Cross the bridge at the junction of Leigh and String Lakes. Park at the String Lake Parking Area and follow signs towards Leigh Lake/Paintbrush Canyon. You may need to bring an ice ax or hiking poles for support. Check with a ranger at the closest visitor center to make sure it is passable on foot. Warnings: Snow can sometimes cover the top of Paintbrush Divide.This hike can be completed as a full day hike or multi-day backpack (campsites are available in upper Paintbrush Canyon and Cascade Canyon – permits required). The views are spectacular the entire way through. Two high alpine lakes welcome a quick soaking of the feet or a full dip for the cold blooded. While Cascade Canyon is swarming with hikers, especially below the forks, Paintbrush Canyon offers a remote wilderness setting. I think things are supposed to cool off later this week, hopefully allowing for some more great skiing this week.If you don't have time for a multi-day backpacking trip in the Tetons, but still want to see the best of the backcountry, try a full day hike up Paintbrush Canyon, over the Paintbrush Divide, and back down Cascade Canyon. Randosteve drops into Paintbrush Canyon below Buckingham Palace Peak.Īnyway, this tour was more about the adventure and getting away from the norm, which is nice to throw in now and then. I read we are at about 27% above average snowpack right now and it is very obvious back in some of these canyons. There was a nice steep pitch to the east, which got the pinwheels moving in the soft snow. With the Grand Teton and Mount Owen in the background.Ĭool views of the seldom climbed Buckingham Palace Peak greeted us when we arrived at the saddle, and what looked like an easy route to the north and into the canyon. In the bottom of the side canyon though, the snow was still firm, so we transitioned to ascent mode and climbed to a saddle to the north, giving us the ability to still ski out Paintbrush…and complete a nice loop. Reed scurried up a little slot and found a route to the slopes to the East…which we quickly descended as it was obvious this exposure was just about done for the day. We were now in the sun as we searched for snow routes further up McKlintok and the snow was heating up fast. Towards the top though, about 500′ according to Mister Suunto, it looked questionable that the couloir would lead all the way the summit. Due to the high rock walls on its sides and south facing exposure, the snow stayed firm for most of the way and made for nice cramponing. Little information is known about this couloir and as we got higher and higher, it would branch out in different directions…some going through…some petering out. Worth a trip back to catch in better conditions. It as too bad too, because the couloir was really nice, about 2500′ long…and snaky the entire way. As we ascended, we passed by huge runnels and piles of bowling ball size snowballs, and it looked like a bomb had exploded. Knowing we probably wouldn’t ski it, we started up…hoping we would be able to top out and ski the north. We arrived at the base of the South Coulior on McKlintok after a couple of hours of skinning, only to find a huge pile of avalanche debris below the couloir. Thinking we might see some bears, Reed had brought pepper spray, but all we saw were reflections of Mount Owen in the lazy sections of Cascade Creek. We saw minimal tracks on the way and it is sometimes nice to get away from the traffic the high peaks are receiving this time of year. Due to some patchy snow on the way around Jenny Lake, we walked with our skis on our back for about the first mile, making our way deep into Cascade Canyon. Reed and I got out just before 5am from the String Lake Trailhead and the snow had set up nicely. The plan was to boot up the couloir and if it looked good…ski it…if it didn’t…plan B was to drop north into Paintbrush Canyon. After my little scare in the Koven Couloir last Thursday, the high temp predicted for the following days and reading about the big slides happening in the Pacific Northwest, I decided to turn things down a little bit on Friday and try and ski a south facing couloir on McKlintok Peak…located near the forks of Cascade Canyon.
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