Scrambling Course
Women's Alpine Scrambling Course
The Alpine Scrambling course teaches essential techniques of off-trail wilderness travel needed for reaching snow and rock summits. This course covers the same curriculum as the other Seattle Scramble courses but is led by women and is for women and non-binary scramblers.
- Mon, Feb 2, 2026 - Sat, Oct 31, 2026
- Committee: Seattle Alpine Scrambling
- Members: $475.00 Guests: $500.00
- Availability: FULL, 3 on waitlist (12 capacity)
- Cancellation & Refund Policy
NOTE: If you do not have a current Navigation badge, You MUST complete the wilderness navigation course concurrently and earn the badge by May 30th to be eligible for the final field trip.
It is important to review the course activity dates closely to ensure your availability to participate in all of them.Note for Instructors: please reach out to the Course Leader to review instructor expectations before registering.
Alpine Scrambling fills the gap between on trail hiking and roped climbing. Alpine scrambling may at times involve unroped movement on and across low or moderately-exposed snow and rock terrain, but does not include roped climbing.
This course is ideal for people who are very comfortable hiking on trails and want something to expand their comfort zone and skills, but are not interested in or ready to enter the world of technical, roped climbing. The Cascades and Olympics are home to a huge number of stunning peaks that have a scramble route. Many of our graduates love scrambling on its own while others use it as a stepping stone to roped alpine climbing. You will find volunteer instructors of both types in this course.
Not sure if Scrambling is for you? Here are some pictures showing the types of places we go: https://photos.app.goo.gl/V3xgHKXMrGb4gTPC8
REGISTRATION TIMELINE
- Student Registration Opens: Dec 1
- Cancellation: Refund less $10 before Feb 15
- No Refund after Feb 15
The Scramble course consists of 3 in town workshops and 4 single day field trips. The workshops introduce skills, which are then refined out in the field. Optional activities include conditioning hikes and social events. Scheduled activities are shown below under the Course Requirements tab.
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WORKSHOPS
- #1 Course Introduction and Gear: Overview of what scrambling is, setting course expectations, and a gear show and tell.
- #2 Snow Travel: Snow travel safety (avalanche) presentation, ice axe introduction, ice axe arrest practice.
- #3 Rock Travel: Movement on a variety of rock surfaces, protected downclimb (emergency descent method).
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FIELD TRIPS
- #1 Conditioner Hike: Introduction to skills and a strenuous hike to gauge conditioning level.
- #2 Snow Travel: Moving through snow, walking in balance, ice axe self belay, ice axe arrest practice, winter navigation.
- #3 Rock Travel: Moving on rock, protected down climb practice.
- #4 Experience Field Trip: Putting it all together and final evaluation. Demonstrate all skills learned in the course on a trip including both snow and rock travel to a summit.
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ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS
- Complete the Basic/Wilderness Navigation course that includes GPS by May 30!
- This is a separate course with its own fees and scheduling.
- Complete an Avalanche Awareness seminar
- Complete the online Low Impact Recreation quiz.
- Complete a full day/8 hour Stewardship event(s). The Mountaineers is a volunteer organization and we strive to create a community that gives back to our shared world.
- Complete 3 successful Mountaineers scrambles; 1 rock, 1 snow, 1 other (different from course field trips)
- Complete the Wilderness First Aid course.
- This is a separate course with its own fees and scheduling.
- You may also take an equivalent 16 hour Wilderness First Aid course outside of the Mountaineers, but you must work with the Mountaineers to get the equivalency and the badge on your profile. Details here.
- Complete the Basic/Wilderness Navigation course that includes GPS by May 30!
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
The Mountaineers strives to serve everyone, regardless of ability to pay. We are committed to providing access to outdoor recreation, education and conservation opportunities for all members and youth in the communities we serve. More information on financial assistance is available here: https://www.mountaineers.org/membership/scholarship-financial-assistance
Required Equipment
In addition to the course fees, scrambling requires a substantial amount of gear. In addition to general outdoor gear (outdoor clothing, rain gear, backpack, 10 essentials, etc.) there are a few pieces of technical gear required. These pieces and rough prices buying new...
- Mountaineering boots at $250-$500.
- Ice Axe at $70-$100.
- Climbing helmet at $60-$100.
- Crampons at $120-$200.
- May be borrowed or rented for the course. They are required at the snow workshop, snow field trip, and Experience Field Trip.
The majority of the first workshop is dedicated to gear, we encourage you to wait until after the gear workshop to make purchases. Much of this gear can be bought used if you know what to look for.
OTHER COURSES
There are several options for learning Scrambling with the Seattle Branch. All cover the same curriculum.
- Pod-based / Affinity courses (including this one). Small-group (n=12) with same pacing as the larger traditional course.
- The traditional course (n=60)
- Compressed Course(s) Small group (n=20) covers the same material but in less time including a long weekend.
Current Seattle Branch scramble course offerings.
The Everett, Foothills, Tacoma, and Olympia branches also have Scrambling programs. Each branch runs their scrambling course differently and course activities are generally not interchangeable with other branches.
EQUIVALENCY
If you already have the skills covered in this course and want to get involved, check out Scrambling Equivalency.
Badges you will earn:
| Course Activity | Date | Availability | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gear Workshop | |||
| Seattle Program Center |
Mon, Feb 2, 2026
Registration closes Feb 2
|
0
participants
2 instructors on waitlist
|
|
| Conditioning Hike (optional) | |||
| Squak Mountain: May Valley Access |
Sat, Feb 21, 2026
Registration opens Feb 7; Instructor registration open now
|
9
participants
0 instructors
|
|
| West Tiger Mountain No. 2 |
Sun, Mar 15, 2026
Registration opens Mar 1; Instructor registration open now
|
9
participants
1 instructor on waitlist
|
|
| Mount Si Old Trail |
Sat, Mar 28, 2026
Registration opens Mar 14; Instructor registration open now
|
9
participants
0 instructors
|
|
| Tiger Mountain Field Trip | |||
| West Tiger Mountain No. 3 |
Sun, Mar 1, 2026
Registration closes Feb 26
|
0
participants
1 instructor
|
|
| Snow Workshop | |||
| View Ridge Playfield |
Thu, Apr 16, 2026
Registration closes Apr 14
|
0
participants
1 instructor on waitlist
|
|
| Snow Field Trip | |||
| Stevens Pass Ski Area |
Sat, Apr 25, 2026
Registration closes Apr 23
|
0
participants
2 instructors on waitlist
|
|
| Rock Workshop | |||
| Seattle Program Center |
Wed, May 6, 2026
Registration closes May 4
|
0
participants
0 instructors
|
|
| Rock Field Trip | |||
| Dirty Harry's Peak Trail |
Sat, May 23, 2026
Registration closes May 21
|
12
participants
0 instructors
|
|
| Dirty Harry's Peak Trail |
Wed, May 27, 2026
Registration opens May 24; Instructor registration open now
|
12
participants
3 instructors
|
|
| Experience Field Trip | |||
| Bean Creek Basin |
Sat, May 30, 2026
Registration closes May 28
|
12
participants
1 instructor
|
|
Additional badges needed to graduate
Completed
See the course handbook under "Course Materials"
| Name/Description |
|---|
| 2025-seattle-alpine-scramble-course-student-handbook.pdf |
| Alpine Scramble Course Graduation Application Alpine Scramble Course Graduation Application |
Snow Travel
Alpine Scrambling Course
Crampon Travel
Rock Scrambling
Basic Navigation Course
Wilderness First Aid Course
Low Impact Recreation
Stewardship Credit