South Gully, Narao Peak, 2974 metres - June 6th, 2024
Synopsis: 4 stars, South Gully is a 50 degree couloir on the NE side of Narao Peak and proved to be a great day out. The approach was straightforward but interesting, the area below the gully was one I hadn't been into and offered a great view of Popes Peak and surrounding mountains. Fun, straightforward climbing up the gully as we had supportive snow the whole way. I now realize that you can see much of the lower part of the route and bowl itself from highway 1 east of Lake O'Hara
Paul and I parked by the western end of the old closed highway 1A from Lake O'Hara to Lake Louise and were heading east at 4:40 am. A quick trip on blacktop to the Ross Lake turn off and headed towards Ross Lake. It was nice and cool as we actually had an overnight freeze.
At Ross Lake we mistakenly took the trail heading to the ridge route on Narao and back tracked to the Lake itself. The correct trail is a bit faint and follows the edge of Ross Lake around to the far side. We then gained elevation through snow wherever possible followed by fairyly easy ground. Below treeline we did get sucked into being too far climbers left and bushwacked a bit to gain the trail, Gaia has a correct trail through this area.
Once the bowl is gained it's pretty straightforward to the base of the route. It was great to be in an area that I hadn't visited before. Pope's peak and the north couloir was straight ahead and an interesting view of Mount Whyte to the left. Well into the bowl we veered off the Divide Mountain Trail and headed towards the NE slopes of Narao.
At this stage the decision was whether to follow the bench feature to the north and rejoin the old 1A or take a trail straight down to the Lake O'Hara road. We chose the latter and my sense is that it wasn't the best option. I wouldn't recommend it as the trail get's very faint and was slow going. Having said that eventually we broke out on the Lake O'Hara road and followed it back to the car.
All told it was a 13 1/2 hour day with 1320 metres of climbing, a great outing in a great setting. In the right conditions I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it.