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  2. Twice, it’s been a while though..
  3. Today
  4. Hi, are these still available?
  5. It is a little known fact that Darin develops routes so that he doesn't have to see other people when climbing high quality rock
  6. That’s a lot of people. I think had I been in the middle of seven parties climbing on top of one another I would have collected my gear, muttered something under my breathe, unclipped and jumped off. Glad the younger generations are not as antisocial as myself.
  7. It’s just me reading the TRs 1000s of times
  8. Yesterday
  9. I'm also looking for such a crew! I'll DM you my contact information. Unfortunately, I'm primarily a slave to the M-F work week, so unless I block days off in advance, it's mostly weekends for me.
  10. Was noticing that recent TRs are seeing many hundreds, if not many thousands of views in a few days. Feels like for the last decade it’s been way less than that, so what’s going on? Is cc.com about to experience a Renaissance of community, culture adventure and creative writing? Or have bots really replaced human beings and it’s just a 1000 different AI start-ups scrubbing the Internet for data?
  11. We just walked through everything with our shoes on for the entire trip. We never had dry feet while we were hiking. You stop and take long lunches with your socks off to dry out your skin, then again when you get to camp. We took plastic bags to line our shoes with so that you can walk around camp with wet shoes on and dry feet. It works really well. This experience has really changed my attitude about river crossings and wet feet.
  12. until
    AAI is celebrating 50-Years of Mountain Adventure with a MOUNTAIN FESTIVAL, MAKER'S MARKET, GEAR SALE, AND FREE EDUCATIONAL CLINICS! EQUIPMENT SHOP SALE: Up to 40% off new gear and tons of used mountaineering, skiing, snowboarding and climbing equipment! AVALANCHE COUSE SALE: Buy anything and get $100 off an avalanche course. MAKER'S MARKET: Local outdoor makers and artists will be selling their wares. FREE EDUCATIONAL CLINICS: 2pm - Know Before You Go: Effective Use of Outdoor Electronics 4pm - Know Before You Go: Wilderness Rescue Resources and What to Expect 6:30pm - Know Before You Go: Avalanche Awareness CLINIC DESCRIPTIONS: KNOW BEFORE YOU GO: EFFECTIVE USE OF OUTDOOR ELECTRONICS This will be a presentation on several things that all outdoor enthusiasts should be aware of: --Phones and How to Use them Effectively in the Backcountry --Mapping Applications (which is best for you?) --Ancillary Useful Applications --Satellite Messaging Systems (the good, the bad and the ugly) --Satellite Phones (the bad, the ugly and the good) --Battery Banks and Solar Charging --Radios (person-to-person and for rescue) --Avalanche Transceivers KNOW BEFORE YOU GO: WILDERNESS RESCUE RESOURCES AND WHAT TO EXPECT What happens when you need a rescue in the wilderness? Who shows up? What do they do? How do they manage a situation? Do you have to pay for a rescue? Will a helicopter come? Who is in charge? How will they find me? Wilderness rescue, search and rescue and mountain rescue are complicated topics. This is because they don't fit easily into one box. It's different everywhere you go. In this seminar, we will discuss how rescue operations work locally, how they work in other jurisdictions, and how they work internationally. In addition to that, we'll talk about tne complicated politics of search and rescue operations in a wilderness setting. KNOW BEFORE YOU GO: AVALANCHE AWARENESS This program is designed to introduce winter backcountry enthusiasts to avalanche terrain assessment, winter snowpack analysis and rescue technique. It also provides you a venue to talk frankly with our expert guides on how to create a reasonable margin of safety when climbing, skiing, or snowboarding on avalanche prone slopes
  13. I was coming down the Baker River yesterday afternoon and passed by the slab feature shown in the photograph. I've seen it many times before but this time decided to grab a quick snap of it. It's located on the north side of the river at approximately 48.82863, -121.43918 if you want to google earth it. I'm sorry to say that it would be a hellish ~seven miles of vicious travel up the river from the trail end at Sulphide Creek. The view looks to the north. This is on the south-southeasterly trending ridge that extends from Mineral Mountain to the Baker River. Has anyone heard of anyone visiting or otherwise investigating it? From the air it looks much like something you'd see in Darrington. The photograph was taken from 48.80671, -121.43873, while at an altitude of about 6400'. The slab extends below the bottom of the frame, but not all the way to the valley bottom.
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      • Rawk on!
  14. Wow, quite the adventure!! Did you just plunge in and cross with your footwear or did you make changes for each crossing?
  15. Last week
  16. Hi yall, I'm currently a sophomore at Montana state, and I spend my summers and winter breaks in Oregon. I have multiple years of general mountaineering experience, comfortable leading ice up to wi4/m4, and trad up to 5.8. Looking for someone who I can push myself with ideally similar skill level or better, and lives in Oregon, Bozeman area, or both. A few goals I got this winter are the Reid headwall or something off illumination rock and just climb some ice up in Washington or off the Elliot glacier moraine If anybody is interested don't hesitate to shoot me a PM! Super stoked to climb ice this winter up in hyalite!!!!
  17. Good luck with that. That FA was put up by a badass.
  18. They really should deploy the military to do this selective enforcement of the law. I believe that is what the American people wanted when they elected a convicted felon and gave him a mandate to prohibit self expression on free time.
  19. Different people! Not to say anything of Mr Ng’s ability or potential. Maybe we all want to spot the next jeans wearing Cheamclimber, but I think it best just to encourage and help out the youth who clamor for the hills in our little community here. No sense in saddling expectations or projecting where someone is going. He will find his own way, and I hope his motivations are always his own. I do enjoy the TRs! Thanks Lucas!
  20. Does Lucas remind any of the Cascade Climbers elders of Colin when he was young?
  21. That looks great. Always wanted to get back up there for something like this. Way to make it happen and thanks for the notes on logistics!
  22. You can arrive the night before and pull a number.... but everyone knows this and more and more people do it. More and more people are now camping outside the ranger station in the parking lot, or in a turnout nearby. The NCNP should join the 21st century and allow more permits to be made on line and not need to stop in to the ranger station. The Olympic NP has their shit together - you can call in a permit request - something I recently did for camping at Lake of the Angels for an over night trip to climb Skokomish and Stone.
  23. You Gorge climbers are just a different breed!!
  24. Has the great Wayne Wallace never climbed Backbone Ridge? !🤔
  25. "Sahale Arm please. Well if not there, can we go to a nice alpine lake, that's not to far from the car, and has lots of solitude with some amazing views?"
  26. Sometimes it’s hard to make it to marblemount before they close. So we will drive in the evening before. You can go to the station and get your number for the next morning, even if they’re already closed. That can help expedite the morning after….because yes it can take a while even on random week days
  27. Selling a Western Mountaineering -25 Puma gore 6' sleeping bag. Has 2 nights of use. Great bag for Denali, Everest, all kinds of other cold (broken) dreams etc. Right zip. $1300 new. Warmest, lightest bags available, made in the USA. Comes with with a nice compression stuff sack and storage bag. $750.
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