Denali Report For May 2, 2025

This is the Denali Report for May 2, 2025

As of last week, there were 913 climbers registered to climb Denali this season and 26 registered to attempt Mt. Foraker.  At that time, according to the National Park Service, there were no active teams on the mountain. But that’s about to radically change.

Base Camp Manager, Gabby Faurot, had intended to fly in to the Kahiltna Glacier this week, but poor weather conditions has kept her from flying into the range.

The National Park Service Ranger Team took advantage of a good weather window in April to fly in some of their gear, stashing it at base camp. The first ranger patrol will fly in when weather allows. 

The first patrol has the arduous task of packing gear up to 14,000 ft and setting up the communications and medical camps for the season. An important part of the task is acclimatizing along the way, so the team will take seven to ten days to reach the designated site.

The Talkeetna-based ranger team has been preparing for the season for a while. NPS Ranger, Joey McBrayer, describes what the team been doing to get ready.

“We just finished up our training cycle. We work these long stints of; six days of rigging training, where we’re doing technical rope work, and then we’ll spend three, uh four days doing medical training, where, you know, we’re working through our protocols and working with our med provider.  And then, towards the end, once the helicopter’s on contract, we do our aviation training. That includes just our basic ground school to stepping out of a helicopter when all the skids aren’t fully on the ground, and then also our short-haul program where we actually suspend a ranger on a long-line and then do rope work with that.”

The National Park Service ranger teams will spend between 23-24 days each in the Alaska Range this year.

You’ve been listening to the Denali Report.

For KTNA, I’m Colleen Love