Trip Ideas
Trips by Type
- Hiking Trips
- Skiing Trips
- Rock Climbing Trips
- Mountaineering Trips
- Kayaking Trips
- Car Free Trips
- Illegal Trips
Trips by Location
- North Shore
- Tri-Cities
- Squamish
- Whistler
- Duffey Lake
- Fraser Valley
- Coquihalla Summit
- Washington State
- Nearby islands
Guidebooks
See the guidebooks page.
Grading
The usual system for rating a trip's difficulty has two components. One rates how strenuous a trip is, and the other rates technical difficulty. The technical rating is based on the Yosemite Decimal System, extended to include skiing.
For physical difficulty
A: easy - up to 5 hours of travel per day
B: moderate - 5 to 8 hours of travel per day
C: hard - 8 to 12 hours of travel per day, heavy loads, etc
D: extreme - more than 12 hours of travel per day, heavy loads, rough terrain, etc.
For technical difficulty
1: on-trail hiking or skiing - good trails
2: off trail hiking, rock scrambling, skiing moderate slopes, straightforward glacier travel. Extremely rugged (north shore) hiking trails may be included here.
3: easy climbing (usually not roped, but pulling on handholds required), skiing steep slopes (up to 30 degrees or so), glacier travel in broken terrain.
4: moderate climbing, usually with a rope. Difficult high mountain skiing.
5: technical rock climbing, extreme skiing
6: aid climbing
Sometimes two technical difficulty grades are used, where a trip has a short difficult section but it mostly at the easier grade. (see Black Tusk Example Below)
Examples
- Black Tusk B2(3)
- Wedge Mountain North Arete C3
- Mount Baker, Coleman-Deming route B2
- Mount Seymour Hike A1
- Alpha Mountain, east ridge C3(5)