Have been over this pass in June with a lot of snow, so as you mentioned this pastSnowblind wrote:
maybe this is due to the dry conditions but I found the snow pretty limited.
weak winter has made it easier this year.
Have been over this pass in June with a lot of snow, so as you mentioned this pastSnowblind wrote:
maybe this is due to the dry conditions but I found the snow pretty limited.
There is little doubt that this is a function of two consecutive dry winters. I went over the saddle in August on 1982 (as a part of climbing both Royce and Merriam while moving camp from the Royces to Merriam Lake) and there was so much snow you might argue that an ice axe wasn't necessary (I had one). The reason was that there was so much snow there was abundant runout (ie low angle snow at the bottom) should one fall on the steeper upper slopes (an ice axe would still prevent a lot of involuntary elevation loss, however).snowblind wrote:I went over the saddle b/t Merriam and Royce recently and really do not understand the need for an ice axe (I know Secor suggests it)...maybe this is due to the dry conditions but I found the snow pretty limited.
I was recently in the area, and this is a good route to follow. I left the trail a bit earlier than this map shows and also headed more west to Royce 2 once I passed by the left side of the tarn. All of this is easy X-country on summer time tundra. There are several waves of hills to get over ie. really steep section followed by a flat section and then another steep section. Very doable with a pack and walking sticks.rlown wrote:Here's a rough map of the area. Feel free to download it, mark it or use your own map to talk about the area and what you're thinking. Just mark it and repost or use your own. Best to communicate with proposed routes over maps at this point.
Russ
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