Climbing in Ruth Gorge Alaska: 5 Things to Know Before You Go
This past June, climbers Harry Hamlin and Avery Parinello spent a couple weeks in the Ruth Gorge in Denali National Park. The Gorge is a mammoth glacial gorge cut into the lowlands below Denali by the Ruth Glacier. This enormous zone contains prodigious peaks that tempt rock climbers and ice climbers alike due to their immense size and spectacular exposure. The remote nature and sheer scale of this location make for a truly alpine experience.
5 Things to Know Before You Go
By Harry Hamlin | Photos by @hamlinharrison
- Route Beta: There exist a couple of good guidebooks for this area, but the Denali National Park Ranger Station in Talkeetna has a tome filled with the latest routes and topos that they will photocopy for you if ask. Ask to take a look at this when you go there to get your permit.
- Communications: A satellite phone allows you to both check the weather via the Denali Climbing Forecast automated phone line and communicate pick-up locations and dates with your hired air taxi service. Many places, including major phone carriers, will rent satellite phones for a relatively small fee.
- Skis: It’s hard to predict when exactly when it’s going to snow in the Ruth so be prepared for any snow conditions and bring skis and skins; without proper flotation, a fun climbing trip could turn into a miserable slog. Bringing a full AT setup provides a day-off activity, but for a lighter set-up, a pair of skis set up with Silvretta bindings works well too.
- Ice Gear: Just planning on rock climbing, we were unsure of whether or not to bring ice gear. We were glad we did as it provided an opportunity to get some unexpected climbing in during inclement weather. Having a variety of gear allows for a climbing contingency plan in bad weather.
- Food: As with any expedition, plan on bringing a varied selection of food. Spending multiple weeks eating freeze-dried food can be hard on your system; luckily there’s a great opportunity to bring fresh food as the glacier can act as your refrigerator. We brought fresh broccoli, Brussel sprouts, bacon, and cheese, just to name a few items.
Departing the Hut Tower route late in the Arctic night.
We returned to camp at 1 a.m. of day 6 and fell quickly asleep. We slept in on the morning of day 6 and awoke again to rainfall. Our daily satellite phone check of the NPS weather yielded a forecast of several small storm fronts rolling in off the arctic ocean.
As the weather cleared throughout the afternoon, we discussed the possibility of attempting the objective around which we had purposed our trip: the West Pillar of the Eye Tooth, a moderate 26 pitch route ascending an elegant pillar before traversing right up a looming headwall topping out on the iconic peak. We needed at least a 36 hour weather window due to the long time required to ascend and descend the route, and we hoped that we might luck out with a chunk of good weather before the first front hit us.
This idea was crushed as clouds descended upon us and we went to sleep that night deciding to wake up at 2am to recheck the weather. When we arose early on the morning of day 7, the sky was entirely obscured and the wind was quickly rising. It was immediately clear that the weather was rapidly changing and that we would not have the window required to ascend the Eye Tooth; however, it appeared as though we might have a small weather window before we were totally enveloped in the storm. We decided to take a quick crack at the Japanese Couloir, a 2,000 foot channel of moderate 60 degree snow and ice that ascends to a saddle just below the top of Mt Barrill; additionally, the Japanese Couloir also serves as a descent option for the famed Cobra Pillar, an alpine epic ascending the East Face of Mt Barrill.
We donned our skis and skins in the dim light and powered to the base of the route. We switched to climbing boots and began the ascent, soloing the route as quickly as we could, the Yosemite-like granite towering above us. Precipitation began falling as we approached the top two hours later and as we topped out, shaking the screaming barfies out of our hands, the rain began to fall with greater significance. We began a series of rappels down the route before downclimbing back to our skis, arriving a few hours after leaving them. We again returned to camp in the late morning, wet but excited to have climbed something in the short amount of time we had available.
Soon after we returned to camp, the cloud deck crashed down upon the floor of the gorge and we were entirely enveloped in a wet soupy mess that would continue to plague us for the remainder of the trip. After 2 days being in the clouds with little visual reprieve, our sat phone weather check told us multiple low pressure systems were rolling in, one after another, from the Arctic Ocean. We decided it was time to pack up and relocate to our pick-up site several miles away.
We paid close attention to our pre-designated navigation plan and eventually stumbled onto the runway that would be our pick up location several days later. We set up camp and had nothing left to do but wait. We listened intently for the sound of a propeller for several days and when we eventually heard it, we were excited to finally get out of the bad weather and make our way back to civilization.