Ryan and Redwood were already there when I arrived, so we loaded up our gear and headed east. We arrived at Snoqualmie Pass without incident, and parked in the Summit West parking lot. We then suited up and headed back under I-90, and clipped in and headed up into the woods on an established track soon thereafter. We were heading for Commonwealth Basin which was exciting since I had never been here, and I always like to expand my repertoire of backcountry ski options. Redwood had skied there 8 years ago so we had some idea of where to go, but other than that it was a bit of an exploration mission. The terrain started out with some gentle climbing on a track that had been packed in pretty well by snowshoers and other skiers, here is Redwood approaching a log crossing over Commonwealth Creek:
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Eventually the set track went off in a different direction than we wanted to head, and we set about breaking trail up the west side of the west fork of Commonwealth Creek. We were skirting just under the cliffs of Guye Peak, and in a few spots we ran into some steep little sections where we had to remove our skis and fight our way up. Here is a shot of Redwood and Ryan with skis off and battling their way up the deep snow:
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After some more climbing we popped out onto the saddle just north of Guye Peak, where it was nice and sunny and we had a good view across towards Alpental. We then continued north to Cave Ridge, here are Redwood and Ryan taking in the view on Cave Ridge:
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From there we continued along the ridge towards Snoqualmie Mountain. At around 5600 feet we hit our designated turnaround time of 2:30pm, and skied off the ridge back down into Commonwealth Basin. We had decided to head down a different way than we came up, and were crossing our fingers that we wouldn't run into any cliffs that would bar our passage. The slope we skied down was north facing with pretty sparse tree coverage, so there wasn't much of the crust that was present on the other aspects and the skiing was pretty fun. Here are Ryan and Redwood enjoying the powder:
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Eventually the trees thickened and we ran into some pretty steep sections where we had to deploy our combat skiing skills as we continued to fight our way down the hill in tree to tree combat. We finally emerged onto a boulder field at the bottom that made for some easier progress until we were forced into a creek drainage that made for some more "interesting" skiing. By this time it was also starting to get dark which added to the challenge, but eventually we found our way back onto an established track and were able to follow that back out to the road, getting back to the car just before 6pm in complete darkness.
Here is the GPS track from our outing, it ended up being about 13km long with just under 3000 feet of cumulative elevation gain:
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