ANGELL PEAK ELKHORN RANGE | OREGON | UNITED STATES
Summary | Elevation: 8,600 ft

ANGELL PEAK
This is a nice peak that is about an hour skin in from Anthony Lakes. There are several shots to ski on the north side that drop down into Angell Basin, or for a more adventurous day drop in to one of the tight chutes on the south side and then skin back around to Anthony Lakes via the Crawfish Lake basin or down to the road through the Black Lake basin. The shots on the north side are all about 600-800' vertical and somewhere around 45 degrees.
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Routes
| Image | Name | Hardest Difficulty | Steepest Section | Aspect | Skiable Vert | AVG Ascent Time |
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Vert Tracker
Gsanders: January 2, 2010 Uphill: 2,800 ft. | Downhill: 2,800 ft.
Some old vert from a trip in Angell Basin. If you live in the northwest and are on the way to the Rockies consider a stopover to ski Angell Basin and/or Anthony Lakes ski area. Good routes, nice sno...[view] Already have a blog about this area? Link to it here.Be the first to enter an external reference for this area!
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Guide Books

People die skiing in the backcountry every year. Avalanches, crevasses, trees, human error, weather, tree wells, rabid sasquatches, among other things can kill you in an instant. Use this guide at your own risk, we are not responsible for any wanker getting all wanked up in the wankin' backcountry. That being said, even the most experienced backcountry skier can get caught off guard. Take avalanche classes, carry a beacon, probe, shovel and avalung AND KNOW HOW TO USE THEM. Just because you buy them, doesn't mean you get magical powers of invincibility. Many people who own beacons have no clue how to operate them. More importantly than any gear you can buy, you need to know how to safely travel in avalanche terrain, minimize potential hazards, and interpret how weather affects the snowpack. This requires time and experience. Learn from others, be safe and courteous, and when in doubt go home and live to ski another day. The amount of snow needed to be dug up to rescue a buried victim, on average weighs right around an actual ton. In North America 25% of victims die from hitting trees, rocks, and other sharp unforgiving surfaces. It only takes one miscalculation to have the mountains kick your ass. Just because you see tracks or someone else skiing a line, does not mean you should ski it. Remember, individual actions affect all of us. Take care of each other out there, we are all on the same team.