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Everything posted by genepires
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scary. did the poll and 97% said climbers should wear it. would be a real crime if this unscientific poll affects policy.
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I have tapped the nut tool with a large locking biner. (if you don't have a big hex) Sometimes I hook the nut tool behind the nut and pull out sideways which sometimes does the trick. climb up a little and sit on the rope so you have two hands to work with.
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don't let jens negativity deter you. RR is awesome. Especially on your first trip. If you get the supertopo, you won't go wrong for rock routes. I would like to make a suggestion for a cayoneering trip in zion for your backpacking portion. Is one of the best non-climbing activities going. There was a website that had lots of info on routes there. maybe canyoneeringusa.com/utah/zion you could rent a drysuit just outside of the park (you will want it) and do keyhole and pine creek canyons in the first day, then go in for a multiday canyon after. maybe the full narrows. pm me if you want more info.
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does the bottom part ever come out? (while using)
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hmm.. ok. the rubber seems to work the same. It is also made for the rubber seals on dive masks so I doubt that it would seriously affect it in anyway. Made for dry suits too so I would guess that it doesn't degrade materials in any way. mirazyme is alot cheaper than new rock shoes. duh.
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Really enjoy the reports from the rockies but really, getting all tweeked about the forum name? Cause we don't have a canadian rockies forum? Well I want a mtn loop hwy forum or I will never read here again. Sounds childish. If that is the way he wants to play, fine. Nothing we can't get from their website or gravsports anyway.
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not sure really. I've had this bottle around for a long, long time. Maybe 8 years now. I would guess that you could get it at a scuba shop as it seems really geared for funk that grows in wet suits.
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SO my rock shoes have some kind of bacterial culture in it that got real smelly when I wear the shoe for any time period. Made the feet smell really bad (it actually offended myself and I can't imagine what it was like for others around) but strangely the shoe didn't smell that bad. The shoe needed some kind of attention to relieve the problem. Things that did NOT work: Throwing the rock shoe in the washing machine Anti bacterial spray from grocery store Something that DID work: Found an old bottle of mirazyme (made by McNett in the b'ham) which is made for washing wet suits, sandals, rock shoes and other sports gear) and followed the directions on the bottle. Made a solution in a 5 gallon bucket and submerged the shoes in it overnight. Next day commenced the 3 day drying session. Happy to say that the shoes do not create the stentch like before and I have used the shoes for about 5 days since the cleaning. Will report if the shoes return to conditions as before but I doubt that it will.
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spooning would eliminate some of the drafty, bad seal, issues. Picking the right climbing partner would be even more important.
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lets not let dawn get by without a little recognition too. (12th) WHile not exactly a "local", she has guided for American Alpine Institute here in the cascades for some 6 years now. First met her at cody's ice festival a long time ago. A very cool person and congrats to her for doing so well!
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There are several sleeping bags available that weight the same as a down jacket (like a 40 or 50 degree bag) that are a lot better to sleap in than a jacket alone. How often does one use a puffy jacket in the summer anyway? But night comes every 24 hours. A light bag sure would be nice. (in responce to dannible) Also, if the weather is supposed to be cold or rainy, then a lightweight alpine trip is not the best idea unless you are training for some sick stuff. I like the "If the weather turns then go sleep in your car. "! Enjoy the alpine!
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Treating (waterproofing) Gore-Tex/Conduit jackets
genepires replied to pup_on_the_mountain's topic in The Gear Critic
does oils, sweat and dirt break down the gore tex or just block the pores? I could see dirt grinding the little holes bigger (isn't the holes way too small for dirt to enlarge?), but don't see why sweat and oil would mess with the membrane. -
Hey salbrecher, maybe you could give the good folks at integral designs a call. Maybe they could whip up a double bag for you to your exact specs? And Jedi, maybe I am old and tired but three days on a route? Are there more than one colin type out there?
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a little bit unclear. do you mean to use the corner loops to anchor the tent down? The best (really only) place to anchor the tent is with the guye lines that are attached to loops on the middle or higher up the tent wall. Think leverage and you will see that the bottom loops are not meant to hold much of anything unless a ski is buried there or something else monstrous. There are several ways of attaching the guye line to your snow anchor (tent stakes or many other alternatives). I preferred a tautline hitch attached to the tent loop (adjusting tension) and a regular overhand on a bight for the snow anchor end (girth hitch). That way you can tighten up the line without digging up the anchor. You can buy little tent stakes that have a y shaped cross section for added strength. I haven't had a skinny "coat hanger" stake fail till I beat it up digging it out of the snow.
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sorry to hear about the pain. how about just going to a indoor rock gym for a while till you feel better? could work on other issues while the injured ones heal. Hopefully you wouldn't tweek any fingers.
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I had a very light double wall tent made by MEC, tarn 2 I believe. Put it through lots of hard weather, way more than a backpacking tent should have put up with. If the tent could talk, it would have bitched me out for tormenting it with snow loading, very hard above tree line winds, 4 day noah flooding rains. I believe it was sub 5 pounds and around couple hundred bucks, maybe less. I would say that this tent would do you well. DOn't know if a completely waterproof tent can really be any lighter. BTW, I would seam seal all seams on the fly, even if it is taped.
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yup. what you mentioned sounds reasonable. If you are ok with a little suffering, the pack can be very light. And the suffering is not usually that bad when you consider how awesome the place is. The scenery overwelms any discomfort that a light pack and bivy gear will offer. Just remember that the lighter the bivy gear, the less of margin for error. So bailing is a greater possibility. Small issues become very large. I think twight made a good discussion to this in his extreme alpinism book. read it.
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While it may be true that c4 may lose some strength by clipping into the main loop, (why?) it may not transfer that the older double axle camalots act the same way. You are getting the double axle type right? If it is the single axle old style, then you have no choice except to resling it, as a biner won't fit inside. Would be real interested to hear why it reduces the strength to clip into the loop directly instead of the sling.
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[TR] canadian rockies - mixed master (mixed weeini
genepires replied to genepires's topic in Ice Climbing Forum
yeah I suck but had a good time anyway. that is the great thing about being a so-so climber, you are always pleased with your progress. -
Got a bibler which is very similar to the ID mk1. Fairly good in very wet conditions. Wouldn't want to cook inside when it is raining outside as it will condense inside and seem to leak.(much like the problems with goretex jackets) If it raining that bad, chances are you are bailing and going home anyway. If you are doing something in which bailing home is not an option, it is probably snowing anyway in which single wall tents shine. stability in wind- can be flappy but nothing some earplugs wouldn't fix. Stablity is a function of how good you stake it out really. Yours probably has at least 6 guye lines which should be plenty if anchored properly. (ie buried deadman types or big ass rocks or trees, ect)
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I have used a down bag that was made to sleep two people from feathered friends, can't remember the model right now. It is a sort of rectangular bag that zips out to a fairly rectangular shape (zipper goes out all the way across foot section), with a nylon piece that zips into the bag to allow two to sleep under the single bag. There are sleeves for the pads to go in to keep you off the ground and also prevent one person from "stealing all the covers". I see you are asking about synthetic bags, but I bet you could find a synthetic bag to work with this feathered friends doubler for a lightweight sleeping system. They have two of this type, one is lighter than the other. Now finding a good cover (double bivy?) for this is a struggle.
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I like leashes and could care less what euros or canucks or yanks think about them. Jesus could show up on the icefields parkway, wielding ergos, swearing we would burn in hell for using leashes and I wouldn't switch. thanks for your opinion though.
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Trip: canadian rockies - mixed master (mixed weeinies attempt) Date: 1/1/2007 Trip Report: Just thought that somone might like some beta for mixed master if you are on your way to banff this season. Locals in front of us on route said that it doesn't form very often so people need to get on it if they have the ambition. We climbed it (all but last pitch) on a chilly but sunny day. guidebook roughly says 2 pitches up scottish gulley traverse R to tree or continue up ice slab to alcove belay 5.8 traverse and ramp pitch thin ice corner to tree belay. snow pitch steep ice pitch So the first 2 pitches can be combined with a 70m rope at a bolt belay. There is a bolt anchor 60m from ground but it is exposed in the narrow gulley and we got nailed a couple times with heavy spindrift sloughs. Not such a great place to belay. (maybe rappel,except there is a good bolt belay only 10 m above so why bother?) 30m above ground is a big ledge for a screw belay. Lots of rope drag if you combine pitches 1&2. pitch 3 traverses R across snow and scrappy rock to get to ice slab. expect rope drag here too. Belay off swiss cheese ice blob. There is dozens of old screw holes in this little blob of ice seepage. Strong enough though, just less reassuring. Maybe someone could bring up a squirt bottle and refill those holes? 5.8 traverse pitch is mostly low angle scrappy climbing. luckily it gets lots of sun, cause I used my hands more than tools. Tons of pro, like every 5 feet. Some stubby screws in seepage ice blobs and med nuts and cams from #0 tcu to #2 camalot. I wished I had 3 or 4 #3 tcu's. Seems like I needed that one more than others. A couple fixed pins at cruxes. I never saw any pin placements but I am probably not so piton savy. Seemed like plenty of gear anyway. Three spots where I sat for awhile figuring out the moves but I am a mixed climbing goober/newbie, something like a hour or more on this pitch. The snow covered ramp was the most mental challenging I thought. (god knows what I was hooking on) Various pins and old small bolt belay in alcove above snow gulley. Thin ice pitch above was sweet with good rock gear and stubby to a cool steep step to tree belay. We didn't go any higher cause we were running out of daylight and I was running out of courage. Locals in front of us (Danny the canmore framer and friend the mtn guide) did the last pitch too and said it was great with 3 fixed pins on lower part. descent From tree above thin corner pitch, 2 rope rappel gets you to top of 5.8 pitch. Another 2 rope rappel (down the snow gulley) gets you to the top of pitch 2. There is a bolt/pin ancor partway down the gulley, right above the drop off. From the top of pitch 2, rope rappel gets you to a ice ledge, then a rap off v thread to ground. A truely sweet route with lots of variety. My first "on purpose" mixed lead! Alright, could someone help me resize the tiny photos? Gear Notes: ice gear w/4 stubbies, maybe 10 screws total rock rack mentioned above 2 ropes nice, might be able to rap with 1 60m. Approach Notes: solid bootpack from road. 10 minutes. Gotta love the rockies.
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peru?
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Some down bags have a waterproof breathable outer shell already. This would be fine for inside a snowcave. There is some dripping but not so much that a bivy sack would be needed if your sack already has a good outer finish. (like water getting through the seams which are usually not taped on a sleeping bag) If your bag does not have any kind of good outside material (driloft, event, epic, ect), then any amount of dripping will saturate the bag and you will need some kind of bivy sack. Your bag will get a little damp anyway due to sweat. Just my opinion, but synthetic bags are crap. Never warm enough, always weigh too much and never compress enough for my too small pack. stay natural, exercise common sense with your gear and stay with down.