Mt Whitcombe is a significant climb from any direction, being the highest peak on or west of the Main Divide in the region. Even the easier routes from the west, across the Leeb Glacier or via Snow Dome, should not be taken for granted. Several parties have had difficulty getting off the peak on this side in mist and poor weather.
Slabs tilted to the west and crevassed glaciers perched above huge bluffs characterise the western side of the Whitcombe Massif. From this side, the peaks are usually approached from the Bracken Snowfield, Evans River, or Vane Stream and the Hazard Glacier. The Buttress makes a fine sight from Smyth Hut, with ice-serac teeth crowning parts of it.
Routes
| Reference | Title | Grade | Length | Pro | Quality | Alert | Operations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ln | LnLeviathan, 5 | 5 | 1300m | ||||
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Also known as the Ramsay Face. See
This was the first winter ascent of the Ramsay Face of the Whitcombe massif and, given good |
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| OR | OROriginal Ramsay face Route, 5 | 5 | 0m | ||||
From the lower reaches of the Ramsay moraine the route takes a fairly prominent buttress |
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| MP | MPMiddle Peak Route | 0m | |||||
From the Ramsay Glacier, take the obvious loose rock rib leading directly to the middle peak |
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| NE | NENorth East Ridge, 2+ | 2+ | 0m | ||||
The original route on Mt Whitcombe was first climbed on what was planned as a bad weather |
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| LWs | LWsLow Peak, West side, 2- | 2- | 0m | ||||
Accessed from the head of the Lornty Glacier. |
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| MWs | MWsMiddle Peak, West side, 2- | 2- | 0m | ||||
Accessed from the head of the Leeb Glacier. The first ascent party approached from Erewhon |
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| LG | LGHigh Peak, From Vane Stream via Leeb Glacier, 2- | 2- | 0m | ||||
Above the Essex flat in Vane Stream, continue on the true left. Go a little way up the Wilberg |
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| vSD | vSDFrom Evans River via Snow Dome, 2- | 2- | 0m | ||||
From J34 374757 / BW18 275 140, head east up a dry gravel stream to the 1800-metre contour and |
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| NF | NFNorth Face, 3- | 3- | 0m | ||||
Climbed when the face was snow-covered. Begin in the left-hand snow cone and climb steep |
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Images
in association with the Canterbury Mountaineering Club