“You had to be careful because if you ended up tumbling a little bit, you’ve got the Rumbling Glacier just below with some pretty big holes in it”
Eric Pehota
The line has not been repeated to this day, speaking to the boldness and intimate knowledge required to succeed in the fickle range. More recently, their sons Kye Petersen and Logan Pehota have officially taken up the torch, building on the knowledge passed down by their patriarchs. Kye, 33, and Logan, 28, have revisited some of their fathers’ lines in the Tantalus when they form up and have claimed first descents of their own, like Kye’s jaw-dropping line on the north face of Mt. Osa.
The mercurial nature of the Tantalus Range is known all too well by Ross Berg, co-founder of Altus Mountain Guides. “The mountains are so exposed, some of those lines only form up every few years.” Recently, summers are getting hotter, wreaking havoc on permanent snow fields and glaciers, and strong Arctic outflow winds strip the north faces bare — ruining the big lines for an entire year in a single afternoon. Sadly, some lines are likely never to be repeated.