The future is NAO!

NAO is the first Petzl headlamp with REACTIVE LIGHTING technology.


NAO headlamp

The rechargeable NAO headlamp adapts its two high power LEDs instantly and automatically to the lighting needs for greater comfort, fewer manual interventions and longer battery life.

Outside Magazine awarded the NAO “Outside Gear of the Show” at ORWM12. A great honor and an acknowledgement of the ground breaking technology that is the NAO.

Petzl’s NAO web site is now live, go to www.petzl.com/NAO. Here you’ll be able to view the video as well as see more information about the headlamp and REACTIVE LIGHTING technology.

Below are some early media impressions on Petzl’s NAO, it will launch in July 2012 at $175 MSRP.

“Touted to have a first of its kind self-adjusting beam, the to-be-released NAO headlamp from Petzl could be a game changer in the world of head-mounted illumination products.”
From GearJunkie: http://gearjunkie.com/intelligent-illumination-headlamp-self-adjusts-its-beam

“Petzl calls the technology “reactive lighting.” We call it the most high-tech headlamp we’ve ever seen.”
“Petzl has come out with a headlamp which will very likely alter the course of headlamp technology.”
“Once in a while, a headlamp comes around that changes the game for others. Enter Petzl‘s Nao auto-adjusting headlamp, which dims or brightens according to the level of ambient light.”
Other places to go and see the NAO:
– Webpage: http://www.petzl.com/us/outdoor/headlamps/nao
– YouTube: http://youtu.be/FZb3k_x067w
– Facebook tab (you’ll need a FB account to view this): https://www.facebook.com/Petzl?sk=app_281881348531418

Source: Dave Karl, Petzl.com

Ego Checks

by Patrick Cooke

Standing at the first belay, I’m staring up at the crux of the route right off the deck.  Protection will be questionable.  I’m sure I’m strong enough to pull the moves, but is it worth the risk?  I’ve got time to decide – I can always wait until Matt’s up the first pitch before committing one way or the other.

I’m up and down on the column of ice below the small roof of ice above like a slow-motion sewing-machine needle.  Each time I suss out some of the moves and try to figure out how I can protect this section.  There’s a pin on the right, but it’s questionable at best.  I get in a 16 but neither this nor the pin will keep me off the deck if I blow the moves.  I think I might get in a 10 a little bit higher, but getting into a position to do this would mean committing to making the moves through the roof.

I’ve climbed this route a thousand times in my mind.  It sees multiple ascents each day, often in conditions far more difficult than those I’m looking at.   It’s been on my tick list for several years now, and though it may not be unfinished business at this point, the way it has captured my imagination is something right out of Inception.  I’ve seen every photo of it on the photopost.  I’ve even searched photos of it with various misspellings.  I can’t get this route out of my head.

The ice is hard and brittle.  The overnight lows were somewhere around -10.  The outer bit of the column is hollow, and the inner section is solid feeling, but candled.  Just below the roof is a section of the most hacked up, thin, and seemingly nasty looking ice I’ve seen all season.  Swinging into it seems like a bad idea.  Will hooking it rip it right off of the rock behind it?  It’s obviously been getting climbed, all I have to do is focus and move upward.

Some days the route just isn’t ready for you.  But in this case I’d be lying if I made this claim.  Self-doubt and fear erased any confidence I had in myself and my abilities.  Others have climbed the route in far more difficult conditions.  Hell, earlier this season I had made harder moves on far more dangerous terrain.  Regardless, I wasn’t ready that day and we quietly rapped down to the ground.

*****

Some days, in a fit of delusion, I actually convince myself that I’m a hardman.  Or at least, I think I want to be?  Do I? $#!&, what the #$@% am I thinking? Sobering up from my fantastical delusions, I’m pretty sure that a: I’m not a hardman, and b: I’m not really sure I want to be one.  Sure, it would be awesome to solo WI6 and figure-4 my way across magazine covers, but am I really cut out for it?

In fact, it seems that I have an internal battle going on each and every day within my own mind.  In one corner we have my ego  – inflated with an unwarranted and largely unearned sense of of talent and self-worth. Repentence?  Should be a breeze.  MindBender? I’ll hike it, no problem.  Run-out trad M8? A figure 4 here, a stein-pull there…  You get the point.  Mid-week, comfortably within the confines of my home, there’s nothing I can’t climb.

Yeah, I could be this guy, but not this day... that's my set of ropes on the right!

Yeah, I could be this guy, but not this day… that’s my set of ropes on the right!

In the other corner is my sense of humility.  The part of me that thinks “it doesn’t matter what grade I climb” as long as I’m out swinging the tools.  This is the part of me that would think a romp up Mt. Webster, or linking pitches in Stony Clove is a hell of a way to spend an afternoon. We can call this my inner-everyman.  Although my inner-everyman lacks the sense of adventure and the potential for glamour that could accompany the inner-hardman, it is the safer avenue: There are no crushing defeats, no scary run-outs, and no moments of sheer terror.

More comfortable terrain - Odell's Gully

More comfortable terrain – Odell’s Gully

So much of my identity as a climber, and indeed my identity in its own right is tied up in the dichotomy between my my ego and my sense of humility.  Sure, grades don’t matter, but there’s a sense of accomplishment and euphoria that accompanies climbing something hard.  When I look at some of my best days climbing, it’s the days in which I pushed myself harder than I thought I could that stand out above most of the others.  Climbing a hard route in good style perhaps panders a bit to my own inner elitism, but damn is it satisfying.  The danger in this, of course, is the crushing return to reality when the desired result doesn’t happen.

*****

I’m back for another run at the route.  We get an early start to beat the crowds that will be out and about on IceFest weekend.  Of course, there’s someone there already as we arrive.  Rather than wait, we jump on another route nearby.  It’s sufficiently hard (in fact, it’s probably even harder), and this time the sense of daring wins out over the fear.  Although we don’t finish the route, the two pitches we do climb are stellar and involve some good, committing moves.  We turn around and retreat when the third pitch is a raging waterfall, and I’ll keep telling myself that this is a justifiable reason for doing so.  Of course now I have two routes to finish…

Equilibrium? Leading pitch 2 of 20 Below Zero Gully

Equilibrium? Leading pitch 2 of 20 Below Zero Gully

Media Partnership with the American Alpine Club

NEice is proud to announce that it has become a Media Partner of the American Alpine Club (AAC).  As a Media Partner, NEice will provide exposure for the AAC among the northeast’s dedicated and zealous population of ice climbers.  NEice sees thousands of visitors each month during the ice climbing season.  As such, it is the #1 site for information on ice climbing in New England and the Northeast.  With its active community of members, NEice will undoubtedly be a valuable partner for the AAC in promoting its overall mission and the efforts of its local chapter: American Alpine Club – Northeast Region.

This partnership will also help increase NEice’s exposure beyond the Northeast: Being a Media Partner means that NEice will receive press on the AAC’s website, E-news, and even some printed material. The AAC has played an integral role in promoting the sport of climbing across the nation since 1902, while also working tirelessly on access and conservation efforts.  NEice is excited to contribute to the AAC’s continuing mission of providing “knowledge and inspiration, conservation and advocacy, and logistical support for the climbing community.”

“The American Alpine Club is committed to supporting and inspiring climbers from their first days on the rock through a lifetime of climbing. The work we do has the endorsement of numerous industry media leaders. Our Media Partners—magazines, websites, photographers, artists—provide essential in-kind support to improve and spread the AAC’s message.”

 

Comp WINNERS! Mount Washington Valley Ice Fest 2012

WINNERS of the Drytooling Comp

Friday Night at the Cranmore Climbing Wall, North Conway NH

Kevin Mahoney climbed strong to win the Men’s division

Kevin Mahoney climbing to win! the MWV Ice Fest Comp

Kevin Mahoney about to enter the first crux of the climb – Photos by Doug Millen

 Click photos to enlarge

Janet Bergman makes it to the last obsticle to win the Women’s division

Janet Bergman on the last obstacle

Janet Bergman on the last obstacle to win – Photos by Doug Millen

Janet BergmanJanet Bergman
Comp Results

Men’s

1st – Kevin Mahoney

2nd – Bayard Russell

3rd – Ivan Tighe

Women’s 

1st – Janet Bergman

2nd – Andrea Charest

3rd – Lindsay Fixmer

Many thanks to Cranmore for hosting the climbing event and to IME and IMCS for making it all happen, and to the sponsors…Thank you!

Ice Fest Blog

Road Warrior – The Back Story

Josh shaking out and thinking about the next move. Pitch 3 of “Road Warriors” – Photo by Ryan Brooks

I had been eying the route since before the rockfall and I know that John Sykes gave it a good attempt in the huge year when the upper smear came all the way down over the bottom roof. A stunningly beautiful ribbon! I was not good enough to get on it;  after hearing that Sykes backed off, I knew that I wanted nothing to do with it and that I had no business going near it. Time passes and big chunks of rock fall. After the rockfall Joel Torretti pointed the line out and we wallowed to the base after a 3′ dump of snow. We took a look and made the usual chicken shit excuses of why we should go climb something else that wouldn’t scare us. I put the line into the files and spent the interim years getting better for it. I’d lie if I said that I didn’t look at the line every time I drove down the hill upon arriving at the south end of the lake.

This winter, on my first day out with Ryan Brooks, we climbed a couple of routes and then walked over to the base. I had too many projects for this winter already and another was the last thing on my mind, but something clicked. I got psyched. Getting psyched on a line is rare for me these days because life is so busy. We made plans on the spot to come back in a few days.

I’ve been given a lot of shit for rappelling in to clean and equip routes. To each his own, and in my opinion the end product is always a better, more thought-out line with the natural features maximized.

Day one saw us parking at the trailhead for Mt. Pisgah with the kit. After a few rappels down the wrong spot we found the top of the route. Down we went. We figured that we could climb up to the top of the big corner ground-up style so we focused on what would be the third pitch. After looking at blankinsh rock for a couple of hours, debating the use of bolts and if the line was worth it, we jugged back to the top to continue our discussion. Down again, this time with the kit. We placed and anchor and it got dark.

Day two saw us monkeying around all day on the third pitch. Down aiding, cleaning, jugging, trying moves, and finding hooks. That morning, working off a 9.2 rope (not advised), I quickly put a core shot in the exact middle while hanging in space over the big roof. A scary 15′ jug got me past the core shot and Ryan and I found ourselves clipped into 3 ropes at all times while working. It’s a tangled web we weave. That night Ryan found a core shot in his fat rope as well. We rapped the route in the dark to get a look at the big corner and fix a rope over it for future use if needed. Two guys, two days, and the third pitch was done- we thought.

Day 3. We would go ground-up. Ryan starts up the ice and at the top of the short pillar.  A rattly tool in detached ice pops, sending him toward the abyss below, only to be saved from a certain maiming by a stubby after only a body length of flight. Dramatic prose to capture a dramatic start to the day. Ryan gets back up and gets more gear in higher. The ice over the roof is thin with no good gear in sight, mostly because I only brought 4 screws for the day. Ryan down climbs and extinguishes all other options of ascent in a 50 meter vicinity. Chicken Little is up next and I get to the top of the pillar and decide that a fall pulling the roof would result in broken legs, so after another hour of debate a bolt goes in. Somehow it is dark again so we stash our bags and prepare for the send the next day.

Day 4. I ran my mouth the day before saying that I’d lead the first pitch. I have more ice screws and an El Cap rock rack. I quickly find myself at the top of the mini-pillar with the bolt clipped. Thin ice above is not welcoming but is sticky and, without realizing it, I’m perched above the roof banging in a Spectre. After equalizing a couple of stubbies I commit to an awkward mantle to a good stance. A 20′ foot traverse will take me to the corner and hopefully gear. “I’m not moving until I can protect my second”‘ I pontificate (read: I’m scared shitless that if I slip it’s paraplegic basketball for me). A couple of A3 pins and I do the shuffle to the corner, good gear, and eventually the anchor at the base of the big corner. Ryan cruses up and starts up the big corner. He is slowed down quickly by loose rock and funky gear. Side-note: Ryan is one of those weird individuals who really enjoys aid climbing and has a super solid head. While equipping routes I view Ryan as the devil on my shoulder, yelling at me not to be a sissy and space the bolts out a little more. I take note of Ryan’s slowed progress and coax him higher to avoid placing myself in the underwear soiling position that he is in. We had set one hour time limits on leading so as not to freeze the belayer too much and to spur the leader into action. Time has always been my enemy.

My turn: the onsight is blown I rationalize as I jug our fixed rope from the week before. I spend my time cleaning and adding one bolt. I lower and hand the reins to Ryan who walks the pitch. From the top of the pedestal the third pitch falls away over the lake. It’s getting dark so I attack. Hooking, feet skating off the small holds, only looking ahead to the next gear placement so as not to realize how scared I really am. I get to the overlap mid-pitch and a good rest. One more thin crux and then the ice. I ease up on the one tooth hooks only to find that a film of verglas has formed on two key edges. Shit. Up and down, up and down. I try everything and after half an hour I am completely flamed so I grab a draw and clean off the holds. I lower to the no hands stance and fire the crux onto the ice.

Had I mentioned the wind? As I climbed the ice I would get tossed back and forth by gusts. Tools would hit rock every other swing and I soon stood 15’ above my last bolt, tools staggered, pumped out of my mind, trying to place a stubby when I get hit by a 40mph gust. In a split second I’m falling and manage to catch my lower tool with my upper hand as I pass it. I swallow my puke and regain my stance. I clip a draw to my upper tool and reset my now wobbly lower tool. Adrenaline gets two bottomed out stubbies in and I try to continue up to a rock gear placement. No luck on the rock gear. My brain is fried and so are my arms. I end up down climbing instead of lowering off the stubbies and I bolt and clean the pitch. We’ll have to come back. We rap off the tree anchor at the top of the corner only to get our ropes stuck in the dark. We say screw-it and leave them, rapping off our third line that had been fixed.

Day 5. Another day is spent retrieving our ropes and gear. In usual fashion, the ropes had gotten stuck at the very base of the cliff, giving Ryan a great workout rapping and jugging to free them while I nap in the cold sun.

A week passes and Ryan gets the flu. I feel the need to add a couple bolts to make the route safer, and after talking with friends I feel that the bolts are justified and that I’m not a complete wimp. I get a burr in my ass and after work one morning I hop in the car and make the rally drive to the Lake. Six hours later I’m at the trailhead and by dusk I’m rapping in. By nine pm I’m at my car again and by 3 am I pull into my driveway. Back to work by 7:30 am the next day.

Day 6. Perfect weather: Mid twenties and overcast. Pitch after pitch pass and we soon find ourselves at the top of the cliff where it all began, nothing but smiles. We’re both stoked but sad that it’s over. I rarely remember routes but instead remember what went into them. For me, it’s the laughing, the moments of terror and the shenanigans that form memories and rarely the climbing. I feel very fortunate to have the friends that I do, as well as Lake Willoughby, in my life.

– Josh Hurst

Details on the climb Road Warrior FA, Lake Willoughby, VT

Road Warrior – M8

Lake Willoughby, VT

FA: 01-25-12  Ryan Brooks and Josh Hurst

 “Road Warrior is hands down the best mixed route I’ve been on at Lake Willoughby” – Josh

Rack: Standard rock rack including two #3 Camalots and three ½” cams, no pins, 5 screws: including 2x 10cm and 3x 13 cm.

The Route ascends a large corner 200 meters to the north of Twenty Below Zero Gully.

P1: NEI 4 50m Climb the left most ice flow, pull the overlap onto thin ice and a good stance. Foot traverse left and up easy mixed to the base of the big corner.

P2: M6 25m Up the big corner. Do not rap off the tree, your ropes will get stuck.

P3: M8 35m Traverse up and right following flakes to the ice. When the ice ends at the big roof, traverse right around the roof to a belay back left. If the ice smear extends to the overlap midpitch, the second crux can be avoided, lowering the grade half a notch.

P4: NEI 4- 20m Climb thickening ice to the trees.

Descent: Walk off or rap the route from anchors at the top of P3 and P1.

[slideshow id=23]

Josh’s notes:

Road Warrior is hands down the best mixed route I’ve been on at Lake Willoughby. It’s a modern mixed route with a very traditional feel requiring a full rack. The name comes from the absurd amount of driving it took to complete this route, 50+ hours over 6 days, and the apocalyptic setting at the base of the large rock fall. (Who doesn’t have a crush on Mel Gibson anyway?) It should be noted that the route is clean and is on some of the best rock at Willoughby. The route forms every year, this year being the smallest I’ve seen it.

The Back Story by Josh Hurst

Source: Josh Hurst

Note: This pair also put up “TINY DANCER” at The Lake last year.

 

Jake List – Climbing to Win!

Slide Show

Jake List of Hinesburg Vermont takes 1st place for the Men at the 2nd Annual Drytooling Comp. This event was held at Petra Cliffs during the 2012 Smuggs Ice Bash.

[slideshow id=22]
Many thanks to Petra Cliffs for hosting the dry tooling comp and to all the sponsors that make this event happen.

American Alpine Club Announces One-of-a-Kind Boston Giveaway

Golden, CO—Today The American Alpine Club—dedicated to knowledge, inspiration, conservation and advocacy for the climbing community—released a chance to win a prize package so unique that it cannot be bought. The giveaway will offer one winner the following items, redeemable in Boston at the 2012 Annual Benefit Dinner on March 3:

Enter by February 6 for a chance to win special AAC Annual Benefit Dinner prizes and access• Two VIP Passes to the Annual Dinner. The VIP reception, overlooking Boston Harbor, is an intimate gathering of North America’s most accomplished climbers and mountaineers. The guest list includes Jack Tackle, Tom Hornbein, Janet Bergman, John Bragg, Jimmy Surette, and more.• Ice Axe signed in person by the Saser Kangri II team. Freddie Wilkinson, Mark Richey, and Steve Swenson—the evening’s keynote presenters—recently summited the world’s second-highest unclimbed mountain and will sign a special axe to the winner.• $100 toward the Silent Auction, which includes climbing art, one-of-a-kind trips, and gear packages from The North Face, Mountain Hardwear, and Outdoor Research.• AAC backpack filled with goodies, including a signed hardback of One Mountain Thousand Summits, the award-winning book by Wilkinson. At the dinner, he will premiere The Old Breed, a video masterpiece about the Saser Kangri II expedition. Watch Trailer


GIVEAWAY DETAILS: 
Every person who buys a ticket to the 2012 Annual Benefit Dinner by February 6th automatically will be entered to win this giveaway package!

http://www.americanalpineclub.org/p/2012-annual-benefit-dinner-giveaway

The Annual Benefit Dinner is the AAC’s signature and largest annual event. In addition to fine dining and entertainment, the Dinner mingles climbers of all generations and abilities to celebrate the vibrant state of this 110-year-old organization. The event will be held in Boston at the Seaport Hotel and will celebrate a year of change and success through the theme of Partnership: Climbing through the Generations.

“In line with our theme, the weekend’s feature presentation will share the inspiring story of men and women from different generations climbing together in one of the world’s last uncharted places,” said Erik Lambert, Information & Marketing Director for the AAC. “The giveaway is an added incentive to bring younger climbers and more seasoned explorers together, celebrating the shared experience of the climbing life.”

Following dinner, Boston native Mark Richey (age 53) and climbing partners Freddie Wilkinson (age 32) and Steve Swenson (age 57) will share inspiration from their August 2011 Saser Kangri II expedition. They reached the 7,518-meter summit of the second-highest unclimbed mountain in the world—one of the last frontiers of Himalayan climbing.

Every ticket sold helps The American Alpine Club raise funds to improve its programs: protecting and preserving the places we climb, bringing climbers together, expanding information resources, grants, lodging, and more. Founded by a Boston native in 1902, the AAC has advocated for climbers throughout the generations, with a progressive implementation of new programs. In 2011 the Club:

• Hired staff around the country to ensure that the AAC is vibrant in your backyard. These Regional Coordinators regularly connect with Members by hosting local events, conservation projects, and more. Sarah Garlick supports the Northeast Region from North Conway, NH.

• Expanded its Member benefits to include rescue insurance, gym and gear discounts, and new and improved places for climbers to stay, such as the rebuilt Snowbird Hut in Alaska and the new AAC Clubhouse in Kathmandu, Nepal.

• Purchased 40 acres of land on the rim of West Virginia’s New River Gorge. The AAC is
working with local conservation and climbing organizations to break ground this year on a Climbers’ Campground with amenities walking distance from popular crags.

• Launched a new website, bringing local communities together in a more
user-friendly and attractive online space.

• And in 2012, the Club will break ground on a new Climbers’ Campground with easy access to climbing in New York’s Shawangunks.

“The AAC is at its best when we can be helpful to climbers where they climb—in their own backyards,” said Executive Director Phil Powers. “Our Members in the Northeast raised their hands to host the Annual Dinner this year. Regional staff and volunteers are working together to make it a truly top-notch event with a great local flavor. This is just one example of how the AAC is changing. We’re listening to our Members and helping them build what they want from the ground up.”

For more information and tickets, visit americanalpineclub.org/2012dinner 

To encourage younger climbers to attend this gathering of the generations, those 28 and younger may purchase tickets at half price.

About The American Alpine Club
The American Alpine Club provides knowledge and inspiration, conservation and advocacy, and logistical support for the climbing community. The AAC advocates for American climbers domestically and around the world; provides grants and volunteer opportunities to protect and conserve the places we climb; hosts local and national climbing festivals and events; publishes two of the world’s most sought-after climbing annuals, The American Alpine Journal and Accidents in North American Mountaineering; cares for the world’s leading climbing library and country’s leading mountaineering museum; manages the Grand Teton Climbers’ Ranch as part of a larger lodging network for climbers; and annually gives $80,000+ toward climbing, conservation, and research grants to adventurers who travel the world. Learn about additional programs and become a member at americanalpineclub.org. Join the AAC’s online community at facebook.com/americanalpineclub.

21st Annual Polartec® Challenge Grant Recipients Announced

(Lawrence, Mass.) – Polartec is pleased to announce the recipients of its 21st annual Polartec® Challenge Grant. Six separate expeditions will receive funding and support from Polartec for 2012: a first ascent attempt in the Indian Karakoram, an attempt of a climbing double header in Pakistan, a first descent attempt in Alaska, a new route attempt in Alaska, a first ascent attempt in Alaska, and first ascent attempts in Antarctica.

“The Polartec Challenge encourages the spirit and practice of outdoor adventure,” states Polartec North American Marketing Manager, Allon Cohne. “The 2012 Polartec Challenge Grant recipients exemplify Polartec’s commitment to expanding our perception of what’s possible, and we’re proud to help them.”

 Northeast Climbers score BIG!

  • Peter Doucette and Silas Rossi will attempt a new route on the southeast face of Mt. Bradley in Alaska. On their proposted route, the two-man team expects to find significant mixed climbing for the duration of the 4,500′ ascent.
  • Freddie Wilkinson and Mike Libecki will travel to an area in Antarctica previously unexplored by climbers to climb first ascents on the Earth’s southernmost and most remote spires and big walls. Wilkinson and Libecki will take advantage of the continuous daylight during the winter solstice and attempt first ascents of as many spires as possible during the expedition. Libecki also recieved a Polartec Challenge Grant in 2011 for a climbing expedition to Franz Josef Land in Russia, which has been extended to 2012.

More….

Source: Facebook, pitchengine.com, Polartec

Smuggs Ice Bash 2012 – Drytooling Comp WINNERS!

WINNERS of the Drytooling Comp

Friday night at Petra Cliffs, Burlington VT!

Jake List of Hinesburg Vermont takes 1st in the Men’s division

Jake clipping to win the 2012 Mens drytooling comp

Jake clipping to win the 2012 Mens drytooling comp during the Smuggs Ice Bash held at Petra Cliffs, Burlington VT – Photo by Doug Millen

Jake ListClimbing to Win! (slide show)

Andrea Charest takes 1st in the Women’s division

Andrea Charest stretching for the log

Andrea Charest stretching for the log, to go on and win the women’s division – Photo by Doug Millen

 Click photos to enlarge

Results

Men’s

1st – Jake List

2nd – Ivan Tish

3rd – Kevin Ryan

Women’s

1st – Andrea Charest

2nd – Janet Bergman

3rd – Melisa McNeill

Many thanks to Petra Cliffs for hosting the dry tooling comp, Bert Severin of  Sunrise Adventure Sports  for putting this event together and climberism.com for the great food and beer at the comp. Sterling Rope & La Sportiva put up the prize money of $250 for the men’s and women’s winners of the indoor drytooling comp.

More on this event coming soon…….

www.smuggsicebash.com

Report and photos by Doug Millen