Pseashkho lake small sunken weapon. Hiking through the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve with climbing to Sugar Pseashkho (3188 m)

  • 28.11.2023

You will find a detailed description of the route, a map showing trails and possible radials (with GPS coordinates), as well as a description of the weather and the most up-to-date information on obtaining passes for this route. Here is some brief information about this particular hike.

Route map in Google Earth

Legend:

A B- the beginning of the trail, the entrance to the territory of the Caucasus Nature Reserve, C D- place to spend the night, E F G- Camp Kholodny. H

Hiking timing

  • 12:00 - took the cable car to the upper Gazprom station
  • 13:40 - having lost a lot of time, we barely passed the Olympic construction site and reached the dirt road leading to the Bzerpinsky cornice
  • 15:00 - 17:00 - lunch break
  • 18:30 - went up to the house on the Bzerpinsky cornice
  • 20:30 - set up camp at the bottom of the canyon of a tributary of the Pslukh River
  • 06:00 - left the camp
  • 08:30 - reached the western ridge of Sugar Pseashkho
  • 9:45 - 10:30 - transition to the southwestern ridge of Pseashkho by traverse of the western slope
  • 12:00 - 13:00 - rest on the top of Sugar Pseashkho
  • 18:30 - return to camp
  • 10:00 - left the camp
  • 10:30 - Pseashkho pass
  • 12:30 - 15:30 - rest in the Kholodny camp, lunch, swimming in the river
  • 17:00 - Jitaku pass
  • 19:30 - return to camp
  • 10:00 - left the camp
  • 10:40 - Bzerpinsky cornice
  • 13:00 - upper station of the Gazprom "Laura" cable car

Important note regarding hike timing: In order to get the necessary time to complete this or that section of the route, we can safely divide the time we spent by two. We walked very slowly, took a lot of photographs, were in absolutely no hurry, and besides, I also got sick on the second day of the hike (it was still freezing under the air conditioning in Sochi). So tourist groups moving “in sports mode” will go through all this faster!


Legend:

1 - upper station of the "Laura" Gazprom cable car, 2 - Bear Gate pass (n/a, 2100 m), 3 - traverse of the western slope of Mount Sugar Pseashkho, 4 - peak of Mount Sugar Pseashkho (n/k, 3188 m), 5 - Pseashkho pass (n/k, 2014 m), 6 - Camp Kholodny, 7 - Semiozerka pass (n/k, 1920 m).


Coordinates of key points of the hike

  • GPS01(upper station of the "Laura" Gazprom cable car) - 43°41"37.61"N, 40°18"49.28"E,
  • GPS02(beginning of the trail) - 43°41"39.44"N, 40°21"1.43"E
  • GPS03(house on the Bear Gate pass) - 43°42"34.25"N, 40°22"36.13"E,
  • GPS04(turn of the trail to Sugar Pseashkho) - 43°43"18.23"N, 40°23"3.99"E,
  • GPS05(beginning of traverse of the western slope, transition to the southwestern ridge) - 43°42"32.05"N, 40°25"50.74"E
  • GPS06(point of exit to the southwestern ridge of Pseashkho) - 43°42"20.09"N, 40°26"10.44"E,
  • GPS07(top of Sugar Pseashkho) - 43°42"31.15"N, 40°26"39.42"E,
  • GPS08(beginning of the upper trail to the Semiozerka valley) - 43°44"3.00"N, 40°23"28.08"E
  • GPS09(place of the Urushten ford for access to the Semiozerka valley from the side of the Kholodny camp) - 43°45"16.88"N, 40°24"23.32"E,
  • GPS10(new suspension bridge over the Kholodnaya river) - 43°45"34.30"N, 40°25"1.01"E,
  • GPS11(house of the Kholodny camp) - 43°45"47.16"N, 40°25"3.42"E,
  • GPS12(viewpoint on the Semiozerka pass) - 43°45"15.73"N, 40°22"34.19"E.
  • Actually completed track for Garmin navigators - .gdb, .gpx
  • Track for viewing in Google Earth - download

update! photos of houses in June 2014

Trek budget

(calculated per 1 person)

  • Pass to the reserve, for 5 days - 750 rub.
  • Products for 5 days of hiking - 800 rub.
  • Gas - 150 rub.
  • Minibus Sochi - Krasnaya Polyana (Gazprom cable car) - 100 rubles.
  • One ascent + one descent on the Laura cable car - 600 rubles.
  • Minibus Krasnaya Polyana (Gazprom cable car) - Sochi - 100 rubles.
  • Total: 2500 rub.

Border pass and pass to the Caucasian State Biosphere Reserve

There are two points you need to know. First, you will need a nature reserve pass. Secondly, if you are not going along this route, but, for example, to the area of ​​Lake Kardyvach, then you will additionally need to obtain a border pass! It turns out it’s not easy - you need to provide a photocopy of your passport and a completed application in which you indicate the desired area(s) to visit. It seems that documents can be sent by fax, but you will still have to receive them locally, that is, in Sochi. The passes are made free of charge, the production time is from one to two months and are valid until the end of the current year at the time of submission of documents.

General information about routes, weather and other nuances of hiking through the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve is in my homemade guide to Sochi and Krasnaya Polyana for outdoor enthusiasts and hikers. Read it, I think it will be useful.

Office addresses of the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve
to get a pass for the route:

  • Adler, Karl Marx St., 8. Opening hours: from 9-00 to 17-00, except weekends and holidays.
  • Krasnaya Polyana, Aviary complex (2 km along the road from the Gazprom cable car). Working hours: from 9-00 to 17-00, without weekends and holidays.

Useful information and contacts

  • Transfer by jeep from Krasnaya Polyana to the barrier of the Biosphere Reserve cordon - Pavel (+7 918 204 4303). A professional driver, like his father. Pavel is an ethnic Greek, as befits a real Krasnopolyan. The cost of transportation is about 1000 rubles per person, but not less than 3-4 people.
  • Georgy Vitalievich (+7 928 661 5210) – senior ranger of the reserve. You can negotiate with him about horses for transportation to Kardyvach. The cost is around 3,000 rubles per horse per day. You can also inquire about transferring by car to Engelman Glades or obtaining a pass for a particular route.

conclusions

  • Very beautiful! Especially the section from the Bear Gate pass to the Pseashkho pass
  • I was very surprised by the cleanliness of the route. No beer cans or candy wrappers. Respect to the reserve staff (and tourists?)
  • Excellent trails and equipped parking areas on the Bzerpinsky cornice and in the Kholodny camp
  • Thanks to all the above factors, the area is ideal for exploring the mountains and making your first hikes!
  • I will definitely leave this area as one of the best for short training hikes in fast&light style
  • And yet radials rule! We wouldn’t have had time to walk so far “in line”!
  • I remembered an important truth - you need to take a very responsible approach to choosing a place for camp. Sleeping and eating in a beautiful place means a lot both for recuperation, and it’s just always nice to admire the beautiful view right from the camp!
  • You should definitely go ski touring here in winter. UPDATE! Made! Look
Pseashkho mountain range.
Pseashkho (Pseashkha) is a mountain range in the Western Caucasus, 20 km from the village of Krasnaya Polyana, in the upper reaches of the rivers Urushten, Malaya Laba, Pslukh, on the territory of the Caucasus Natural Biosphere Reserve. Belongs to the Main Caucasus Range. 9 peaks of the massif reach more than 3 thousand meters in height. The toponym “Pseashkho” is translated from Adyghe as “high-water mountain,” apparently due to the fact that several rivers fed by glaciers originate on the slopes of the massif. On old maps they often wrote “Pseashkho”, but on modern topographic maps they began to write “Pseash-kha”: the city of Sev. Pseashkha, Yuzh. Pseashkha, Pseashkha ridge, Pseashkha glacier, lane. Pseashkha. Modern official maps also have the following names: Kholodny camp, r. Kholodnaya, Kholodny glacier, Mramornaya city, river. Clean, r. Small Laba, b. Psluh. Some of the names were introduced into use by the famous geographer Yu.K. Efremov: Zap. Pseashkho, Stone Castle, Kozhevnikov Peak, Bzerpi Peak. Peak Sugar Loaf or Sugar Pseashkho is named by the residents of Krasnaya Polyana. The remaining names were given by employees of the Caucasian Nature Reserve, tourists, glaciologists: r. Mutnaya, Igolchaty Peak, lane. Stroitel (or Builders), trans. Neftyanik, per. Mramorny, Marble glacier, Sugar glacier, Pslukh glaciers (Upper, Middle, Lower), Cold West glacier, Cold Middle glacier, etc.

The Pseashkho massif is limited from the west by a trough valley with the Pseashkho pass (2014.2m, n/c). This five-kilometer valley, about 500m wide, was carved out by an ancient glacier that no longer exists. It stretches in the direction southwest - north. The longitudinal slope of the valley is so small that the passage of the pass point (Pseashkho Lane) may not be noticed.

From the southwest the Pseashkho massif is limited by the valley of the Pslukh river, from the east by the valleys of the Malaya Laba and Chistaya rivers, from the north by the valleys of the Kholodnaya and Mramornaya rivers. The southern end of the massif can be considered the Aishkha pass (2401.5m, n/k), the northern end is the Mramorny pass (about 2800m, 1B*).
The Pseashkho massif is a complex mountain cluster with ridges of different directions and peaks from two and a half to three and a quarter kilometers in height. Sharp alpine relief forms are characteristic here: rocky narrow ridges, steep slopes and walls, peaks in the form of towers, peaks, battlements. The geological structure of the massif is complex. The massif contains rocks of different ages: gneisses, schists, marbles, conglomerates, sandstones, tuffs, porphyrites.

The Pseashkho massif from the west, from the Pseashkho pass (2014.2m, n/c) begins with a steep spur adjacent to the Western Pseashkho peak (2899.8m). This peak is a node from which spurs extend: a short southwestern spur and a two-kilometer northern spur with peaks of 2627.8m, 2609.1m and 2629.4m. East of the West. Pseashkho stretches for a 3.5-kilometer high jagged ridge with peaks: 2822.0 m, 3065.2 m, Uzlovaya (about 3196 m) and South Pseashkho (3251.2 m). On the northern slopes of this ridge there are several glaciers and peaks: Razdelnaya (2700.5m) and Kamenny Zamok (2556.0m).

From South Pseashkho (3251.2m), a sharp rocky ridge stretches northeast to the highest point of the entire massif - Mount North Pseashkho (3256.9m). This section of the ridge has a length of 775 m and breaks off to the north-west towards the Kholodny glacier with an almost vertical half-kilometer wall.

From Northern Pseashkho (3256.9 m) the ridge descends to the east. The small eastern shoulder of the peak drops steeply downwards and, after a deep notch, rises sharply upward in the form of a rock tower with steep walls and a flat top (150m from the main peak). Further on the ridge rise three more peaks, significantly inferior in height to the tower. After the third peak, the ridge descends to the north and northeast to the Mramorny pass (about 2800m, 1B*). 750 meters northeast of the Marble Pass rises the Azurite peak (3012.8 m, 1B), so named by A.F. Brikalov, who discovered outcrops of this mineral at the summit.

Two spurs extend from the peak of Northern Pseashkho (3256.9m). The short, steep northern ridge cuts deeply into the Mramorny glacier; here the glacier is divided into western and central parts. The northwestern ridge also goes down steeply, bordering the western edge of the Mramorny glacier. After the saddle, which is the upper reaches of the couloir along which stones constantly fall onto the Kholodny glacier (for which this couloir received the nickname “garbage chute”), the spur rises sharply upward with two sharp rocky teeth. These battlements are clearly visible from Kholodny’s camp. The western prong has an elevation of 2936.4 m, the eastern one is 30-40 meters lower. Further, the spur descends to the northwest, dividing the basins of the Kholodnaya and Mramornaya rivers.
Let's return to Mount South Pseashkho (3251.2m). 0.5 km west of this mountain is the Uzlovaya Peak (3196m) and, further to the south, Uzlovoye Shoulder (3192m). From the Knot Shoulder, the ridge with a sharp decline goes south-southeast to the Stroitel (or Stroiteley) pass with a height of about 2815m (1B) and then with a sharp rise to the node, from which the ridges extend to the west and east. 250m west of the node is the Sugar Pseashkho peak (3188.9m) or the Sugar Loaf peak with a 2-kilometer spur extending to the west. This peak from Krasnaya Polyana looks like a beautiful sharp peak. Whitened by winter snow, it really resembles a sugar cone (in the old days, refined sugar was produced in the form of “sugar loaves” of a conical shape, hence the name of the peak).

From the node mentioned above, a ridge extends to the east to the Zeleny Klin peak (3164.4 m) and further to the southeast and south and after 1.4 km it approaches the node mark of 3004.2 m, to the east of which Kozhevnikov Peak rises at 325 m with a height of 3070, 6m (the peak is named after the botanist A.V. Kozhevnikov). A spur extends from Kozhevnikov Peak to the northeast and further to the east, ending with a peak of 2936.2 m. The length of the spur is about 1 km. From the nodal point of 3004.2 m the ridge goes south to the Aishkha pass (3.7 km). In addition to the ridges described above, in the Pseashkho massif there is a one and a half kilometer rocky ridge more than 3000 m high with peaks of 3154.8 m and 3168.5 m.

This ridge separates two branches of the Pseashkho glacier (glaciers No. 35 and No. 36 according to the Catalog of Glaciers of the USSR). Peaks 3154.8 m and 3168.5 m and the previously mentioned peak 2936.2 m on the spur of Kozhevnikov Peak look very impressive from the Malaya Laba valley. The appearance of these peaks varies greatly depending on the location of the observer. If you look at the peak of 2936.2 m from the Malaya Laba valley, near the mouth of the Mutnaya River (flowing from glacier No. 36), then this peak looks like a beautiful sharp “needle-shaped” peak. It is often called “Igolchaty Peak”. If you go further into the valley of the Chistaya River (flows out of glacier No. 35), then the peak of 2936.2 m loses its needle-shaped shape, and the peak of 3168.5 m, on the contrary, takes on the appearance of a needle-shaped peak. The 3154.8m peak visible to the right also looks like a rock tower. In order not to get confused in the names of these peaks, it is proposed to call the highest of the three peaks “Needle Main Peak” - 3168.5 m. The peak of 3154.8 m is proposed to be called “Igolchaty Western Peak”, and the peak of 2936.2 m in the spur of Kozhevnikov Peak is proposed to be called “Igolchaty South Peak”.

The Pseashkho massif is interesting for its glaciation. Here you can count 11 glaciers, of which the Pseashkho glacier (glacier No. 35) is the largest glacier in the Krasnodar region. This is a cirque-valley glacier 3 km long and 1.5 km² in area. With its upper reaches it merges with the neighboring (to the south) glacier No. 36 (area 1 km²), as if straddling the ridge separating them. Such glaciers are called melting glaciers. The saddle separating glaciers No. 35 and No. 36 (ice divide) is also a pass called Neftyanik (2936.8 m, 1B). Glaciers Pseashkho and No. 36, like other glaciers of the Caucasus, are shrinking in size. Parts of glaciers that are well illuminated by the sun are especially susceptible to intense melting, while the shadow parts of glaciers are in more favorable conditions. The Pseashkho glacier melts especially intensively in the place where the ice flow changes direction from northwestern to eastern. The southern branch of the Pseashkho glacier (glacier No. 36) is exposed to solar radiation and melts intensively in the summer months in the part adjacent to the southern slope of the Igolchaty Zapadny peak. Here the thickness of the ice is only 2-3 m, and the surface of the ice in the second half of summer is literally cut up by gullies with streams of melt water running into them. The Pseashkho glacier (No. 35) gives rise to the Chistaya River, glacier No. 36 - to the Mutnaya River (both are left tributaries of the Malaya Laba River).
To the north of the highest point of the massif (3256.9 m) there is the Marble Glacier (No. 31), which gives rise to the Marble River. The area of ​​the glacier (1 km²) is gradually decreasing due to climate warming and the glacier is already being divided into three parts.

On the northern slopes of the ridge connecting the peaks of Western Pseashkho (2899.8 m), South Pseashkho (3251.2 m) and Northern Pseashkho (3256.9 m), there are several glaciers, which previously represented a single glacier. In the process of degradation, it broke into pieces. The extreme, eastern glacier is called Cold. This is caravan glacier No. 30 (according to the catalog of glaciers of the USSR) with an area of ​​0.5 km². Overflowing the cup of the kara, the glacier pushes its tongue through the crossbar into the valley, which is why it is called kara-valley.

The position of the end of the glacier changes periodically. So, in 1959, the tongue of the Kholodny glacier protruded beyond the crossbar and hung on its slope. In 1985, the tongue of the glacier moved forward and moved (according to the author’s measurements) into the valley 20 m from the foot of the crossbar. Currently, the tongue of the glacier is again on the slope of the ridge. Thus, the Kholodny glacier appears to be a weakly pulsating glacier. Approaching the glacier tongue is dangerous due to the possibility of falling rock fragments and collapses of ice blocks. The Kholodnaya River flows from the Kholodny glacier and flows into the Urushten River.

To the west of the Kholodny glacier there are glaciers No. 29 and No. 28, connected to each other by a narrow strip of ice, which in the coming years may disappear, and the glaciers will completely separate from each other. Glaciers No. 29 and No. 28 belong to the cirque type. Glacier No. 29 (let’s call it “Medium Cold”) has an area of ​​only 0.1 km². The lower part of the glacier is heavily cracked, ice collapses can occur here, so it is dangerous to be below the glacier.
Glacier No. 28 (let's call it “Western Cold”) has two branches flowing around the Razdelnaya peak (2700.5 m) with currents to the northwest (larger branch) and north (smaller branch, area 0.1 km²). The total area of ​​the glacier is 0.5 km².

A remarkable feature of the glaciation of the Pseashkho mountain massif is that the first glaciers of the southern macroslope of the Greater Caucasus appear here from the west. These glaciers are located at the sources of the first and second left tributaries of the Pslukh River. There are four glaciers in total. The largest of them is the Sakharny glacier, which occupies part of the glacier and the steep northwestern slope of Mount Sugarloaf (3188.9 m). Its area (according to the author’s measurements) is 0.131 km², the elevation of the upper point is 2800 m, the lower point is 2611 m.

Three other glaciers (Pslukhskie glaciers) used to be a single glacier, which broke up into three parts during the process of degradation. The Upper Pslukh glacier can be classified as a morphological type of hanging glaciers. The glacier has a convex surface shape, clearly visible from Krasnaya Polyana, resembling a sail filled with wind.

The lower part of the glacier has a steepness of 50º, the upper part is much steeper. The area of ​​the glacier is 0.052 km², the lowest point is 3030 m, the highest point is 3200 m. Approximately 100m from the end of the glacier, the arcuate shaft of the terminal moraine is clearly visible. The flow from the glacier is carried out into two river systems (through depressions in the ridges bordering the glacier from the north and south): into the second tributary of the Pslukha (Mzymta River basin) by filtration through moraine sediments and into the Kholodnaya River (Urushten River basin) in the form of a stream flowing from the northern side of the glacier.

The Middle Pslukh glacier is the most unusual of the Pslukh glaciers. It is difficult to attribute it to any morphological type. The glacier is an ice ridge, sharp in places, stretching across the valley with steep ice slopes in both directions and flow into both the first and second tributaries of the Pslukh. At the foot of both ice slopes there are two small lakes. The western lake is dammed by a terminal moraine. The area of ​​the middle Pslukh glacier, like the other two, is small - only 0.062 km² (according to the author’s measurements). Lowest points: 2909m (the foot of the western slope) and 2955m (the foot of the eastern slope). The highest point of the glacier is 3021m (the ice ridge at the summit is 3053m). One more interesting feature of the Middle Pslukh glacier can be noted. As a rule, small glaciers are located in the bottoms of ice pits and other slope depressions, where snow accumulation is better, there is more shade and, therefore, less exposure to solar radiation on the glacier. All this contributes to better preservation of glaciers. A different picture is observed on the Middle Pslukh glacier: its main part is located on a hill and is well illuminated by the sun at any time of the day. It can be assumed that the stability of the glacier is ensured by abundant nutrition due to snowstorm transport of snow associated with the peculiarities of the local circulation of air masses. Therefore, the glacier itself can be attributed to the genetic type of ridge-induced ones.

The Lower Pslukh glacier (tar glacier), with an area of ​​0.067 km² (according to our measurements), descends to 2754 m and feeds the first tributary of the Pslukh. The highest point of the glacier is 2903 m. With its western edge, the glacier rests on a powerful arched moraine swell. A comparison of photographs of the Lower Pslukh glacier taken by the author in 1959 and 1985 suggests that the glacier has changed little or not at all during this time, its position is quite stable.

The Pseashkho mountain massif is popular among tourists and climbers. Climbing routes of various difficulty categories from 1B to 3B have been laid to individual peaks. However, it should be remembered that to visit the Pseashkho area it is necessary to obtain a pass from the administration of the Caucasus Nature Reserve, and the sports training of groups and equipment must correspond to the category of difficulty of the route being traveled. It is also necessary to register the group with the rescue squad in Krasnaya Polyana.

One of the most popular routes in the area is the ascent to Sugarloaf Peak (3188.9m). In summer, the route is rated difficulty category 1A. From the Fir Glade on the Psekho ridge (on modern maps the ridge is mistakenly called “Psekhako”) we climb the path to the Bear Gate and then go out onto the Bzerpinsky cornice to a small house built here in 2004. We follow the path further towards the Pseashkho pass and, after walking 1.5 km, turn off the path down to the right. From a distance you need to see the path on the southern slope of the Western Pseashkho Mountain and mark a landmark to which you should go. Having crossed the upper reaches of the Pslukh ford or over stones, we go to the beginning of the trail. Once on the trail, there are usually no problems with orientation - the trail is quite clearly laid out along the gentlest part of the slope. Walking with a smooth climb, we cross the stream, then we approach the first tributary of the Pslukh. The tributary flows in a trough hanging valley, which ends abruptly at its mouth to the valley of the Pslukh River. A steep descent down, crossing a tributary and climbing up its left bank slope. There is a good camp site under a low flat rock here. Go ahead. There is a steep climb up the slope, and again the trail passes through a traverse with a smooth climb. Descent into the 2nd tributary of the Pslukh, crossing through it and climbing to the grassy areas of the left bank slope. The trail has ended. Here, at an altitude of about 2150m, you can set up camp.

The path to the top of Sugarloaf Peak (3188.9 m) goes along its western ridge. The horizontal distance to the top is 2.5 km, the elevation difference is about 1000 m. The ridge is overgrown with grass, in places with rhododendron, and there are rocky outcrops. Before reaching the steep slopes of the ridge (approximately the middle of the ridge), we turn right, cross the snowfield and emerge onto the southwestern ridge. Along this heavily destroyed simple ridge we reach the top. From the top there is a beautiful panorama of near and far mountains: Pseashkho (Uzlovoy, Yuzhny, Northern), Igolchatye peaks, Green Wedge, Kozhevnikov peak, Tsakhvoa, Agepsta, Akh-Ag, Aibga, Achishkho, Chugush and others.

Akhun, Bytkha, the city of Sochi, and the Black Sea are visible. When descending from the summit along the southwestern ridge, you can mistakenly, especially in the fog, turn onto the southern ridge adjacent to it. To prevent this from happening, when ascending, you can mark the place of descent with stone tours or other marks.

The described route to Sugarloaf Peak is the easiest. There are more difficult routes. In 1998, Viktor Kholodilin, a climber from Lazarevsky, climbed the Sugar Loaf peak along the edge from the Pseashkho glacier, rating the route as difficulty category 3A-3B. In July 2000, Artur Brikalov, a Tuapse climber, made a traverse: Sugar Loaf Peak - Green Wedge - node mark 3004.2 m - Kozhevnikov Peak. The difficulty category of the route according to his assessment is 2B.

The peak of Sugar Pseashkho is not included in the list of permitted routes passing through the territory of the reserve. Climbing this peak is a violation of the regime of the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve and faces a fine.

Another, no less popular, route leads to the Knot Shoulder (3192m) of Southern Pseashkho. Route difficulty category - 1A, length (from the camp at the Sugar Glacier) - 1.4 km, elevation gain - 540 m. The beginning of the route to the 2nd tributary of the Pslukh is described above. Next we go up the tributary valley towards the Sakharny glacier. The glacier itself is not visible; it is closed by a crossbar (2650m), which with its steep slope blocks the valley of the 2nd tributary. Next, the path goes up along a moraine overgrown with grass and rhododendron. The main tributary flowing out of the Sugar Glacier remains on our right. On the left is a powerful stream with waterfalls. The moraine along which we climb adjoins the left (as viewed from below) edge of the crossbar. Here the ascent follows a faint path. You have to climb carefully - on the left the slope drops steeply to the stream. Behind the crossbar there are good camp sites, behind them is the lower bowl-shaped part of the Sugar Glacier, and further is the saddle of the Stroitel pass (2815m, 1B).

From the camp you can go through the Stroitel pass to the Pseashkho glacier. The slope along which you climb to the pass seems steep, but in fact it is easy to walk. To the left of the Stroitel pass, the Knot Shoulder (3192m) is clearly visible. The path to it goes along the scree slope of the left bank of the stream. At the very end of the ascent along the stream, where the bed cuts deep into the ridge, the movement is somewhat complicated by the steepness and unstable stones lying on the scree. Having crossed the incision of the stream, we come out to the Middle Pslukhsky glacier with a small lake at the foot of the steep eastern slope, and on the right, 300 meters away, the Upper Pslukhsky glacier hangs like a steep ice wall, bordered on the right (from the south) by a non-steep, heavily destroyed ridge. Along this simple ridge, climbing from one rock block to another, we reach the top of Knot Shoulder (3192m).

If you follow the ridge further north, leaving the Upper Pslukhsky Glacier on the left, you can reach the Knot Peak (3196m). When moving along the ridge along the upper edge of the glacier, you need to be careful (ice ax at the ready!), since if you fall, you can slide down, where the glacier’s steepness is 50° and it will be problematic to stay.
Following from the junction peak further along the ridge to the east, after 500 m you can reach the peak of South Pseashkho (3251.2 m). At the top there is a metal pyramid - a triangulation point (heavily damaged by winter snow and wind). This route has a higher difficulty category - 1B.

Sometimes tourists, having climbed Knot Shoulder, believe that they have reached the top of South Pseashkho, and, having climbed South Pseashkho, they think that they have climbed North Pseashkho. This error can be easily eliminated, remembering that there is a pyramid on the top of South Pseashkho, but there is no pyramid on North Pseashkho.

You can also reach Knot Shoulder via other, more difficult routes. If you go up the valley of the 1st tributary of the Pslukh, you will have to overcome a simple wall, on which the tributary splits into three branches, forming waterfalls. Next, you need to overcome the steep slopes of the Pslukh glaciers - Lower and Middle (crampons, ice ax!). After descending from the Middle Glacier, the ascent route coincides with that described above. Route difficulty category - 1B.
Another route (also 1B) runs along the crest of the watershed ridge separating the basins of the 1st and 2nd tributaries of the Pslukh with access to the western ridge of the Knot Shoulder. The route is somewhat tiring, with overcoming numerous rocky climbs and, in the first half of summer, sharp snow ridges.

From the camp at the Sakharny glacier you can go to the Igolchaty peaks through the Stroitel pass (2815, 1B). From the pass they go along the Pseashkho glacier (crampons, ice ax!) to the Neftyanik pass (2936.1 m, 1B) and then traverse the slope of glacier No. 36 in the direction of the southern spur of the Igolchaty Zapadny peak (3154.6 m). Along a simple, mostly scree and heavily damaged ridge of the southern spur, one ascends in a northerly direction to the top of the peak. Difficulty category - 1A. The traverse of two peaks is more difficult: Igolchaty Zapadny - Igolchaty Main. Brikalov A.F., who completed this route, rates it 2A category of difficulty.

Simple routes (not higher than 1A) lead to the peaks Razdelnaya (2700.5m) and Ka-menny Zamok (2556.0m), provided they are climbed along their southern ridges (from the north these peaks are quite difficult to climb). The problem here is different - the complexity of the approaches.

The path along the left tributary of the Kholodnaya River (flowing from glacier No. 28) is quite unpleasant in its lower part. Walking along the right bank of the tributary (leaving the waterfall on the right), you have to wade through thickets of crooked forest without a path. After entering the tributary valley, you should go in the direction of a large stone and further to the “ram’s foreheads” with a small lake. The next obstacle is a rock barrier. On its left side there is a shelf with a path trodden by tours. Higher up the trail becomes lost and you have to overcome steep rocks. This is followed by a simpler and gentler climb to the northern edge of glacier No. 28. Along the gentle moraine along the edge of the glacier we move east to the southern simple ridge of Razdelnaya (here glacier No. 28 is divided into two branches - northwestern and northern). Along the ridge there is an easy way to the top (2700.5m). Rounding Razdelnaya from the east, they descend to the Stone Castle and along a very light, almost horizontal, wide meadow ridge reach the highest point (2556.0 m).

It is much more difficult to climb to the highest point of the entire massif - Northern Pseash-kho (3256.9m). There are no easy paths to this peak. Below is a description of one of the ascent options (along the route taken in July 1998 by the team of A. Brikalov - B. Tarchevsky). The difficulty category of the route is approximately 2B-3A.

From the Kholodny camp they go southeast along the right bank path along the Kholodnaya River. Before reaching the mouth of the Mramornaya River, the trail begins to go to the left (in the direction of rocky cliffs) and, gaining height, leads into the valley of the Mramornaya River. Having crossed the river, we climb along meadow, scree and snowy slopes, through a snow bridge between two rocky ridges to the western part of the Mramorny glacier, to the moraine at the foot of the rocky Teeth of Pseashkho (2936.4m). From the moraine we climb the steep slope of the Marble Glacier (crampons, ice ax!), bypassing the cracks and further to the left to the saddle in the lower part of the northern edge of the peak (leaving the northwestern edge on the right).

From the saddle the ridge rises steeply. We go around it on the left along the shelves, then go up to the ridge. Along the ridge with sharp feather-shaped rocks, going around them on the left along the slab, we emerge between two “gendarmes”. Again, go around the ridge on the left along the shelves, exit onto the ridge and then up the steep rise of the ridge. Now the ridge becomes sharp and jagged again, but on the right there is a detour along the shelves and screes. There is a small grotto on the right. We go around the summit wall on the right and along a simple scree slope we reach the highest point of the entire Pseashkho massif (3256.9 m).

From the top there is a magnificent panorama of the mountains. Below, under your feet are the Pseashkho, Kholodny, Mramorny glaciers, the green valley of the Kholodnaya River, the sharp Teeth of Pseashkho. South Pseashkho with a pyramid on top is clearly visible; a rocky ridge bristling with towers and battlements leads to it. In the southwest, through the haze, one can discern Mount Akhun and even Bytkha with white dots of houses. Endless chains of mountains with intricate patterns of glaciers and snowfields sparkling in the sun go to the east.

We got our hands on some photos from a hike in the mountains of the Caucasus Biosphere Reserve on July 1-3. I look through the photos and realize that I want to go there again! Untouched by man, pristine nature, good people nearby, an interesting route - left an indelible impression. Thank you very much to Yura Vartanov yvar who organized this event and invited me to participate in it!

At its core, the hike was educational - as preparation for an autumn sports hike of the 2nd category of difficulty. While passing the route, we passed 2 category passes - the Stroiteley pass (1B, 2800 m) and the Mramorny pass (1B*, 2800 m), and both passes were climbed in one day - and for educational purposes I think it was very cool: )

The hiking area is the Pseashkho mountain range, located 20 km from the village of Krasnaya Polyana, in the upper reaches of the rivers Urushten, Malaya Laba, Pslukh, on the territory of the Caucasus Natural Biosphere Reserve. Belongs to the Main Caucasus Range. You can read about the Pseashkho massif.

In this hike I was interested in many things - getting to this part of the Caucasus Nature Reserve, visiting the mountains, assessing whether I need an autumn double, finding out what category passes are and seeing glaciers. All goals were successfully achieved. The reserve is amazing! I'll go to double! Categorical passes turn the hike into a great adventure! And glaciers - although small, accessible and not dangerous, for a person who has not seen anything like this - evoke some kind of unreal feeling of eternity. When I walked along the Pseashkho glacier, surrounded by harsh, steep rocks, this feeling did not leave me - this is all eternal, it has always been here, is and will always be. And I, as tiny as an ant, am not at all the king of nature. I am the same biological species as all the animals that inhabit these mountains - I am the same as them, just part of nature. This is a truly unusual, incomparable feeling. And I really want to feel it again and again.

And this is our track:

View of the mountains at the beginning of our journey, almost on the border with the reserve:

After climbing the path up to the so-called “Wicket”:

And this is already a nature reserve:

View from the reserve to the village of Krasnaya Polyana and the construction of Olympic sports facilities:

Blooming rhododendron (by the way, this is where we met the female Caucasian grouse):

Inspector's house:

The first snowfields on the way up to the Stroiteley Pass:

And this is our group already at the pass, we are waiting for those lagging behind:

A small panorama from the Stroiteley pass to the Pseashkho glacier:

Sparse vegetation among rocky screes:

Descent down the glacier. A flat glacier of the valley type, covered with snow, we didn’t even wear crampons on it:

View of the glacier cirque after passing the glacier:

After descending along the rocks to the very bottom, to the raging river flowing from the glacier, we took a break and went up again - to the Marble Pass. A very interesting pass. Feels like it. Because the steepness of the slope was about 45 degrees, it began to rain and hail and we couldn’t even walk, but had to climb up along a narrow ridge. It turned out that my phobia of heights did not disappear completely, as I previously thought. Out of 8 people, I was 7th in terms of experience, but I went, or rather flew into the pass, I was 3rd :)

View from the Maramorny pass to the highest point of the Krasnodar Territory, Tsakhvoa (3345m):

Descent down the Mramorny glacier:

Bottom view of the pass:

And this is after spending the night on the banks of the Mramornaya river of the same name:

Pseashkho massif with a view of the Kholodny glacier:

The height is 3190 meters above sea level, it is part of the Pseashkho mountain range and the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve. The name “Pseashkho” itself is translated from the Adyghe language as “High-water mountain” and, apparently, indicates to us that several mountain rivers flowing from glaciers originate on the tops of the mountain range.

Photo by Dmitry Kovinov http://www.kovinov.com/

Photo by Dmitry Kovinov http://www.kovinov.com/

However, it is worth noting the second name of the peak - “Sugar Loaf”. The fact is that the top in appearance resembles a cone, and in ancient times refined sugar was produced exclusively in the form of “sugar loaves” of just such a conical shape. It is also curious that this name was given by the residents of Krasnaya Polyana themselves, while the other names for the peaks of the massif were assigned by workers of the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve.

Sugar Pseashkho on the map:

The map is loading. Please wait.
The map cannot be loaded - please enable Javascript!

The height is 3190 meters above sea level, it is part of the Pseashkho mountain range and the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve. The name “Pseashkho” itself is translated from the Adyghe language as “High-water mountain”.

43.708958 , 40.444279 The height is 3190 meters above sea level, it is part of the Pseashkho mountain range and the Caucasian Biosphere Reserve. The name “Pseashkho” itself is translated from the Adyghe language as “High-water mountain”. Sugar Pseashkho

On Sugar Pseashkho there is a large massif glacier of cirque origin, it is called the Sugar Glacier. Its area is approximately 140 m2, the highest point is about 2800 meters above sea level, and the lower point is 2600.

You can get to the Pseashkho mountain range, and from it to Sugar Loaf, on foot, from.

Coordinates:
Latitude: 43.708958
Longitude: 40.444279