Mount Shasta: Skiing Avalanche Gulch (June 99)
        Amar Andalkar's Ski Mountaineering and Climbing Site
Home | Ski Mountaineering | Photos & Trip Reports | Equipment & Info | Cascade Volcanoes | Ring of Fire | Site Map

California's Mount Shasta is the second highest volcano in the Cascade Range and in the lower 48 United States. The permanently snow-capped cone dominates the skyline of southern Oregon and northern California for hundreds of miles in any direction. Shasta is in fact the most massive stratovolcano in the Cascade chain, rising almost 12000 ft from the surrounding lowlands and easily surpassing in volume the slightly taller Mount Rainier. However, its southerly location results in lower snowfall and less glaciation than the northern peaks of the Cascade Range. Nevertheless, Shasta supports eight glaciers including the largest in California, and the deep winter snowpack provides good skiing well into the summer. Avalanche Gulch on the south side is the standard climbing route to the summit, providing a continuous crevasse-free ski run of over 7000 vertical feet.

This was the second peak on our week-long South Cascades ski odyssey during June 1999: ...
June 18: Lassen Peak June 19-20: Mount Shasta June 21: Mount McLoughlin
June 21-22: Crater Lake June 22: Mount Thielsen June 23: South Sister

Click on any photo to go there, or start your tour with the first photo...





Trip Summary: Saturday-Sunday, June 19-20, 1999

Starting Elevation: 6900 ft (2100 m) Weather Conditions: Clear, high clouds; moderate winds
Summit Elevation: 14162 ft (4317 m) Temperature: 30-70 F (0-20 C)
Roundtrip Distance: 12 miles (19 km) Visibility: Over 100 miles (160 km)
Total Skiable Vertical: 7100 ft (2150 m) Ski Conditions: Sastrugi, good corn snow, soft snow
This was a private trip, with a party of two (myself and Alex Cronin).
I skied on randonnee (alpine touring) gear, Alex skied on heavy-duty telemark gear.

Home | Ski Mountaineering | Photos & Trip Reports | Equipment & Info | Cascade Volcanoes | Ring of Fire | Site Map
Amar Andalkar <andalkar@u.washington.edu>