Jump to content

wfinley

Members
  • Posts

    1227
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by wfinley

  1. More pix.... This is from the Jasper FB page: and this is a pic I took 11 years ago:
  2. That is incredible. Was anyone on the peak when this occurred? Imagine climbing the North face and witnessing this! Here's the view looking down at the lake from above. The parking lot from the above photo is the clearing at the end of the moraine.
  3. What a perfect day! Nothing lame about 2500 feet of Canadian climbing in shorts!
  4. Aesthetics are subjective. Beckey lists Silverhorn as one of his 100 favorites in his new book - and there's no 5.7 moves on loose down sloping shale. That said.,. Loose Rockies choss builds character & makes you fully appreciate the well bolted routes near Canmore.
  5. I got a pair of Salewa Rapace this past spring. Used them in Chamonix for a month and loved them. They fit a pair of Grivel crampons that have a heel piece and a plastic toe piece just fine. They climbed moderate rock just fine and are perfect for kicking steps or hiking across glacier ice. Best of all they're super light so I didn't complain too much when I had to carry them in a pack. I also have had a pair of La Sportiva Nepals for about 5 years now (just got them resoled at Dave's Cobbler). Love them but they sure are heavy.
  6. Hi Evan! Nice to run into you guys as well. Hope you found some partners for your last week there. Get in touch if you're ever headed north again!
  7. Trip: Chamonix, France - July in Chamonix Date: 7/1/2012 Trip Report: My wife & I spent all of July in France. I have hundreds of photos and pages of journal entries to sort through so this is nothing more than a brief roundup of our time spent and climbs done. If you're interested you can check my site (http://www.akmountain.com/) in the next few weeks for more stories & photos. Thanks to CC.com members who pointed me the right direction when trip planning. We had a wonderful time. If you're in Anchorage and need guidebooks or maps then get in touch. Gaston Rebuffat busting an aid move in a town center mural. The ultimate backcountry gate at the Midi The routes... Crochues - Traverse Our first climb; a wonderful ridge traverse that is very straight foreword and simple. Super fun, a good way to get over jet lag and get a feel for the area. One pitch of 5.4 chimney, a couple pitches of easy 5th class and lots of exposed 4th class. It took us about 6 hours round trip with a while spent lounging on the summit. Route takes the skyline from left to right. French guides don't wear helmets and love to balance on airy spires while belaying their clients. l'Index - SE Ridge One of Gaston Rebuffat's 100 Finest Routes. First climbed in 1913 it's one of the all-time easy classics. Mellow climbing up to 5.6 with some fun airy ridge traversing. Very mellow with a short steep section protected by pitons. You ascend 4 pitches on the ridge line and then traverse an airy summit ridge to the final summit block. Afterwards it's 50' of down climbing to the rap anchors, a 150' rappel and a final 4th class mank couloir down climb. 5 hours round trip - the last down climb in a driving rainstorm. l'Index as viewed during the Gliere Fun ridge climbing high on the route. Aiguille du l'M - North Northeast Ridge Another one of Rebuffat's 100 Finest Routes. In summary... Across two glaciers, up 1500' of moraine and scree. Then up 800' of immaculate granite. Across a wildly exposed summit ridge. Two raps, more exposed 4th class. Another rap. Then 1500' of mank couloir followed by 400' of rickety metal cables, ladders and wield metal steps. Reach the glacier and play Russian roulette with the serac and rockfall just out of reach (ridiculous objective danger is the norm here) and then tromp 4000' down the trail to Chamonix (after missing the last tram). One of the best alpine rock climbs I've ever done. The NNE of l'M ascends the left skyline of the far left peak; the Petite Charmoz traverse ascends the right skyline of that same chunk of rock. The route more or less takes the right skyline. Excellent rock right off the ground. The classic dihedral pitch. Guidebook called it 5.6 and said it was a "great warmup after a season of ice climbing". Halfway up it I remembered I hadn't ice climbed at all last season. Being at 9K and 3 days out from our house at sea level didn't help. Aiguille du Tour - Normal Route One of the more popular easy glacier peaks in the Mont Blanc Massif. An easy 3 hours to the Albert Premier Hut where we were inducted into the joys of European hut culture. Up at 4am, coffee and bread then out onto the glacier with 100 other climbers in a race for the summit. Ridiculously crowded but everyone had a good time. The crowds included a 10 year old boy and an 80 year old woman. Glacier crossing, a bergschund and then some easy 4th class made difficult by the 100 people trying to push you off. Aiguille du Tour as viewed from across the valley. The summit is the highest point in the center of the photo. The wonderful Albert Premier Hut. Guide and client high on the route. [video:youtube]www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHtr1mTkghE French crowds!!! Mont Blanc - North Ridge A lonely climb through a serac zone, rockfall, a crevasse field from hell, a quiet hut, a beautiful snow ridge with slopes up to 45 degrees, narrow catwalks with crevasses on one side / seracs on the other. All leading to high winds, altitude and crowds. This route had all the elements of big mountain climbing packed into two days of fun. The N Ridge ascends the sharp ridge line in the center of the photo. When the French guidebooks say the approach is crevassed they mean it. Leading up the ridge to the world's greatest outhouse! Dawn on the North Ridge. Turning tail and running down the Gouter route after a lenticular touchdown. Petite Charmoz - Traverse Yet another one of Rebuffat's 100 Finest Routes. Old-school chimneys, perfect granite hand rails and massive exposure. Rated "5.5 A0"... which in reality was more like 5.8 with mandatory aid moves over roofs. Super classic after the fact. Discovering the joy of "5.6 A0" old-school chimney climbing. Perfect granite hand rail to the summit. Chapelle de la Gliere - South Ridge And yet another one of Rebuffat's 100 Finest Routes. This route has a super classic pitch that our guidebook called "mythical". "The Razor's Edge" consists of a slab up to a wildly exposed arete. Very fun! The South Ridge of Chapelle de la Gliere ascends the left skyline. Starting up the Razors Edge. On the Razors Edge. More perfect rock high on the route. Cragging On our off days we spent a lot of time cragging. We hit up the local wall Lac Gaillands where the average age is about 8, sampled the multi-pitch slabs at Les Cheserys, the bolted cracks at Vallorcine, the 7 pitch sport routes near Brevant, and the wonderful gneiss slabs of La Duchere The fun bolted mutli-pitch slabs of Les Cheserys. Below is the village of Argentiere. Old old anchors at Vallorcine. Route finding is not hard at the local crags. The bolted cracks of Vallorcine. A name plate bolted into the base of a route at La Duchere. (Note: image sizes are off so if you want full sized & a prettier layout go here: http://www.akmountain.com/index.cfm/2012/07/01/Chamonix-Preview ) Gear Notes: 250 lbs of gear! We took everything - rock gear, ice gear, mountain gear & dining wear. Everything was used at one time or another. Approach Notes: Anchorage to Geneva via the north pole, ChamExpress to Chamonix and a 10 day multipass.
  8. Great to be reading your write-ups once again. Congratulations on a full recovery. Looking forward to many more stories and pictures.
  9. There's no doubt that 2-way communication is critical, but saying one should carry a sat phone on a backcountry climbing trip is unrealistic. They're heavy, bulky and expensive - no one is going to pack one for the average weekend trip. I bought a Spot last year after hiking out 6 miles on a broken ankle. I recall thinking after taking a grounder that had I landed 2 feet to the right I would have had a compound fracture. A Spot in that case could have made quite a difference. Luckily for me it was merely a bad sprain and fractured tibia / talus and I was able to walk out on my own power. There's no way I'll ever pack rope, rack & camping gear and add a sat phone to the pile - but a Spot weighs as much as a powerbar so it goes everywhere with me. PS... If you havn't already, read Gadd's post on the Spot: http://willgadd.com/climbing-spray-death-life/
  10. Nice. An ajax loading icon would make people know the DB is refreshing. I was put off by the time lag and couldn't tell it was refreshing. And I think you should query each result and pull out the first image from the TR and display it as a thumbnail!
  11. Nice documentation! And congratulations on an uber-classic route!
  12. Rad! Climbed SkyLadder in July over 10 years ago. It would be a freakin' crazy ski!
  13. I want heated tents at 17. And an espresso stand at basecamp.
  14. Thought people would like to read this writeup. 370 unsupported miles with skis and packrafts. Amazing. http://thingstolucat.com/logan-traverse/
  15. My favorite Messner vid. [video:youtube]D_pwYa58PRY
  16. wfinley

    Sobo's Updates...

    That is awesome. I remember being awed by the decorations as a child in India. Love the Samson illustration!
  17. I snapped this pic of Ama Dablam some years back. A couple weeks after I took this pic the hanger just below all those people broke off and a bunch of people died. Crazy crowds on all those famous peaks...
  18. Yes - you came for a good year. We're still able to ski road to summit & back on Peak 3. Not bad!
  19. Nice to see the backyard (Flattop) included with peaks like Middle Teton and Granite!
  20. It's nothing but Fast Food Alpinism. Anyone who doesn't refill their ratty styrofoam coffee cup at Tim Hortons every morning, live in the back of a rusty Tacoma and squat for 30 days every spring at Kahiltna International is obviously not dedicated.
×
×
  • Create New...