2005/07/02 - San Luis  
  ID: 2284 Author: Deborah Atkinson Start Date: 7/2/05   End Date:    
     
  I was hopeful Andrea Jacso would ask for guest status for this one, but Ferenc asked me to write the trip report. He’ll likely be focusing his translation energy on the Wilsons, and Andrea is committed to composing a version of San Luis in her native tongue. I hope I can capture the magic of her first 14er here.

Brett and I had just finished Ride the Rockies. Ferenc has been cycling at least three days a week and climbing as many peaks as he can on weekends before he leaves the country again next month. Andrea, on the other hand, full-time mother of four, had just returned from two weeks at close to sea level in Hungary. She doesn't cycle, run or anything that would prime her for a trip like this. She said the highest elevation her feet had ever taken her was about 2,000 feet.

All four of us discussed potential peaks for Andrea's first climb for a couple of months and finally picked San Luis because it would be exciting for all of us – a new mountainscape and hopefully moose-laden territory. Hopefully, it would be a peak both she and I could successfully get up.

Our drive to the trailhead from Denver took only five hours, thanks to Nick's excellent directions. (Thanks, Nick!) We hit the fairly level trail about 5:30 a.m. and kept our eyes sharply on the beaver ponds the first couple of miles for any signs of movement. Alas, breathtakingly designed grassed terraces sporting occasional tufts of wildflowers were all the ponds would display for us.

The weather was gorgeous the entire day. The wind was ferocious a few times, but never debilitating. A few puffy white clouds gathered distantly during the early afternoon, and smoke from the Utah fires blurred what might have been an excellent view of the San Juans, but the 10% chance of showers forecast played out in real life with a few scattered drops casting rings upon on the windswept surfaces of beaver ponds and Dome Lake on the drive out a the end of the day.

Language barriers make spending time with the Jacsos a continual adventure. Never a cliché moment! As we began noticeably gaining elevation, Andrea delighted us with her tales of wildlife sighted in Yellowstone… including a prairie wolf! As we passed by high altitude gardens of sky pilot, columbine and dandelions, she asked the names of the colorful blossoms and described European equivalents. Apparently, forget-me-nots have long stems in Hungary.

Andrea began feeling the altitude as we cleared treeline, and I was soon to follow. Ferenc and Brett could have easily left us behind to sweep up Organ and still beat us to the summit of San Luis, but they patiently held our pace and eventually even our packs. Ferenc really, really, really wanted Organ. He actually drooled when we passed under the north buttress on the lower of San Luis’ three shoulders. But, he explained, as if convincing himself, he couldn’t leave Andrea. He didn’t want her to get discouraged.

Knowing Andrea’s fear of heights, I worried she might want to turn back when we left the Organ/San Luis saddle to begin the traverse of the mountainside. To experienced mountaineers, this is not steep at all, and what we were doing was not climbing but merely walking. Andrea, however, has always been very uncomfortable with exposure. What would this do to her?

“I’ve made it this far,” she bravely announced. “I’m not turning back.”

Ferenc kept enthusiastically churning out, “Only 300 meters to go!” “Only 200 more meters!” “We’re almost there! Only 100 more meters!” Somehow, hearing how many meters of elevation remain as opposed to the same distance in feet seemed to make the hardest part go so much faster!

When I lost sight of Ferenc and Andrea circumnavigating the false summits, I assumed Andrea must have turned back. My heart sank. But then minutes later, I caught a glimpse of the two of them again between two of the lower sub-summits. She’d made it! She’d conquered her fear!!!

Atop the summit, Andrea high-fived me and collapsed into Ferenc’ lap for a promised 30-minute nap. But she never slept. She excitedly bubbled about remembering this moment forever.

“Now I know why Feri likes to write trip reports,” she exclaimed while drinking in the view from 14,014. “Now I understand why he wants to do this every weekend.”

So, will she do it again?

“Not a chance!” she moaned as she laid her head back to rest. “This was very hard for me.”

I told her it was hard for me, too, just for different reasons.

“What was your first peak like,” she asked, intent and sincere. “Was it this hard for you?”

Yikes. I felt cornered. I didn’t want to give her any reason to NOT seek another peak. I hesitated before answering.

“Longs was my first.” I almost winced as I whispered the answer.

“Oh.” She closed her eyes as if she was allowing fatigue to seize her soul, but then she let out one incredibly visible sour grimace. “I’m never climbing another mountain.”

Yeah, that’s what I said, too. For a whole 48 hours!

photos are here