Trip Report
An ice climbing (mini-)safari - part two: Cody and Hyalite - 1/12-22/12

by BMcC
Friday February 17, 2012 12:44pm
As I indicated in the trip report on part one of my ice climbing mini-safari (link below), my original plans (dreaming big) included heading up to Canada for a few days; however, you can see that Canada is absent from the title for this TR. The reason for that will become clear farther below.

TR for part one:
http://www.supertopo.com/tr/An-ice-climbing-safari-part-one-the-Ames-Ice-Hose-Ourays-Ribbon-and-Tellurides-Bridal-Veil-Falls-1-2-11-12/t11347n.html

TR for part two:
I had a great time at the Ouray Ice Festival with Frank Baker, Loren Baker, and Ed Hartouni. After the ice fest we manage to whack, scratch, and hook our way up the Ames Ice Hose, the Ribbon outside of Ouray, and Telluride's Bridal Veil Falls - Ed and Frank on the 1st and 2nd routes, and Frank on the 3rd. While they had to head home, I had designs on more ice climbing...

Cody and Hyalite were unknowns to me, but I had heard good things and had recently acquired a copy of Joe Josephson's "Winter Dance" on ice in Southern Montana and Northern Wyoming (2004) which shows countless possibilities. I had no particular list of climbs to do, but figured that I would select climbs with the partners from Colorado and Wyoming who were planning to rendezvous with me. My partner for the Canadian part of my mini-safari and I were in full agreement that we wanted a window of promising enough climbing weather to make his flying and my driving to Calgary worthwhile or we would postpone. Later, after dropping said partner back at the airport in Calgary, Alberta, I would head south to visit a high school classmate, her husband, and her horses in Helena, Montana. Continuing farther south to Bozeman, Montana, I would re-connect with a partner from a couple of decades ago and climb in Hyalite.

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Almost to Cody, Wyoming.
Almost to Cody, Wyoming.
Credit: BMcC
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Got to Cody a bit late. Had reserved a motel room for myself, since I had learned just a couple of evenings earlier that neither of the two partners with whom I had thought I would climb and stay turned out to be available - one got sick and the other let her newly-wed status take precedence over climbing. Figured I would either find climbing partners at the motel or the trailheads, or not find partners. The hotel manager greeted me in the morning with a local travel magazine with a nice list of Cody ice climbs (from Aaron Mulkey's ColdFear.com). The list was handily divided into climbs on the north facing cliffs on the south side of the South Fork of the Shoshone River and (you guessed it) climbs on the south facing cliffs on the north side of the river. I've included a scan of the list at the end of the Cody section of this TR. She also told me, the only other ice climber in the motel had moved on the day before.

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Seems like every developed trailhead had these signs (and some had...
Seems like every developed trailhead had these signs (and some had more ominous signs, too).
Credit: BMcC
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I had done some online searching the night before to see if any grizzly bear activity had been reported recently in the vicinity of the Cody ice climbs. It had been some weeks - a mother grizzly and her cubs had been seen out and about in December in Yellowstone. The Cody ice climbs are a bit southeast of Yellowstone National Park. So each time I saw one of these signs, I would remind myself that grizzly bears hibernate (always, right?!) and reassure myself that the mild winter (had a couple of days in the low 40's) and dry conditions certainly would not have interrupted their hibernation patterns. Nope. The bears would all be happily snoozing.

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Nice looking ice on the north facing side of the Shoshone River valley...
Nice looking ice on the north facing side of the Shoshone River valley and merely an hour or 2 of grizzly country to hike through to access it...

Credit: BMcC
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Matt and Nathan crossing the well frozen South Fork of the Shoshone Ri...
Matt and Nathan crossing the well frozen South Fork of the Shoshone River and heading for High on Boulder and Moonrise.
Credit: BMcC
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Met Matt and Nathan from Oregon in the parking lot. Briefly tried to interest them in inviting on their climb with them - nope. They did, however, give me some approach beta for Duck Soup (WI 3 100m) since they had climbed it the day before. Seemed like it could be a nice introduction to the area for me. I tagged along behind them until the main trail at the edge of the river where I went left. After hiking a while, I followed some climbers' tracks uphill until I saw this ice. The approach had been far mellower than that described for Duck Soup and, while the ice didn't look like what I remembered from the pics in the Josephson book, it did look good. Turns out, it was Mean Green.

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Mean Green (WI5 300m).
Mean Green (WI5 300m).
Credit: BMcC
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The ice was plastic and very tool and crampon friendly.

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Mean Green - 3rd pitch (maybe WI4-).
Mean Green - 3rd pitch (maybe WI4-).
Credit: BMcC
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Climbed about 3 pitches. Went up the left side of this headwall - where the ice steepened to nearly vertical, I self belayed the uppermost 40' (the crux for what I climbed of the route). The pitch ended in a snowy creek bed with tracks leading upstream, but no visible ice. Tied off my end of the rope to an ice tool I planted in the snow and then started hiking. After a while (maybe 20 minutes?), I saw some ice upstream in the distance. Not Duck Soup.

I got down fairly quickly with some hiking, downclimbing, and four 30m rappels using the 2 fixed rap stations, placing one v-thread, and once threading my rope directly through a hole I bored in the ice. No muss, no fuss.

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Easier than making a V-thread anchor: drill hole, extract screw, threa...
Easier than making a V-thread anchor: drill hole, extract screw, thread rope though hole, and then rappel.
Credit: BMcC
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Wore my crampons back down the sometimes icy trail and to cross the frozen and slippery river. I got back to my vehicle just as it was getting dark enough to need a headlamp. Met Ivan and Steve and chatted about our respective routes.

While I was checking out conditions on Deer Creek ice (on the south facing side of the valley) kind of late the next morning, Ivan and Steve pulled up and invited me to join them on Too Cold to Fire (WI4 70m) up Deer Creek. Yes!

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Ivan modeling his Patagonia jacket while Steve was 3rd classing up the...
Ivan modeling his Patagonia jacket while Steve was 3rd classing up the narrow approach slot.
Credit: BMcC
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Fun mixed and thin ice bouldering. <br/>
Falling not allowed - the landing...
Fun mixed and thin ice bouldering.
Falling not allowed - the landing was a thin veneer of ice over shallow water.
Credit: BMcC
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Too Cold to Fire - Steve led this pitch &#40;~WI4&#41;. There's open w...
Too Cold to Fire - Steve led this pitch (~WI4). There's open water (depth unknown) beneath his feet. He did some mixed and stemming moves to make the start more interesting.
Credit: BMcC
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Too Cold to Fire - fun climbing.
Too Cold to Fire - fun climbing.
Credit: BMcC
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Ivan on Too Cold to Fire.
Ivan on Too Cold to Fire.
Credit: BMcC
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Two parties showed up to do the climb as we finished the 2nd rap off of it.

Ivan looked at the pictures I had taken the day before and confirmed that I had been climbing Mean Green - their objective for the next day. When I asked, they declined to invite me to join them since they expected a very long day on it as a party of 2 (turns out they started before 7 in the morning and got back to their truck around dark). Ivan suggested that I climb the Moratorium (WI4 100m) which they had climbed the day before over in the Lower Bench Area. It only forms every 3 to 5 years. They said that it was fat and wanted to hear what I thought of it.

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Looking across the South Fork of the Shoshone River to the ice on the ...
Looking across the South Fork of the Shoshone River to the ice on the north facing cliffs above the Lower Bench.
Credit: BMcC
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The Moratorium - in the right quarter of this pic.  <br/>
The Moratorium - in the right quarter of this pic.

Credit: BMcC
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With some time left in the late afternoon, I back tracked, took a well-maintained gravel side road across a bridge and then up a not-too-rugged, 4-wheel drive dirt road to the trail head. Explored the approach to the Moratorium for about 45 minutes with the sun dropping towards the horizon, but wasn't even close to the climbs. Numerous game trails on the hillside. Among the many, many deer tracks, I saw some canine paw prints, and (holy crap) one that looked like a bear paw print. Not clear because of other animal tracks. Couldn't be a bear paw print - grizzly bears are supposed to be hibernating. Must have been a melt-distorted paw print left by a large wolf or something similarly benign... Time to head back to my wheels.

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Got back to my vehicle with the sun setting over Yellowstone &#40;far ...
Got back to my vehicle with the sun setting over Yellowstone (far in the distance).
Credit: BMcC
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Back at the motel, I did more reading, learned that they weigh "as little as 350 lb," and came across the Latin for grizzly bear: URSUS ARCTOS HORRIBILIS. Such a cool name.

On my last day climbing in Cody (Sunday-January15), I drove back up to the trailhead for the Moratorium late in the morning, started the approach, and then returned to my vehicle as I thought more about long, remote, and lonely approach to the Moratorium and the animal paw print I thought I had seen. High on Boulder, which is a longer route (WI4 160m) and has a shorter, well-traveled approach, became more appealing than the Moratorium and rose to the top of my tick list.

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High on Boulder &#40;left&#41; and Moonrise.
High on Boulder (left) and Moonrise.
Credit: BMcC
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Moonrise - 2nd pitch.
Moonrise - 2nd pitch.
Credit: BMcC
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Moonrise - 3rd pitch as seen from the top of the 3rd pitch of High on ...
Moonrise - 3rd pitch as seen from the top of the 3rd pitch of High on Boulder.
Credit: BMcC
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Late afternoon light as I crossed the frozen South Fork of the Shoshon...
Late afternoon light as I crossed the frozen South Fork of the Shoshone River returning to the trailhead.
Credit: BMcC
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Here's the list to which I referred earlier - so many routes to go back and climb (in addition to the Moratorium) on future trips to Cody:

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Scan of Cody ice climb list from ColdFear.com.
Scan of Cody ice climb list from ColdFear.com.
Credit: BMcC
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Reminder note to self: get pepper spray.

Back to the motel to pack, get a good night's rest, and figure out what to do with the rest of my icy little road trip.

My partner for Canada and I had been watching the weather forecasts for the Waterton, Bow Valley, and Icefields Parkway areas for days. The various forecasts were consistently not positive. We decided that the nasty cold weather forecast for our planned 4-day window of climbing (with a travel day on either end) was too unpleasant (storming and low single digit daytime temps) and could preclude our climbing much of anything. By mutual agreement we postponed. The right decision, but it put a modest monkey wrench in my Bozeman/Hyalite rendezvous and plans - my partner for Hyalite was unavailable due to the trade show in Salt Lake City.

The forecasts for Bozeman and other parts north of Cody were also unpleasant. Even winter-like. Decision time: do I head home in nasty weather or proceed to Bozeman through nasty weather and with no partners lined up? I called the climbing shop in Bozeman (Northern Lights) to ask about ice conditions in Hyalite. Spoke with Brad (the shop's ice enthusiast) - he was unavailable to climb with me until my 3rd day there, but was incredibly positive about the conditions, the plethora of moderate routes for me, and the high probability that I could find a partner. The die was cast - I was going to Bozeman.

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On the road to Bozeman - passing through Belfry, Montana &#40;pop. 219...
On the road to Bozeman - passing through Belfry, Montana (pop. 219) - "The home of the Bats"
Credit: BMcC
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I was jazzed to get a return phone call from my Bozeman friends just as I was getting to the 1st exit. I thought they were out of town. Still unavailable to climb, but fantastically hospitable. With the stormy weather forecasted to continue, they greeted me with open arms. Hooray! After talking ice, trips, and fast BMWs (theirs), I departed with a key to the house, directions to Hyalite Canyon, and a local street map. Went for a drive and a preview.

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Genesis I &#40;WI3-5  20m&#41; - a few minutes from the Main Fork park...
Genesis I (WI3-5 20m) - a few minutes from the Main Fork parking area.
Credit: BMcC
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Bozeman countryside
Bozeman countryside
Credit: BMcC
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Blastingly windy.
Blastingly windy.
Credit: BMcC
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The road up Hyalite Canyon has apparently been improved and made safer over the years, and was freshly plowed on each of the 4 times I drove up it.

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Met Chris in the main parking area. Looking for a climbing partner, to...
Met Chris in the main parking area. Looking for a climbing partner, too. Yay.
Credit: BMcC
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Bingo World.
Bingo World.
Credit: BMcC
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The Thrill is Gone &#40;WI4 M4 35m&#41;. <br/>
The Thrill is Gone (WI4 M4 35m).

Credit: BMcC
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Josephson: "The Thrill is Gone is thought by many to be the best route in Hyalite. Certainly, it ranks as one of the most fun, best one-pitch routes anywhere."

Chris had climbed this several times already, so I got the lead. Talk about fun!

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The Thrill is Gone.  &#40;pic courtesy of Chris with my camera&#41;
The Thrill is Gone. (pic courtesy of Chris with my camera)
Credit: BMcC
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Rumor has it that the route so readily accepts rock gear, that a climber put in more than 20 pieces. I put in lots, but not that many.

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Chris cruising the upper reaches of the Thrill is Gone.
Chris cruising the upper reaches of the Thrill is Gone.
Credit: BMcC
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The Elevator Shaft &#40;WI3+  65m&#41;.
The Elevator Shaft (WI3+ 65m).
Credit: BMcC
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Met Chris and a couple of his friends from the Seattle area the next day for more fun.

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Mummy Cooler II &#40;WI3+ 45m&#41;.
Mummy Cooler II (WI3+ 45m).
Credit: BMcC
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Mummy Cooler II &#40;WI3+ 45m&#41;.
Mummy Cooler II (WI3+ 45m).
Credit: BMcC
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The Scepter &#40;WI5 30m&#41;.
The Scepter (WI5 30m).
Credit: BMcC
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From the cave under the Scepter.
From the cave under the Scepter.
Credit: BMcC
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Chris getting intensely soaked on the Scepter.
Chris getting intensely soaked on the Scepter.
Credit: BMcC
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Also top roped the Matrix (WI4 M5 30m - when first climbed by Steve House) which Chris's friend had led with pleasant WI3 conditions and hiked Crypto Orchid (WI2-3 50m) before calling it a successful day.

My 3rd and final day in Hyalite started with us 3rd classing Lower Green Sleeves (WI3 30m), before we did some quick laps another party's top rope (thanks!) on the fun, right side of Genesis I (~WI4-).

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Chris showing me the way....
Chris showing me the way....
Credit: BMcC
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Did some interesting down-climbing on our approach to Genesis II (WI3+ 50m) and then the Hang Over (WI3 50m).

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Chris on Hang Over.
Chris on Hang Over.
Credit: BMcC
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Another fine day on the ice with an energized partner. Headed out before dark so I could begin my drive to Helena to visit my high school friend.

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On the ranch.
On the ranch.
Credit: BMcC
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Home a couple of days later.

While not all of my planned partners were able to participate and the weather did not cooperate for a side-trip to Canada, I had really fun partners and good to great conditions on a couple of the biggish classic routes in the San Juans and a handful of routes in Cody and Hyalite. All totaled (parts one and two), 4100 miles from beginning to end and three weeks of fun.

  Trip Report Views: 6,672
BMcC
About the Author
BMcC is a trad climber from Livermore.

Comments
SteveW

Trad climber
The state of confusion
  Feb 17, 2012 - 07:26pm PT

Great stuff!!!
Wish I coulda gone!
Grampa

climber
from SoCal
  Feb 17, 2012 - 07:40pm PT
Fantastic TR and photos! Thanks
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
  Feb 17, 2012 - 08:19pm PT
firing and fortuitous!
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
  Feb 17, 2012 - 09:50pm PT
Fantastic TR!

Thanks for sharing your fun with us!

Nice fat conditions for the most part.
rhyang

climber
SJC
  Feb 17, 2012 - 09:59pm PT
Awesome !!
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
  Feb 19, 2012 - 03:49am PT
Great TR. I also went to Hyalite a month or so ago...

Im on Fat One, variation on the left

On Elevator Shaft

Free standing column in the Bingo World cave

my partner posing under Bingo World

I am starting up Dribbles

Very fun place. I will be back next year for sure, for a longer time.
BMcC

Trad climber
Livermore
Author's Reply  Feb 20, 2012 - 12:06am PT
Thanks everyone!

So much fun ice to climb and to share.



p.s. nice pics Vitaliy :-)
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
  Feb 20, 2012 - 09:18am PT
Great reports. Thanks for writing them up. I have spent quite a bit of time in the Cody/Red Lodge area and love going there every time. Next time ou go deffinately check out the East Rosebud area as there are many classic climbs. You seem to get a lot done with out a partner, way to get after it regardless of what comes your way.
WallMan

Trad climber
Denver, CO
  Feb 20, 2012 - 02:57pm PT
Great photos and trip report, BMcC. Thanks for sharing. Been to Cody a bunch - but haven't ventured north of the border, some day.

Did you really rap off that V-thread? Looks sketch to me, rapping off that narrow of a column.

Climb Ohn. Wally
Zander

climber
  Feb 20, 2012 - 03:53pm PT
Great TR!
Thanks,
Zander
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Feb 20, 2012 - 07:56pm PT
Hell Yeah, world class TR, Looks like a GREAT time!!!!!
Branscomb

Trad climber
Lander, WY
  Feb 22, 2012 - 11:30am PT
Always best to listen to the sixth sense about the griz. We did Bozo's Revenge about the time you were in Cody and could see some sort of carcass from the top of the second pitch a little farther east on the lower bench. Lot of tracks and blood around it and with the warm weather, the grizzlys have been in and out of their dens all winter. There could well have been a griz hanging out nearby.

It's such a cool place up there. Get up on those climbs and look across and realize the huge scale of the place. It's like Alaska. We saw a wolf once going up to Spyin' and Flyin' and have been chased around by cow moose a couple of times on the river. Pretty wild. Gotta watch it up there, but that's a great deal of the charm there.
NFB

Mountain climber
Wilson, Wyoming
  Feb 22, 2012 - 12:03pm PT
Nice.

Looks like you hit a bunch of classics.

The bears around here are no joke. Best to keep your visits limited to the torporific winters!

Thanks for all the great photos.
TKingsbury

Trad climber
MT
  Feb 22, 2012 - 12:35pm PT
Nice! Thanks for posting!
Gnome Ofthe Diabase

climber
Out Of Bed
  May 19, 2019 - 06:44pm PT
oH ? COME ON!
 ONLY 12 REPLIES?!

SO MUCH TRUE STOKE
FROM A HARDCORE BLOKE

THANX FOR LETTING US GET A LOOK
Almost Like sitting in the back seat.
Chugach

Trad climber
Vermont
  May 21, 2019 - 03:00pm PT
Wonderful, great trip
tradmanclimbs

Ice climber
Pomfert VT
  May 21, 2019 - 03:47pm PT
Sweet!
Ksolem

Trad climber
Monrovia, California
  May 21, 2019 - 03:47pm PT
Thanks for a cool TR. To a mere rock climber that sh*t looks psycho.
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