Blodgett Peak, 9423', Colorado Springs, Jan 28th, 2007
Tom had
suggested three options for a conditioning effort this weekend as we claw our
way back into shape for winter climbing. In no particular order, he suggested 1)
snow shoeing around flat
I voted for #3 as Tom said he had a friend that climbs it all of the time for
conditioning and with it so close, how hard can it be? Well in the summer,
while it must be a very hot climb, it is probably just that, a conditioning
climb, in shorts and carrying water. Yesterday in winter conditions it was
a bit more... well, a lot more.
We left the trailhead with
loaded winter packs (for conditioning) and quickly climbed the gently graded
road to the water tower in the Blodgett Open Space. Having never hiked in this
area before, we probably missed a side trail that left the road on the left so
when we got to the water tower, we were faced with a badly eroded steep
hill rising straight up. Bad erosion unfortunately in the name of the game
on Blodgett as a "man made" trail does not exist and it is more of a
climbers trail in the majority of the steep sections, leading to tough scree
slopes that make upward progress dubious.
We met a young man named Mitchell at the water tower and he joined us for the
remainder of the day. He was carrying a 65lb pack with climbing gear for
conditioning as well while climbing in trail running shoes. As we started up the
steep slope the morning sun was brutal even though it was in the low 20's.
The mud had melted and as I brought up the rear I actually saw "rivers of
mud" flowing downhill at me. I felt like I was in
After working our way up through this snowy, icy and muddy mess (yes all three
together), we finally found a semblance of a trail and continued upward to what
we thought was the base of the peak. The higher we got, the warmer it got,
and slowly but surely we all stripped from fleece to exp. weight underwear to
simply just our poly propylene layer. I applied sun screen to my face and
neck on one stop as I could tell we were being baked.
Tom on the easier traversing
trail...
Finally we reached a traversing trail to the west and hiked under the soaring
rock face of a sub
We took a break in deep snow at the top of the 2nd scree slope and actually I
was about to vote for calling it a day due to the conditions, but Tom rallied us
and said onward to the summit! It was obvious now that we had one more
headwall to get around and we actually still did not know where the peak was or
it's summit. I headed up the mainly straight up trail, now using the
"rest step". Tom later computed on his GPS that this section was
1000'+ vertical gain.
NOTHING
easy about this section near the saddle
As Mitchell and I reached a saddle, the wind coming over quickly cooled us while we waited for Tom to join us. We decided that the actually summit was to our right and we waded through knee deep snow to work our way to the top. As we were reaching the top as the wind increased and the temperature dropped.
Mitchell topping out...
The summit is bare rock
about 20' by 40' and the views of

The small Summit of Blodgett Peak at 9423'
If going up was tough on the
lungs and legs, going down was tougher on the knees and brains as you had to
concentrate on every step on the icy steep slope. Crampons would have been
perfect here. We got out of the wind and got Mitchell some tree limbs to
use as poles and started our descent. A couple of times Mitchell did a 30'
glissade on his rear; once even on purpose :-) As we worked our way down
the two nasty scree slopes, we finally obtained the traversing trail we had
started on. Tom had mentioned that the guides to this peak mentioned that
on the descent, many people get lost and miss the sub trails back to the water
tower and the road. Chalk us on that list as well.
Tom slipped on some piece of icy trail and cut his hand on a rock...with blood
dripping off his palm; I poured some iodine (I told him it would not sting, but
I did not really know) and wrapped some gauze around his hand as we took a short
break.
*Note: My sister, Sue, thought the above quote was funny about me not knowing whether it would hurt or not. I guess a full confession is required now. Tom: that iodine bottle was 12 years old from when we climbed together in 1993-1995. See a doctor soonest....
A short time later, we realized we had gone too far north and
decided to bushwhack farther south down off a ridge. We encountered deep
snow that I broke through it until we ran into a chain link fence. It was
then very obvious to us we had misjudged and were on the
Needless to say, when we reached the Xterra, we were knackered... pulling off
our muddy boots and piling in for the short drive home. Who would have
thought a peak so close to the city in these conditions would prove so tough.
After a day like yesterday it is clear to me that the right choice would
have been option #2!
Beta:
5:13 elapsed time, 4.64 miles RT, 2500' vertical, with > 1400 of it in the
last mile.

Colorado Springs 2,000 below
Copyright (c) 2007 Robert Broeking All rights reserved.
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