And finally, a 2-day drive from NM to NC for climbing in the Asheville area and Elisa's family gathering at Mountain Lake (film location for Dirty Dancing). While Hurricane/Tropical Depression "Ida" rained steadily on us for 2 days, we got half-day wet climbs at Looking Glass (Sundial Crack & Seal) and Rumblingbald (Fruit Loops, Granola, & others). Other highlights were camping in a puddle on the Warren Wilson College campus and meeting Elisa's friends and self-proclaimed "eccentric" family.
Ghost Ranch (Including 90-sec Buford Video showing a great display of loose nuts in his brain, playing hockey puck with a rock, and getting frightened of his own echo):
October is a great time of year for desert climbing. Too cold in Colorado to climb and too early to ski, Elisa & I (with our sidekick Buford) decided to hit up Moab for its' desert towers and cracks. Day 1: Drive, break down, switch trucks, and drive. Brief hike in Arches NP. Camp just east of Fisher Towers. Day 2: Climb Ancient Art in the Fisher Towers area and a brief trip to Wall Street. Day 3: Camped in Kane Creek Canyon and climbed at the Ice Cream Parlor. Wind and Rain! Moved camp & dinner in town (McStiff's). Day 4: A brief stop at Indian Creek, a drive into Canyonlands, and return to New Mexico.
Testing my new (free) Flickr account here (dotphoto is no longer free and deleted my account, therefore lots of broken links in my blog now). For the reason behind the poetic blog title, view the slideshow below:
The 2009 video and slideshow party was a success! And to boot, the quality of the videos have gotten better each year since I first hosted it in 2004. The invitation list grew from just the climbing club to the NMT mountain bike forum this year. Pretty much if it was outdoors, was fun (or painful or embarassing), & was photographed, it was welcomed to be screened for an audience through a digital projector. Slideshow topics were:
- Mish-mash climbing, biking, and ice climbing pics from in, around, & way beyond Socorro, NM (see "There Was Rock" video below) - Rob's King Swing and other Socorro climbing pics - Dianita's rock climbing in Columbia slideshow - Nick's repeating-loop hiking slideshow to Abba - Colin & Elisa's Yosemite & California Coast trip (see video below) - Brock & Sofia's New Zealand bouldering & travels video - Bob's annual bouldering extravaganza video.
I left two videos out of the slideshow party because (1) I forgot and (2) due to technical difficulties. See my updated blog entry for these videos (Colorado climbing trip & William's Lake Basin backcountry ski day) here).
I haven't posted an update in a while. A little busy lately! So here's a brief one.
Spring Skiing Photos:
Short video (2min 31sec) from a May 9th backcountry tour to Sin Nombre Peak in the Williams Lake Basin (Taos, NM). Actually, just the 12,500' ridge of it. Mark, Elisa, Me, & Buford.
Also: 1. Mount Taylor near Grants, NM. 2. Deception Peak near Santa Fe, NM.
(note: removed broken slideshow link. Youtube video above works.)
Spring Climbing Photos, Including:
1. Chloride Canyon with Elisa, Jessie, & Sandy. We had a slighly serendipitous meet-up with Jessie & Sandy who were biking across the US. After hanging out (or rather, getting stuck) in Silver City during the Tour de Gila (we cheered on Lance Armstrong and hundreds of other bikers), they joined for some climbing in Chloride.
2. Front Range Climbing. Elisa & I headed up to visit her friends Bill & Juanita at the Allenspark Lodge (a great B&B!) for a weekend of climbing & even a brief horseback ride. Also met up with Giovanni to climb the Pear Buttress (II 5.8, Book Formation, Lumpy Ridge) and then at Boulder Canyon the next day. (last few photos taken by Gio. Thanks!)
Once again, I was fortunate to take an extended vacation this summer. The purpose of this trip was to assist "Dahlia" in her quest to be the first inflatable doll to summit Mount Olympus... OK, actually the impetus was to be Best Man at Phil's wedding and after half jokingly mentioning whether he wanted to climb Mount Bachelor for his bachelor party, he decided to set our sights on something more monumental: Mount Olympus. And, of course, since this was to be a bachelor party, there needed to be an inflatable doll. Since I was going to be up in the Pacific Northwest, I thought I may as well get in touch with Mark again and he was jazzed about climbing in the Bugaboos. I got in touch with Willie, too, and he had been wanting to climb the "Arm" of Sahale Peak, so I said "why not?" Thus, a 3-week trip was born.
Click on play icon to view the 4-Part video below (approx. 11min, or click here for individual videos). Continue reading for details (in four parts).
Part I: Mount Olympus, Olympic National Park, Olympic Mountains This is an epic mountain that I've been looking forward to for a couple years not because of the technical challenges, but because of the variety of environments it travels through. An 18 mile approach through temperate rainforest and then sub-alpine fir forest is required before reaching the alpine zone and getting access to the Blue Glacier. And besides steep glacier and snow climbing, a final rock pitch (5.4) tops the mountain. We accomplished all this and on our hike-out day, we drove a short distance to Rialto Beach for a 3-mile stroll. This trip had it all- from rainforest, to glacier, to beach!
We took a fairly leisurely 5 days to complete the trip, which made it more enjoyable while carrying the extra weight of both climbing and backpacking gear (and an inflatable doll in the spirit of Phil's bachelor party). This also allowed flexibility to make a second summit bid if the weather didn't cooperate. We took a 60m rope since getting off the top requires either 4th class travel on what sounded like loose rock or a 30m rappel. Gear recommendation: Books say gear to 2", but if you're comfortable climbing 5.4, a handful of nuts and some slings will do (I placed 5 pieces of gear, all <1"). Access to the 4th class ascent/descent off the summit block was in sketchy conditions because of a large "moat" that melted out around the base of the rock in those sections, so it was good we had planned to climb the 5th-class route to the top. I'm fairly certain we assisted in what was the first ascent of Mount Olympus by an inflatable doll.
Brief trip report/Mt. Olympus Beta and Topo:* From Glacier camp, we ascended a well-used trail for 1 mile, crossing a couple snow fields and exposed scree sections on the way. We chose to not put on crampons during this section, but with the alpine start, snow was hard & slickery! This took us to the top of and along the eastern lateral moraine. Toward the far (southern) end of the moraine, an eroded trail went almost straight down to the Blue Glacier at approx 5,000' elevation. We roped up here for glacier travel. A climbing traverse southwest toward the right side of the ice falls took us to a gap in the rock outcrops with a moderately steep slope and an already beaten path that zig-zagged northwest-ish to the top of Snow Dome. The entrance to this "gap" was at approx. 5,600' elevation. From there, we stayed on the ridge and then contoured around crevasses to a col at about 7,220' (I think this is called Crystal Pass). Through this pass, we continued along the south side of a couple "false summit" blocks, then across about 100m of loose scree and gravel toward the real summit block, traversed under the eastern face of Mount Olympus's West Peak, up a steep (60+ degree?) snow slope to the base of the North Face. There was a thin (3" thick) snow bridge at the top of the snow slope that a climber had warned me about the previous day. That was good beta. I led 28m of climbing up and slightly left, through a short (3m) dihedral, and finally to a belay at a block with a rap sling. Scrambling took us to the summit. Voila! (We were half way done!). (*The usual disclaimer: Consult a book for real beta, I'm not responsible if you get lost, hurt, or killed). Click on photo map to view full image and see our route.
A few days later after the Mount Olympus trip and before Phil's wedding, I also took an 11-mile round trip hike down the Dungeness Spit (Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge) to the lighthouse. Nice, peaceful hike with some shorebirds beginning to migrate through. Click here for a photo album of this trip (or check out video above).
Part II: Sahale Peak, North Cascades National Park, North Cascade Mountains
Willie picked me up at 6am in Shoreline (two days after Phil's wedding) and we drove to the North Cascades for a day trip up the Sahale Arm to the peak. We had a few small mishaps getting to Marblemount, but fortunately the hike and route itself was very straight forward and in a speedy 5hrs 25min we hiked up the 5,000' of elevation gain, climbed the steep snow and glacier field, climbed (roped) the 5.-easy blocks, and were standing on the summit. This was a nice, low-stress day with great views. The 2007-2008 winter was a heavy snow year so there was still plenty of snow on the Sahale glacier to cover the bergshrund and the afternoon snow was soft enough to kick steps without crampons. This allowed us to save weight by taking only an ice axe. We took & used a 60m rope (50m or perhaps a 30m would do) and small rack to climb the summit blocks, although some strong climbing parties solo the ~20m of exposed moves to get to the summit (more confidence inspiring if the rock is dry). Click here for a photo album of this trip.
Part III: Bugaboos, Bugaboo Provincial Park, B.C., Purcell Mountains
The day following Sahale, Willie & I brunched at the Calico Cupboard (highly recommended) in "quaint" La Conner and then he dropped me off in Burlington where I met Mark, who was coming from his own wedding in Victoria, B.C., two days earlier. We took 2 days to drive to the trailhead. Click here for photo album (or see video above).
Day 1: Packing 2 ropes, a large rack (pro to 4"), mountaineering gear, extra bivy gear for an intended 2-day climb (didn't happen), and 9 days of food, we were each loaded down (approx 80lbs each) for the hike in- the heaviest pack I had ever carried. Fortunately it was only 3.6 miles.
Day 2: Bugaboo Spire, NE Ridge (IV, 5.7) This is one of the 50 Classic Climbs in North American, according to Steck & Roper's book by that name. A mega-classic, I shouldn'tve been too surprised to be the 4th party in line despite rising at 3:40am for an alpine start. Shoulda slept in! (Smile) Mark led a nice 5.9 variation on the first pitch. We soloed 2 or 3 pitches of un-exposed 4th/5th class chimneys half-way up the route. After topping out on the north summit, came the awesome knife-edge traverse to the south summit, with stunning 1000' drop-offs on each side. The descent was 2 raps, a short climb up, 2 raps, ridge traverse, 2 raps, down climb, short rap, then traverse the ridge off (or something like that, my memory is shady). The trick for the final walk-off, as according to the guide, was to stay as close to the ridge crest as possible and avoid the many worn trails that descend too early.
Day 3: Pigeon Spire, West Ridge (II, 5.4) A rest day for us. Based on info we got from another climber, We decided to solo this route to save weight and time & maximize enjoyment. One of my favorite route of the whole trip because of the spectacular positions and views and nice, solid rock. Lots of friendly people on this popular route.
Day 4: Snowpatch Spire, Southwest Ridge (aka "Surfs Up") (III, 5.9, 7 pitches) If you can turn your brain off during the 4 pitches of dirty, licheny climbing that precede surfs up ledge, the remainder of this climb presents high quality, fun lie-backs and hand and fist jams to the top. Again, great views!
Day 5: Another Rest day. We had superb weather until this point (too hot, in fact), but the Kain Hut attendant posted incoming rain for the remainder of the week. Applebee Camp converted from a 45+ tent carnival to a pleasant 7-tent community in a matter of days. Actually, since Mark had found us a nice, secluded campsite, the Applebee Camp experience was fun. I heard German, British, Japanese, French, and other unidentified languages there. A Camp Four-esque experience.
Day 6: Crescent Spire, McTech Arete (III, 5.10) This was a good route to climb with a forecast for bad weather since there are options to rap at the top of every pitch. I thought this route had the most fun technical climbing for the whole trip. Great jams- fingers, hands, and fists- on each pitch. Easily protected. In fact, one of my favorite routes of all time!
Day 7: Hike out. This was 2 days earlier than we had planned, but sounded like the better option than sitting out the rains in a tent. On the way out we did a quick tour of the blue glacier ice on Bugaboo Glacier around the base of "Son of Snowpatch" spire.
Part IV: Mount Gimli (IV, 5.10 variation of a 5.8 climb), Valhalla Provincial Park, B.C., Selkirk Mountains
Based on a tip from Phil, we decided to visit the hip town of Nelson and scrounge for information about climbing Mount Gimli, which he had visited and shown me striking pictures of. The library's internet turned out the be the best source of information and, armed with Gary Clark's topo, the following day we set out to climb. This may have been my favorite climb of this trip (Or maybe it was Pigeon Spire. No, maybe Bugaboo. Mount Olympus? Aaahhhh! They're all good!). Fog sat in the valley below during our hike in. By the time we topped out, it had risen and caught up to us, denying us of a summit view. However, I welcomed the eerie atmosphere it created. We were surprised to find snow and icicles on the August summit, which must've formed during the cold front and storms just a day or two earlier. Click here for photo album (or see video above).
Some Stats for the 3 week trip:
Total Hiking Distance: 95 miles (153km)
Hiking Elevation Gain: 17,269 feet (5,264m)
Vertical Technical Climbing: 3,832 feet (1,168m)
Approx. cost of unleaded gas (87 octane) per gallon in the U.S.: US$4.00, in Canada: US$5.25
To use my new Bugaboo-acquired vocabulary: "Berg Heil!"
FALL colors are in full swing in northern New Mexico (7-8 Oct, '07). Eva & I visited the Truchas area for a hike and spent a second day climbing at the El Rito trad crag.
The world had been feeling a bit too horizontal lately and the weather seemed to be coming together for a bid at Dreamweaver in Rocky Mountain National Park, so I called up Wes who's always game for an alpine diversion. So, it was another whirlwind, weekend-warrior-style RMNP trip (see Kiener's Route).
Dreamweaver summits Mt. Meeker (13911 ft) via a narrow ribbon of snow & ice (below & slightly left of the red "*" on the photo above). I've had my eye on this route for four years now, but the narrow window that this route is at its' best (3 weeks each year) conspired against my schedule each year till now. Too early and it's a post-hole, snow slog, avalanch nightmare. Too late and it's just a loose, rocky gully. This year (May 2007), I read Eli's May 11th report that it was just coming into shape and we climbed it May 19th. Conditions were good- The snow was a good, firm cramponing surface, the chimney sections were about 4' tall with a thin, but good enough layer of ice to tool into lightly (actually, rock features offered many opportunities, thus the M2+ ice/rock rating). More ideal conditions were probably 1-2 weeks away if deep nighttime freezes kept up (which would've lessened the snow pack and let the ice cruxes become taller), but with suddenly warm temperatures the route may have melted out. It became blazing hot by the time we topped out, making a slushy glissade down the Loft. Then it rained and thunderstormed at 1pm during our hike out. We carried a light rack (single set of cams & nuts & 30m rope), but could've gone lighter since the cruxes were short and easy enough that we wound up simul-soloing the whole route. There were 2 parties that likewise soloed and 1 party that roped-up.
Eva's attempt at the Keyhole Route on Long's was thwarted by snow & ice on the North-side slabs, so she wisely turned back after enjoying the view. There was quite a bit of snow, with most of the trail covered by snow.
Undetailed details: Left trail 4:30am Base of Climb (6 miles?) 7:10am Top 9:10am
Slideshow below (2.5min. Plus, Double Feature! Eva's hike up the Keyhole Route on Long's Peak. PLUS PLUS!! Epilogue: A Special Visit to the Historic & Spoooooky Stanley Hotel!). Or, view Larger Photos Here.
It's a small town, but we have many ways to entertain ourselves. Rob, a former Socorro-ite, came to town and set up the "King Swing." 2min 16sec Video:
Plug in a cam... Clip in etrier... Weight carefully... Step up... Hook fifi... Reach... Slide in a nut... Clip in etrier... These were my first aid moves on my first Wall leading to my first bivy on a portaledge. I had once said that I wasn't interested in climbing a "bigwall." The idea of creeping up a few pitches per day, as opposed to linking-up ten or more pitches per day for free climbing, didn't appeal to me. However, when Wes emailed with an invite on a trip to Zion in a few weeks, I didn't delay.
We chose Moonlight Buttress (V, 5.9, A0, C1) for our first Wall attempt. OK, so it's not even that BIG of a bigwall. After all, I've climbed taller routes in a day (Epinephrine & Snake Dike for instance) and the route is aided and free climbed (12d) in a single push regularly. But, this was our first tall aid route (my first aid experience), we were expecting to climb & haul slowly, the route is listed on bigwall.com, and we did plan to spend a night on the route. We wanted to avoid crowds and this is a megaclassic, but luck was on our side: It was the weekend after Thanksgiving holiday, when the majority of people already took their vacation, and the first REAL cold front of the season just moved in. Did I say "luck"? I should've added a little "brute" mentality.
To match our brute mentality, the brute approach was the most miserable part of the entire trip. We crossed the Virgin River to get to the base of the climb (to the NE or Angel's Landing) at 7:30am with the water temperature at 35F. Brrr.
After this, creeping up the wall is exaclty what we did. I took the first lead (5.9 free climb) at 8:30am and we swapped leads from there and reached the top of the third pitch around 4:30pm, where Wes solo-aided half-way up the fourth pitch while I set up the borrowed portaledge. Setting that thing up on the ground a couple times really helped doing it for real on the wall. Wes finished the pitch in the dark & rappelled to a welcoming bowl of hot Indian cuisine (Tasty Bites highly recommended!).
Sleeping on the wall wasn't as bad as either of us thought it'd be. We had to coordinate movements to make sure the ledge, attached from a single point, didn't pivot us off, but otherwise it was like a stiff airbed. After shaking off the fairly frigid night (just below freezing) and just as the sun hit our bivy, Wes began jugging his fixed line at 9am to finish the 4th pitch. Similar to the first day, we swapped leads firing for the top, but sunset caught us half-way up the 6th pitch. I tend to climb calmer after sunset. After all, once the sun sets, there's no more deadline to meet. Aid climbing was no different and we took about 3.5 hours per pitch on the final two pitches, topping out at 2am and crashing for our second, unplanned, bivy on the West Rim descent trail.
This trip presented lots of firsts for me, which is what definitely drew me into climbing a wall against my initial hesitations. I guess you could say I like, or perhaps need, to spice things up occasinally. I placed my first Leeper hook after seeing one for the first time the day before. The hauling system (for the 60-pound Pig) was new to me, but was an easy carry-over from crevasse rescue. Aid climbing did turn out to be excruciatingly slow, especially in comparison to my 1,200'-in-a-day climb a few weeks before (see "A Tale of Two Epics" for details). However, I can see aiding, especially at the C1 level (Clean aid 1 = EASY!), going much faster the next time around. It was incredibly fun breaking into a new type of climbing and by focusing on gear, I can see clean aid experience improving my trad climbing placements.
Climbing Stats: Climb dates: Dec 2-3, 2006 Permit cost: $10 for 2 Sunrise 7:30, Sunset 5:15 Approx. Temperatures: High 53F, Low 27F. Hours of climbing 1st day: 10 Hours of climbing 2nd day: 17 Time per pitch: A little over 3 hours Approx vertical gain 1st day: 350' (3.5 pitches) Approx vertical gain 2nd day: 650' (4.5 pitches)
Rack: 1 set DMM Peenuts (small offsets; large offsets would've been nice) 3 sets Nuts 1 set Ballnuts 2 ea Cams sized 0.33"-1.6" (8mm-41mm, i.e. Camalots 0.1-0.75; a 3rd set would be nice) 1 ea Cams sized 1.2"-4.5" (30mm-115mm, i.e. Camalots 1-4) 1 set Small, med, large Leeper cam hooks (used large once) 2 ea BD Cliffhangers & Talons (not used) 2 Cordellete 20 Slings (didn't need this many) 1 Double-length sling 50 Carabiners (2 on each sling & a handfull of non-slung)
Thanks to Isaac "Crakadikt" for lending us his old A5 ledge. Cheers, mate!
By Chirurgeons and Blood-Letters, in Boston DISCOVER'D, an Organelle of the Body, an' that Human; excis'd from the Back & Mottl'd Purple in Colour, and very like a Kiddney-Bean in SHAPE, which when Remov'd causes Expiration, as with all Organs.By Chirurgeons and Blood-Letters, in Boston DISCOVER'D, ...
From our Baltimore Cousins comes News of the felicitous Health Benefits of the Powder'd Tobacco SNUFF , and the Recommendation that multiple Pinches be taken until Blood flows freely from the Nose in Service of balancing the Humours....