Alpine Climbing

【Deep Dive Chronicle】Central Buttress of Ichinokura-sawa: A Day After the Exam, Onto the Wall

北村 智明

June at Mt. Tanigawa, Ichinokura-sawa. On a morning when the tension from my exam still lingered in my hands, K and I stood gazing up at the Central Buttress (Chūō Kante). A single day of clear weather between the rainy season spells illuminated our fleeting freedom. With each touch of rock, I felt the shadows of everyday life receding.

Part One – The Day After the Exam

Saturday, June 17th. As I left the national examination venue, the sky was cloudless and brilliant. The forecast for the next day was flawless. We couldn’t let this opportunity slip away.

Busy with exam preparation, I had left even the planning documents to K. Despite the short notice, he readily agreed. The exam results came back perfect on the preliminary scoring. Now I could head to the mountains with a clear conscience.

At 10 PM, I met up with K locally. We parked at the Information Center parking lot and pitched our tent.

The next morning, I woke at 3:30 AM. We departed at 4:00, driving through the dim roads and reaching the Ichinokura-sawa confluence by 5:00. For June, the snow fields were surprisingly scarce. We took the approach trail. At a point where we could access the snow field, we started the approach, and it became a snow field walk to the base of the Tail Ridge.

"Climbers approaching Ichinokura-sawa via snow field in early June, Mt. Tanigawa"

Around 7:30, we passed Tsuitate-iwa (Shield Rock) and arrived at the base of the Central Buttress. A climber from another party said:

“I heard there was a fall accident on the Central Buttress yesterday.”

For a moment, the air grew heavy. But having come this far, we couldn’t turn back. We yielded to parties arriving after us and prepared our gear.

Though the weather was clear, temperatures were high. We carried one more bottle of water than usual. K would lead the odd-numbered pitches, and I would take the evens. At 7:44 AM, K started on the first pitch.

Part Two – Ascending the Wall

Pitch 1, Grade III+, 40 meters. K traversed then moved onto the face. His movements were stiff. I fumbled with the radio operation—we hadn’t found our rhythm yet. Following, I found the traverse frightening. The face was wet, probably remnants from yesterday’s rain. I placed my feet carefully, testing each hold as I climbed.

"Climber on wet granite traverse, first pitch of Central Buttress, Ichinokura-sawa"

Pitch 2, Grade III, 50 meters. I climbed the gentle face and diverged from the concave route. Here we entered the direct ascent route of the Central Buttress. Finding no existing protection, I used thin shrubs for intermediate anchors.

 "Climber entering direct ascent route on Central Buttress, using shrubs for protection"

Pitch 3, Grade IV, 40 meters. From a band onto the buttress. Not difficult, but once again I had no choice but to use thin shrubs for intermediate protection.

"Alpine climber on buttress section with sparse protection, Central Buttress route"

Pitch 4, Grade III, 50 meters. That buttress clearly visible from the South Ridge terrace. A comfortable pitch with pitons dotting the rock wall. I climbed using these at key points for anchors.

Pitch 5, Grade IV, 30 meters. From a couloir (runze) into a chimney.

“It’s wet and my shoes are slipping!”

Granite becomes treacherous when wet. The wet couloir interior was hammered with pitons. The tension was palpable. It took time.

 "Climber in wet granite couloir with heavy piton protection, technical chimney section"

Pitch 6, Grade III, 40 meters. Face climbing upward-left, then traversing right along a band. The rock was friable. The moment I grabbed a hold, rock peeled away. My heart leaped. I proceeded with extreme caution.

 "Climber traversing friable granite face with careful movement, Mt. Tanigawa alpine route"

Pitch 7, Grade V, 30 meters. The crux section. A face and corner crack. Movement was deliberate. Slippery, with fine holds. Still, K free-climbed through it. At the crux, I didn’t hesitate to aid climb (A0).

"Grade V crux pitch on Central Buttress, corner crack and face climbing on Mt. Tanigawa"

Pitch 8, Grade IV, 30 meters. Slab climbing upward-left, then into a couloir-like section. Surprisingly poor conditions. The belay station was on a narrow terrace.

"Climber on slab section leading to couloir, narrow terrace belay station"

Pitch 9, the final pitch, led by K. Grade III, 40 meters. From a grassy concave section onto the face.

"Final pitch of Central Buttress starting from grassy concave section, Mt. Tanigawa"

The line seemed different from the topo illustration. Instead of going straight up, we moved upward-left. Perhaps because the route differed, the face was far worse than Grade III suggested.

At 9:55 AM, we reached the rappel point with massive amounts of abandoned cord. The climb was complete. Relief flooded through me.

Part Three – Descent, and Then

From the Eboshi no Kata (Hood Shoulder), we began the free-hanging rappel. As my body floated in space, a mix of slight fear and liberation crossed through me. After landing, we traversed to the opposite bank along the couloir. Carefully discerning the boundary between grassy sections and brush, we proceeded with careful route-finding.

"Rappel descent point with abandoned cord at Eboshi shoulder, Ichinokura-sawa descent"

From the Direct Route’s terminus, we moved laterally through trackless brush. Beyond that, at a rock section, we found an anchor point leading from the South Ridge to the border ridge. Descending about five meters from there, we reached the descent point of the sixth couloir.

From there, we repeated rappels as on the South Ridge. When we descended from the South Ridge second pitch terminus to the terrace, trouble struck.

The rope had snagged on a rock horn at the first pitch.

Pulling did nothing. Fatigue seeped into my body as frustration built. It was past 4 PM.

“We’ll have to climb back up.”

Bonus lap on South Ridge pitch one. We re-tied the rope and climbed back up to retrieve the snagged line. About an hour lost.

Finally recovering the rope, we descended again. The last rappel brought us back to the South Ridge terrace. 7:39 PM. The sky was sinking into dusk.

At 7:56 PM, we returned to the Ichinokura-sawa confluence. Switching on headlamps, we walked toward the trailhead. At 9:05 PM, we arrived back at the Information Center parking lot.

We pitched our tent in the same spot as the previous night. Once again, we’d worked overtime.

Inside the tent, K and I laid our exhausted bodies down. Lured by fair weather to challenge the Central Buttress of Ichinokura-sawa. Despite harboring unease over the shadow of an accident, we cleared the crux and worked through the final trouble.

The exam was perfect. This climb, too, ended safely. That was enough.

The Tanigawa night was quiet.


[LOG SUMMARY]

  • Date: June 18, 2023 (Sunday)
  • Team: 2 members (with K)
  • Route: Central Buttress (Chūō Kante), Eboshi-zawa, Ichinokura-sawa, Mt. Tanigawa
  • Grade: Grade IV- (with Grade V pitch) – Based on Japanese Alpine Club Standard
  • Number of Pitches: 9 pitches
  • Weather: Clear skies
  • Accommodation: Tent camping at Tanigawa-dake Information Center parking lot
Download file: track-gm-5630054.gpx
Xからの読者コメントをお待ちしています。
ブログ更新の励みになります!
Facebookでのコメントをお待ちしています。
ブログ更新の励みになります!
ABOUT ME
北村智明
北村智明
登山ガイド
日本山岳ガイド協会認定登山ガイドステージ2。ガイド歴10年。東北マウンテンガイドネットワーク及び社会人山岳会に所属し、東北を拠点に全国の山域でガイド活動を展開。沢登り、アルパインクライミング、山岳スキー、アイスクライミング、フリークライミングと幅広い山行スタイルに対応。「稜線ディープダイブ」では、山行の記憶を物語として紡ぎ、技術と装備の選択を語る。
記事URLをコピーしました