erugs
New member
We're thinking of a guided climb on Mt. Hood this June. Do any of you have suggestions on this trip and what else to do while we're out there? As always, thanks in advance for all the helpful information.
Talk to twoshuzz on Summitpost. He is a Mt. Hood encyclopedia and has summited many many times.
Be careful about how late you go. Once the warm temps start melting the snow, you can be climbing across a bowling alley when the sun hits the upper ridges and starts whizzing rocks past you. We went too late in the season, left the summit and started down at 7am and felt like we were crossing a target range for mortars.
So you guys climbed the East Face route of Whitney, one of you summitted Rainier and you're thinking of hiring a guide for South route of Hood? Not talking against guided climbs, I'm just curious why you're picking to have this one guided when you seem to have some good experience.
So you guys climbed the East Face route of Whitney, one of you summitted Rainier and you're thinking of hiring a guide for South route of Hood? Not talking against guided climbs, I'm just curious why you're picking to have this one guided when you seem to have some good experience.
How many days do you have total?
You could also head to Astoria, OR to see the Goonies house
Perhaps glacier free, but the route does involve steep snow and ice. And perhaps weather and navigational difficulty.Mt. Adams is a slog but is very high and the standard route is glacier free so you can feel safe.
Dust, dust, dust everywhere.
That's cool. Nothing wrong with going with a guided service to an unknown area.We've had experiences (Whitney, Rainier, Grand Teton) but not on our own. We thought of hiring a guide as a way to get additional experience first-hand. I personally prefer traveling without a guide (after my first experience attempting Rainier and feeling that I was ruled out and sent back before summit day because I'm perhaps slower).
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