Saturday, January 30, 2010
Nordwand ... the movie
Last night the "North face: a true story," opened in Manhattan and other select cities around the country. This 2008 German film, with English sub-titles, is getting its American release, to good reviews. The consensus is that all the climbing (true parts) of the story are superb- riveting even - but that the fictional love story and Nazis drama portions of the movie are much less successful. This is the story of one of the ill-fated early attempts on the North face of the Eiger. Click on this text to access the New York Times review.
I think my time has passed, however if there is one alpine route I dream of, this is it!
Loppet Training
I took my students out for a two hour ski on very hilly terrain. This teaching video, cuts in images from the current U-23 World Championships, along with footage from our skiing on the Ladies Five and the East Mountain Loop. The major take-aways are keep your hips forward, aggressive foot drive, and concentrate on weight transfer directly under your hips. Their technique was spotty at the end of the session when we were videotaping, but my kids seem ready!
Last Training Weekend
This is the last chance for my students to get some mileage under their belts for next weekend's 25K loppet. The temperature is currently -21 degrees, and everyone is doing a waxing clinic until it warms up and then we will ski a 15K workout. I am a little concerned as this is the youngest group I have ever taken to this race. (Including my daughter Lucy who at 12 is theyoungest in the group of four student skiers.)
I have enclosed an image of the famous oil painting depicting the two burly birkebeiner dudes as they ski Prince Hakon to safety over the mountain in 1206 A.D. All "loppets" and long distance ski marathons take their inspiration from the grand-daddy of them all, the 55K Norwegian Birkebeiner held in March. To this day, each of the 15,000 participants must ski with 12 pound pack which symbolizes the infant prince.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Interview: Messner the alpine god!
Click on this text to read a recent interview with Messner ... he soloed the North face of Droites, he climbed the North fce of the Eiger in 10 hours, he did an alpine style ascent of Hidden Peak, he soloed Everest without oxygen, and he was the first man to climb all fourteen 8000 meter peaks.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK ... I want to solve a climbing problem in the mountains, not in the sporting goods store.
Reinhold Messner
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Video: Herringbone Technique
This short video includes footage from the 1930s, a 10K race in 2008 held at Rumford Maine, and a short session on the NCS trails with my young racers.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Alaskan Routes
So many routes and so little time. The picture is of "Ham and Eggs" on Moose's Tooth, an ultra-classic that I would love to do. Then too, there is the West Ridge of Hunter, the Messner Couloir or the Cassin Ridge of Denali, and a whole host of moderate peaks near the Kahlitna "landing strip." Click on this text to access the link to an overview of SuperTopo routes, a great overview of what Fossils might still do with 10-14 days in Alaska.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
The Stonemasters
Click on the picture to enlarge of the photo of Bachar and Kauk soloing Reed's Pinnacle Direct. Know that Mark and I were sitting on the top belay, having just done this two pitch test piece, when both of these guys came soloing up. (We got the impression that this was a common warm-up for them; totally casual as you might say in 1970s parlance.) Click on this text to access a short slideshow, evocative of the 1970s Yosemite scene, played to a medley of Hendrix. I am intrigued enough that I might shell out $60 for a copy of the book. Few memories are as good as Fall in the Valley during the late 1970s.
Monday, January 18, 2010
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Fossil Ice Climbing
Gary and his buddy John are up from the Berkshires. They stayed in the Fossil Cabin last evening and went to see Steve House's slideshow in Keene Valley. This is an important work weekend for me, board prep, chatting with visiting parents, and doing a bit of work with the Treetops planning summit. However, I was able to join the Fossils for their warmup laps in Cascade Pass, after which they were headed to "Sisters."
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Video: more double poling
Yesterday morning Lucy and I went over to the Olympic trails to watch St. Lawrence University host the Eastern College ski circuit. We watched the women's 5K classic race, which was held in very challenging waxing conditions (alternating rain, sleet, and snow). The Dartmouth women cleaned up, taking places #1-#5. Later in the day, my youngest NCS nordic racers were out on our trails - with their waxless skis - working on their double poling. Thanks to all the collegiate racers who made this training video possible. (The background music is from the Nutcracker.)
Video: NCS avalanche forecasting
One of the eagerly awaited units for our students, is the 8th grade snow physics science unit. Larry spends a great deal of time out with the students talking about snow crystal classification, distinctive layers in the snowpack, ET and destructive metamorphism, as well as the "how to" of backcountry travel and avalanche safety. This short video covers the topic of how to do a shovel test to identify weak layers that might fail in the snowpack.
Quote of the Week
When you really examine the types of things that Fossils have done in the name of "vacation," and "fun" over the years, it seems almost absurd ... bivouacs in Palisade boulder fields, 16 days storm-bound in a tent on Denali, subsisting on gasoline soaked fruitcake, or even something mundane, like freezing your butt off on an ice climb or losing the ends of the rope. You do begin to doubt our sanity, as well as the sanity of all mountaineers.
And so, it makes perfect sense that H. W. Tilman, looking for a crew to man his boat, which was going to sail off on a climbing trip to climb uncharted peaks, would place the following ad in the London Times newspaper:
NO PAY, NO PROSPECTS, AND NOT MUCH PLEASURE.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Video: NCS nordic ski team
After a quick 24 hour trip to Manhattan, I made it back to campus just in time to take part in the cross country ski team practice. I took a small sub-set of the team to ski the east Mountain loop, and this 40 second video (which includes Lucy) focuses on the famous herringbone hill. During the 1980 Olympics it was nicknamed "Russia Hill," many year ago it was renamed "Harry's Hill in honor of our former NCS headmaster (and winter mountaineer extraordinaire) Harry Eldridge. Enjoy.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Blast From The Past
Twenty years ago - as my nordic racing career was winding down - I was still coaching and guiding for the US Disabled Ski Team. Having missed out on the demonstration event at the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics, Joe Raineri was still hoping to medal in the 1991 World Championships. As one of our training races I guided Joe on the 25K Lake Placid Loppet course, an Olympic profile course with over 1800' of climbing. The quality of this two minute video is moderate as I recorded it off an old VHS tape of the TV coverage ... nevertheless you get a clear idea of what a great guy I am!
Monday, January 11, 2010
NCS Nordic Team Practice
Conditions were fantastic and the temperatures were moderate for a change. There were only two skiers today as the older racers were working on secondary school applications, so I had my daughter Lucy, her friend Hannah, and Liz one of our other coaches out on the Olympic trails. We started off practice with some technique work - double pole kick - something these young ("I just want to skate") types rarely use. Enjoy this 90 second video, set to some 1940s jazz.
Fantastic Skiing
The campus nordic trails, as well as the 1980 Olympic trails across the street are in spectacular condition. I have been getting out regularly, including an 80 minute ski yesterday, which included two laps of the Porter Mountain loops. Also, as you can see, our alpine area - rope tow powered by a 1959 Ford engine - still has deep pockets of powder in some of the glades.
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Fantastic Ice
This morning I toured to the back side of Pitchoff to check out the climbing conditions, and in a word they are FANTASTIC. By 11:00 AM I counted five parties up on various routes. Enclosed you can see parties on Screw and Climaxe, and Weeping Winds, there were also parties on Eye of the Needle. Oddly, Central Pillar of Pitchoff, which looked very fat, had nobody on it. Are any fossils coming up for the Martin Luther King weekend?
Essay: Chamonix and the Urban Bivy
A fantastic little piece, that will resonate with any American or Brit who has ever climbed in Chamonix. Fred Wilkinson hits the nail on the head with his story of mixed climbing, the inevitable SNAFU, with bivouac to follow; know that I have also slept in that bathroom, high atop the Aiguille du Midi. Click on this text to read this evocative article which will bring you back to the days ...
Oh, and always click on the image to enlarge the photograph.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Quote of the Week
The quote featured below was by Albert Einstein. It was was featured prominently inside the front cover - with a picture of the East face of Moose's Tooth - in the 1972 Chouinard Catalog, a collector's item which I have in my mountaineering library. The catalog is most famous for the essay "The Whole Natural Art of Protection," by Doug Robinson. To put things in perspective, the chouinard piolet (70 cm) was listed for $50, custom prescription mountain glasses for $45, salewa wart hogs for $9.00, and knifeblades for $1.85.
A PERFECTION OF MEANS AND A CONFUSION OF AIMS SEEMS TO BE OUR MAIN PROBLEM.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Perfect Time for a Visit
Click on this text to read Selden's blog entry entitled, "The Freezer Is Full." If you are in a rush, the bottom line is simple, georgie provided 300+ pounds of beef ... so not only is the snow and ice fantastic, not only is the Mountaineer's Icefest coming up, but the freezer is full of free-range, pasture fed beef.
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Black Diamond Lab Tests
Click on this text to access a quick lab test, on the question of when to retire old ropes. Obviously no definitive answers, however some good strategies are shared, as well as some eye-popping statistics on the 9.4mm sport rope that the tester had been leading on ... it broke at 40% of the strength of the new rope!
Monday, January 4, 2010
Interview with Charlie Porter
SuperTopo has reprinted the 1993 Rock and Ice interview with this legendary figure. Quiet, relatively unknown, this guy has done big walls all over the world, and soloed big routes all over the world ... from multiple El Cap routes to the Cassin on Denali, and then from Patagonia to Pakistan ... he's done it all. It would be great to have someone do an updated interview. Click on this text to access the article.
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Tour de Ski ... Stage 3
Click on this text to see a video of the 1.6K men's semi-final sprint heat. Despite difficult waxing and new soft snow, these guys are flying! Andy Newell - one of America's best hopes for a medal in the Olympics - advanced out of the prologue and the quarterfinals, only to finish fourth in this semi-final race ... just missed advancing as a lucky loser ... he finished 8th overall and continues to build up solid World Cup points. He is #16, in a red suit with a black hat. The race takes place in Oberhof, Germany and this heat has two hot Norwegians, the eventual winner Roenning, as well as Northug who has been dominating this event for the past several years.
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Video: Eperon Cosmique
Click on this text to access a french video - beautiful climbing shots, especially of the 5.10c overhang - Larry led this route in July 2008. When we did the route there was a women stuck on the overhang and he had to give a stiff push on the derriere to get her over the hard bit. As you can see from the picture it is spectacular rock, in a beautiful setting, with easy access from the tram. A true classic first done by Gaston Rebuffat.
Friday, January 1, 2010
White Mountains
The W.H. Murray Literary Prize
A new discovery today, click on this text to access a page from the Scottish Mountaineering Club website. The page is full of literary treasures, about climbing in the highlands. After sampling a few stories you can not help but want to head over to the Glen or up on the Ben or over to the Isle of Skye for some mountaineering.
The NCS Traverse of the Gods
Checking out my new mountaineering system - 120 cm skis, 70 cm skins, and my double boots - I skied the long route to the crag and then self-belayed a few laps on a heavily snowed up easy route called "Buried Treasure." The temperatures were moderate, however a light snow was falling, over a few inches that we received last night, so it was truly winter conditions. This should help me get ready for the traverse pitch on the Black Dike which Larry and I hope to do this winter, as well as get me started on training for some grim nordwands that I still aspire to do.
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