Sunday, September 30, 2018

Glen Coe Skyline Race ... on my bucket list

A mixture of ultrarunning and mountaineering. I have done the Anaoch Eagach Ridge in winter, and it is quite exposed, and of course the ridge on Stob Dearg is even harder.  This movement towards a synthesis between two disciplines - running and mountaineering - is fascinating to watch. 





Great new mountain resource

Saturday, September 29, 2018

Dealing with injuries

Good general advice on overuse and trauma injuries, on one of my favorite websites. 




Friday, September 28, 2018

Best climbing film ever



Sam gave me two tickets to the premier of Free Solo, which I then passed along to Manhattan Trustees.  (Unfortunately I had to head back to Lake Placid.)  The word from my Trustees was that the movie was awesome, as the enclosed review attests.  A week ago Sam had bumped into Honnold and his mom while he was doing a walk-through of a property he manages. 










Thursday, September 27, 2018

Getting psyched for Chamonix

This short video about three mountain mamas spending the summer trail running in Chamonix is sure to get you fired up. Amazing scenery. 



Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Leaves starting to change ...

This past weekend hiking up Mount Van Hoevenberg, I snapped this picture of Whiteface with the leaves starting to change on the last official days of summer.

Pioneering women skiers















Tuesday, September 25, 2018

On the retirement bucket list

ONLY IN SWITZERLAND DO YOU SEE GRAPHIC NOVELS ABOUT SKI MOUNTAINEERING!  

The Patrouille des Glaciers (PDG) is a ski mountaineering race organised every two years by the Swiss Armed Forces, in which military and civilian teams compete. It takes place once every two years at the end of April, in the south part of the canton of Valais below the summits of the Pennine Alps.

You must be able to complete the races in the following times, given normal conditions: Zermatt – Schönbiel within 3h; Zermatt – Arolla within 8h 30min; Arolla – Riedmatten within 1h 45 min; Arolla – Verbier within 8h 30 min.






Monday, September 24, 2018

BLAST FROM THE PAST ... 1991 RMNP



Well our Fossil Club numbers are dwindling, and over the next few months I will try and post some memories of our time together with Lewie, Michael, and Brian.  So, 27 years ago in the summer of 1991, we had this wonderful trip to Rocky Mountain National Park which included Brian and Michael.








Sunday, September 23, 2018

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Winter isn’t that far off ...

It was thirty degrees this morning and they have fired up the snow factory to get it ready for the upcoming season. Stash and I ran a lap of the Ladies 5k trail.

7th grade overnight in natural shelters

Stash and I ran on the Olympic trails to a wooded spot on Dave Steckler's property where the students teamed up to build a variety of structures, out of deadfall and brush he had cleared on his land.

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Bridger-Teton National Forest

A spectacularly beautiful little video.




Tuesday, September 18, 2018

A haute route disaster

A good and well balanced article; it is particularly good in reminding us how to be safe vis a vis heuristic mental traps.  



Monday, September 17, 2018

Great hike ...

Stash and I got out and about before it was too hot. We hiked from our back pasture over to the Ladies 5k and to the summit of Mount Van Hoevenberg and back. On the way down from the summit I bumped into the NCS hiking group, just above the start of the bob run ... 15.5k and 1500' vertical.

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Quote of the week ... Leslie Stephens

Thinking of climbing ice this winter drove me to read four chapters in the definitive northeastern climbing history - YANKEE ROCK & ICE - by the Watermans. In reading the chapter entitled, "The First Ice Age: before 1927" I was entranced by the 1905 epic on the Great Gulf Cirque. In Whipple's account in APPALACHIA he quoted a passage by the Victorian alpinist-author Leslie Stephens writing about the Eiger:

"The result of a slip would in all probability have been that the rest of our lives would have been spent in sliding down a snow slope, and that the employment would not have lasted long enough to become monotonous"

Saturday, September 15, 2018

Spectacular Mountain Website ... Footless Crow

A wonderful, and quite literate, British blog about all things connected to the mountains ... adventure, history, art, literature, and the environment.  Excellent guest authors.  This new, about to be released, anthology of women's adventure writing seems like a must read. 



Thursday, September 13, 2018

How dangerous are mountain sports?

Well at 66, I think the bigger dangers are strokes, heart attacks, cancer and turning into a couch potato!  




Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Great trail run ...

Next week I will start from our farm, which will make it an even 15k and 1500' vertical. The route is: biathlon trails to the stadium, flatland to nordic stadium, Ladies Five to the snowshoe trail, and on to the Mount Van Hoevenberg summit. All but 3-4K will be runnable. As you can see the view is outstanding.

Monday, September 10, 2018

The history of skate skiing

He did not really start it, or invent it, but Bill Koch played a big part in it. Here he is, wearing his lucky hat from the 1976 Olympic silver medal race. 





Sunday, September 9, 2018

Our 34th anniversary ...

Of course it's possible we could have another 34 years together, after all, I would only be a 100 years old. But however many more years we have, we do know things keep getting better and better, and Selden gets more awesome every day.

Bierstadt ... painting our western mountains

An article which reviews a new exhibit of Bierstadt paintings, which portrays the changing of the American West.  He is one of the key artists who influenced our government to set aside land for national parks, and he is one who helped the mountain landscape of the West to enter the public consciousness. Standing in front of this enormous canvas in Manhattan is a sublime experience. 





Saturday, September 8, 2018

What Honnold did on the way to the world premiere ...

Quote of the Week ... H.W. Tilman

I am reading a great article in Alpinist 62, by Peter Takeda, about the history of exploration and climbing on Nanda Devi. In his account of the climb Tilman made this observation which was spot on, but which was also sprinkled with some of his dry sense of humor.

"We live in an age of mechanization and, in recent years, it has become apparent that even mountaineering is in danger of become mechanized. It is therefore pleasing to record that in climbing Nanda Devi no mechanical aids were used — apart that is, from the Apricot Brandy."



Friday, September 7, 2018

Spectacular sunset

Matterhorn speed record from Zermatt

From the church to the summit and back in just under four hours!