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northvanclimber

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Posts posted by northvanclimber

  1. northvanclimber....hmm that sounds familiar. Were you the guy that bailed off the WR of stuart that one day after the lightning started the forest fire on jack ridge? just wonderin..

     

    nope. but my friend busted up his foot in the bugaboos this august and a nearby team with a HAM radio called us an air ambulance so we could get him out of there.

  2. i've been looking into this same topic myself and have been getting both positive and negative responses. seems like rescue using a HAM radio is dependent on:

    1) being able to access nearby repeaters - my impression is that many are not open to the public

     

    and 2) having someone to actually call.

     

    looks like if you've done your homework before you head out, the radio may have a chance at rescuing your butt.

  3. Check out the March 2008 article here for lots more info.

     

    very interesting article. i'm a little confused though, if i need some sort of rescue, who exactly would i try contacting? it sounds like commercial services use frequencies i can't (legally) access...

  4. Glad everyone got out safely!

     

    A couple weeks ago i was up there with a couple buddies when one of them took a terrible fall on snowpatch spire and busted up his foot badly. despite our best efforts to make a splint for his foot, it was apparent he wasn't going to be able to walk back to our tents, let alone back to the car. luckily, a team climbing on a route nearby had a VHF radio and were able to call us a rescue helicopter and even better, the upper vowell glacier made for a nice helipad. we were pretty grateful those guys had a radio and i'm wondering now about the merrits of getting one myself.

     

    since a lot of mountaineering and climbing takes place in remote areas where cel phones don't work, do any of you c.c.'s carry radios when you're climbing? dru, any thoughts? i know you have to get an amateur radio license, but that doesn't sound very hard considering how useful it can be...

  5. it seems like the fracture lines from the tools will decrease the screws strength if you have it too close to a tool placement.

     

    i think you figured it out all by yourself...

     

    likewise, cracks can spread out from screw as it drives through the ice. would be a shame if your axe was in their path...

  6. i was in a similar spot about 5-6 years ago. wanted to start mountaineering but my friends were all sport climbers. took a week-long alpine course, learned a lot (which included repeatedly practicing the skills we were being taught), and met a bunch of guys that, to this day, i still climb with.

  7. I want to climb Ultimate Everything but don't want to climb a deathwish route on the Apron. Are there any routes on it without serious runouts?

     

    LOL... i think your friends (or whomever you've talked to) have been overstating their experiences on the apron just a tad. there are some run outs on the easier routes, but that's usually cause you're going up incredibly easy ground that you wouldn't bother protecting anyways!

     

    for well protected climbs there's over the rainbow, which is just to the right of diedre near sickle. barely deserves its 5.9 rating...

  8. I'll second that the approach trail is largely unusable due to snow cover. However, the boot track that you and everyone left behind made a great trail for my buddy and i to follow on sunday. it was also impossible to miss the entrance to the correct chimney due to the substancial boot track! amazingly, all the tracks on the approach had completely melted out by monday afternoon...

  9. You gotta give thanks to MSR for designing products without planned obsolesence. Awesome that they have lots of repair parts available, not to mention that go forever with a little cleaning once in a while.

     

    They don't put planned obsolesence in cause they break right from the get go! INSTANT obsolesence.

     

    oh i dunno about that... i've had a whisperlite for over a decade and never had a problem with it. but then again, my buddy bought a simmerlite that we used in the bugs a couple years ago and i don't know if it was just his, but i really didn't like it at all. kept spraying the fuel everywhere when we tried to prime it...

  10. simul rap so that each person only has to walk/feed one rope on the way down.

     

    careful if you do this with half ropes (or really thin singles) because they're so thin. some belay devices won't provide enough friction (although you can remedy this by adding carabiners, etc.). did this once without really thinking about it and discovered it was a good thing i was wearing gloves...

  11. so i don't know anything about metal work, but are people implying that black diamond isn't making their picks correctly (ie., this whole laser business), and that's why they break more often?

     

    or are they just a bit thinner or something like that...

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