Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Silvretta Ski Traverse




The Silvretta mountain chain extends on the Austrian provinces Tyrol and Vorarlberg, as well as the Swiss canton Grisons. These regions meet at the top of the Dreiländerspitze mountain. The largest part of the Silvretta belongs to Swiss territory, while the Austrian part of this mountain chain is more popular and known with alpinists.

The highest summit of the Silvretta is Piz Linard (3,411 m), also located on Swiss territory. In the north of the Flüela pass, the Silvretta mountain range is characterised by a number of glaciers and therefore also called the "Blue Silvretta". The mountain range is bounded by the Rätikon, the Verwall mountains, the Samnaun mountain chain, the Albula Alps and the Plessur Alps.

Peaks: some of the mountains in the Austrian part of the Silvretta are the Fluchthorn (3,398 m), Silvrettahorn (3,244 m), Grosses Seehorn (3,121 m), Hohes Rad (2,934 m), Bielerspitze (2,545 m), Vallüla (2,813 m), Dreiländerspitze (3,197 m), Schneeglocke (3,223 m) and the Big Piz Buin (3,312 m).

Good workout ... Cragging and the Whiteface Toll Road

Another beautiful - Colorado style - day. After lunch I headed up to do some 5.6-5.7 laps on the crag, and then after a few more hours at work, I did a 50 minute run-walk workout on the Whiteface Toll Road with 800' vertical.

BOOK REVIEW ... another shout out for BORN TO RUN

Monday, July 30, 2012

Celebrating my 60th again

As always we had a working dinner before our quarterly board meeting, and the staff and trustees took the opportunity to belated celebrate ... the cake was truly over the top!

Tour du Mont Blanc Someday?


ULTRA TRAIL Tour du Mt-Blanc by Petzl-crew

Sunday, July 29, 2012

QUOTE OF THE WEEK ... George Mallory

"It is 50 to 1 against but we'll have a whack yet and do ourselves proud." Written in 1924, in a letter to his wife Ruth. (I found this quote in Chapter 8 of FEARLESS ON EVEREST:The Quest For Sandy Irvine.)

Friday, July 27, 2012

30th Olympiad ... Citius, Altius, Fortius, which is Latin for "Faster, Higher, Stronger"

Unfortunately because of our board meeting I will miss the Opening Ceremony. However I will be up at 4 AM (with the rest of the males in America) to watch the first women's beach volleyball event!

BLAST FROM THE PAST .... 1972 Olympic 5000m Final

On this day when the London Olympics begin, I remember vividly watching this race on TV, as well as following the sad drama with the Israeli athletes that proceeded it.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Ski animation

Five Key Stretches For Running

CLICK HERE As the Fossil alpinists get older there are some things to remember: range of motion on the rock goes first, then strength leaves us, next to go is endurance, and hopefully we hold on to our climbing technique until the bitter end. This is a good reason for doing yoga or stretching religiously.

The Olympics Are About To Start ... the famous 1908 London marathon

CLICK HERE TO READ THE STORY OF THE MOST FAMOUS MARATHON RACE EVER.

The women's 2012 Olympic marathon will be run on August 5th, and the men's race is August 12th.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Silvretta Ski Traverse In 2013?

Having experienced poor conditions twice on the Haute Route in March I am wondering if a change of venue is in the cards.

This high level route has a reputation for the nicest huts, and the best early season conditions. The huts in this part of the Tirol open in mid-February as opposed to the March dates more common in Chamonix or Zermatt. The route is successfully guided quite frequently in March, and while not a scientific study, I can say that most of the videos posted on YouTube were from March trips.

As per possible peaks to bag, there are many, including Piz Buin, Silvrettahorn, and Breite Krone pictured here.

Open letter to the US Olympic marathoners

CLICK HERE TO READ DON KARDONG'S ADVICE (4th in 1976 Olympic marathon)

Cragging

Today was the annual Ironman competition, which pretty much confines everyone to the campus, as the race course requires all available roads to be shut down for most of the day. I spent several hours at the crag doing laps with my soloist, and third classing the easiest routes. The picture is of me 30 feet off the deck on Buried Treasure (5.2).

Good day of training

An hour on the rowing machine (watching Mission Impossible III), and then later in the day, and hour running and doing yoga at the Lake Placid track. I finished the day, watching the sunset from the Fossil Cabin, sipping single malt, and reading the biography of the poet Robinson Jeffers. Tomorrow it's laps on the NCS crag.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

1960 Olympic 50K at Squaw Valley

In honor of Sixten Jernberg, the Nordic legend, who just passed away. This film clip comes courtesy of Soviet cinematographers (with Russian narration and a peppy soundtrack!)…the film focuses on Jernberg (no 36) and Veikko Hakulinen of Finland (no 26)…also Kalevi Hamalainen of Finland (no 1), Rolf Ramgard of Sweden (16) and a snippet of Genadii Vaganov USSR (no 22)…gold medal went to Hamalainen, silver to Hakulinen, bronze to Ramgard…Jernberg finished 5th – but he had already won gold in the 30k and silver in the 15k ... pretty incredible pace given they were on wood skis and red klister!

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Crag climbing

I did nine laps with Larry yesterday, it was fun, but I need to start running less and bouldering more!

An Iconic Photograph Of Gaston Rebuffat

These are the types of pictures that got me into climbing ... they still make me want to book a flight to Geneva and spend the summer in Chamonix

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hardrock 100

What a beautiful route, however I think the days of me being able to do this in under 48 hours are over ... Too bad ... Maybe in my next life!

Solo on the north Butress

CLICK HERE TO READ COLIN HALEY'S TRIP REPORT

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Coleman Headwall on Mount Baker

There are still ski mountaineers getting after it in North America, you do not have to go to Portillo to get your boards out. CLCIK HERE TO READ THE WILDSNOW REPORT.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

BLAST FROM THE PAST: reed pinnacle direct

In the late 1970s Mark and I climbed Reed Pinnacle Direct; me for the first time, and he for the second or third time. At 5:10a this is a sustained route, and a valley test-piece. 

Sitting at the top of this relatively short route we were feeling puffed up - like we had arrived as rock climbers - when all of a sudden I took a break from my snack of orange slices and sardines to look below. There about half a pitch down were two guys free soloing this route at prodigious speed. "Mark, you are not going to believe this," is what I said.  Moments later, at the peak of their game, Bachar and Kauk pulled up onto the ledge. A friendly conversation was had, which at different times included two key questions: Do you ever worry about falling? Do you want to use our rap line? The answers blew my doors off ... From Kauk, "You have never fallen off a sidewalk have you, well something this easy is like a sidewalk to me." As for Bachar, he said, "no thanks," and proceeded to down climb the route.

I believe this was just their warm-up for a "Half-Dome Day." (I will refer you to John Long's brilliant essay, "The Only Blasphemy" for a riveting account of a different half-dome day.)





In 1976 Peter Livesey - a top Brit climber - wrote an essay "I Feel Rock," which had a section about Reed Pinnacle Direct which spurred me to want to do the route. The essay can be found in the anthology GAMES CLIMBERS PLAY or on the FOOTLESS CROW website.

http://footlesscrow.blogspot.com/2012/06/i-feel-rock.html




A dozen years after we bumped into Kauk and Bachar, you can see by Bachar's training log, that they were still climbing near the cutting edge.

Bouldering at NCS

In anticipation of a short trip to the Sierras in August I am starting to climb a bit more regularly. I am quite fit as the aerobic volume has been good but I have not been scratching much Adirondack anorthosite.

Expedition Yoga

CLICK HERE TO READ THE AAC BLOG.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

THE ART OF SUFFERING

KURTYKA WAS A LEADING PROPONENT OF FAST AND LIGHT IN THE 1970s and 1980s. This is a historically important essay written in 1988.



The Art of Suffering

By Voytek Kurtyka
Mountain Magazine, #121

It's hard to believe, but the tongue-in-cheek speculation in the pub in the 70's has become a Himalayan reality of the 80's. We once joked about climbing naked at night (the ultimate lightweight), and now it's happening! During the past few years a new Franco-Swiss generation have made a number of ascents at night, and given the circumstances, they might well be considered "naked". But no perverse sense of humour drove them to choose such outrageous tactics, rather a spirit of adventure and sporting calculation.

There was once much truth in the saying, "alpinism is the art of suffering." The masters of this art ruled and shaped Himalayan climbing. Neither age nor lack of ability deterred the masters of suffering from achieving their aims. To survive intense cold, starve for days on end at high altitude and still be able to wade through deep snow, a man requires a peculiar stolid brand of passion and determination. A prerequisite for Himalayan climbing was an ability to accept pain. It was considered a sort of psychological triumph of mind over matter.

Only a few appreciated the psychological costs, yet it is true that inner strength is sometimes mirrored by an outward callousness. Physical dangers and the distress of partners may be blotted out. Hard work and suppressed fear, when combined with competitive determination, tend to narrow the field of vision. I am sadly convinced that egocentricity and a kind of inner deafness are common personality blemishes in our climbing community, more so than many care to admit.

Am I merely being sarcastic? I may be not without reason. Too often heroic performances are achieved at the expense of partners. "He's tired, well so am I. Someone's coughing behind? There's always someone coughing behind ..."

This attitude is not an inevitable consequence of Himalayan climbing. Choice of partner in the Himalaya is increasingly important to the successful lightweight group. If there is a strong bond, stronger than just companionship, an individual is less likely to miss possible fatal signs of distress in a partner.

I believe that the latest trends exhibit different qualities than those of the traditional "masters of suffering". They are successes both in sporting and human terms. Extreme lightness, the ease of action and the natural relationship with the mountain environment characterise, these ascents. Mind and body seem to listen to a new voice, follow a different rhythm. Suffering has been replaced by composure as the long hours of night are paced away. In two of the following ascents, it is astonishing that the climbers seem not only to have deceived the human psyche, but also the human body since acclimatisation was minimal. Possibly the speed of the ascents with only short spells at altitude prevented deterioration. Loretan for one is convinced that by depriving the body of sleep, stagnation is inhibited and the chance of oedema and altitude sickness is reduced. 

The first ascent I will relate was a relatively cautious affair on the Abruzzi Spur of K2 climbed in July 1985. The team members, Loretan, Escoffier, Morand and Troillet, acclimatised traditionally, spending one night at 8000m. At midnight on July 3, they left base camp at 5000m and by 10am were at Camp 2 at 6800m. Here they stayed until 7am the following morning. Previous ascents from this point had taken at least three days, but the plan now called for a single push. At 11am they reached Camp 3 at 7300m, where the lads fancied a "picnic" and waited for dusk. Leaving behind bivi gear and even the stove, they climbed through the night and reached the summit at 2pm on July 6, having climbed 1800m without sleep. They descended to Camp 3 before nightfall and down to Base next day. Next, the East Face of Dhaulagiri which Alex Maclntyre, Rene Ghilini and I had first climbed in 1981. The Swiss team consisted of Loretan. Steincr and Troillet, and this time they chose winter for their night-naked tactics.

The team spent little time acclimatising, spending one night at 5700m and climbing to 6500m on the NE Ridge as a warm-up. At midnight on December 5, they left Base Camp and climbed to the camp at 5700m. Here they rested in a snow hole, departing at midnight on the 2500m, 50° ice face. This time they were not only "naked", but cheeky: no ropes, hardwear, sleeping bags or bivi tent, just their one piece suits, one
stove and a chocolate bar each. Winter in the Himalaya is characterised by continuous hurricane winds and -40°C, but the lads guessed the weather right. They climbed continuously for 19 hours through the night and the following day, emerging on the summit ridge at 7700m at 7pm. Here they sat out the night, huddled together, brewing drinks during 12 hours of what Loretan described as "convulsive shivering". At first light the desire for the summit was still with them and at 8am they set off again, reaching the summit 6 hours later. They descended immediately and at 2amreached their snow cave at 5700m.




This incredibly bold and cold feat is to me more inspirational and revelational than frenzied 8000er collecting. These three had discovered a new secret, proved the possibilities of extremely lightweight winter ascents, and suffered successfully together. Peak bagging is a form of emotional consumption, a sign of a mountaineer overwhelmed by a desire to collect. If there is such a thing as spiritual materialism, it is displayed in the urge to possess the mountains rather than to unravel and accept their mysteries. Adventure is thus replaced by a regimen of routine actions and emotions. The collectors make clever use of the magic of numbers such as 8000 and 14 x 8000. These figures were once symbols of extremes in Himalayan achievement, but now have been skilfully turned into commercial measures of mountaineering fame. Numbers are simple and understandable, even by those who have never had cold fingers. The demand for numbers is unlimited. The number eaters gulp them greedily for they confirm the illusion of possession and soothe the nerves of the consumers.

It is difficult to imagine a sport without numbers and many now classify mountaineering as sport. No doubt, there is excellent sport to be found in the hills, but is it merely sport? How do we excuse the common and horrifying presence of death in the mountains? Do we really accept it as part of a funny game and competition? I believe that the inner response that drives us onto the precipices and into danger has nothing to do with competition. As an activity, it expresses the classical opposition of the urge for self-preservation and the need to test mortality. To feel in control of one's fate spontaneously frees the spirit from mortal skin. While sensing these frontiers, a mountaineer experiences his greatest joy. How much of this is expressed in collecting numbers? To me, the Swiss ascent of Dhaulagiri, gambling with their nakedness at night, was a return to the essence and good taste in mountaineering. 

In 1986, there were two superb "night naked" style ascents on Everest and K2. The first, an ascent of Everest's fine Japanese/Hornbein Couloir Direct was made by Loretan and Troillet. With them was Beghin, but he rebelled after the first night when instead of sleep the team climbed a mere 2000m. The total ascent time from the base of the wall to the summit was 40_ hours! Almost as incredible was the time of descent. Finding the snow in condition, the pair made a sitting glissade (in Polish this is literally translated as "arse sliding") down the majority of the route, and reached Advance Base in only 4_ hours! As a Pole, I find it difficult to stay cool knowing that the Swiss have beaten us at one of our national sports! I don't mind hangliding or parapenting from 8000ers, but I am boiling with rage to know that these two Swiss have experienced the greatest arse slide in the world! This very rapid ascent was preceded by a five week stay during the monsoon in a Base Camp at 5500m. Acclimatisation above Base, however, was minimal. They spent one night in Advance Base at 5850m and ascended two 6500m neighbouring peaks.

That was enough, all other energy was saved for the face. They left ABC at 10pm on August 28 carrying no more than had been used on Dhaulagiri. The first 2000m took 13 hours. At 11am, the team had reached 7800m, where they spent the rest of the day continuously brewing up. At 9pm, Loretan and Troillet continued without Beghin. Sometime after midnight, at about 8400m, the intense cold and pitch darkness forced them to a halt. They huddled close together and waited for the cruellest hours to slip past. Around 4am when the first glimmer of dawn had crept into the couloir, they set off and at 1pm they reached the summit. They lounged on top of the world for 1_ hours. By 7pm, and hopefully a little sore in the hind parts, they were 3000m lower. The one night and day ascent of the Abruzzi Spur of K2 by Benoit Chamoux is the simplest story to tell. He set out from Base at 5pm on July 4 and at 4pm the next day he stood on the summit. Clearly, he had no time to sleep. A few days earlier he had made a 16 hour ascent of Broad Peak. 

When I met Loretan and Troillet in Kathmandu two summers ago, my curiosity provoked a few questions aimed at Loretan;
"Do you train for climbs?"
"No, the best training's here," tapping his forehead.
"Do you smoke or drink?"
"No to the first, yes to the second." 
"Any medications taken?"
"Only mild sleeping pills, never anything to improve blood supply."
"What do you want most in high altitude mountaineering?"
"As difficult, high and quick as possible, alpine style of course."
"What advice would you give to aspiring Himalayan climbers?"
"Try to listen to and to understand your body systems."

Although the four climbs described here are athletic feats, their appeal is not that of sport, but lies in the style in which they were done. Traditional methods were abandoned in favour of a new approach.

Whenever a climber leaves the known paths, he enters an area without rules or routines to rely on. The only advice comes from deep inside the self, and hopefully the motivation is true. At such moments, the mountaineer is creative, not merely a participant in sport. This creativity manifests itself in styles of climbing or in exploration of unknown areas. It is impossible to cram mountaineering into a sport framework. To me there are as many ways to experience the mountains as there arc real and passionate emotional bonds with the mountains. If you allow my earlier sarcasm, permit me a momentary contact with the mystical. I conclude that mystery is essential to mountaineering. What is unveiled to the individual when involved with creative mountaineering forms part of a new bond with the mountain experience. 

One needs to recall only a few figures such as Tilman. Uemura or Hemming. It is in forging true bonds rather than the collection of numbers or establishment of records that unveils a bit of mystery. But mystery remains a mystery and sport is sport.




Mountaineering Fiction ... in search of Elizabeth Coxhead

My favorite climbing novel is ONE GREEN BOTTLE written by Elizabeth Coxhead in 1951. This fantastic piece of literature works on both the climbing and artistic level. Cathy Canning - the main character - is complex, engaging, and deeply emblematic of all the hopes, dreams, and tribulations of the era. Having read and re-read this short novel several times in the anthology ONE STEP IN THE CLOUDS, I was happy to stumble upon this biographical sketch on the FOOTLESS CROW website. CLICK HERE TO READ THIS IMPORTANT ESSAY.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Backcountry skiing in South America

Balmy weather continues in Adirondacks

I started the day with a sauna, as the temperature was in the 40s at 5:30 am. Selden brought the sheep back to her pasture yesterday. By the time I was heading home for breakfast the sheep were up and about.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Gaston Rebuffat

Monday, July 9, 2012

Slovak Direct On Denali

Bullock and Houseman made the 6th (second fastest) ascent of this hard route on the South Face of Denali during the third week in June. CLICK HERE TO READ HOUSEMAN'S REPORT.

Chamonix Topo ... two thumbs up

If you are heading across the big pond to chase the alpine holy grail be sure to check out this useful website. CLICK HERE

All the fossils have left

After a delightful breakfast with Mark and Liz at the Noonmark, we visited the Mountaineer for their 40% off sale ... Everyone got a little something! On the way home I did a quick trip up Owl's Head. The cloud level was lifting and so you got a good view of Giant and the lesser Round Mountain.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Light Is Right

Whenever two or more fossil mountaineers get together, you can bet they will be talking gear. Time to retire the bamboo chouinard axe? Send your foot fangs to the dump? OMG ... Get rid of the Ramers mounted on old downhill skis and upgrade to the Ferrari of ski mountaineering?

K2: siren of the himalayas

Interview from The Mountain Library website

CLICK HERE

Interview with Steve House

CLICK HERE

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Teaching them the ropes!

A common Treetops activity, is to teach knots, belaying skills, and climbing technique on the chimney before campers head up to our crag.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Gathering Of The Fossil Club

So, with Mark, Gary, and Hock, around Liz, Selden, and the youngsters - Greg and Tori - had lots to laugh about. Tori was cranking on the NCS boulder. Gary was successful with the one-hand ascent of Hock's Blessing (5.6), and Mark was dispensing wisdom in between mouthfuls of waffles. A good time was had by all.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Skiing up/down Rainier In Five Hours

Not a great picture, but putting on ski crampons above Disappointment Cleaver. CLICK HERE TO READ THE TRIP REPORT ON SLCSHERPA.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

QUOTE OF THE WEEK ... Bill McKibben

Twenty pages into Bill McKibben's LONG DISTANCE: a year of living strenuously, I came across this jewel: IN THE BRAIN OF A COMMITTED CROSS-COUNTRY SKIER, WAX OCCUPIES THE AMOUNT OF SPACE ALLOTTED TO SEX IN A NORMAL MIND. PERHAPS SEX AND MONEY BOTH. How true it is ....

EPIC TV from chamonix