Glacier Peak, Washington Cascades
Doug McKeever climbed Glacier Peak in 7h54m in August 1998.
Doug McKeever is a professor of geology,
ultrarunner and mountain guide from Bellingham Washington. He emailed me his Glacier Peak trip
report in September 2008:
Although not as well known or popular as Mt. Adams, Rainier, Hood, or Baker,
Glacier Peak is another beautiful volcano in the Washington Cascades. To this day
this is one of my all-time favorite climbs, one that I repeat occasionally.
The picture [below] is of me on Frostbite Ridge way back in 1978, just a scruffy mountain man!
On that trip we camped on the summit and came down via the Sitkum Glacier on the west side.
On a perfect August day in 1998, I did a solo, unsupported "speed" climb of Glacier Peak
via the White Chuck River Trail and Sitkum Glacier route in 7 hours and 54 minutes, car to
summit to car (about 24 miles r.t. and 8,800' climb). I wish I could have just one race
sometime where everything clicks like it did that day! Yes, I did use crampons and an ice
axe but as I was solo of course didn't use traditional roped travel on the Sitkum Glacier.
However, this trip occurred just two days after doing the Sitkum Glacier route in fairly
standard three day fashion, and the route conditions and weather were as perfect as could be,
so I don't feel like I compromised safety unnecessarily. An interesting point is that
Dan O'Brien, Olympic decathlon champion in 1996, had climbed to the summit just a few days
earlier.
-- Doug McKeever