Spectacular traverse

June 2014

Read more from

June 2014

The sun sets as a climber walks the final section of the Crater Lake traverse. Photo: Fraser Crichton

Crater Lake traverse, Tongariro National Park

A traverse of Ruapehu’s Crater Lake is a spectacular and unique alpine trip involving an arête and an exposed face on the North Island’s highest volcano.

It’s a challenging day’s climbing – perfect for those graduates of an alpine instruction course who are looking for a first climb.

It’s a hard slog from Whakapapa Ski Field to Ruapehu’s Summit Plateau and the lake. The circumnavigation is best done anticlockwise, beginning from Dome equipment shed where gentle snow slopes beneath Paretetaitonga are followed to a point below 2797m Tahurangi from where a broad ridge leads down to the sulphurous smelling Crater Lake outflow. This is where Ruapehu’s periodic lahars flow from, but the crossing is normally straightforward.

A devilishly narrow arête stretches ahead from here; the smell of brimstone and sulphur wafting overhead. Falling from the arête would mean a tumble into the lake and the exposure is heightened by the dark shadow of the lahar-tracked Whangaehu River falling away to the right and the Desert Road 1500m below.

At the end of the arête there’s a steep descent to a col below Pyramid Peak, 2645m. In poor snow conditions this can be a noxious scramble of a descent on loose scoria and rubble. From the col traverse right onto the steep, shaded south face of Pyramid Peak. A rope and some ice screws may be welcome here – blue ice sticks out close to a rock ramp and the slope kicks back steeper for a pitch. It’s not dissimilar from the feeling you get on one of the big faces down south; intimidating and uncertain. The final pitch zigzags up a steep ramp and out into the sun on the summit of Pyramid Peak.

From the summit a long ridge with a red tower of rock halfway along leads back towards the equipment shed and the completion of the traverse.

Fraser Crichton

 

About the author

Oliver

More From Waypoints

Related Topics

Similar Articles

Getting Technical

The three trips that changed my life: Celia Hogan

Five ways to Lake Angelus

Trending Now

Green Point Hut, Gamack Conservation Area

The possibilities of packrafting

Every Tararua hut reviewed and ranked

The Tararua’s forgotten traverse

Leaning Lodge, Rock and Pillar Conservation Area

Subscribe!
Each issue of Wilderness celebrates Aotearoa’s great outdoors — written and photographed with care, not algorithms.Subscribe and help keep our wild stories alive.

Join Wilderness. You'll see more, do more and live more.

Already a subscriber?  to keep reading. Or…

34 years of inspiring New Zealanders to explore the outdoors. Don’t miss out — subscribe today.

Your subscriber-only benefits:

All this for as little as $6.75/month.

1

free articles left this month.

Already a subscriber? Login Now