicrously warm temperatures causing sunburn and mashed potato snow. Those were six fantastic runs that will carry me through the summer. But I am not done quite yet! Back for more in two weekends to earn my June turns on what ever is left in Tuckerman Ravine.

Word was Airplane was still skiing great and folks were still going a long way down the gully. From the quick view I got from the Van, it looked great but Pipeline is shot. From the PNVC, Left Gully still looked fantastic! The season is far from over but the end is sooner than I would care to admit.

Pictures latter tonight...
 

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a few more.
 

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Nice! Glad you were able to get up there and down without any problems. How did you get down anyway? Those snowfields look nice but also look like there going really fast. How crowded was it up there anyway, it didn't look too bad from your pics, atleast not nearly as bad as Tucks would have been.
 
riverc0il":3vg8j2j3 said:
But I am not done quite yet! Back for more in two weekends to earn my June turns on what ever is left in Tuckerman Ravine.
(...)
The season is far from over but the end is sooner than I would care to admit.
Nice report Riv. =D>

June is next weekend. If the weather and family copperates, I'd like to be in NH next weekend. Family to see Santa in Jefferson, me on the rockpile. Stay tuned.

The season never ends, it just moves elsewhere as long as there snow on Earth!!! :P
 
Very nice, Riv. I was chained to the Big Red Truck this weekend, no turns for me. Maybe Thursday or Friday. Stay Tuned.
 
awf170":uqyggwe8 said:
Nice! Glad you were able to get up there and down without any problems. How did you get down anyway? Those snowfields look nice but also look like there going really fast. How crowded was it up there anyway, it didn't look too bad from your pics, atleast not nearly as bad as Tucks would have been.
A good semiratin offered me a ride down. I have never been up there before, so I can not compare to normal years in regards to how fast they are going. The extremely high temperature and traffic yesterday surely did not help. It felt crowded even if my pictures do not show it. Definitely over 100 people up there, which I consider a lot for such a small patch of snow. Way more people on the Snowfields than in Tucks I would suspect. I can't imagine more people hiking into Tucks with the auto road open. The only time I have to compare it too was last year when I went to Tucks with similar conditions as current but still more snow and there were definitely less than 100 people in the ravine.
 
Anyone have any idea on what the pitch of the snowfields are? I'd look it up on the topo but I'm not sure exactly where on the mountain they are.

Nice pictures by the way- amazing there is any snow left considering how hot it was today....
 
frontrange":yqrpeabr said:
Anyone have any idea on what the pitch of the snowfields are? I'd look it up on the topo but I'm not sure exactly where on the mountain they are.

30 degreees for 600 ft. of vertical.
 
Great pics from the East Snowfields - or was that Hampton Beach?

Second pic from the top, 052806washington01.jpg, you captured a local legend, Greg S., with the Pocket Rockets over his shoulder. A few years back, Greg managed to ski Mount Wash for a streak of 31 months. We had run into Greg on 2 or 3 Tucks trips this year, so we weren't surprised to see him at the Glen House Site with a truckload of friends heading up the Auto Road.

...well over a hundred people to the East Snowfields...

I think your guesstimate is on the mark, easily 100+. I've never seen quite that large a crowd gathered. After skiing Airplane, we took one late run on the East Snowfields, then braved the masses up above to visit our State Parks friends on the summit.

...the Auto Road folks would not look kindly on my sticking a thumb out near the gate...
We would have picked you up! Sorry we missed you, we had an extra seat on the ride down, and could have squeezed another in for the ride up (and we had sunscreen to spare!).

Word was Airplane was still skiing great and folks were still going a long way down the gully.

We were able to link about 800 feet of turns in Airplane. Although there was a break in the snow about 600 feet down, you could cautiously side-step over the brush-rocks-snow and get another 200 feet below it. A couple folks through caution to the wind, and skied right over it.

It's getting pretty narrow in spots, and undermining was a factor. While hiking up a steep gully, I never like to hear running water under the snow beneath my feet. Ascending back up the climber's right of that break in the snow, the boot track began collapsing into the water, prompting some re-routing of the boot track.

Another sight I don't care to see is a trail of blood in the snow. It turned out that it wasn't a serious injury, just a fellow with bloody knee resulting from skiing in shorts. It boggles my mind how many folks ski these gullies without a helmet, let alone without covering elbows and knees.
 

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Good you got it in when you did. Mother Nature was not kind to the snow on the rockpile this week.
 
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