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gavastik

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Posts posted by gavastik

  1. Ah you guys and dolls... All that lack of climbing has made you so tense you can't deal with the gentle loving nature of the teletipster... Go smoke a hookah, put on a wool hat with a pompon and relax already.

     

    D'oh! Sorry, wrong forum.

    Cheers

    Paulina

  2. Things are different in Europe and they definitely have different sensibilities.

     

    Yeah but there are nice people and assholes everywhere. So speak your piece and judge by the reaction. Of course if there's a big group of burly guys with lots of tattoos* being loud and obnoxious, I will probably move rather than confront them... shame on me.

     

    Cheers

    Paulina

     

    *as experienced at the Gunks (east coast) recently...

  3. Shomshing is wong. A girl (with a car!) who likes to climb and is offering to buy beer, needs a climbing partner and only one person has replied? Mein got, has the ratio changed this drastically or do cc.commies only read Spray nowadays?

     

    He he. I got a few PMs, actually. Also perhaps the call was a little too early. But that's alright -- we go for quality not quantity, right? smile.gif

     

    Cheers

    Paulina

  4. What does that mean "died from exhaustion"? Do they mean hypothermia???

     

    There's an article about a Russian climber's death on 05/22 on risk.ru (in Russian). Not sure if it's the same incident as reported above, but this is what risk.ru say:

    On May 21st a team of 20 people attempted to summit, all using oxygen. 16 of them did summit, 4 others got to about 8,600-8,700 meters. Everybody made it down to the 7,800 camp that day in good weather and good spirits. The next day (May 22) as they were preparing to descend, one of them - a 54-year-old man (who was among the non-summiteers) felt sick, complained of lack of oxygen and inability to breathe (even though he was using bottled oxygen). Raising the volume of oxygen from 2 to 4 l/min didn't help. A doctor-recommended injection of dexametanose (sp?) didn't help. He died. It was impossible to carry his body all the way down; so the guides and expedition members covered his body in sleeping bags and rocks; then descended to base camp.

     

    This is just one of the tragic incidents; but this one doesn't sound like the one where the climber was left to die just below the summit. It could be a "death from exhaustion"... RIP.

     

    I never know how to write about these things...

    Paulina

  5. I've been trad and sport climbing for a few years. It turns out that I will be working in the Sierra Nevadas this summer and relaively close to Yosemite. I'd like to learn something about big wall climbing and I'm looking for all the beta I can get. Websites worth looking at, recommednations for haul sacks, portaledges, books to read etc. Ideally I'll find someone out there willing to take me through the ropes of lead, haul, jug, but if I don't I'll be going at it with friends with a similar skill set to mine (lots of trad and sport, but little to 0 aid). If you have any constructive advice, I'd appreciate hearing it.

     

    For gear, Fish Products: www.fishproducts.com

    For advice and mentorship, I'd be the wrong person to ask.

     

    Cheers

    Paulina

  6. How come there's no "yes and no" option?

     

    If you surprise the bear, you're pretty scary. If it's used to people, you probably aren't (mind you, I've never met you, so I couldn't say for sure). The tasty morsels are those Gu packs and Luna bars in your pockets -- the black bear doesn't eat people.

     

    Hating to take sides,

    Paulina

    (who saw a black bear only once, at a distance, and was very scared)

  7. Hello, good people of cc.

     

    I'll be coming from the Coast that's in the East to Seattle area (living in Redmond actually) for the month of July, maybe even the last week of June, and looking to climb all over, all the time, especially during the working week. I'm looking to do rock, alpine, ice, ski descents, whatever.

     

    I prefer fun long easy/moderate climbs to desperate epics. Let me rephrase this: I don't climb very well, for all the years I've been doing it. smile.gif I've led 5.8 on gear, but I've also been scared on 5.6. I've clipped some 5.10-ish bolts, but who cares. I've led grade 3 ice but it was mushy and in the 40s. I ski on tele gear, but not too steep (Main Gully in the Gulf of Slides on Mt Washington was scary). You get the idea.

    But I'm psyched to climb! And ski! And I'll have a car. And if you're kind enough to show me around I'll buy you a beer.

     

    I also plan to show up to pub club events and such. bigdrink.gif (where's the smiley for downing martinis?)

     

    Cheers

    Paulina

  8. I'd suggest picking up one of Nelson's Select guidebooks and maybe looking at the volcanoes for July skiing.

     

    Yep. Got both Nelson's Selected Climbs, as well as Weekend Rock! and a guide to the Olympics. Salivating over them at night.

     

    So, is it pretty easy and usual to try to pick up a partner at one of them pub club meetings? Or do people prefer to make plans over email/pm?

     

    Off to post on the partners thread for weekday adventures if anyone's interested.

    Cheers

    Paulina

  9. Hi! I'm new here.

     

    (That was the general hi.) So I'll coming to Seattle from the east coast in July and maybe last week of June this year, on an extremely flexible schedule, and with a burning desire to climb. Good place for it, innit?

     

    Other than looking for partners, which it seems I should do on the Looking for Partners board, I was wondering about oh so many things...

     

    Are there any easy/moderate alpine climbs (rock or ice) with gentle descents that you like and would recommend I check out? By gentle descents I mean glissade, rappel, cable-car, paved road, magic carpet... You know, I'm an old woman with bad knees... smile.gif

     

    And then a bunch of OT stuff, like:

    Where's the best bc skiing to be had in July, preferably not extremely badass?

     

    Is it worth it to bring my bike into Seattle? I'll be living in Redmond, so it would be to "commute" to places like the climbing gym and the pub.

     

    Last but not least: do the nice people of the Pub Club bite?

     

    Thanks for any and all the info. Cheers!

    Paulina

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