Standing 14,375 feet tall, Mount Williamson appears to be the highest peak and is the biggest massif visible from California State Highway 395. (Mount Whitney which sits a few miles south of Williamson is the highest peak in the lower forty-eight, but it is among the second tier of peaks farther from the road, and appears lower.) At first glance, Williamson’s north wall looks better suited for climbers. For practitioners of the steep, however, the granite ribs simply define the boundaries of a playground.
Historically, locals have agreed to keep first descents along the Sierra Nevada’s “east side” undocumented. Despite this tradition and the uncertainty it breeds, it is generally accepted that nearly all the couloirs of the eastern Sierra visible from 395 have been descended. Except for one.On Memorial Day, May 24, 1998, Dave Braun skied the entire length of The Giant’s Steps and solved one of the last coveted problems of the eastern Sierra. Eric McGrath made a descent from just under the headwall, riding caboose on the first descent.
The Giant’s Steps is tucked into the rocky folds on the north wall of Mt. Williamson—a narrow ribbon of snow that cuts a jagged, diagonal slot down through 3,100 vertical feet of granite. It’s the longest, thinnest line along the face. The line’s precarious orientation suckers even the seasoned skier to believe the mirage it presents from the road: it just might be dead vertical.
Two disinct jags in the couloir hint at a discontinuous line. As it turns out, whether you look from below, above, near or far, it’s difficult to determine if the line even goes. This element of uncertainty no doubt shriveled the huevos of the few locals capable of descending it earlier.
Dave Braun possesses a six-foot-one-inch frame that packs 190 pounds of determination. A mechanical engineer by day, he works in Pasadena for Jet Propulsion Labs. “It keeps cobwebs off the cranium,” he insists. He manages time off to enjoy fifty days a year of skiing in the Sierras, the San Gabriels or the Wasatch on weekends. Dave takes his skiing seriously. A nine to fiver must carefully pick objectives. His trips include places like New Zealand, Nepal, Peru, Alaska (Mt. Fairweather, Couloir Vol. IX-4 Mar./Apr.97), and Kyrgystan (Pik Pobeta, Couloir Vol. XI-4, Jan.’99).
Last year Dave decided to take a break from world traveling, but he still yearned for something serious. The Giant’s Steps was, if not obvious, certainly a worthy target.
The true crux of this route is not its steep angle or narrow chokes, but figuring out how to access it. While there are established routes up Mount Williamson from Bairs and George creeks, these only provide access to the peak’s eastern slopes, which your typical masochistic mountaineer might do. There is no established trail up Williamson Creek, the watershed of the north wall’s couloirs, there’s just a natural barrier of dense willows, stinging nettles, biting insects, and an insidious plant whose leaves ooze shiny, itchy wax.
With so much uncertainty surrounding the descent, and even more surrounding the approach, Dave knew that scouting the route would be essential. Using tidbits of information he’d been able to amass, his goal was to find a rocky corridor on the western flank that led up to the summit plateau, and to then drop down the north side of Williamson via The Giant’s Steps couloir. The key was learning exactly which gully on the west would share the same col as the couloir on the north. The previous year a colleague of Dave’s had told him about a west gully route he’d climbed that shared access to the north face from a notch on the summit ridge, but, he remarked, “there’s no way [the north couloir] is skiable. It’s straight down!” Dave relished the challenge.
April 17th was the date of a reconnaissance mission. Braun hiked up Shepherd Creek with his camera and returned to his desk for the week with photos that he programmed as his screen saver. The line beckoned to him each day from his computer screen.
The following weekend Braun headed out solo, gambling that he wouldn’t need a rope. A 6,500-foot hike to Shepherd Pass put him in plain view of the west face, but it was not obvious which of the myriad gullies would lead to the north-facing couloir. He descended from the pass down to the base of the north wall in Williamson Creek, reasoning that a classic approach from the bottom straight up the couloir might be the best route, after all. The view from the bottom, however, was not conclusive. There were simply too many choices, and none that definitely went to the top. Twice he climbed up couloirs that ended in granite cliffs, barring him from the summit. Neither couloir was the coveted line he had viewed so many times from the road.
For his third attempt in as many weeks, he managed to hitch a ride to the trailhead, but the ride left with his boots. Foiled again.
On May 24th Dave finally put all the pieces of the puzzle together. Armed with perfect weather and new details on the exact location of this western gully, Dave Braun and partner Eric McGrath, were finally poised to begin the first descent of The Giant’s Steps.
Although Dave wouldn’t readily admit it, the 6,500-vertical foot schlep up to advanced base camp (Shepherd Pass) is classic macho pack stuff—a slow, sweaty twelve-hour grind. He and Eric made camp in time to watch the sun’s rays race over the classic Sierra High Route, bathing Mount Tyndal in stunning spring alpenglow.
In the morning they skied to the base of the west face and began kicking steps up a corridor of hard snow, the one and only route from the west that intersected with the elusive Giant’s Steps Couloir. Two hours later he made it to the col, where a mere foot of sharp granite separated the two couloirs and determined whether snow fell on the north or the west flank of Williamson’s huge shoulders.
The couloir itself is actually four separate pitches. The first two are flanked by high rock walls of granite all the way down to their ends, ending in a frozen, cresting wave to skier’s right. A fall here means being flushed over a cliff. From Hwy 395, however, “it looks like a hypodermic needle”, says Dave.
The entire run starts at about 14,100 feet and drops 3,100 vertical feet. The first pitch begins with a clean, intimidating 54° headwall. After a couple of turns it mellows to 50°, then 45°, before ending abruptly at the first “giant step.” A cliff yawned below while Dave and Eric kicked steps over the cornice and on to the second pitch.
Once atop the first step, with his skis safely underfoot, Dave beheld an even narrower slot in the face. It had no headwall but its average pitch was steeper, at about 46°. The third pitch—a jagged hallway of steep, narrow twists and turns, eventually opened up to the final pitch of wide 38° fun. Unlike a traditionally shaped couloir whose crux is at the top, Dave recalled that the exposed breaks in the line kept the skiing exciting. Making the third descent, this writer didn’t relax until the lower apron.
Most of the notorious East Side lines require a skier/rider who feels comfortable on 50° slopes, an upper level skill to be sure. But the ascents rarely require more than fair weather and bomber snow, both common in the Sierra Nevada. Perhaps the good ol’ boys responsible for many of the East Side’s first descents knew that the bragging rights wouldn’t stand up to a traditional mountaineer’s standards of profound risk. Routes like The Giant’s Steps, however, with its huge approach and hungry cliffs are challenges more akin to mountaineering than glisse alpinism. Perhaps this “last great problem” of the East Side will herald the beginning of bolder mountaineering descents deeper into the Sierra Nevada.