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| Length - 21 Days |
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| Cost - 2:2 $18,400; 1:2 $25,600 |
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| Max Ratio - 2:2 |
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| Capacity - 2 |
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Location Alaska Range |
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| Same as West Rib plus ability to climb 65 degree ice, consistently follow 5.8 rock, and previous high altitude climbing experience to 20,000 feet. |
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Denali Expedition - Cassin Ridge |

The south face of Denali with the Cassin Ridge in the center.
The West Rib rises from the foreground on the far left. Bradford Washburn |

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DENALI NATIONAL PARK RATES AAI #1 GUIDE CONCESSION APPLICANT
The Mountain
Denali offers one of the world's greatest
expedition challenges. While it is exceeded in elevation
by peaks in South America and Asia, its arctic
environment with extreme temperatures and severe
storms and its great height above the Alaskan
plain make it a severe test of personal strength, team
work, and logistics. No peak in the world has greater
relief: Denali rises 17,000 feet above its surrounding
plain, Kilimanjaro 14,000 feet, and Everest 13,000 feet.
Vertical elevation gain on Everest from the normal
base camp for the South Col route is 11,000 feet; from our
landing spot on the Kahiltna Glacier Denali's summit
rises another 13,000 feet.
In the context of technical climbing skills, the
mountain offers quite varied lines of ascent, from
several which require intermediate alpine mountaineering
skills to others which rank among the world's most
difficult alpine routes. By any route, however, the
mountain requires great physical effort, skillful and
cautious mountaineering and expedition practices, and
patient acclimatization and climbing over a three-week
period. We have chosen the West Buttress, West Rib, and
Cassin Ridge for our ascents of Denali. All three have
more limited objective dangers than other challenging
routes on the mountain, and together they offer three
distinct levels of technical challenge. The West Buttress
requires intermediate level mountaineering skills; the West Rib is more difficult and includes sections with
sustained climbing on exposed 55-degree faces; and the
Cassin Ridge is very challenging, with 65-degree hard ice,
mixed climbing on steep ground, and rock to 5.7. In
addition to appropriate technical skills, all routes
require winter backcountry experience in very cold
conditions and top physical conditioning.
The AAI Approach
As in other parts of the world, AAI expeditions in
Alaska are run with small groups of climbers who have
carefully prepared for their objective. The Institute
takes a team approach to its climbs, and expedition
members are expected to take responsibility for
themselves and a share of responsibility for the
overall operation of the expedition. We do not accept
climbers who are only minimally prepared and experienced
and who need to be “hauled” up and down the
mountain. Trying to push ill-prepared climbers up
the peak is what keeps so many guided and unguided groups
from succeeding on Denali.
The Institute gives its clients careful and detailed
counsel in their preparations for climbing
objectives, and when appropriate, has them first achieve
intermediate goals to fully prepare. Climbs on Denali
obviously involve many factors that we cannot control,
among them temperature, wind, snowfall, and changeable
climbing conditions. The key to success therefore is
doing an excellent job working on those areas that a
climber can do something about: skill in dealing with
cold conditions, skill in climbing at an appropriate
technical level, and personal conditioning. To have
abilities in these areas well developed and then to
combine them with a carefully designed and guided
itinerary is the most direct line to safety and success.
AAI expeditions enjoy a rate of safety and success
rarely matched by other teams. With well prepared
climbers, we do not have to rely on perfect conditions
in order to move. Able to remain poised high on the
mountain in poor conditions, our teams often make
successful summit bids in small windows of good weather
when other teams are out of position. AAI doesn't pretend
to guarantee good health, good weather, or success on
these expeditions, but we are committed to building
strong teams and creating high potential for safe and
successful climbs. The average individual success rate on
Denali is 54% overall and 59% in guided groups other
than AAI. The Institute's success rate for individuals
for the last nine years is 76% and for expeditions it is
83%.
AAI has the highest level of commitment to
environmental protection and restoration, and on all
expeditions and instructional programs we teach and
follow Leave No Trace ethics and practices for travel,
camping, and climbing. The Institute has been a leader in
the conscientious use of wilderness environments,
including both remote and popular areas of Denali
and the Alaska Range. Each year the National Park Service
presents "Denali Pro" awards to individuals who
have made major contributions to protecting the mountain.
Twenty AAI guides and clients have had the honor of
receiving this highest Denali National Park and Preserve
award since its inception four years ago.
With regard to expedition processes, we make five to
seven camps as we climb alpine style, moving all camps
higher as we go and leaving none established above or
below. It is not uncommon for temperatures high on the
mountain to fall as low as -30F, but at lower
elevations daytime temperatures on the glacier can reach
as high as 70F, so there we sometimes sleep in the day
and ferry loads at night when temperatures are between
0F and 15F. The night's cold improves conditions under
foot, and we still have adequate light because of the
extreme northern latitude. Double carries are done during
the first part of the expedition to ease the work and to
help with acclimatization.
All expeditions begin with a meeting and orientation
in Anchorage. We spend one night there, then travel by
van the next morning to the small town of Talkeetna.
There we repack our equipment, meet our ski plane pilots,
and as soon as possible, make the beautiful flight to the
Kahiltna Glacier at 7300 feet. Soon after our arrival and
a review of glacier travel procedures, we begin moving to
our first camp.
Cassin Ridge Expedition

The lower part of the Cassin viewed from our 11,000' camp on the Northeast Fork of the Kahiltna Glacier.
John Kear
The Cassin Ridge has become one of the most
sought-after big mountain alpine climbs in the world.
There are few routes that follow such a beautiful and
continuous line up 9000 feet of challenging granite
and ice that end right below the highest point in North
America. We approach the route via the Northeast Fork of
the Kahiltna Glacier, continuing past the toe of the West Rib to the base of the Cassin Ridge in the basin at
12,000 feet. After several days of acclimatization while
based at a bergschrund camp, we begin the ascent by
tackling what many climbers consider the most demanding
part of the route the Japanese Couloir. Twelve
full pitches of 60 to 65-degree hard ice with occasional
mixed rock climbing lead to the crest of the ridge at
13,400 feet and the first bivouac on the narrow Cassin
Ledge.
The next day involves several pitches of mixed
climbing to reach the base of a 1500-foot ice rib, which
we ascend in nine pitches of steep, rising traverses on
ice and snow. We finish the rib at the toe of a small
glacier and there we are able to establish a comfortable
camp in a large crevasse. After a rest day we climb to
the top of the glacier where we are able to bivy deep in
a narrow bergschrund at the foot of the first rock band
at 14,300 feet.
The first rock band has both mixed and pure rock
pitches up to 5.7 in difficulty. We are on very steep
ground for 1000 feet; with good protection, comfortable
belay stances, and high quality rock, this face climb is
very exhilarating. Higher up the terrain eases back to
steep snow climbing, and at about 15,800 feet we dig into
an exposed snow slope for our camp at the base of the
second rock band. On that section we encounter more
challenging mixed climbing and some easier rock pitches
that take us to the end of the most difficult part of the
route at 17,000 feet. Our exposure to this point has been
steadily increasing: to our left and right the ridge
drops away abruptly to the cliffs of the Southwest and
South Faces. Either way it is about 5000 feet to the
glaciers below.
Above 17,000 feet our climbing takes us over
alternating moderate and easy terrain until we eventually
reach our final challenge, a 400-foot, 65-degree ice
face. Above that we reach the clearly defined summit
ridge, which in just fifteen minutes, leads us to our
final step of ascent and to the summit of North America.
On our descent via the West Buttress route, we are able
to enjoy the scenic west side of the mountain as well as
distant views of the Cassin. This route is one of the
world's classics; it is very challenging and offers
technical and aesthetic rewards from beginning to end.
Flight Information
You will need to arrange your travel schedule so that you can attend the mandatory expedition orientation and gear check with guides at the hotel at 2pm, the day BEFORE the scheduled start date of the trip. Your return flight home should be no earlier than two full days after the trip ends.
Program Cost Inclusions
Inclusions: Ski plane flights to and from the glacier; guide fees and instruction; meals while in the mountains; tentage and group cooking equipment; group climbing equipment; mechanical ascenders; custom mountain sleds.
Exclusions: Transportation to and from Talkeetna (from Anchorage to Talkeetna one-way is $85); food and lodging except on the glacier; rescue and evacuation costs; national park fees; baggage, accident, rescue, and trip cancellation insurances; gratuities to guides; personal equipment.
AAI is an
authorized concessioner of Denali National Park.
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Follow Up Programs
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| Denali Expedition - West Buttress |
| 21 Days |
Intermediate |
Alaska Range |
May - July |
| Over the course of 21 days, we establish 4 camps ranging from 7,800 to 17,200 feet on the West Buttress of the tallest mountain in North America, Denali. |
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| Denali Expedition - West Rib |
| 22 Days |
Difficult |
Alaska Range |
May - June |
| This is a beautiful three-mile-long ridge with a 9000-foot vertical rise. The Rib is a very attractive challenge for strong intermediate and advanced alpinists heading for the top of North America. |
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American Alpine Institute (AAI) |
1515 12th Street Bellingham, WA 98225 info@aai.cc |
2011 American Alpine Institute, Ltd. All Rights Reserved
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