Mount Denman

July 14-15, 2025

1991m

Powell River, BC

Mt. Denman might not be well-known internationally but is one of, if not the most sought-after objective in Powell River vicinity which is also known as the Qathet. The climbing circle in this area is rather small, but everybody knows the significance of Mt. Denman and it’s on everybody’s dream list. This peak also boasts over 1000 m prominence and as a result, it starts to catch attention from peak-baggers living in areas farther away. I had honestly never put in too much thoughts about Mt. Denman mostly because the access would require a private boat transfer, but I was always waiting for that “perfect oppourtunity” to come. Earlier in this summer the local climber Tyler Zakkour messaged me on Instagram asking if I’d be keen on Mt. Denman and his offer included providing the round trip boat transfers. Tyler was recommended by the local legend Jason Addy so I immediately prioritized making this trip happen. Both Tyler and I are almost indefinitely flexible about timing the weather window so the decision was eventually made for Monday/Tuesday, the first two days of this heat wave in mid July. I also managed to sell this trip to Erica so we would be taking the two ferries to Powell River on Sunday and crash in Tyler’s house for the night.

The plan was to climb the East Face from Daniels River which is a relatively new route detailed by Jason’s party in 2022. Jason did not manage to make the first ascent of it but the only source of “beta” was from his trip. This route has seen two documented ascents so likely hasn’t been climbed by more than a handful times anyway. The traditional South Ridge route that comes up from Forbes Bay requires a longer boat ride and a longer bushwhack/approach but has the benefit of being only 4th class. The East Face route has three short pitches rated at 5.5 so the downside was having to bring a rope and climbing gears. Nevertheless that was what Tyler was looking for so I agreed with the plan. I inquired Jason about some details about these climbing pitches so the final decision was to bring Erica’s 48m 8mm rope in addition to Tyler’s single rack and everybody would be bringing rock shoes. The rack and rock shoes of course turned out to become training weight as we managed to “scramble” the entire route without changing footwear. The East Face still has a gnarly approach that requires boating the entire way up Powell Lake, biking 8 km and bushwhacking the entire way up from the sea level, so Mt. Denman is an ordeal no matter what. I was actually looking forward to do a “west coast adventure” and this trip seemed like the one that would involve everything except for a river crossing. In retrospect we could have camped at the dock and do the entire route boat-to-boat as our round trip time minus camping was only 18 hours, but it was more enjoyable and definitely more scenic to camp up on the ridge for one night.

Erica and I left home on Sunday around 2 pm so we had less than 24 hours of resting between Mt. Odin and Mt. Denman. I was not fully physically recovered but when the weather window formed, we must go. I anticipated having to wait for multiple sails as it’s a sunny Sunday but we got to the Horseshoe Bay terminal at 3 pm and managed to get on the 3:10 pm ride without reservation. That was quite a sweet treat. The second ferry to Powell River went uneventfully and we showed up in Tyler’s house at 7:30 pm. Tyler was having a massive family barbeque dinner and kindly invited us to join, so we spent the rest of the evening there. We did the final sorting of gears and went to bed at around 11 pm. The next morning we left Tyler’s house at 6 am together with his dad Zak, the boat and three bikes. This was actually my first time fully participating the loading and unloading part of a boat-assisted expedition and as expected, it was far from “no brainer”. The water was quite choppy and the wind was cold, but 1 hour 15 minutes later we made to the head of Powell Lake, traversing around the west side of Goat Island. I got partially soaked from the water splashing. This lake is like a massive fjord with length exceeding Howe Sound.

Looking back at the North Shore Mountains from the first ferry
Erica with Diadem Mtn. behind
Mini the cat in Tyler’s house
Joining Tyler’s family for the dinner
Momo the other (much fatter) cat…
Mt. Baldy making a show as we wrapped around Goat Island
Me on the boat ride in. I would soon get splashed…
Boating up towards the head of Powell Lake
Unloading the packs and the bikes
Mt. Denman via East Face. GPX DL

The next leg of the expedition was biking 8 km up the Daniels Valley and Erica and I would be using the bikes borrowed from Tyler and his friend. Biking was never my expertise so I totally couldn’t figure out how to switch gears. As a result Tyler and Erica were nowhere seen and had to wait for me to catch up, cranking awkwardly on the lowest gear on a flat gravel road. Tyler had to teach me how to properly use this bike, but I eventually switched bike with Erica as her bike had that adjustable seat position similar to the old fatbike that I got from Matt Juhasz. We also made one navigation error missing a supposedly new turn-off and the result was having to push the bikes up a steep hill and adding 1 km to the biking distance. I think they had altered the logging roads in this valley because the new roads were nowhere to be seen on the satellite images that I had downloaded. The old (more straight) road had a wash-out that’s impassible by vehicular traffic, and had started to become overgrown. We correctly located the next turn-off and biked the rest of the way to the starting point with some gentle elevation gain. The altitude at the starting point is only 120 m so this 8 km ride was mostly flat. We then took a much-needed break before embracing the gnarly 1600-m bushwhacking.

Me and Tyler starting the bike ride
The FSR up in Daniels Valley, not far from where we ditched the bikes

Tyler led the way diving right into the bushes but he was too fast for Erica and I to follow. Tyler eventually opted to let me do the route-finding and followed from behind. We somehow decided to ascend parallel to Jason’s track but dealt with a shit ton amount of Devil’s Clubs and other types of thorny plants. I wasn’t aware that Jason’s route actually ascends the middle of a dry creek bed so did a lot more unnecessary bushwhacking. A few hundred meters higher we finally merged into that creek bed and cruised upwards to the point we were supposed to leave this creek for a diagonal traverse. This was where the shit show began. We did this traverse slightly above the most optional elevation band and encountered some gnarly old growth with gigantic rotten dead-falls that had several meters of air underneath to crawl across or duck under, a shit ton of thorny undergrowth and some loose rocks on the side-hilling. This section terminates at a sketchy down-climb into a deep ravine using vege-belay, but this ravine kindly offered us some much-needed fresh water. I had opted to not bring too much water as I was bidding on having sources of water somewhere along the route, and I was correct. To climb out of the ravine required more vertical thrashing followed by some steep old growth. The intensity of the bushwhacking finally eased at around 650 m elevation so we made steady progress to the series of boulder fields, traversing underneath the 1450-m unnamed bump.

Tyler led us into the sea-level bushwhacking…
The typical thrashing for the first 400m gain
The vertical bush to get out of that deep ravine
A surprising patch of snow provided some brief moments of relief

I thought we would be “home free” at this point but that was not true. I was still not getting how bad the bushwhacking in the Qathet or how tough these local climbers are. The boulder fields started out easily but on the second or the third field I naively decided to make a short-cut by thrashing through a band of “greens”. Jason’s track went up and over and I thought there’s no point in doing that, but I forgot that Jason had thrashed through this section 4 times so if he chose to do something, there had to have a reason. The “greens” turned out to be some 2-m tall BW5 brambles that was next to impossible to thrash through without having some full body protections, so we turned around and went straight up. This straight-up thrashing section was also bad with lots of brambles, so we should have stuck with the known. The upside was that we found lots of salmonberries and ate them literally like bears, and we found more water sources to stay hydrated. We then ascended the loose boulders to the head of this valley and then bailed climber’s right into more sub-alpine bushes. The intensity of the bushwhacking stayed in “BW3” for the next few hundred meters to near the top of the first bump at 1450 m elevation. On the satellite images this stretch looked rather “open” but the open fields had some intense underbrush. The traverse from there to “the punisher” was thankfully mostly bush-free and didn’t involve that much of micro-terrain. We had encountered several good camping spots but decided to push further.

Traversing the “greens” to link up several patches of boulder fields
Erica in the worst of the bushes. All plants here are brambly
We ascended to the high point of this section to bypass the worst brambles
Tyler on that “up-and-over” detour which makes sense if you do it…
A mossy 3rd class bluff
The typical thrashing between 1150m and 1350m
Sustained BW3 in this stage… It’s unrelenting
We were getting tired by now, but must press on…
Looking deeply down into the upper Daniels Valley
Tyler at a supposedly good campsite. But we decided to carry on farther
Unnamed lakes at the headwaters of Forbes Creek
Tyler and Erica with “Beaton Peak” behind
Erica with “Beaton Peak” and Theodosia Peak behind
Another picture of Erica taking in the views at this amazing spot

“The Punisher” has over 100 m prominence so counts as a separate peak but there’s no point in tagging the summit until the return. Instead, we cut across the south slopes and started to embrace the punishing bushwhacking with 100 m elevation loss. Right off the bat I made a route-finding error that resulted in me having to make an in-situ rappel. My harness was buried at the bottom of the backpack so it would be very awkward to dig it out. Instead, I simply wrapped the rope around my body and “rapped” off. This caused some bruising on my hands and arms. Erica and Tyler went and walked around the section. I then paid more attention to route-finding and I believed we managed to find the simplest way, but it still involved a lot of bushwhacking and exposed 3rd/4th class scrambling. The rocks were down-sloping and covered in moss, so thankfully it was not wet. The day was still young so the decision was to tag the summit in the evening, and camp as high as we could for better views. There’s a 5-star campsite at 1580 m but we pushed for another hundred meters higher and found another site with running water.

Our first unobstructed view of the east face of Mt. Denman
Descending exposed mossy bluffs down “The Punisher”
More about the steep bushwhacking down the punisher
Traversing into the Punisher/Denman saddle, with another unnamed peak
Tyler slogging up snow, with “The Punisher” behind
Erica with Mt. Crawshay directly behind her in the distance

The east face of Mt. Denman appeared intimidating and in fact, we couldn’t figure out how exactly Jason’s group went. There’s only one way to tell, that was to stick our noses into it. The scrambling was straightforward until some point where things became steep enough for Erica and I to ditch the trekking poles. We continued scrambling to where the supposed 5.5 pitches were, but found no obvious climbing options. I traversed around climber’s left on a ledge and thrashed up a vertical section completely using vege-belay, and I believed in retrospect this (or nearby lines) was the 1st pitch. The next section involved a tricky leftwards trending traverse on down-sloping holds but there were only a few class-5 moves so we all scrambled across, and the 3rd pitch probably involved that difficult step-up move on a smooth-looking slab. Again, if there’s anything 5th class it wasn’t longer than “a few moves”, so we did the entire climb without evening donning harness nor changing footwear. I thought the entire route could be down-climbed so we were wondering where exactly the climbing pitches are. In any case we scrambled up some easy terrain after traversing around to the south side of the upper face, and were quickly standing on this elusive summit. Tyler and I even went further down the north ridge for photos and more scrambling oppourtunities.

Tyler picking his way up some easy slabs
We found another cool lake in the valley NE of Mt. Denman
Erica and Tyler thrashing up vertical bushes
The exposed ledge traverse after the bush pitch
These few moves are also tricky…
Tyler on another ledge traverse. We basically went from ledges to ledges
The typical terrain on the 4th class middle/upper mountain
Erica getting onto the easier south side of the upper route
Looking ahead to the true summit. It’s easy from here onward
Summit Panorama from Mt. Denman. Click to view large size.
Me with the Desolation Sound
A zoomed-in view of Slide Mountain
Mt. Baldy and the Rainbows
Mt. Aiken in the foreground looks technical from all sides. No beta.
This is looking towards Mt. Algard direction. This area is super remote
Tyler on the summit of Mt. Denman, his dream coming true!
The “Discovery Islands” with Mt. Hayes
East Redonda Island with Mt. Addenbroke that I climbed last month
Mt. Alfred is that glaciated massif, another project in the area
Erica and I on the summit of Mt. Denman
Me and Tyler playing on the north ridge bonus
Tyler went down the north ridge to inspect something…
The three of us on the summit of Mt. Denman

We still had a few hours of daytime but figured we might as well descend to camp as we were getting hungry. To get down the upper face there were lots of route options but for the steep parts we stuck on the line we had taken. We also looked fairly hard but couldn’t find a single rappel station so again, I’m not 100% sure if we had taken the route that Jason’s group did. The original plan was to make some rappels but we ended up down-climbing all the way to that vertical thrashing pitch. There’s a great-looking boulder above what seemed like a clean line to rappel off, so we cut some of Tyler’s webbing and made the only rappel on this mountain. Erica’s 48-m rope was plenty enough for the job. After getting back to camp we had a crazy bear encounter minutes before starting to cook for dinner. The bear had chased Tyler back to camp after he went around for some views, and we had to come face to face with that bear for about 10 minutes before the bear finally reluctantly left. Throwing rocks simply didn’t deter him. For that reasons we finally decided to “camp properly” and buried our food away from the sleeping sites under a pile of rocks. I was expecting the bear to get those food but he left us alone. The night was extremely windy that the sleeping was not that great in the open. I also lost my pillow while getting briefly up to take some nighttime photos.

Erica scrambling down the upper/middle route
Tyler dropping in for the typical terrain
Crab-walking is sometimes the right technique..
Erica on that tricky down-sloping traverse move
This is another difficult step down by some hand traversing and friction
Me starting down the only rappel we did
Erica on the vertical rappel
Finishing the east face route on Mt. Denman with victory
A curious bear welcomed us at camp… A bit stressful encounter
Erica’s bivy set-up with Theodosia Peak behind
Tyler with the gorgeous sunset behind
The evening horizon towards the inlets and Vancouver Island
“The Punisher” catching the evening sunrays
Erica with the east face of Mt. Denman
Erica taking in the views. What a show…
Another picture of Erica. No Instagrammer here as it’s hard to get to…
I don’t think these peaks have names
Another picture of the inlets, islands with Vancouver Island behind
Me on that same Instagram spot with the evening glow
Evening alpenglow on Mt. Alfred
The upper Daniels Valley
Erica taking in the dusk views. We would soon go back to camp
I got up at midnight and took this shot of Mt. Denman

The original plan was to get up at 5 am to watch sunrise but the colours were rather mediocre especially comparing to the sunset in the previous evening, so none of us actually got up. We eventually got up at 7 am. The weather was still very windy so we didn’t bother to cook breakfast and simply packed up and went. We unfortunately had to re-climb that “punisher” but we knew the way this time, so it wasn’t too bad. I then directed us gaining the extra 50 m elevation to the very top of it so that we could claim this secondary summit. There’s even a tarn with fresh water and the wind was dying down, so Erica and I took our time cooking the ramen breakfast. There’s no point in rushing. The going was not too bad until we started to descend from that final bump. I was leading most of the bushwhacking and my strategy was to stay on the GPS track and deal with the known. The thrashing was bad. My pants got ripped off right at the start and the rip extended to almost the entire leg length, such that I basically did the descent in “shorts”. The worst was still the bands of greens in the middle of those boulder fields. On the descent we stayed even higher but still had to thrash through some 2-m tall brambles. Lower down we made sure to stay hydrated on the two important running creeks, but other than that, we just stuck close to the track and made the tedious descent one step at a time. Finding Jason’s dry creek bed extending much further down was a relief as I wasn’t looking forward to those nasty Devil’s Clubs even though we had been dealing with Devil’s Clubs for quite a lot in the past two days.

Thrashing up “The Punisher” on Day 2
This section sucked a lot of energy from us…
The north face of Mt. Denman from “The Punisher”
Slide Mountain behind “Beaton Peak”
The Daniels Valley catching some morning sunrays
Erica and I on the summit of “The Punisher” or Peak 1680…
Taking advantage of the bush-free ridge to gain some speeds
The typical terrain descending from that 1450m bump
The typical thrashing around the boulder fields
At least the views were great…
Lots of 2-m tall brambles. Not kidding. This part sucked balls…
At least we found fruit to eat…
Erica eating while thrashing… No pain, no gain…
The boulders were covered in lichen and loose, but still better than bushes
The mess of old growth. I’ve not seen old growth this bad before…
Staying hydrated was crucial
Traversing towards that dry creek bed
At least the last 400 m descent wasn’t too bad
Taking a break at the ditched bikes

It was eventually the time to start biking, and Tyler had been texting his dad using the satellite texting function in the new iPhones. The plan was to get picked up at 3 pm so we had lots of time to linger around. We did find the “correct way” on the exit but as expected, this road was partially blocked and was clearly not for vehicular traffic anymore. Still, it was much simpler on the bikes than to deal with that hill in the heat. Our round trip time (sans camping) was 18 hours but moving time was less than 11 hours. Had we known the route better we could definitely have day-tripped it. We had about 40 minutes to kill at the dock according to the clock but Tyler’s parents came earlier than expected so we were quickly on the way homewards. This time we traversed around the east side of Goat Island completing a circumnavigation of Goat Island in boat. The rest of the journey back home involved two more ferries and a lot of driving and waiting in between. We were only able to get on the 7 pm ride from Saltery Bay to Earls Cove, and subsequently the last ride (10:30 pm) from Langdale to Horseshoe Bay. I didn’t get back home until midnight but that’s alright. I would be surprised if anybody had managed to pull off Mt. Denman in a mere 2.5 days return from Vancouver. I had to thank Tyler and his parents for inviting us and hosting the trip. Without the support from the local communities there’d be no way, as neither Erica nor I own a boat, the equipment to haul a boat nor the knowledge to drive a boat.

Tyler cruising back the 8 km of road
Walking to the finish line
Erica actually went in for a quick dip..
Erica and I on the boat ride back down across Powell Lake
Boating back around the east side of Goat Island
We found lots of cool cabins on this side of the channel
The aftermath of Mt. Denman. A fully ripped pants and bruised leg…
Me having fun in the boat… The water was quite calm here
Erica unloading her bike at the lower end of Powell Lake
Me back on the Saltery Bay – Earls Cove ferry
Erica taking in the views near Earls Cove
We then stopped near Sechelt for more views of the evening colours
Two ducks in the ocean…