THE PERFECT ZONE
Steep summer corn snow, family, and friends
By Louis Dawson
An outdoor writer I respect says
we write too much about education, technique and ethics -- that we don't
say enough about how fun all this is. Sure, some backcountry ski trips
are painful treks while others are a mix of hardship and pleasure. That
pain defines the good ones; the fun ones. And some trips, they peg the
perfect zone.
Powder Boy Bob called me this
past spring. Amid our usual gushing about the last great unskied lines
of Colorado, he proposed a trip to Grizzly Peak. I wasn't too keen.
We'd both skied Grizzly a number of times, the approach was sure to
be a dirt slog, and at 13,988 feet, Grizzly doesn't qualify as a fourteener.
(Yes, I'm a snob about those teeners.)
Yet Grizzly
is a centennial peak (one of Colorado's 100 highest), and it's got The
Chute: a glorious couloir that drops from near the summit about a thousand
vertical feet to Grizzly Lake, a pristine tarn with the elegance of
a French garden pond.
But for the extremist there's
something better than The Chute; to climber's left another system of
couloirs, steeper and less defined, drops to the lake. We'd heard about
this line and lusted in our hearts. And Powder Bob had another idea.
During one of his many Grizzly trips, he'd spied a small but unforgettable
couloir on the other side of the lake. The plan was to do a double --
on all new terrain. That was convincing enough for this jaded fanatic.
To make the trip complete, Lisa
and I loaded the family into our Honda for a trailhead overnight. We
brought our 4-year-old along as the family provider -- with his fishing
he's getting one up on me -- a mere writer. Yes, only our second family
camping trip. After three hours of stuffing our motorized skate-board,
and loading the roof rack in style worthy of Grapes of Wrath, we sagged
up the highway then bounced the rough road to the campground at Grizzly
Reservoir. I had a pretty good headache by then, which the fishing mitigated
till our hooks kept coming up dry. My headache got worse when the guys
next to us pulled in a harvest that resembled a tuna haul. In pity,
or perhaps just so they could keep fishin', they gave us dinner.
The aroma of sizzling trout wafted
over our campsite as the setting sun glinted off the reservoir. My son
stalked chipmunks with his toy bow. He's taking this provider stuff
seriously. I told him we had to eat what he killed, and prayed his arrows
were dull.
A 4-year-old's second camping trip is a touchstone experience. The guy
wouldn't stop running, and we finally duct taped him into his sleeping
bag to control him. It seemed like a good idea to sleep under the stars
- 'till we had to count them. After that we explained God and outer
space, and chased away several bears and lions. It's not exactly bliss,
but the contact high you get from the kid is pretty good.
Four hours later my alarm shrilled, and Bob arrived a half hour after
that. We headlamped up the trail and climbed to the sun. Lo, Bob's couloir
was where we thought it would be, but it was catching a later sun-hit,
so we climbed the Chute up Grizzly.
Snow steps from previous climbers led us like a golden ladder to the
summit ridge. We skipped the summit, having been there many times, and
clipped our skis atop our intended line to skier's right of the Chute.
The perfect corn snow was ripening in the sun, and a velvet 45 degree
pitch dropped below us like a frozen plume of whitewater. While I clicked
my shutter Bob fired a series of flawless hop turns, then headed over
to the sinuous ridge separating us from The Chute.
Perhaps second to my love of the fine couloir is my lust for skiing
perfect ridges that perch you above everything. This was such a line,
and I framed Bob as he skied suspended above the planet, making turns
like answered prayers, on perfect snow, with perfect skis, on a perfect
day.
The lake below us was still iced, but the edges had thawed and refrozen
to a deep blue that resonated the alpine sky like the harmonies of a
cathedral choir. We scooted around the lake to the base of our second
goal, that slot couloir that Bob had spoken so highly of. It was everything
he'd hoped for: from the azure ice, a flawless fan of snow led up to
a narrow slot harboring a 50 degree bulge, then on to a rocky ridge.
We climbed like teen-agers going through flavors at Baskin Robbins --
something better was just ahead.
After a quick click-in on a talus
launch pad, we smothered the bulge with swishing spindrift. It was that
perfect angle that makes skiing like flying. A small hop sends you soaring,
but with snow so sheer, skis so fine, and technique so tuned, you always
recover ready to float again.
I'd like to say we arrived back at camp to burbling java and bacon fresh
from the skillet. But we did not. My wife and son were fishing, and
to tell you the truth seeing them doing that was better than the best
victuals.
Bob mentioned that such a perfect
day would cap his season, and he was hanging up his skis. I think I'm
following his lead -- but ask me this fall. Colorado has plenty of summer
skiing, and it wouldn't take much to roust me. After all, we might have
another perfect day. They happen.
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MERE FLEXUS ... NIX INDOMITUS
