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Mt. St. Helens from Red Rock Pass??
- dfhkvs
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Looks like a nice line up SW aspect to 'true' summit. But, I can't find ANY reports (hiking or skiing) of people going that way.
Dave.
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- Amar Andalkar
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There's no point in going anywhere near Butte Camp for a ski trip (although the summer trail from Redrock Pass and the rarely-done climbing route above goes that way). Just park at Cougar Sno-Park at 2280 ft (or beyond if the gate is open), follow the road FR 81 to Redrock Pass and the trailhead sign, ascend onto the toe of the lava flow, and follow an obvious path along the right (east) edge of the lava flow north about a half mile to a large open area. This route works best when there is at least a few feet of snow on the ground.
This area had changed substantially between 2004 and 2013, and that open clearing is apparently a mudflow produced by the record-setting November 2006 floods, brought on by 37" of rain at Mount Saint Helens in 3 days. Continue north through the open area to an obvious gully, follow it to treeline and then up open slopes directly to the true summit.
This route is longer and has more vert than the standard Worm Flows route from Marble Mountain Sno-Park, but the road is nicely groomed in winter. By the time the gate opens in spring and one can drive past Cougar Sno-Park, the snowpack in the woods near Redrock Pass may be getting a bit too thin for easy travel.
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- dfhkvs
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I've skied via Redrock Pass up the southwest slope (Dryer Glacier) route 3 times, once in April 2004 ( see TR ) and twice last year (January and April 2013). Should have written TRs for both of those trips, they were great, but just did not happen to write anything afterwards.
There's no point in going anywhere near Butte Camp for a ski trip (although the summer trail from Redrock Pass and the rarely-done climbing route above goes that way). Just park at Cougar Sno-Park at 2280 ft (or beyond if the gate is open), follow the road FR 81 to Redrock Pass and the trailhead sign, ascend onto the toe of the lava flow, and follow an obvious path along the right (east) edge of the lava flow north about a half mile to a large open area. This route works best when there is at least a few feet of snow on the ground.
This area had changed substantially between 2004 and 2013, and that open clearing is apparently a mudflow produced by the record-setting November 2006 floods, brought on by 37" of rain at Mount Saint Helens in 3 days. Continue north through the open area to an obvious gully, follow it to treeline and then up open slopes directly to the true summit.
This route is longer and has more vert than the standard Worm Flows route from Marble Mountain Sno-Park, but the road is nicely groomed in winter. By the time the gate opens in spring and one can drive past Cougar Sno-Park, the snowpack in the woods near Redrock Pass may be getting a bit too thin for easy travel.
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- freshie
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Our late-April/early May timing had us driving to the trailhead, bare ground in the forest, and then snow all the way up the mountain. I see from FS maps and satellite that there are trails in the area, so it may be possible to follow those and avoid any cross-country travel.
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- dfhkvs
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A long time ago I skied a route starting from near what is now the Blue Lake trailhead on FS Road 8123 (some miles past Red Rock Pass). We travelled one-half-mile E-SE through mostly open forest (some mild BS involved) until reaching the drainage identified by your arrow (near the base of the arrow). Easy going all the way to the summit from there.
Our late-April/early May timing had us driving to the trailhead, bare ground in the forest, and then snow all the way up the mountain. I see from FS maps and satellite that there are trails in the area, so it may be possible to follow those and avoid any cross-country travel.
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- OldHouseMan
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- dfhkvs
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D.
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- freshie
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Thanks, in looking at the satellite image, I think that the drainage you describe is the next one NW of the one I show. Sorry, my picture is pretty zoomed in. 1/2 mi from Blue Lake would put you in a drainage / wash that looks to go on the NW side of that large butte; the wash in my picture is to the SE. I appreciate the reply and information. I think this looks like a really nice aspect of the mountain to ski!
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- freshie
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I've been curious about skiing this side of the mountain. I assume the same permit system and quotas apply to the west side routes as the south side routes?
They do. But you'll see far fewer people, of all types, on the west side.
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