
This week the winds that have plagued the Colorado Front Range for weeks finally died, and the avalanche conditions guarding the approach to the Longs Peak area settled to "moderate." I woke on Wednesday, checked the forecast, and decided to declare a "no powder, no wind day." I'd been waiting for the chance to do the mixed route Martha on Mt. Lady Washington for a couple of years, but partners and conditions had never lined up. Now I had no partner but conditions were excellent; I decided to celebrate President's Day, two days late, on my own.

Martha is a route that was probably climbed 30 years ago, but only recently became popular, thanks to Internet spray on
Mountain Project. It's a long, moderate mixed climb on the south face of Lady Washington, looking straight at the Diamond across Chasm Lake. The setting couldn't be more spectacular.

After a two-hour walk on well-packed trails, I reached Chasm Lake only to find that Martha had no ice. But there seemed to be enough snow to cover the rubbly low-angle sections, and I knew there wasn't supposed to be any rock climbing harder than low fifth-class, so I decided to head up anyway. It was good fun: steep snow interspersed with short rock climbing cruxes, most of which were easy to climb with gloved hands; I seldom needed the single ice tool I had unstrapped from my pack.

At the top, I sat down to bask in sun that was rapidly being obscured by the next incoming storm, gaped at the Diamond across the chasm, and then slogged to the 13,200-foot-plus summit of Mt. Lady Washington, another place I'd never been. With soft packed snow on the trails, the walk/skid out was a cruise, and I was back at the car by 3 pm, in time to return a few calls and emails. Another workday well utilized!