Trip Report
Winter in the Black Canyon
Wednesday January 25, 2017 8:09am
Sometimes one’s reach exceeds one’s grasp, but that is not necessarily a bad thing. Early March of 1978 Jimmie Newberry, Tom Pulaski, Phil Broskovak, and I conspired to do a big wall in the Black Canyon in winter, which had not been done yet. Both Tom and Jimmie had experience on routes on the Painted Wall, but Phil and I were pretty much neophytes to the big wall nailing game. I had shared many rock and ice climbs and back-country ski adventures with Tom and Jimmie and felt confident in our group. The Black Canyon of the Gunnison River is unique in being locally deeper than it is wide , over 2,000 ft deep, and characterized by vertical walls of black gneiss intruded by phantasmagorically shaped pink pegmatite dikes. Psychologically it can be a daunting place to climb, and with steep, narrow, poison ivy-filled gulches, a challenging place to access. We had chosen to have a go at the second ascent of the Nose Route on North chasm View Wall, a route put up by Brian Becker and Ed Webster of Colorado Springs.
top left corner top right corner
The Nose of North Chasm View Wall, Black Canyon of the Gunnison.
The Nose of North Chasm View Wall, Black Canyon of the Gunnison.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

The first day gave us the best weather we would have as we humped our loads down SOB Gulch. We chose a line that started up a set of dihedrals somewhat to the right of Brian and Ed’s original route. The first four pitches were long free climbing at 5.9, but with consistently good protection. We figured that there would be plenty of climbing to go around, so I shamelessly volunteered to lead these first four pitches. They were four of the most enjoyable pitches I had climbed up to that time. As Jimmie and I led up and fixed ropes, Tom and Phil hauled loads.
top left corner top right corner
The dihedrals at the start of our variation of the Nose route.
The dihedrals at the start of our variation of the Nose route.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
The author climbing somewhere on the first four pitches.
The author climbing somewhere on the first four pitches.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Tom and Phil hauling the bags in the middle of the first four pitches.
Tom and Phil hauling the bags in the middle of the first four pitches.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Jimmie Newberry near the top of pitch four, getting ready to help with...
Jimmie Newberry near the top of pitch four, getting ready to help with the haul.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

At the top of the forth pitch we encountered a ledge about 2 feet wide and about 10 feet long that provided an excellent place to set up our first bivy. By the time we got to this ledge we had lost the sun and temperatures started to drop as the first clouds from an impending storm blew in. We had plenty of time to complete the haul and set up a port-a-ledge for Jimmie and Phil, while Tom and I arranged our bivy sacks on the ledge.
top left corner top right corner
Tom Polaski snug in his bivy bag on the ledge.
Tom Polaski snug in his bivy bag on the ledge.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Newberry’s port-a-ledge.
Newberry’s port-a-ledge.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Tom Polaski, bright eyed and bushy tailed on the morning of day 2.
Tom Polaski, bright eyed and bushy tailed on the morning of day 2.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

Day two started with what was billed as the first challenging lead of the climb. According to beta from Brian and Ed, this was an aid pitch primarily of hook moves with an occasional small wired stopper that traverses up and left to a point where the leader tension-traverses off a hook around the corner and into another dihedral that would yield to an easy nail-up. My whining and pleading were sufficiently pathetic that the lads acquiesced to letting me try this pitch. My only previous experience with aid had been on D-7 of the Diamond Face of Longs Peak. In for a penny, in for a pound.
top left corner top right corner
Author leading pitch 5 on hooks and small stoppers.
Author leading pitch 5 on hooks and small stoppers.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
More pitch 5.
More pitch 5.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Higher on hooks and not a lot of pro beneath me.
Higher on hooks and not a lot of pro beneath me.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

It was about half way through this pitch that I suffered a failure of character. At the high point of the pitch I was supposed to place a hook and lean out to the left on it and crawl across the face left and downward to the outside corner of the dihedral. Up to this point my hook placements had been on some really positive small flakes that had engendered confidence in this whole hooking thing, but that placement for the traverse hook look real dodgy to me for the direction I would be pulling on it and I wanted to place a bolt. Jimmy was belaying me and voiced his discomfort with placing bolts on a route where the first ascensionists had not. Philosophically I totally understood his point, but I was also pretty gripped at the thought of traversing off a hook I did not fully trust, seeing as how I was already several hook moves past my last tiny stopper. So I put a bolt in. Sorry Brian, but I have never been as accomplished as you at this sort of thing, and now it is time to confess my sins.
top left corner top right corner
Traversing left off the bolt of my shame.
Traversing left off the bolt of my shame.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Near the point on pitch 5 where I traverse around the corner.
Near the point on pitch 5 where I traverse around the corner.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

I was able to get around the corner and into the dihedral, nail up a ways, and place some anchors to fix the pitch. As Phil cleaned pitch 5 clouds started rolling in for what would turn out to be a genuine winter storm in the Black Canyon.

top left corner top right corner
Phil Broskovak cleaning pitch 5.
Phil Broskovak cleaning pitch 5.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
More cleaning on pitch 5.
More cleaning on pitch 5.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Phil cleaning pitch 5 near where it goes around the outside corner of ...
Phil cleaning pitch 5 near where it goes around the outside corner of the dihedral.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

Once Phil completed cleaning pitch 5 we all settled back in at the bivy ledge for a meal and sleep. Clearly the weather was changing for the worse, but we were warm and safe at that point in time. The following morning when we crawled out of our bivy bags and port-a-ledge snow coated the walls of the Black Canyon.
top left corner top right corner
At the end of day 2 the weather rolled in
At the end of day 2 the weather rolled in
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Looking across the canyon from our perch on North Chasm View Wall.
Looking across the canyon from our perch on North Chasm View Wall.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner
top left corner top right corner
Looking up canyon from Chasm View Wall on our third morning.
Looking up canyon from Chasm View Wall on our third morning.
Credit: Nick Danger
bottom left corner bottom right corner

It was at this point that we held a council of war and decided to bail. We were about 1/3 of the way up, it was day 3 and snowing, and we still had 2/3 of the pitches, including the crux pitches through the pegmatite dikes well above us. Once the decision was made Tom went up and pulled the fixed ropes from the 5th pitch, we packed our haul bags and started rapping the first four pitches. By the time we had gotten off the wall and muscled our loads back up a snow-filled SOB gulch, we had put in one of the physically most demanding days of our lives. At least three of us were quite happy with our decision, but Phil was very disappointed that we had pulled the plug at the first real sign of adversity. Could we have pulled it off had we persevered? That’s hard to say in retrospect. We were a good team and had yet to tap into Tom and Phils’ considerable climbing talents, but most of our experience was in mountaineering, and we had only modest big wall climbing experience. Looking back, I no longer second guess the mountaineering decisions of my youth. No one got hurt and we all went on to live productive lives enriched by our shared hardships and adventures. Friendships forged on the cliffs and peaks of Colorado and beyond are some of the strongest friendships I have. I have no regrets.

  Trip Report Views: 2,746
Nick Danger
About the Author
Nick Danger is a ice climber from Arvada, CO.

Comments
BrassNuts

Trad climber
Save your a_s, reach for the brass...
  Jan 25, 2017 - 08:28am PT
Cool! Thanks for sharing, great historical pics :-)
snakefoot

climber
Nor Cal
  Jan 25, 2017 - 09:36am PT
Bad ass! thanks for sharing your many good posts and pics!
wayne w

Trad climber
the nw
  Jan 25, 2017 - 09:32am PT
Thanks for posting this! The Black is just, unlike anywhere else. I can only imagine how much snow is there this Winter.
Prod

Trad climber
  Jan 25, 2017 - 10:09am PT
That was a fun read.

Planning on Climbing in the Black this summer, for my first time, with Eyonkee.

Can't wait.

Prod.
ydpl8s

Trad climber
Santa Monica, California
  Jan 25, 2017 - 11:03am PT
Nice Bob! Pictures of the infamous Pu(o)laski are hard to come by. It is great to see those shots of Mr. ape factor.
Moss
eeyonkee

Trad climber
Golden, CO
  Jan 25, 2017 - 12:08pm PT
Big thanks for Black Canyon adventure!
Kalimon

Social climber
Ridgway, CO
  Jan 25, 2017 - 03:17pm PT
Excellent Nick!
SteveW

Trad climber
The state of confusion
  Jan 25, 2017 - 07:47pm PT
Badass!
Vic

climber
  Jan 25, 2017 - 08:10pm PT
Awesome!! Thanks for posting. Winter climbing in the Black is a borderline transcendental experience.

FA of The Nose: Earl Wiggins, Bryan Becker. From what I understand, it was the hardest big wall route in Colorado (VI 5.10 A5) when it was established in 1977.
Nick Danger

Ice climber
Arvada, CO
Author's Reply  Jan 25, 2017 - 08:24pm PT
Vic,
Thanks for the FA correction, I appreciate that. To all who commented - thanks a bunch.

Scott, Tom Pulaski is probably the most gifted outdoor athlete I have ever adventured with. Didn't really matter whether we were rock or ice climbing, skiing, mtn biking, or trail running, he was always at the top of the game, and so modest and unassuming about the whole thing. Saw him this past summer at Michael Bain's memorial and he is as strong and fit as he was in his twenties. And just as modest. What a dude!
Ezra Ellis

Trad climber
North wet, and Da souf
  Jan 26, 2017 - 02:27am PT
Keep them coming Nick, you write wonderful TRs!!!
EdwardT

Trad climber
Retired
  Jan 26, 2017 - 06:01am PT
Thanks Nick. You win again.
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
  Jan 26, 2017 - 07:44am PT
The spirit of adventure lives on because of adventures, and consequent reports like this one!thanks!
Handjam Belay

Gym climber
expat from the truth
  Jan 26, 2017 - 09:11am PT
Thanks for the TR share!
Such a lovely lovely place for an adventure.
Winter in the Black is far past magical.


Go