1/30/25: I took a rare mid-week day off to take advantage of the end of a high pressure period and ski something different. With fairly robust low elevation snow, the drive to the trailhead of sorts at Mollman was scary with deep snow and I probably would have picked a different objective had I known.
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| Near the summit, looking down the upper icy bits. |
The climb was a bit different than expected. With extra snow, the ingress included less approach shoe walking and more wallowing through deep snow interspersed with brush. It was also remarkable to see the extent of surface hoar on shaded aspects, a weak layer that would plague the Northern ranges for a long time deeper into the season. Once in the basin below the peak, I was surprised to see a massive debris pile. After a pause to puzzle through what was going on, I realized that it was from glide avalanches on solar bear grass slopes, an avalanche problem that was reportedly plaguing the Flathead avalanche zone. As a result, I re-routed my climbing route onto the summer trail and upper Southwest face, which was inefficient, but avoided ascending below bear grass slopes. I made a calculation that the risk associated with skiing down the face was acceptable given the cold day and limited exposure time.
The ski run was so fun. There was some ice near the summit that I had to get my head in the game for, but with care it was fine, and the rest of the run flowed well through interesting terrain with powder transitioning to corn transitioning to surfy surface hoar down in the shaded canyon. I skied the full run to the lake.
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| Thin powder... |
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| ... brief taste of corn ... |
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| ... ending with surface hoar. |
Thoughts: I skied the looker's right gully on Mollman peak 8632, the gully on the Southwest face that takes off just South of the summit. This zone is pretty obscure, but I'd totally go back. I think the best timing is in early spring right when the road melts out, but before conditions open up enough to make the more alpine haunts of the Missions more compelling.




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