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McPilchuck Wild Bagger
Joined: 17 Dec 2001 Posts: 856 | TRs | Pics Location: near Snohomish, Wa. |
Bedal Basin
6-27-03 (Mountain Birthday Trek)
After spending most of the day climbing up and around cliffs at around 5,000 feet on the Southwest side of Bedal Peak, with no real destination or goal in sight, I dropped back down to the road and circumvented the Bedal Creek Trail at 3:30 PM. I had hiked on this trail for a ways many years ago, but somehow just never kept going far enough to end up in Bedal Basin. Enter Henry M. Jackson Wilderness: Up the trail I went as it wandered along the flanks of the creek and through the forest. Numerous waterfalls poured off the cliffs to the right about mid way up. Occasionally, I was provoked onward by glimpses of Sloan Peak towering above and bathed in the late sun of the day. It appeared someone had been up the trail a few days before by the set of tracks in the mud that I saw. The trail crossed a stream coming from Bedal and went through several open areas, some of which had some nettles that stung my legs as I passed by. At around 3,500 feet, the trail took on some steepness and began to climb up the rocky creek directly from Sloan. When it crossed the stream and veered right up through the remaining forest (near 4,300') and into snow patches, there were no more tracks that I saw. Lured by the overwhelming desire to view Sloan more closely from this angle, I pushed on up through the last bit of forest until I topped out at Bedal Basin around 5,000 feet. And wham! "What a beautiful cirque and meadow in the shadow of the bold south wall (rock-monster) of Sloan Peak," I thought. Here, I found the remains of Harry Bedal's old cabin next to the gin-clear creek that flowed through the meadow, which was dotted with wildflowers here and there between the snow patches that still lingered. Bedal Peak stood out like a sore thumb...it was magnificent to say the least. But Sloan Peak loomed above so impressively it stole the show! It's no wonder as to why Harry Bedal built a cabin here if not for just the sheer pleasure of spectacular view. Surely, a lovely place where the mountain angels sing to the soul: one reason as to why climbers used this route in decades past I suspect. At any rate I was here all alone and it felt grand. I had spent an hour taking photographs from the shoulder of Sloan and now it was getting late. Reluctantly, at around 7:00 PM, I gathered my gear, laced taunt my "trusted" full-leather (Raichle Montagna) 5 lbs. 5 oz. boots and let them do the work to getting me out -- back down the rocky creek and onto the trail. The forest was in shadows, the sun aglow on the peaks, and I content amid the silence except for the gurgle of the little mountain rills.....
McPil
http://www.alpinequest.com/bedal.htm
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brownster145 Member
Joined: 18 Jul 2002 Posts: 65 | TRs | Pics
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Thanks for the report. I enjoyed reading it.
Happy birthday, by the way.
Andrew
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McPilchuck Wild Bagger
Joined: 17 Dec 2001 Posts: 856 | TRs | Pics Location: near Snohomish, Wa. |
Hey thanks Guy, I appreciate the words.
McPil
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#19 Member
Joined: 17 Dec 2001 Posts: 2197 | TRs | Pics
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#19
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Sat Jun 28, 2003 6:40 pm
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Dang, I missed your birthday...again! Sounds like it was a good one! Nice TR.
Even though I sometimes where lightweight footware, I certainly understand the statement Quote: | laced taunt my "trusted" full-leather (Raichle Montagna) 5 lbs. 5 oz. boots and let them do the work to getting me out |
and did the same thing - the same day.
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Larry Member
Joined: 22 Feb 2003 Posts: 1084 | TRs | Pics Location: Kitsap |
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Larry
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Sun Jun 29, 2003 8:39 am
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Happy Birthday, Man!
As always, a wonderful description of your trip. I like the mental images you bring up so nicely.
Somewhere in a far distant time, long ago...I actually got 2/3 of the way up the west/sw face of Sloan with a partner leading. Spectacular climbing...way "out there" but with good ledges here and there. We got fogged off, but it was wonderful anyway.
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McPilchuck Wild Bagger
Joined: 17 Dec 2001 Posts: 856 | TRs | Pics Location: near Snohomish, Wa. |
Hey Paps, thanks. Sounds by your report of Thornton that you had an equally grand trek. Of interest, I was up that way around Thornton a week previously on a rainy-misty day with 3 other fellows. Ate dinner in Marblemount at Buffalo Bob's. Didn't write up a trek report for that one however. Stayed overnight at the cabin in Oso. The Triumph area is something to behold...looks almost mythical...makes the Alpine Lakes Wilderness peaks look like regular so-so peaks IMO.
http://www.alpinequest.com/triumph1.jpg
Larry, liked your comments as well. I can see you now up in the rock on Sloan...perhaps the most impressive peak (also called the Matterhorn by some) around the Cascades (exception of Triumph). For another view of Sloan from the other side taken from Lonesome point see:
http://www.alpinequest.com/sloansplendor.htm
McPil
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