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Mt St Helens tour

  • doc_i
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14 years 11 months ago #199073 by doc_i
Mt St Helens tour was created by doc_i
Hi all -

A friend and I are considering skiing Mt St Helens next weekend. Neither of us have done this tour before. Just wondering if anyone has been in that area recently and could share any observations (snowpack etc), or has general advice about anything regarding the trip... route suggestions, camping spot suggestions for the night before the climb, etc...

I am aware of past incidents involving cornice collapse at the crater rim and will be extremely cautious about that.

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  • OldHouseMan
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14 years 11 months ago #199078 by OldHouseMan
Replied by OldHouseMan on topic Re: Mt St Helens tour
The best advice I can give in regard to Mt St Helens is wait for clear skies and give it a few days to settle after a storm has blown through.

I have had some of the best and worst trips on Mt St Helens over the years. The best trips were always corn skiing under clear skies. The worst were always under clear skies immediately after a storm and several thousand feet of breakable crust.

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  • doc_i
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14 years 10 months ago #199103 by doc_i
Replied by doc_i on topic Re: Mt St Helens tour
Thanks for the heads up - maybe we'll pick a different tour if the sun doesn't come out - a distinct possibility.

Anyone else? Here's your chance to actually give *solicited* advice on TAY. :)

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  • Pete A
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14 years 10 months ago #199106 by Pete A
Replied by Pete A on topic Re: Mt St Helens tour

TAnyone else? Here's your chance to actually give *solicited* advice on TAY. :)


couple weeks ago i was up on the muir snowfield and it was a really unpleasant mix of ice and heavily wind affected snow... it wouldn't surprise me if high on St.Helens was a similar mixture of ice, crust, sastrugai given the wicked winds that have been in the Cascades over the past few storms. My two cents would be to wait on St.Helens when its springtime and your objective is to catch it in corn snow conditions.

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  • Scotsman
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14 years 10 months ago #199109 by Scotsman
Replied by Scotsman on topic Re: Mt St Helens tour
In addition to the excellent advice regarding snow surface conditions, the other variable that effects enjoyablity of this tour is visibility.
No trees so in bad viz its like touring in a bubble( I know, I have done it)
I would ensure that good visibility is forecast for the ENTIRE day before embarking on this tour no matter what time of year I did it.

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  • Don_B
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14 years 10 months ago #199133 by Don_B
Replied by Don_B on topic Re: Mt St Helens tour
Usual route this time of year is from Marble Mount sno-park up the Worm Flows.
At the sno-park, it really sucks to buy the pass then get a hefty ticket, just because you didn't see the sign for snomobile only area (trailers, trucks, all that) when arriving late.
You can camp in the lot. We've "circled the wagons" to avoid being run over by late arrivers or snomos, who sometimes like to high mark the roof of the shelter there if snow is high enough. Or bivy nearby. You can use the shelter with its massive stove. Not supposed to sleep there, and impossible if there are many visitors equipped with many cases of beer, but it has been known to happen.

Ditto on the weather unless you really enjoy skiing by braille. I've been blown back by rain and stinging snow than once in February, and sumitted once in winter by compass/altimeter (on crampons not skis) just seeing a slightly darker gray above a lighter gray announcing the rim, with my companion dropping ice pellets on the ice to see which way they'd roll, to find the fall line. Descended into sun and semi-tropical warmth. It's a lot nicer if there is a big high pressure system firmly in place. Like probably in May.

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