The 900m high Otira face of Mount Rolleston in Aurthrs Pass national park is 2 hours drive from Christchurch and is the mountains most prominent face. It is in fact made up of a number of gullies and prominent buttresses of rock ranging from very bad to not quite so bad.
Heading up the Otira Valley just after first light |
Climbing up to the gut on the approach to the central buttress of the 900m high Otira Face |
Mount Phillistine Behind |
Scrambling up the approach gut. Above this there was a 2m pitch to beneath the waterfall and a short pitch up a steep and crumbly wall to gain the snow/scree patch under the buttress. |
Helen enjoying the beautiful orange and solid rock of the lower 200m of the buttress |
Further up the rock quality deteriorated |
Helen negotiating the cheval ridge during a relatively horizontal section of the ridge |
Final buttress up to the Rolleston-Phillistine ridge |
On gaining the Rolleston-Phillistine ridge there was a section of easy, blocky scrambling before the final 50m of great rock and good climbing directly to the high peak |
Looking down the Otira valley with Mount Phillistine beyond |
Looking south towards Mount Arrowsmith and the mountains of Mount Cook national park |
The col between middle and low peak. We sidled middle peak along loose but easy ledge systems on the Otira side |
Looking towards Avalanche Peak and the Waimak valley beyond from low peak |
After the gap there was one more notch with a short abseil and climb and we were glad to have found a way through. |
As we descended the remaining steeper scrambly sections of the ridge, the rain eased and we witnessed a great sunset |
1 comment:
Some potential contest-winning photos again here! M
Post a Comment