Difference between revisions of "Emmons Glacier"
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
{{TripReportInfoBox | {{TripReportInfoBox | ||
− | | Date= | + | | Date=21 July 2012 (~17 hours car to car) |
| Route= Emmons Glacier from the White River Trailhead | | Route= Emmons Glacier from the White River Trailhead | ||
| Elevation Gain=10,000ft from trailhead to summit | | Elevation Gain=10,000ft from trailhead to summit |
Revision as of 16:16, 24 July 2012
Basic summer route info: From the trailhead, follow the Glacier Lodge trail until you reach a snow field. Go up the snowfield and cross a small small glacier section between rock outcroppings until reaching Camp Shurman. Follow the ramp-like route up and to the left of camp until reaching a heavily crevassed and serac filled area. Traverse this area until reaching the right side of the area where there will be another well marked (in the summer) ramp-like section up to the summit. Once you reach the summit ridge, you will see the summit crater and the summit of Mt. Rainier.
Trip Account (written by Lauren, 22 July 2012): Hamik and I ended up summiting Mt. Rainier via the Emmons Glacier route in day trip yesterday!! It was my first 10,000ft day (trailhead was at 4400ft, summit at 14400ft) and I somehow miraculously kept form bonking halfway up the route! Hamik was supposed to do Liberty Ridge with another group but given that there was only supposed to be one good day of weather and they weren't sure they could do that route in a single day, they turned around and came back to camp Friday late afternoon. I had half-jokingly mentioned to Hamik that we should do the DC route in a day trip and he was worried that 9000ft might be a tough one for me since I had never done more than ~4600ft in a single day - before yesterday that is!
Anyway, he gets back on Friday night and suggests that we do the 10,000ft Emmons Glacier route in a day trip on Saturday so we packed up, slept for a few hours, and left the car at 1am on Saturday morning. By 4:30am, only 3.5 hours later, we had reached the 5,000ft half way point on the route, witnessing one of the most incredible sunrises I've ever seen. We hiked for a bit more to hit the glacier and then stopped to rope up, eat, suncreen, and get some water. We also lost our first and only item to a crevasse which was one of the bars I had brought to eat along the way.


All in all, the day was a great success and I think that the Emmons glacier route was much more fun, interesting, and less crowded than the Disappointment Cleaver route, hands down. Plus, it was much more of a challenge for a day route than I think DC would have been.