After another rather wet summer, September had arrived with a splitter forecast—warmer and sunnier than it had been for weeks. For Labor Day weekend, Nate and I snatched this late-season opportunity to spend a few days in the alpine. I secured a bivy permit for Upper Glacier Gorge (need to be climbing a route that is at least four pitches to qualify for a bivy permit), and Nate and I bivied up there for two nights (Friday and Saturday nights) below The Spearhead.
Due to the splitter forecast and an expired national park pass, I cleared up my Friday schedule and decided to head up to Glacier Gorge in the early morning, secure our favorite bivy site, and do a
traverse over Arrowhead - McHenrys - Chiefs Head - Spearhead, arriving back at the bviy around the time Nate arrived. On Saturday, Nate and I climbed
Sykes' Sickle (5.9+, 7p). On Sunday we climbed what we called
"The Barbfisher" (5.11a, 8p)—a link-up of the first 5 pitches of
The Barb with the last 2.5 pitches of
The Kingfisher. We also enjoyed a couple of sunny afternoons hanging out in this spectacular area.
This page gives a trip report for "
The Barbfisher" on The Spearhead. What a fun link-up of pitches.
The following gives pitch-by-pitch photos of "
The Barbfisher", and below that a photo smorgasbord from our three-day, two-night Labor Day weekend hanging out in Upper Glacier Gorge. Enjoy!
It was Labor Day weekend and the forecast was for splitter weather, so Nate and I snatched the opportunity to spend three days and two nights in the spectacular Upper Glacier Gorge. We had secured a bivy permit for Upper Glacier Gorge (need to be climbing a route that is at least 4 pitches to qualify for a bivy permit), and we bivied up there for two nights (Friday and Saturday nights) below The Spearhead. What a spectacular place to hang out for the long weekend.
Upper Glacier Gorge has some of the best bivy locations in RMNP. We stayed at what I decided to call the "Under the Dome" bivy, which is a roomy cavern under a giant boulder. This is one of the coolest spots to bivy in the area, but it is usually filled with snow or ice until late in the summer.