Kokanee Glacier John Carter, Outlook, Sunset, Crazy Mary and KGR couloir

Words by Lee Lau. Photos by Sharon Bader, Lee Lau and Rob McLachlan unless otherwise noted.

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The evening before plans had been brewing in my mind for an attempt at a beautiful line I had spied on our third day at Kokanee. This aesthetic steep N facing line split the E-W ridge off Sunset in two when a happy accident of nature must have induced a fault in rock. We now had 3 days of weather that tended to induce snow stability and a few days of data from N – facing slope that corroborated that stability. All I had to do was to try to find someone to share in this experience. I talked to Vince and to the custodian, Wylee C., and shortly, we had a plan.

We still had to lay tracks down the E face of John Carter. Our error in leaving the slope unscarred was remedied by early morning. The group split up and I headed off to S Glory Basin to take a look at Outlook.


Group shot on John Carter – from L to R: Lee, Karl, Rob, Joel. Sharon, Steve, Adrian, John, Trevor, Max, Gregor ~photo Max Melchior


Pano from the top of John Carter with the Pyramids and the runs running W to Kokanee Lake in backdrop


Top: Kokanee Lake after the E face of John Carter run. Bottom: E face of John Carter tracked out. ~photo Max Melchior



Pano of W-facing Kokanee Peak runs and Gray’s col runs from Outlook Peak


Shot from Outlook Peak looking NW to Sunset -> the W facing runs from Sunset N peak are cliffed out; the entry is through Crazy Mary couloir on a short bootpack from Sunset S


Sloppy pano from Sunset N peak. All the lines below are cliffed out


Skiing off Sunset N so we can skin up to Sunset S ~photo Rob McLachlan


After skiing off Outlook and admiring more views, I made my way over to Sunset where Wylee and Vince were making their way up a bench to the north summit. We joined up and quickly determined that there was no way to either bootpack the ridge leading over to Kokanee Gravity Research (KGR) couloir. We looked for a way off the N summit to drop into the bowl immediately west of the summit to see if we could drop down but all routes looked cliffed out. From our perch there was another beautiful line piercing the NE ridge dropping down to the bowl so we decided to ski over to it. While we did all this, the rest of the group tracked out the W face of John Carter then came over to Sunset and proceeded to track that out in an impressively efficient display of powder farming


Sunset peak carpet bombed by multiple skiers ~photo Rob McLachlan


Pano from Sunset S peak.


We headed over to the S peak. Wylee put in a bootpack along the ridge to the Crazy Mary entry. The S face of Sunset sees a fair amount of wind so it was rather firm and I’m glad we didn’t try to skin over there as it would have been a chore without ski crampons. The bootpack itself is also a tad exposed and the last downclimb to the Crazy Mary entry a challenging experience for those who have vertigo.Wylee dropped in first into waist – deep powder; Vince dropped in second and I took the caboose while the rest of the group snapped pictures of us as tiny dots skiing the 300m shot.


Bootpack down the ridge from Sunset S to Crazy Mary couloir. The approach to the entry by skinning is wind-swept and slabby.


Vince in Crazy Mary. Lee waiting up top ~photo Sharon Bader


Wylee dropping into Crazy Mary

Pano shows Sunset peak backside from the bowl immediately west. Crazy Mary is to picture right We made our way up to Goat Track ridge (we saw some pretty crazy looking mountain goat tracksall along the knife-edge) and scouted out the double entry to KGR. There was a fair bit of space in the right entry so Vince and I elected to drop in on that. The left entry was a bit narrower so Wylee hopped in there. With a protected spot where the Y’s intersected about 200m down and with radio communication I hopped in first into waist-deep stable snow.


Wylee at the top of KGR couloir

Lee dropping into KGR

Wylee dropped into the skiers left entry of KGR and railed out of it at the choke to watch sluff roar by


The pitch was consistently steep (55 degrees in top third; 50 – 45 in middle third; 45 then 40 at bottom bench thereafter). What was a pleasant surprise was the consistent quality of the snow, which can be very variable in steep couloirs. Only at the bottom bit of the 600 m pitch was there some debris from old slides and we could make pretty confident turns the whole down. We leap-frogged each other and comfort levels and stoke grew as the snow stability proved to be excellent.This turned out be the highlight of the trip for me; my partners were confidence-inspiring, our route selection was good, our timing was perfect and the experience was phenomenal.

The icing on the cake was that the slog out from the valley bottom which had been so exhausting and so long 3 days ago turned out to be a relative cakewalk. We were out in about half the time and back with plenty of daylight.


Vince finds there’s still lots of powder in N facing steep chuts even three days after a dump


Wylee and Vince on the bottom part of the chute where it starts firming up. Bottom picture shows the entry line to the chute from Rob and Adrian’s suicide traverse of a few days ago


KGR couloir

John Carter sunset


Day 6 route – 2250m total elevation

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