[Photo] Tim Blakemore
Deep and remote in the Kichatna Mountains, in the southwest corner of the Alaska Range, British alpinists Mike “Twid” Turner and Tim Blakemore endured strong winds and spindrift to establish a significant new route up the rarely climbed North Triple Peak (2560m). On May 19, the men summited the wildly corniced mountain after eighteen ice and mixed pitches, including eleven new ones. Their route, No Country for Old Men (ED AI6), is steep and sustained, and features a notable 70-meter crux lead; the pair climbed in low visibility, with winds producing spindrift and forming rime. However, they found the snow conditions to be stable and the ice reliable for twelve of the eighteen pitches. The men completed their climb and descent in a continuous 24-hour push.
The Kichatna peaks are steep and striking, reminiscent of the Patagonia skyline and far more remote. Although the summits are all below 2750m (9,000 feet), the walls guarding them are known for their high-quality technical climbing. The climate is famously unforgiving, as weather systems from the north and south collide among the sharp peaks. This creates a Venturi effect as winds pick up speed, snow blows horizontally and visibility closes in without warning. On this trip, the pair spent most of their time tent-bound.
[Photo] Tim Blakemore
Turner and Blakemore spotted what would become No Country during a ski reconnaissance, noting a steep ice line that branched off the established Northwest Couloir to follow an impressive gully to North Triple’s summit. On May 19, during a rare weather window, they set out following the Northwest Couloir for seven pitches to reach an ice smear that led to their target gully.
The AI6 crux came about one-third of the way up the climb, where the team climbed through vertical, rotten ice with sparse protection. Blakemore told Alpinist: “[The crux] involved pulling over an overlap on poor ice with minimal protection. It took me about twenty minutes to get a grip and commit.” Having surmounted the tricky lead, Blakemore was determined to continue. “The last couple of pitches were tricky (some with difficult snow) also, but overall a lovely natural line with good ice,” he wrote.
To reach the summit, the climbers tunneled through a cornice. As Blakemore told UKC Climbing News, “The finish was almost comical. At one point I had burrowed…about 15 meters only to have to retrace, as it was a dead end.” Finally, they located a passage up “vertical, sugary snow.”
This was Turner’s tenth trip to the Kichatnas. Here, in 2003, he, Stuart McAleese and Ollie Sanders climbed a new line on the Citadel: Supa Dupa Couloir (ED4: WI6+, 1230m), for which they received a Piolet d’Or nomination. On his fifth trip, in 2007, he made three first ascents that included Bish Bash Bosh! (ED: Scottish VII E1, 19 pitches, 900m), Cool Couloir (D: Scottish V, 15 Pitches, 800m) and The Whack and Dangle Sculpture (D: Scottish V, 14 pitches, 1000m).
[Read more about Turner’s travels to the Kichatnas in the following NewsWires: The Citadel in 2003, the East Face of Mt. Nevermore in 2004 and Bish Bash Bosh, Cool Couloir and The Whack and Dangle Sculpture in 2007–Ed.]
[Photo] Tim Blakemore
Meanwhile, this was Blakemore’s first visit to the Alaska Range. “I’m well-travelled and have climbed on all the continents,” he wrote in an email. “I’ve climbed new routes in the UK, Norway–Aurland, Gudvangen, Senja–and Antarctica and now Alaska. I’m as happy climbing wild sea cliffs in the Scottish Hebrides as I am skiing in Antarctica–really, for me, the quality of the experience is paramount.”
To break down the pitches up No Country for Old Men, the route begins after climbing seven rope lengths on the Northwest Couloir of North Triple Peak. From here, the team climbed 11 pitches of new terrain:
P1: WI5, 50m
P2: WI4+. 60m
P3: Crux. Poor ice, WI6, 70m
P4: WI3, 55m
P5: WI4, 60m
P6: WI4, 60m
P7: WI3 60m
P8: WI3 30m
P9: WI4+/5; poor snow, 60m
P10: Rock and snow
P11: Difficult cornice, 40m
Tim “Twid” Blakemore, Mike Turner, thealaskarange.com, thebmc.co.uk, dmmclimbing.com, themountainguidingcompany.co.uk, northernmountainsport.co.uk