1. Start climb at midnight to avoid desert heat and excessive water requirements.
2. Blisters will incapacitate you. Hiking boots that rub your heals too much will create massive blisters. Bring tape, moleskin, and scissors for blisters. Wear light weight cross trainers or running shoes instead with gators.
3. Body maintenance is the most important thing to remember! Food, energy gel caps in pants pockets easily accessible on the outside of body instead of in your pack. Eat and drink continuously all the way to the summit!!!!!
4. Pack weight too heavy. A 35 pound pack is way too heavy! Camelback backpack that can accommodate 6 liters of water and a sports drink would be much better. Infuse water with electrolyte tablets. Minimum of 6 liters of water in camelbacks that have easily accessible hoses.
5. Extra batteries for GPS Delorme with insurance for rescue purchased. Battery backup brick (mofie) for phone charged and packed.
6. Microspikes and hiking poles instead of crampons and ice axe in late March because of the significant weight difference.
7. This is an extreme professional climb and should be completed carefully, methodically, and at a comfortable steady pace all the way up. The summit wall is a bear! After climbing 6000 feet, the 2000 foot summit headwall is the crux of the entire climb. Even if you did everything right in terms of body maintenance to this point, this is the true test of whether you properly trained for this climb.
8. Hat or head covering to shade from sun was missed, but highly recommended during the day.
9. Still some snow on top in late March, but snow is soft in late afternoon. Did not use crampons, ice axe, or microspikes in late afternoon traverse.
10. Wear pants with extra pockets on the outside. Layer clothing. Jacket shell needed for cool weather from 7000+ feet up in shade and snow fields.
11. Microfiber cloth to clean perspiration from glasses.
12. Cloth to wipe nose.
13. Cloth to wipe face.
14. Respect this climb or it will eat you up and spit you out!
