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Eric and I climbed Guye Peak by the Improbable Traverse, a route
highlighted in the recent new edition of Jim Nelson's Selected Climbs
guidebook. We parked in a pullout across from Ober Strasse off
Alpental Road at about 8.30am and were soon swimming in loose scree
below the slabs at the base of the west face. We simulclimbed for
almost two ropelengths up and left before my nerve gave out and I
belayed Eric up from a tree. The climbing up to this point was on
slabs, blocks, dirt, and vegetation -- not difficult but with little
protection (I placed two pieces). Eric continued left and then up a
steeper wall until rope drag became annoying, stopping about 20 feet
below Lunch Ledge at the start of a wide right-facing crack.
Interesting climbing began with the crack, with some fist jams for 30
feet (large hexes and a #4 Friend work well here), then past Lunch
Ledge, to the right, and up to narrow ledges with good face holds. A
few more feet to the right and down is a decent belay alcove just
before the traverse. Just as I popped in few cams for the belay, the
sun wheeled around and melted away our pleasant shade.
Eric got to lead the exciting traverse, the namesake of the route.
The first ascent must have been an adventure for the leader, since
there are few good cracks for pro. Eric tied off the three fixed
knifeblades and clipped a fixed sling bleached white as a bone.
Around the corner and up he found two more pins to belay from. I
followed (fun moves!) and led straight through, up the 200' ramp of
3rd/4th-class slab to trees.
From there we unroped and scrambled up and right, around a buttress
overlooking the west face, then back left for a while, dropping down
at one point instead of scrambling on steeper rock trending rightward.
From the summit, it looked as though Rainier were just over the next
ridge, the sky was so clear. A few snow patches still lingered up
high, but nothing to justify the snowshoes strapped to the pack of the
hapless dayhiker we met on our way down the trail.
A single gulp of warm water, tasting of plastic, was the only medicine
for my thirst when we reached Eric's sunbaked truck at 3pm. The
largest cherry slurpee in North Bend still left me parched, so I
downed four glasses of water as soon as I got home. Summer would be
the perfect season for climbing if it weren't for the heat. Get an
early start on this route and enjoy the shade on the west face!
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Eric starts up the wide crack below Lunch Ledge

Passing a small roof

Onto the face on good holds

The namesake traverse

Chair Peak
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