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MisterMo

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Posts posted by MisterMo

  1. Turn left off SR 2 at Reiter Road just east of fire station

    Go where the road bears hard left (<1 mile) go straight.

    Pass a working pit on the right and a huge flat open area smitten with ORV's on the left. Just beyond, at the point where the paved road starts downhill, turn left onto an unpaved road thru an open gate.

     

    Go past powerlines then take first right turn. Two very long switchbacks lead to and through a two year old clear cut to the boulders. There is another gate, probably closed. You will also see the adit to the Copper Belle mine if you are modestly observant.

     

    This is very much bubba-country, but 99.44% of the bubbas are cool...they're just into ORV-ing like you are into climbing.

     

    The boulders and their location are glaringly obvious from the 4 lanes on SR 2 just east of where you turn off.

  2. Exept that I would NOT tie a back up for the Euro Death knot. Adding a back up will increase the chances of getting it stuck, and reduce the advantage.

     

    And note: it is not the same as an overhand (if you tie the overhand "correctly" as a follow-through knot).

    water3.gif

     

    The overhand is probably harder to untie than the double fisherman's, not as secure, and not much easier to pull over an edge.

     

     

    Your pic is what I learned as an "Overhand Bend" or "Water Knot", 'bend' being the overall term for a knot used to join two ropes. Yada yada....

     

    What I'd like to point out is that those tails in the photo are awfully short, especially for webbing.

     

    Why variants of the overhand fell from grace, in favor of variants of the Figure 8, involved, I recall, claims of greater knot security, greater knot strength, and less tendency to become un-untyable post loading. For knots never to be untied...runners and nut slings (yeah, remember those?) I went to the double fishermans as it seemed to never come loose.

     

    To this day, both for frequent work applications and on those increasingly rare momentw when I actually climb something I still use the Fig 8 both for tying in and for joining ropes of equal diameter.

  3. Fuck oh dear. blush.gif

     

    It's easy to forget that the entire LTW is a bit of a house of cards, everything's all sort of wiggled loose from the quarrying operation.

     

    The rockfall against which all shall be forever measured was when the monster overhang which once dominated the western side of the quarry came hurtling down and filled the former pond site with all those giant boulders. It sent a wave of water up and across the railroad tracks. In the midst of a horribly stormy night in wintertime it was witnessed by no one, but the aftermath was pretty impressive.

  4. nice to know the historic name for recurve.

     

    This is one hard-to-follow thread. Weigelt named the climb Recurve Dihedral at the time of the FA done by he and R (not P) Doorish. This was around 1970 or so. The name Weigelt's must have gotten adopted sometime later...if, in fact, it refers to the same climb.

  5. I don't think a fixed line is going to hurt anything, but I am also thinking that maybe a semi permanent fixed line creates some obligations as far as maintenance and also some real questions as to trustworthyness. Would you use a fixed line that you didn't fix, didn't know who fixed how well, and didn't know if it had gotten schlocked by a rock? By the time you meander over and check these sorts of things out...well...you don't really need it any more do you?

  6. I have only ever suffered losses at Boston Mine ( lost a long-out-of-print Beckey Guide cry.gif) and East Fork Foss where they cleaned (stupid) me out pretty good. I guess I'll nominate those. I had a skunk move in my Squareback at Squamish once but he didn't take, or leave, anything. Call that one a draw.

  7. No doubt about it.

     

    Y'know, if you just take your rope to someplace big and grassy and reasonably devoid of dog shit and uncoil it and drag it around the grass for a few it dekinks it just fine without people freaking out.

  8. i once knew this guy who got arrested rappeling off the Montlake bridge.

     

    and you go crashing down onto the street below.

     

    My friend, you are going to need one helluva glide ratio to fall off the Montlake Bridge and land in a street. But, let's say you achieve just that and the following ensues:

     

    Fire crews show up to treat you, police come out to block traffic and investigate if this was a crime or accident. You get sent to the hospital (do you have insurance to cover your injuries, or do the taxpayers pay for it?)

     

    The street is blocked off for 30 minutes while this all happens, and ties up numerous resources that could be doing something else.

     

    How does this sequence of events (save maybe the crime investigation and street closure) differ from what happens if you tank it off the Lower Town Wall?

  9.  

    what flavor?

     

    Whatever's in season. The SO (and only the SO) gets Lemon Meringue, totally from the ground up...much much work.

     

    It's tempting to strike a deal with Mike the Barber, whip out a hair pie & Fedex it to Chilliwack.

  10. Quien Sabe is the nickname that Tonto gave to the Lone Ranger. Does that mean that that Lone Ranger knows nothing? In Spanish, Tonto means stupid. So, does this mean that the stupid is leading the dumb?

     

    Are you thinking of Kemo Sabe?

     

    Quien Sabe of course is Spanish for who knows. John Marshall Junior High School lore had it that Kemo Sabe was Indian speak for "Horse Shit".

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