Inaugural Post: The Tatoosh Traverse FKT (Fastest Known Time)
The Tatoosh Mountain Range lies just south of the towering
Mount Rainier within the national park. It runs east to west and, per
Wikipedia, includes 25 named prominent peaks. The traverse links together 12 of
the most prominent ones and then follows a section of the Wonderland trail to
return back to the start.
I have attempted the traverse twice. The first two times we
started at Snow Lake trailhead and ended up bailing at the mid-point down the
Pinnacle Peak trail due to exhaustion and slow moving. Continuing on past
Pinnacle Trail is very committing due to the remaining 6 peaks followed by the
1600 feet of climbing up the Wonderland trail back to the car, which would
occur later in the evening making hitching back to your car an unlikely option.
This attempt Brody Hatch and I were committed. We had a
better idea of what we were in for. We also had learned from multiple
previous time and moral wasting wrong turns which ways not to go. We
arrived at the Snow Lake trailhead late Saturday night, August 12th 2018, and
got 4-5 hrs of sleep in the van. We hit the trail running at 4:34am. The night
was very cool and damp due to the rainfall the day prior and the forecast was
perfect with cooler temperatures and low chance of rain.
Heading up to Unicorn Peak took us up past Bench and Snow
Lakes where the maintained trail stopped. We followed the canyon up a large
boulder field, trending left up a steep chute with flowing streams to the base
of the peak. There we found a time saving climbers trail to traverse the loose
scree to a steep 4th class chossy wet pitch taking us to the saddle between
Unicorn and West Unicorn Peaks. On a prior attempt we included West Unicorn
which falls in line on the traverse, discovering that coming off of the back
side was completely heinous due to huge amounts of loose rock and scree in
steep chutes. We both appreciated that the established traverse didn't include
it. From the saddle we followed the small trail up to the summit of Unicorn
which has a distinct pointy rock feature on top (maybe that is how it got its
name) which required maybe 5.5 level climbing moves and was wet from dew. Peak
one, check.
(Brody down climbing off of Unicorn. )
Next was Stevens Peak which required dropping down into
minimal visibility, relying on GPS, to find the saddle between the peaks. GPS
saved the day as dropping down to early or late could have put us in some tough
spots. Obtaining Stevens ridge was fairly straightforward, trending right to
avoid a large cliff band and then heading up a bunch of loose rock to the final
portion of the ridge before topping out. Peak two. Check! Coming off of Steven
had screwed us up in the past because we dropped down to early and got to low
on the mountain. This time was not the case and we were back at the saddle
below Unicorn.
(Dropping off of Unicorn, heading over to Stevens)
(Looking at the base of Unicorn from Stevens. A wrong turn on the Unicorn descent could put you into that)
Next was Boundary Peak which lies directly south of Unicorn.
We headed up a visible rocky chute to the climbers left after passing through a
boulder field and then up the ridge. Getting around and up the summit required
traveling on the left (west) side of the ridge below a few large cliff bands
and then coming up a steep gully, and following the rocky ridge to the summit.
Peak three. Check.
(Brody coming off of Boundary Peak with Mount Adams in the background)
(View of Mount Rainier from the Unicorn saddle)
Next was Foss Peak. From Boundary we dropped off down to the
same saddle between Unicorn and West Unicorn. Views is this section were
amazing as the clouds parted, allowing full view of the mountain. We down
climbed the 4th class choss of Unicorn's west base and skipped across the
boulder field under West Unicorn to catch the far side of the canyon. After
obtaining the far ridge we followed it up to Foss which was straight forward.
From the top of Foss we could see Snow and Bench Lake far below. Our shoes were
soaked through from the dew which was unavoidable. Peak four. Check.
Next came The Castle. We dropped off of Foss down a steep
grassy face, passing a small pond and caught the mellow ridgeline up and over a
smaller high point and to the base of The Castle on a trail. We followed the
ridge up to the base of a large rock feature which earned the peak its name.
The prior attempt we had been overconfident and had each attempted to free solo
up different random lines which had both ended up in extremely focused down
climbing after thoughtful risk assessment. Following the base around to
climbers right presents two fairly straight forward 5.5 level climbing options.
An exposed ridge traverse takes you to the true summit. We could see hikers far
below the shear cliff on the other side. There were rappel rings set up from
near the summit. We down-climbed our ascent route without problems. Peak five.
Check. We passed some climbers in with climbing gear hiking up to climb the
route as we headed down.
(The Castle ridge line)
(Down climbing off The Castle)
Pinnacle Peak was next, which is a more commonly climbed
peak due to the easy access from the Pinnacle Peak Trail. We dropped off of The
Castle, bumped over a steep spine on a climbers route, down through some steep
trees and onto the open bowl. Using the GPS we found a trail up high just below
the cliff line that saved time getting us over to the the base of Pinnacle.
Heading up Pinnacle there isn't much of a specific route, just a loose steep
rock face on the far side (west) leading up to the summit. The summit was a
rocky point with great views of Rainier. This was our bailout point. Brody's
knee started acting up coming down off of Foss, likely IT band issues. When I
asked him if we were going to go for it, his response was, "We'll at least
get to Plummer" (the next peak) which wasn't incredibly promising. Our
socks and shoes were soaked and our feet were getting trashed. We put on fresh
dry socks, making our feet feel brand new, and headed down the loose ridge to
catch the well established trail over to Plummer.
(Heading over to Plummer with Pinnacle Peak and Pinnacle Peak Trail in the background)
Getting to Plummer Peak was the most straight forward peak
of the day, following a well established trail, passing a few families with
children on the way up and meeting a family at the top. Peak seven. Check.
Brody's knee was feeling better and we decided to go for it.
Getting over to Denman was quick. We dropped left off the
Plummer trail and caught another small trail that led over to the south ridge
of Denman and followed it up to the summit. Peak eight. Check.
Heading over to Lane Peak I believe there was also a very
lightly traveled trail. As we approached Lane we could see a group of two
climbing up, which could be concerning for rock fall. We headed up a loose
gully and trended left around and up. This section was extremely loose and
maybe 5.3 level climbing moves. Peak nine. Check.We met the group of two women
at the top who were doing the lower half of the traverse, having started at
Pinnacle Peak Trailhead. We had a short hello and they let us descend in front
of them. We dropped down the same way we climbed up and scooted right when we
got to the gully. From the top of Lane we could see the route heading up to
Wahpenayo which consisted of a long traverse below two rocky features and then
heading up a wide grassy steep chute.
(Coming off of Lane)
Starting along the traverse over to Wahpenayo there was a
light trail that continued up the first saddle which was not were the GPS and
the prior beta had directed to go. I ran up to check it out hoping we could
stay on a trail, but the destination of the trail wasn't visible and we made
the decision to continue on across the loose, grassy, steep, horrible traverse.
This traverse was the worst part of the day. Each step resulted in sliding
rocks or sliding on vegetation with small rocks sliding down and hitting our
ankles. We tried to stay high but maybe it is faster to stay low where it is
lower angle, or to follow the trail over the first saddle. I don't know the
answer. We slowly worked our way over to the wide grassy chute and was able to
get on some firm rocky features headed up the chute which allowed faster
moving. When we got to the saddle we followed the ridge line through some very
very dense narly pine trees coming very uncomfortably near to some cliffs. It
may be faster to stay on the shelf just below the ridge and loop around up to
the summit. Following the ridge came to a very narrow steep notch that luckily
allowed passage and then over a high point and on to the summit which was
pretty ill-defined except for the surveyor marker. Peak ten. Check. While on
the summit I switched out my socks, having hung my other wet socks on my pack
to dry. Brody realized that one of his socks came off during the traverse
across the Wahpenayo ridge which was a costly loss, as his feet got completely
trashed with maceration and a deep fissure between his toes later on that day
that prevented him from completing the whole loop.
Coming off Wahpenayo and over to Chutla followed the ridge
and then turned off to the right (north) catching a fairly obvious trail that
traversed across below the ridge to the saddle between the two peaks. I had
previously been to the top of Wahpenayo, having come up from Eagle Peak Trail
and was familiar with the route. From the saddle we dropped down a steep well
formed unofficial trail that dropped down below the steep rocky ridge of
Chutla. There was a trail that headed up to the ridge from the saddle but I am
not sure if the route was solo-able, and it looked pretty rugged, so we opted
for the previously traveled path. We followed the trail across and cut off
staying high, cutting up about the 2nd or 3rd steep grassy gully and caught the
ridge path at the top of the gully, headed right on the trail, up the ridge and
ticked the summit. Peak eleven. Check.
Heading over to Eagle Peak there was a pretty good trail, as
this is more commonly traveled by the many day hikers that access via Eagle
Peak Trail. We came up on a group of young adults, having just randomly popped
out of the bushes. "Was there a trail there?" they asked. "Sort
of", Brody responded. They laughed and we quickly explained that we had
been going all day and was doing the traverse. I guarantee they had no idea
what we were talking about so we just kept moving. We hit the saddle, which is
the end of the maintained Eagle Peak Trail and then up the ridge of Eagle Peak,
through some tight trees, up a few climbs and bam! Peak twelve. Check. We only
spent a moment on the summit taking in the view of Rainier and looking over
towards Eagle North Peak that is not part of the official traverse.
We returned back to the saddle and got into the rhythm of
running for only the second time since initially running up Snow Lake Trail.
Finally a solid maintained trail. Our feet burning with every step from being
wet all day and doing so much rocky travel. We hit the trailhead at the bottom
and celebrated knowing we beat the FKT for the traverse by about and hour. We
walked over to the Longmire trailhead on the road. Brody's feet were wrecked
and he decided to wait at the the general store. I took the GPS watch, rotated
my socks, and headed up the Wonderland trail. I passed a few people and tried
to keep a slow jog/shuffle. I missed the turnoff where the trail crossed over
the Nisqually River and wandered around for awhile watching my GPS and finally
figured it out. The trail gains more elevation once you cross the river and
climbs up along the Paradise River. I eventually topped out at Reflection Lake
and followed the trail down to Louise Lake where I made a frustrating error and
stayed on the Wonderland trail, dropping down below but parallel to the road,
rather than transitioning to the road. I incorrectly thought that there was a
small spur trail when it reached Snow Lake Trailhead. I got to where the spur
trail should have been and with every turn expected it. Shit!! I was wrong. I
now had the choice of backtracking uphill on the trail for about 0.25 miles or
bushwhack it through dense steep vegetation up to the road. I went with the
bushwhacking. 15 minutes later, with some extra thorn scrapes and extremely
frustrated I popped out of the thick mess and onto the road just barely below
the trailhead at 7:35pm. I stopped the watch! I made it!
I walked up to the van, opened the door, stripped my shoes
and took some water. There was a group of over fed tourists nearby who were
taking a smoke break during their exhausting drive to and through the park.
They asked me about my day and were extremely bewildered when I tried to
explain to them that I had been going since 4:30am and had climbed the whole
ridge line. I popped a warm Rainier and headed down to pick up Brody and we
made the drive home deciding that we were not going to think about doing this
again until maybe next year.
Lessons learned and ways to improve on future attempts.
- Bring a fresh pair of socks for the run up Wonderland trail if there is dew and rotate pairs on the traverse.
- While heading up the Wonderland I lost about 20-25 minutes due to missing the turn over the Nisqually River and by having to bushwhack up the final section to the van. Don't do those things!
- Ways to possibly travel faster that could be attempted include: avoiding the nasty traverse coming up to Wahpenayo by following the trail over first saddle or going below the traverse; traveling on the shelf just below the ridge coming up to Wahpenayo to avoid the narly ridge; following the ridge up Chutla rather than going around and up the gully.
Stats
- 26.5 miles
- 15 hours, Car to car
- 13,514ft elevation gain
- 12 peaks
Splits
- Snow Lake TH 4:34am(0)
- Unicorn 6:05am(1:33)
- Stevens 7:39am(3:07)
- Boundary 9:05am(4:33)
- Foss 10:08am(5:36)
- The Castle 10:46am(6:14)
- Pinnacle 11:26am(6:54)
- Plummer 12:12pm(7:40)
- Denman 12:32pm(8:00)
- Lane 1:13pm(8:41)
- Wahpenayo 2:58pm(10:26)
- Chutla 3:48pm(11:16)
- Eagle 4:16pm(11:44)
- Eagle Peak TH 5:10pm (12:38)
- Longmire TH 5:18pm (12:46)
- Reflection Lake 7:02pm (14:30)
- Snow Lake TH 7:35pm (15:00)
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