We Fell into a Burning Ring of Fire The Targets, The Lowdown, The Damage
An overview of three charismatic peaks we hit (and one we missed) Michael Darter
1 Mount Rainier ELEVATION: 14,410 feet
Time on the Mountain: Four days (it took 14 hours to climb from Camp Muir to the summit and then descend to the Paradise parking lot).
Summit route: From Camp Muir, we took the Ingraham Direct (an alternative to the standard route up Disappointment Cleaver).
2 Mount Adams ELEVATION: 12,307 feet
Time on the Mountain: 24 hours
Summit Route: The South Rib from the Cold Springs trailhead, where we camped
3Mount St. Helens ELEVATION: 8,366 feet
Time on the Mountain: 18 hours
Summit Route: Monitor Ridge from our camp at Climbers' Bivouac.
4 Mount Hood ELEVATION: 11,235 feet
Next time
The LowdownThe Ring of Fire
LENGTH OF TRIP: Nine days
WHEN TO GO: Late May through early July
REQUIRED FITNESS LEVEL: High
MINIMUM PREPARATION TIME: Three months
REQUIRED SKILLS: Big-mountain skiing or snowboarding, backpacking, winter camping, nontechnical grades II and III climbing on snow and ice
* The Objective
To climb and skifour of the most significant peaks in the Cascades during the course of a week: Mount Rainier (14,410 feet), Mount Adams (12,307 feet), Mount Hood (11,235 feet), and Mount St. Helens (8,366 feet). In our case, we failed to knock off Hood; but the remaining three peaks offer glacier travel, substantial nontechnical climbing, and 17,000 vertical feet of glisse.
* Skill Requirements (Mountaineering)
All routes to Rainier's summit require roped team travel. See page 104 for a checklist of requisite skills and a directory of schools where you can acquire and polish them.
* Skill Requirements (Skiing/Snowboarding)
Corn snow is hero snow: Softened by spring's warm days, it gives an intermediate skier the confidence to descend expert terrain. But cold fronts and wind can instantly turn corn back to ice, or worse, either brittle sastrugi (think ankle-deep broken glass) or sun cups (ice with more dimples than a Palm Beach County ballot). Attempt this trip only if you're comfortable skiing or boarding all runs in all conditions at any major ski area.
* Fitness Requirements
This is a rigorous outing. Rainier is a sea-level fourteener, so, unlike in Colorado, where you might ascend only 5,000 feet from trailhead to summit, here you'll climb a full 9,000. Pulling off all four volcanoesor even just threein a weeklong push demands a serious approach to fitness (and a fair amount of luck). See "Powering Up" on page 104 for specific training information.
* Gear Requirements
This trip is extremely gear intensive. For a comprehensive inventory of the mountaineering and skiing equipment, see "Walking Is for Hikers," page 107, or www.outsideonline.com.
* Is It for You?
This is an ambitious yet classic North American ski-mountaineering trip. It will bust your ass and empty your wallet; but unlike a commerically guided trip (of which, in fact, there are none for the four-peak plan outlined here), you'll return with the gear, skills, and partnerships that will enable you to do it again.
The Damage
Ground Transportation
$2,130.59
Rental of two SUVs, gas, parking, tolls
Airfare
$1,920.00
Eight round-trip tickets, Santa Fe to Seattle
Food
$1,017.04
Pasta, ground meat, fresh vegetables, freeze-dried meals, cereal, energy bars, powdered drink mix, Gu, and three cases of Rainier Beer
Permits
$275.00
Climbing permits for Rainier, Adams, and St. Helens