Tuckerman Ravine Work Weekend

FRIENDS OF TUCKERMAN HELP REBUILD THE TRAILS

Saturday 10/22 and Sunday 10/23

Tuckerman Ravine Work WeekendThe Tuckerman Ravine region was hit particularly hard during Irene. Due to all the hurricane damage this season, Friends of Tuckerman Ravine (FOTR) and the White Mountain National Forest reached out for help, and NEice and many others were there to lend a helping hand.

We moved an estimated 7 tons of rock to rebuild the third bridge on the Tuckerman trail. This was no easy task given the cold, rainy weather, but the spirits were high and the work went quickly.

Please join the Friends of Tuckerman Ravine for the 2nd Annual Tucks Dinner and help fund their efforts.

Awards Banquet and Live/Silent Auction. November 5, 2011.

Sources: http://www.friendsoftuckerman.org

 

Hillman's Highway after the storm

 Click on photo to enlarge
Photos by Doug Millen

Freddie Wilkinson Interview

Some of the world’s best alpinists seem to come from the Northeast – especially New Hampshire. If you’ve hung out at the Mt. Washington Ice Festival, you know there’s a great bunch of climbers there.  More importantly, you’ll find a camaraderie among them that encompasses anyone who puts on a pair of rock shoes or crampons.  While ice climbing, you can run into the hardest climbers and guides in the area, and an elitist attitude is as tough to find as ice in July.

Friendly, enthusiastic, and psyched to climb, Freddie Wilkinson embodies a rare combination of camaraderie, humility, and absolute mastery of his craft.  We recently caught up with Freddie, who just returned from a 2-month trip to the mountains of India. 

Interview By Alden Pellett

wilkinsonYou live and climb a lot in New Hampshire, would you say that given you an edge in the bigger mountains?

Yes. Definitely. New England weather and conditions pack a punch, and the more practiced and comfortable you are dealing with those conditions, the more comfortable you will be in the big mountains. Dealing with shite conditions is a skill set that must be learned, like anything else.

How did you meet up with Ueli?

I originally joined the expedition as a producer/rigger, to make a movie about Ueli for Sender films with Rob Frost. Then, just before the trip began, Ueli’s original partner backed out, and he suggested we team up instead. I had, like, two weeks to train before going climbing with a guy whose nickname is ‘the Swiss Machine’.

Your ascent with Ueli was impressive in many ways. The route on the north face of Cholatse looks incredible, what was it like?

Cholatse is, without a doubt, one of the great alpine mountains in the world. This was actually my second time summiting the peak, and Ueli’s third. It’s North face, which we climbed this spring, is an all-time classic ice route, similar in quality to the Moonflower Buttress or the Super Couloir. And, like Mount Hunter in Alaska and Fitzroy in South America, it’s just one of those peaks you want to climb again and again.

What was the best thing you’d say you have gained from that climb?

Well, it was pretty cool to see Ueli up close in action. As a journalist, I was curious about what makes him tick. As a climber, I was interested in finding out what it takes to perform at his level.

What advice do you have for other climbers?

Climb for no other reason then that it makes you happy.

Favorite one-pot mountain meal? 🙂

Mac and cheese, or hashbrowns, but you need a good fry-bake skillet with a lid to do it really well.

Do you just climb and stay active in other pursuits or do you do anything specific to stay in shape?

I love to train, but I travel too much to be serious about plotting long-term training cycles.  At home I regularly trail run, do fingerboard workouts, iso-metric circuits, core workouts, and occasional yoga. It’s actually pretty easy for me to over-train, and balancing power training and endurance training is a challenge. If I am trail running 50 – 60 miles a week, as I did preparing for my summer expedition to the Karakoram, it’s virtually impossible for me to rock climb at my limit. The power is not there. I like to think of myself as a climbing decathlete.

What’s the best thing about living in New England?

The year-around climbing is really, really good, and the climbing communities are close-knit and welcoming.

Do you have a favorite ice climb in the Northeast? 

There are so many unique and classic ice climbs here! But, one that sticks out that doesn’t get a lot of attention is Love Diet in Evan’s Notch. It’s got a long ski approach and feels really remote. Bayard Russell and I climbed it a couple of years ago, and it is still in my mind as a really fun, memorable adventure.

In the big mountains?

Probably the Moonflower Buttress and the North Face of Cholatse.

You just published your first book, how did that come about? 

There was a terrible accident on K2 in 2008, in which eleven people perished. I wasn’t there, but I investigated and wrote about what happened for Rock and Ice magazine. There were a lot of inconsistencies in the initial stories told by some of the survivors, and I figured out that they key witnesses to unraveling what happened were the climbing Sherpas who were there. I found them in Nepal, and tried to write their stories as best I could. One Mountain Thousand Summits is the result.

Any other big plans, climbing, writing, otherwise?

Ueli and I are hoping to go back to the Himalaya next year. I also want to write another climbing book, something about Yosemite Valley. Yosemite is the great story in American climbing, in my opinion.

You live in a nice little cabin with Janet.  Can you talk about that some? Did you design and build it yourselves? 

We bought a chunk of land and built the ‘Shabin’ four years ago. It has electricity and internet, but no running water. A little primitive, but we love the flexibility and time outdoors it affords us.

 ____________

More from Freddie Wilkinson

His web site: The Nameless Creature

Surf’s Up!  Video – “Only one pitch remained to finish Endangered Species to the top of the cliff… and Kevin Mahoney was psyched…”

Saser Kangri II  Mark Richey, Steve Swenson, and Freddie Wilkinson have climbed the east peak of Saser Kangri II in the Eastern Karakoram mountains of India’s Kashmir region. This was believed to be the second-highest unclimbed peak in the world.

Sources: Freddie Wilkinson, thenamlesscreature.com, NEice.com, Alden Pellett, vimeo.com

Freddie Wilkinson

The First Ice

Huntington Ravine, Mt. Washington NH

Thursday October 6, 2011

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4:30am start to beat the sun.
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The first ice we have seen this season.
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Mr. Alfonzo testing the ice, “she no go”.

Proposed Bozeman Ice Tower

World Class Climbing Arena Coming to Bozeman

By Doug Millen, NEice.com

A team of Montana State University students has won a local competition to design an 85-foot ice climbing tower as part of an attempt to lure the world cup of ice climbing to Bozeman. The design of the project was initiated by a student competition during the winter of 2011. Winners were selected in March 2011.

Led by Michael Spencer of Willow Creek, a recent graduate of the MSU School of Architecture, with Tymer Tilton of Missoula a current architecture student, and MSU engineering student P.J. Kolnik of Helena, won the MSU-based competition to design the Bozeman Ice Tower.

Ice climbing is now a global sport. Competitions are popular enough that at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, ice climbing will be a demonstration sport. The climbing tower that organizers hope will be built will give Bozeman the ability to host the 2013 Ice Climbing World Cup and provide an approved training and qualifying facility for American ice climbers looking to compete in the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

2nd place - Adelina Tahiri, James Stodgel, and James Willich

3rd Place - Tanner Skelton and nelson Rahn

Joe Josephson and Conrad Anker hope that the climbing tower will serve as a venue for area climbing enthusiasts as well as a community events center. The world class climbing facility could be used as an outdoor concert venue that would accommodate 2,000-3,000 people.

The contest’s organizers are now working with the Bozeman City Commission and the fairgrounds board on a site and are raising money for the project, which is expected to cost 1-3 million dollars.

More at http://bozemanicetower.wordpress.com/

Bozeman Ice Festival

Each December climbers from around the world meet at the annual Bozeman Ice Festival. The cold temps and dependable conditions allow Bozeman to hold the first of the seasonal ice festivals. This year is the 15th anniversary of the Ice Climbing Festival. The event will be held December 7-11, 2011.

Find out more at http://www.bozemanicefest.com/

Sources: MSU News, Alpinest.com, Bozeman Daily Chronicle, bozemanicetower.wordpress.com

 

Local Climbers Ascend World's 2nd-Highest Unclimbed Peak

Saser Kangri II

7,513 meters (24,649 feet)

Saser Kangri ll, south face - Mark Richey

Mark Richey, Steve Swenson, and Freddie Wilkinson have climbed the east peak of Saser Kangri II in the Eastern Karakoram mountains of India’s Kashmir region.

This was believed to be the second-highest unclimbed peak in the world.  Details of the climb are not available yet.

More at:
Climbing.com
American Alpine Journal
Steveswensonsblog.blogspot.com
Sources: American Alpine Club, Climbing.com, Steveswensonsblog.blogspot.com

 

Photo by Mark Richey, aaj.americanalpineclub.org

The Highs and Lows of NEice

Creatures of Habit!

by Doug Millen, NEice.com

Have a look at this graph. Visits per day. The high points are almost always Monday, and the low points are mostly  Saturday. It Makes perfect sense. Out climbing on the weekend (Saturday), at work on Monday, bored, checking out what happened and posting new stuff from the weekend. It’s the same, week after week and has been for years.

There is a lot of  information out there these days. The question is, what to do with this knowledge?

Help the NEice viewer, of course 🙂

Camping Trip Planner

New Smartphone App by Jimbl

Android System

A Camping planner pre-populated and customizable

A configurable planner with everything needed for any camping trip. Comes pre-populated with more than 225 camping items. If you are a camping person, this is all you need to ensure you don’t forget anything. Check/uncheck and reuse every-time you go on camping trips. Save all the time typing the camping list. Easy and very intuitive thumb friendly check/uncheck options.

So customizable that it could be configured for any trip…easy to use and it will share the list via popular networks and email.

Great App!

Worth every penny. At $.99 how can you go wrong. Find it at the marketplace on your android phone. Or  Go to the Web Site

Doug

New Crampon from Petzl

The “Lynx

Petzls latest High End Crampon

Available SEPTEMBER 2011
$245.00 MSRP

The new Lynx crampon from Petzl offers a forged and easily replaceable monopoint or dual point. The Lynx will replace the M10. A much lighter replacement and should make a lot of people happy.

Petzl-Lynx-Crampon

Modular crampon for ice and mixed climbing, with new LEVERLOCK universal bindings
From snow couloirs to dry tooling, the LYNX is a versatile crampon. Modular front points allow for many options: dual or mono-point, long or short, and/or asymmetrical. They come with two types of interchangeable front bindings to adapt to boots with or without toe welts.

Selling points:
• Versatile crampons for ice and mixed climbing

• Configuration and length of front points can be modified with one screw:
dual points in short, long or asymmetrical position
offset mono-point in short or long position

• Crampons adaptable to boots with or without toe welts:
interchangeable front bindings: stainless steel toe bail wires for shoes with toe welts, or flexible “Flexlock” style toe bindings for boots without toe welts
both types of toe bindings can be adjusted to accommodate shoe width and provide sufficient point length

• LEVERLOCK heel bail is height-adjustable, designed for boots with heel welt

• Integrated front and rear ANTISNOW plates

• FAKIR carrying pouch included

• Marked bars facilitate crampon adjustment

• Comes with:
FAKIR carrying bag (V01)
front and rear ANTISNOW (T24960)
flexible front binding
stainless steel wire heel bail

 

Product specifications:
Number of points: 14
Boot sizes: 35 to 45 with M linking bar (included), optional L linking bar fits boots sizes 40 to 50 (T20850)
Weight: 2 x 540 g = 1080 g (configuration with two points and ANTISNOW)
2 x 455 g = 910 g (configuration with one point, no ANTISNOW)
Certification(s): CE, UIAA

More on the “Lynx” at  coldthistle.blogspot.com & the NEice Forum
Source: Dave Karl, NEice Forum – Dane

Lynx

We End Where We Start

Time to go “UP!”Gothics North Face

The ice climbing season is coming to an end and the lower elevation climbs are melting away. But for the die hard ice climber, the best climbing  is just beginning. The snow in the higher elevations is consolidating,  the nights are cold, and the days are long and warm, Spring climbing in the Alpine Zones of the Northeast is one of the best experiences an ice climber can have. Make your plans now and get out before it all melts away.

Enjoy these  recent photos from “The Zone”

[nggallery id=13]

Doug Millen

The Peach (WI5 M8)

Peach+6_20114493828BD athlete Raphael Slawinski makes first ascent of The Peach (WI 5 M8), a multi-pitch, bolt-free mixed line in the Canadian Rockies.

by The Black Diamond Crew

Black Diamond athlete Raph Slawinski has climbed ice all over the Canadian Rockies from fat ice flows to desperate mixed lines, bagging tons of first ascents along the way. Recently he teamed up with Grant Meekins to make the first ascent of an impressive bolt-free mixed line, The Peach (WI 5 M8). Raph was so stoked about the route he later returned with Jerome Yerly to make the second ascent, this time with Wiktor Skupinski along to film the action. The video deftly captures the demanding nature of the steep climbing, as well as shows just how chossy Rockies choss can get.

More at  BlackDiamond.com

Sourse: Vimeo, blackdiamondequipment.com