Skiing
to the Sea
Skiing Magazine
We
motor across the smooth glacial waters of Alaska's
Prince William Sound, heading into Zaikof Bay at the
eastern end of Montague Island, where the island splits
like whale flukes. Ahead, an incisor peak rises sharply,
raking the sky. It is around 10:30 p.m., but this
far north the mid-April sky holds an ethereal light,
and the big mountain is awash in a rich purple cast.
But what lures our eyes is the peak's immaculate west
face pitching sheer and clean straight down from the
summit like a giant headwall.
As our two boats cruise quietly toward the head of
the bay, the big Volvo Penta engines rumbling softly,
most of us gather up on the flying bridges for a better
view. We're tracing ski lines down the face and pointing
out various approach routes when our chatter is suddenly
interrupted by a loud "whooshing" sound.
My friend Rich Rayhill points, then whispers, "Orcas!"
I turn and look. Suddenly the glossy surface a few
yards away is slashed by a five-foot-high black dagger
board of a dorsal fin, and then another and another.
The black and white killer whales rise and sink, rise
and sink, slicing through the silky water. There are
perhaps thirty whales of all ages, from six-foot calves
to 30-foot patriarchs. Fully aware of us and curious,
they approach the vessels as they feed and play for
an hour or more. Then, as if at some signal, they
turn east as one, swim off into the open sound, and
vanish.
It has been a day for whales. Earlier in the afternoon,
after threading Upper Passage on Knight Island, we
entered a realm of cetacean feeding and frolicking.
At all points of the compass, we saw whales rising
and sounding, their giant flukes standing out sharply
against the snowy mountains beyond. For hours we just
drifted, watching the immense creatures breach and
spout, the gassy vapor of their exhalations hanging
in the air like mist.
Our expedition-to attempt to become the first to climb
and ski one of Montague Island's many nameless peaks-originated
several years ago. A fisherman pulled his 42-foot
trawler, the Alexandra, alongside my sea kayak during
a long crossing in a remote part of the sound. My
group and his crew were the only human beings in hundreds,
if not thousands, of square miles, and when he offered
a lift, I thought, Why not? He introduced himself
as Brad Von Wichman, and as we cruised we talked sea
kayaking, then somehow got on to skiing.
"If you love ski mountaineering, you should see
this place in the spring," Brad said, urging
me to return when the snowpack was measured in meters
and the steep white slopes plunged straight into the
cobalt sea.
Prince William Sound is renowned as a sea kayaker's
utopia. But this 15,000 square mile arm of the Pacific
Ocean, with its labyrinthine network of glacially-carved
fjords, is watched over by breathtaking mountains
thrusting thousands of feet into the sky. The sound's
3,500 mile-long coastline reaches like an octopus
deep into the snowy recesses of the Chugach and Kenai
Ranges. The skiing in these peaks is virtually unexplored.
But there are no roads here, the sound is enormous
-the size of my home state of New Hampshire-- and
to access these mountains you need a boat.
When Brad and I parted, I took a last look at the
Alexandra and thought, "Hell, we could base ourselves
aboard that boat and ski anywhere we wanted!"
So here we are on a bright Alaskan wilderness morning
with not one boat, but two. The Alexandra and Brad's
58 foot charter boat Babkin serve as our transportation
and our floating base camps in the wilderness. In
addition we have two inflatable, motorized Zodiac
skiffs for accessing shore and eight sea kayaks for
après-ski paddling excursions.
Banking the skiff in graceful arcs to avoid chunks
of floating ice, Von Wichman steers towards open water.
As the skiff cuts a furrow across the placid surface,
I grab my ball cap with one hand and shade my eyes
with the other. Looking ahead, I study our destination
for the day. Montague Island is a long, rugged, mountainous
barrier guarding the southwest portion of the sound
from Pacific Ocean swells. Though one of the largest
islands in the United States, it's a place few people
have heard of and fewer have seen.
Stealing a glance at my friends perched atop a literal
boatload of skis, boots, and packs, I see a half-dozen
faces wearing sunglasses and silly expectant grins
that no doubt mirror my own expression. Tracy Zietlow
catches my eye and smiles. "It's going to be
a good one," she says.
Brad cuts the motor, and the skiff drifts quietly
towards shore. From the upper branches of a towering
spruce, a pair of bald eagles flap away. Yellow eyes
glaring, the big raptors screech, venting their anger
at us. We jump out and wade through yellow seaweed
to a deserted beach covered with flat, shingle-like
stones. Brad then turns the Zodiac around and skims
quickly back to the boats. Though he is an accomplished
skier, with Brad the vessels come first, and he wants
to spend today tinkering with the Alexandra's engine.
Once on shore I look around. There is a lot of skiing
talent represented on this wild beach. Edda is a former
member of the German Olympic ski team; Brad's wife
Kjersti Von Wichman was on the Norwegian World Cup
Alpine team and later coached the U.S. Ski Team, and
Anna Kari is a former Norwegian cross-country ski
champion. Tracy, Jim, Richard, and Brad's sister,
Alex, were all top-ranked collegiate ski racers, and
Rob is on the ski patrol at Alyeska Ski Resort. We
know each other through the Von Wichmans; many of
us have traveled together before; and over the last
several days of skiing and sailing, we have gelled
as a group and become good friends.
Ski boots and packs on, avalanche beacons transmitting,
we kick steps and climb the seven foot snow-wall at
the high tide line. On top we snap into our telemark
bindings, slip through a gap in the coastal rainforest,
and ski off into the unknown. There are no trails,
so we thread our way under towering trees through
thickets of spiny devils club, a tall plant bristling
with thorns. We ski across snow bridges, and we use
fallen trees to span streams swollen with snowmelt.
As the going gets steep our eyes start to sting with
sweat and our muscles burn.
To ski across the flats and to ascend the steep slope,
we attached climbing skins to the bottom of our skis.
In the old days, climbing skins were just that: ski-length
strips of animal hide that skiers attached to the
bottom of their skis. With the hairs pointing toward
the tail of the ski, the skins gave the skis a tenacious
grip on steep uphills when the skier pressed down
on the ski. At the top the skier simply ripped the
hides from the bottoms of his skis and continued on
his way.
Today, climbing skins are made of synthetic fibers,
but they perform the same function as the original
hides. As the ski glides forward, the hairs provide
little resistance. If the ski starts to slip backwards,
the hairs dig into the snow and hold. Without skins,
the peak we are climbing would be inaccessible.
We break out of the trees, taking turns in the lead,
stretching a long thin track across the dazzling white.
The sun is brilliant. Daggers of light glint off the
snow surface and stab at our eyes through our dark
glasses. The route steepens, we crest a ridge, and
a massive bowl rimmed by heavily corniced ridges expands
before us. Some of the cornices have cracked off and
bombed the mountain flanks, creating catastrophic
avalanches, obliterating the slopes below. But there
is no cornice above our giant west face, which is
extremely steep but flawless. We ski towards the base
of our peak to assess the avalanche risk.
Rob Durnell, the patroller from Alyeska, directs us
in digging a pit. We go down six feet, eight feet,
deeper, finding nothing of concern. "The slope's
solid," Rob declares. "Let's do it!"
Halfway up the face I stop and peer down between my
feet and I can see Anna Kari directly below me. I
glance up and see the bottom of John Durham's ski
boots ten feet above. He looks down and grins. "Ayuh,
she's gittin' kinda steep," he deadpans in his
best Downeast Maine brogue. I stare off to the north
where the sharply canted white slope intersects the
perfectly level blue horizon of the sound at an exact
45-degree angle. Rob confirms my estimate with his
inclinometer.
The pitch gets quite a bit steeper yet at the top
as I scramble the last few yards to the summit. From
up here the view is of the sapphire sea and ice-choked
fjords backed by endless rows of scalloped ridges,
sawtooth mountains, and tidewater glaciers. For a
moment I'm lost in contemplation. My trance is interrupted
by the crackle of my VHF radio.
"Steve, you there?"
"Yeah Brad, go ahead."
"You guys might want to take your time on the
way back to the boats," Brad says in his matter-of-fact
voice. "There's a giant brown bear down at the
beach where I dropped you off. I'd say he goes over
a thousand pounds, easy. These Montague bears are
real aggressive, and I'm guessing this guy just woke
up from hibernation. He's probably hungry and cranky
as hell. I'm scoping him with the binoculars right
now. He's sniffing your rubber boots, getting your
number. Watch your back."
"Thanks pal," I say, looking down at the
Babkin tugging at her anchor chain in the safety of
Zaikof Bay below. Though she is only a couple of miles
away, the distance between us now seems vast. I tick
off the potential hazards that separate us: Avalanches.
Extreme steeps. Grizzlies! "All in a day's work,
Brad. We'll keep an eye out for him."
When I launch over the lip I feel as If I'm jumping
out the window of a tall building. The face feels
dead vertical. But once I land the first turn, pressure
my rear foot, and feel the skis bite into the soft
snow, my feelings change from apprehension to pure
exhilaration. With greater confidence I face straight
down the slope. At every turn I angle my skis closer
to the fall-line. Within moments I feel the joyous
sensation of near flight as I rocket down the slope,
slashing quick turns left and right, going faster,
faster.
I finally pull up, stopping at treeline to catch my
breath. My legs are on fire. Another first descent.
Looking up I watch Tracy, then Anna Kari, then Kjersti,
carve up the slope with beautiful sinuous lines. In
a day or two our traces will fade and no one will
ever know we were here, which is exactly how we want
it. But as we ski down through the tall trees, we
cross another set of fresh tracks. The size of dinner
platters, with claw marks extending a good four inches
out in front, we have no doubts about who made them.
"Hey, comes with the territory," I say with
more cheer than I feel as we hastily bushwhack down
through the fallen timber and the evil devils club.
There are giant bear tracks everywhere. Rich Rayhill
looks over his shoulder dramatically, then intones
"We are not alone."
You wanted an adventure, I think. Well, you've got
one.
Some dreams come true, and every day of this expedition
we have summited an unclimbed peak and cut first-ever
tracks down steep faces and rollicking couloirs. In
the evenings we have launched sea kayaks and explored
hidden coves and glaciers. Our world seems new, filled
with endless possibilities for adventure, and everywhere
I look I see jagged peaks rising from the sea all
across the horizon, beckoning. In that vast, incomprehensible
distance there are no other signs of humanity.
In an age of satellite links, geographical positioning
systems, cell phones, and the Internet, it's harder
and harder to get away, to find genuine terra incognita
to explore, to have a singularly authentic experience.
Here in Alaska it's still possible to be truly challenged
mentally and physically, to rely utterly upon careful
preparation, honed skills and acquired wisdom. So
far our little band of Argonauts has passed each test
the wild has tossed at us, and every day we have felt
that bracing sensation of being the first.
And as I ski down through the thick timber to the
beach, I watch my back until Brad fires up the Zodiac
and brings us back to camp.
^top