Crowfoot Ridge, YNP

Aenigma

Active member
After a many years of looking at this place and wanting to ski it, I finally just went out and did it. Crowfoot Ridge is in the NW corner of Yellowstone National Park, and very rarely gets climbed at all. This was in a special bear management area that does not allow off-trail travel for much of the year, so the only time to climb any of these peaks is in the winter--which is a pretty great time to be on top of a mountain, in my opinion!

I started off on the highway, with about 5 miles of completely flat valley to cross before I started climbing.

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The Gallatin river is absolutely beautiful all along this stretch, and doesn't see much fishing pressure because you have to--gasp--hike to it!

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After the long approach, I finally started heading up and away from the river.

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One of the hallmarks of a thriving ecosystem is the presence of a larger number of predators. Here's a set of tracks from a wolverine, which may be my favorite.

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The West side of the ridge was pretty much all melted out, so I was forced to hang out on this side for the day.

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I'd always thought of this tour as an unrealistic goal of mine, but it turns out that with the right snow conditions and frame of mind, I can do quite a bit in a day.

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A look back down the ridgeline, with Lone Mountain far in the background.

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Some dumb-ass bowl I had to track up.

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There are several bowls like this along the ridgeline, and certainly many more in the area.

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I thought this one was solid since I'd skied the same aspect 25 minutes earlier on chalky windbuff, but my first tentative turn put me into four inches of slush, so I sidestepped out and moved on to plan B. All the more reason to come back!

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I decided to traverse the ridge for a mile or two and do a big 'ol loop to get to know the area a little better.

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After dropping in to the headwaters of the Gallatin, I climbed back up and over a small pass to get to a nice burn area.

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Here's the side of the ridge you can see from the highway. It'd be a fun ski if the snow conditions were right, but aspect and exposure might make that happen infrequently.

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A quick tour out another smaller ridgeline got me here.

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And then I skied a bunch of perfect corn through this burn area!

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After crossing a set of really fresh grizzly tracks, I changed course and posted up here for 30-40 minutes to wait things out.

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Turns out I'm not a bear whisperer, and it headed the direction I'd hoped it would not. This was set #6 for the day.

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But they were noticeably older (at least an hour), so I kept poking along the river, and finally back home!

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I was. It was pretty solid spring corn and old windbuff, for the most part, so I wasn't too worried about anything moving. I've also had trouble finding any reliable partners who can tour for more than a few hours, and I like to get out early and put in 8-10 hour days when I can.
 
13405828:Aenigma said:
I was. It was pretty solid spring corn and old windbuff, for the most part, so I wasn't too worried about anything moving. I've also had trouble finding any reliable partners who can tour for more than a few hours, and I like to get out early and put in 8-10 hour days when I can.

I don't blame you, I'm inspired!
 
How do you like the converts? Your trips are awesome, I'll have to check out Montana/Wyoming/Idaho area next winter.
 
I only got them recently so I haven't had a ton of time on them yet, but I really like them so far. They turn really well in all conditions (I have been able to ski them in a lot of bullshit snow), are relatively stable, and are impressively light for a 105-waited, 188cm ski. They do become a bit squirrely at speed, but I'm also generally not straightlining things in the backcountry...that often. The best part is I got them for ridiculously cheap, so I could afford pseudo-new skis!
 
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