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pale

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Everything posted by pale

  1. Carpenter. Work your ass off during the job to finish, when done head to the mountains till the next one starts.
  2. So is traversing the ridge the point of the climb, or are you aiming for the summit by the route less travelled? Just wondering because the NE face via Anniversary is much easier and involves way less up and down. Great pics!
  3. Thanks for the help. I just wanted to confirm what I've heard. What I've done in the past is bring up a bunch of lockers, and some cord and clip a pre-tied to the anchor bolts. Safe, yes, but not nearly as quick as clipping a couple draws. I am aware of the problem of being lowered or TR'd through chains, causing excessive wear. Roscoe, I have done some seconding on very moderate alpine routes (5.6), and am pretty excited about doing more. For me, the cragging is all in preparation for the alpine. I think my biggest problem right now is that my group of climbing friends all have about the same experience as I do. I need to climb with more experienced folk, and second some harder routes. Also, unlearn any bad habits I may have picked up due to lack of solid mentors. Currently I climb in Squamish, and if you are looking for a partner, please feel free to contact me. I can lead 5.7 on gear, and toprope 10a comfortably.
  4. Hey there..... just started doing some easy gear leads on single pitch routes at the crags with some friends. Just wondering, if once we reach the top of the crag, and there are bolts there, what is the safe and acceptable procedure for being lowered? Often we will repeat the route, ie, one of us will second and then one or two more of our group will then lead it again. What I have been doing, is a little bit tedious, and I'm wanting to save time. Usually I'll set up a TR anchor onto the bolts, but this can be time consuming. So today a fellow suggested we just clip in a couple quickdraws to the bolts instead of a proper TR anchor. So I want to know your esteemed opinions. Is this an acceptable thing for seconding and repeat leads in a crag? Thanks for your time
  5. I should also say that the Wedge turnoff is also past the turnoffs to Emerald.
  6. If you continue on past Whistler, past Green lake, look for a turnout to your right. This is the Wedge trail turnout, and is signed. Just cross the bridge and camp there by the river for free. 10-15 minutes from the skiers daylots.
  7. Here's a site that has some good pics of Wolverine tracks and their gait. It's quite informative on Wolverines in general: http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/ab/banff/natcul/natcul15_E.asp Cool that they have one tagged now
  8. pale

    Winter Blues

    No. I'm too busy beating the hell out of Chuck Norris. And Olyclimber keeps calling, muttering something about push-ups.
  9. pale

    Tour de Breakup

    He just said that to piss off the French.
  10. pale

    Tour de Breakup

    Ya well, now that he's retired, he's out of the spotlight, so no wonder.
  11. Spackle is cheap, right? I once hung a canoe from my ceiling, and when I moved I plugged the holes with toothpaste.
  12. And take some courses, starting with anchor building. Good luck and have fun!
  13. Ya but taking $10 million out of the park system is probably a bad thing. Why can't someone sue on principal?
  14. What kind of compass is it? If it's a Silva or Brunton, they will replace it no charge, you pay shipping to. I had the same problem. Just send them an email and they will send you a return authorization #. Took about 4 weeks for me to get mine back.
  15. pale

    Winterizing

    From one finish carpenter to another - Often the little tongues on the strikeplates can be adjusted without removing them, just stick a screwdriver in that little tongue and force it out. The cheaper, paint grade doors usually have these strikes. Buy a digital thermostat to regulate the heat in your house. Wrap your hot water pipes in insulation - possibly the hot water tank too, if it's old Good advice on the door sweeps, but additionally you should keep the threshold clean - nothing lets in a draft like a bit of ice holding up the door sweep. Make sure your exhaust vents (dryer, bathroon) have functioning louvers on them outside, otherwise you get cold air blowing back in.
  16. pale

    My Real Tree

    Great tree. How did you come by it?
  17. I did it the Sept long weekend in '04. Don't recall driving past a gate. Perhaps I have the wrong road? We used it to access Slollicum lake. It had some monster cross ditches. Did some gardening with my trailer hitch.
  18. The north Joffre is so overgrown now you would need an industrial lawnmower to get through. The other forks on N Joffre are in pretty good shape, in fact there's active logging on one of them. North Fork of Lizzie FSR has recently been cleared in the last year by myself and a BCMC group. - although there are still many large boulders that are tricky for a fullsize to get past, and one large landslide where one set of tires is on the slide, and the other set is right on the edge I didn't find Slollicum too bad, either. Fun at night One good one is the Owl Creek FSR. Good washouts, some exposure, large boulders and some loose rock. I have a stock 1/2 ton pickup, and I'm no extreme driver by any stretch.
  19. Actually I believe the correct phrase used above would include the words "donut puncher" as opposed to "donkey puncher". Sheesh. No wonder he's pissed
  20. I'd fix it. Cheaper than buying something new. My ford just rolled over 250,000km. Constant maintenance keeps it in good shape.
  21. Ryobi sucks. Also I disagree with the comment above about buying corded versus cordless. Batteries have come a very long way in the last few years. Even some cordless chopsaws are beginning to be seen on some of my jobsites - but I wouldn't be cutting 2x material with them. Dewalt is popular because it's the "GoreTex" or "Mountain Hardware" of tools. People think when they buy Dewalt they are one of the cool kids. As a person that uses these tools everyday, I say Ridgid has a better product, as does *newer* Panasonic. And for cordless drills, you still can't beat Makita (except for the weekend woodie Makita's)
  22. The best thing Bosch has going for it is it's jigsaw, and it's jobsite radio. I've had lots of problems with their batteries, and that portable table saw of thiers is poorly designed. My advice would be to stay away from Bosch unless you buy the most expensive model they have. If you're a weekend woody then a mid-level Ridgid is perfect for you. No financial interest, I just know my shit.
  23. Go Ridgid. IMO DeWalt has really dropped in quality in the last few years, while the big competitors are doing quite well. In my experience ridgid makes bomber tools. I use various woodworking tools everyday. Makita puts out good packages too. Sounds like the warranty for the ridgidd is definitely better. At $60-80 for a dewalt battery it'll be worth it, but only if you use it everyday.
  24. Bit of late notice, but looking for someone to climb with in Squish tomorrow. I'm fairly new to the sport, but have a rope and a small rack. Can toprope 9's and 10a's, after I get warmed up. Can lead gear 7's and sport 8's. More experienced climbers than I are more than welcome - I would be interested in seconding an easier multi-pitch (haven't multi-pitched yet). Can also take newer climbers like myself to work on skills on toprope, but you can't be an outright newb - I would like to push my limits a bit. Thanks. PM me or post here if interested.
  25. Where are you located? The color is white? Do the locks work? Any idea if it'd fit a 98 f-150 ext cab, full box?
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