Mt Rainier: Summit Climb via DC (August 98)
        Amar Andalkar's Ski Mountaineering and Climbing Site
Home | Ski Mountaineering | Photos & Trip Reports | Equipment & Info | Cascade Volcanoes | Ring of Fire | Site Map
Trip Introduction | Previous Page | Next Page

View of Mt Rainier from Paradise
A Sea of Clouds below Camp Muir
Camp Muir Pinnacle
Looking Up at Gibraltar Rock
The Climbing Route to Cathedral Gap
Dawn in the Summit Crater
View Across the Summit Crater
Liberty Cap from the Crater Rim
Looking Down on Grand Park
The Final Steps to the Summit
Self-Portrait on the Summit
View of St Helens from the Summit
View of the Crater from the Summit
Descending the Upper Ingraham Glacier
Overhanging Serac
Panorama of the Ingraham Glacier
Traversing Below the Cleaver
Crevasse on the Ingraham Glacier
Camp Muir from Cathedral Gap
The Three Summits of Mt Rainier
During the night the lack of moonlight had prevented us from noticing hazards beyond the limited range of our headlamps. Daylight revealed these all too clearly, such as this massive (100+ ft) serac overhanging the climbing route which we had to traverse beneath. It is important to climb at night and then descend long before the afternoon warmth so that such blocks are more frozen and stable, and thus less likely to collapse and topple onto the climbing route. However, seracs are unpredictable, and can topple at any time, so it is imperative not to linger unnecessarily in such dangerous locations.
Trip Introduction | Previous Page | Next Page
Home | Ski Mountaineering | Photos & Trip Reports | Equipment & Info | Cascade Volcanoes | Ring of Fire | Site Map
Amar Andalkar <andalkar@u.washington.edu>