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jfs1978

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Posts posted by jfs1978

  1. EDIT: Make offers - A couple offers fell thru because of int'l shipping. I've marked what sales are still pending below. Otherewise make an offer on what's remaining if you are interested. Willing to negotiate on stuff - need to meet a budget but not looking to take anybody.

     

    A bunch of stuff for sale. I've tried to come up with fair prices - let me know if you think they aren't. :blush: I'm selling gear to buy gear so I'm trying to hit a budget...but make an offer if you want something.

     

    REALLY want to deal locally...i.e. in Bend or meet at Smith or something. I'll be fair if I need to ship anything but will probably hold out for dealing locally. Portland is probably doable too.

     

    Here goes:

    DMM Flys in good shape. With Leashes. $250

    DMM%20Fly%20Both.jpg

    DMM%20Fly%20Picks.jpg

     

    Mad Rock Alpinist Insulated Mountaineering Boots. In very good shape. Used 2-3 times on snow/ice climbs. Don't fit. Non-MR insoles. Size 45 euro. For reference I wear size 45 Salomon trail running shoes, and 5.10 Guide Tennies at a tight 44. The boots technically "fit" my foot size but I have other boots that fit better and I never use these. $110

    Mad%20Rock%20Alpinist.JPG

    Mad%20Rock%20Alpinist%20Toe%20Detail.JPG

     

    CAMP Tricams used a couple times. $35 for the set

    Tricams%20close-up.jpg

     

    Wild Country Rockcentrics used twice or never - $35 for the set - Sale Pending

    WC%20Hexs.JPG

     

    Marmot Eiger 36 (Med/Lrg) - Good shape with some crag dust. $55 Sale Pending

    Eiger%2036%20Front.jpg

     

    TNF Badlands 60 (Med/Lrg - 18in.-22in. torso) in good shape. $55 Sale Pending

    TNF%20Pack%203.jpg

    TNF%20Pack1.jpg

     

    And some misc. crap. Make an offer if interested.

    Two BD Headlamps - one with a remote battery pack for cold weather. Sale Pending

    BD%20Headlamp%201.JPG

    BD%20Headlamp%202.jpg

    MSR Denali decks.

    MSR%20Denalis.jpg

    MSR Steel Pot

    MSR%20Pot.JPG

    Primus stove

    Primus.JPG

  2. Kevin, I'd also encourage you not to leave the table. As mentioned above...many climbers don't have anything against actual PLB usage and availability. Making it mandatory is the problem - for many reasons.

     

    The reason I now support HB 2619 is because we need to get accurate information out regarding PLBs and where they fit and don’t fit.

     

    Supporting legislation isn't a great way to go about entering this discussion regardless of your reason...imho. You start from that position and you will get a LOT of opposition from this crowd...before you have a chance to even enter the discussion. The only message that support for these bills sends is that you have no interest in a discussion, are uninformed, have not done your research, and have no intention of doing any research. Whether that's your intent or not...that is what I hear.

     

    On another note...it looks like your company provides only ACR products for rent. The size and weight of the unit alone keeps me from considering one...and I would be unlikely to use one even if available for rent. Any chance you will offer the newer McMurdo FastFind in the future? Much smaller and lighter.

  3. Monty thanks for what you and PMR are doing. It is appreciated.

     

    I do hope that as you are working with the OR legislature you emphasize that a requirement placed specifically on climbers is both unfair and ineffective if cost reduction is the goal. If climbers are required to carry a "signaling device" then every other outdoor user group requiring occasional SAR services should be required to as well - that means snow-mobilers, mushroom pickers, hunters, fishermen, back-country skiers, boaters, hikers, snowshoers, winter campers, and every other user group that accounts for more SAR calls and expense than climbers ever have...

     

    I'm certainly not advocating this...but I'd be willing to bet that if someone DID, the legislation would get shut down in a hurry.

     

    cheers.

  4. I have four days off...starting...um... now. To be honest I don't expect to be able to get anything big done on such short notice. And the last forecast I looked at for the area looked like The Suck (wet and warm) so...

     

    That said...any conditions reports for the Leavenworth area? North of there? Would anything be worth making a mad dash up there for, right now? Gradewise...hard to say...WI/AI4ish, low commitment and reasonable approaches considering my short window? Anything to recommend if I get another 4 day stint (coming from Oregon) later in the season?

     

    Bit of a gaper request. Thanks for any beta.

  5. don't know'bout'the bone's, but my POTD award wears serious merit, and you my'man have earned it w/ the no-doubt wicked-ardous research that musta been necessary to root-out this gem :)

    Woot woot! serious merit indeed. I'll be mounting the award on my bathroom wall with a couple 3/8 inch Rawls - so as to admire it from my throne. Hand-drilled on lead of course.

  6. the 18 some odd quickdraws got bootied by the party immediately before us, 'fore we had a chance at 'em! :(

     

    heh, we were up the day before. I came close but would have felt too guilty bootying 18 draws off one pitch. I think I ended up with one old 'biner though...I'll consider it a booty tax...

     

    ah well.

     

    :mistat: who had to leave all those behind though.

  7. ok thread drift here. sorry ivan but your thread reminded me...

     

    Just curious if anyone knows anything about the entire PR bolt ladder having draws hanging on it? Every bolt. Weird...

     

    If someone was working on freeing that face...I might expect four or five...not 18. We left 'em all hanging a couple days ago...despite the massive booty temptation. :confused:

     

    Just curious if anybody knows anything. Which one o' y'all's second had a little epic hissy fit and refused to follow? :poke:

     

    edit...heh, come to think of it, maybe Joel's got new tactics for beating his last time... :crazy:

  8. so...camped at the Turtle (9,200) for the Fuhrer Finger this past weekend. Woke up at 3am to the sound of my foodbag ripping down the Wilson outside my tent...

     

    "What the...?!?!?!"

     

    Hop out the tent...two yellow eyes lookin' (or smirking) back at my headlamp...my pack opened up...and my foodbag gone. I got some satisfaction out of the fact that it apparently had gotten away from the thief and was on it's way into a crevasse somewhere below. :lmao: At least the little bastard didn't get my food either.

     

    We split the remaining food up and everything was fine...and we all came back more fashionably fit and trim. :moondance:

     

    So...that was a first for me...couple thousand feet up the glacier I considered the food safe...

     

    my bad... :crazy:

     

    So keep an eye out for critters y'all.

  9. Trying to cram a "workout" in before work tomorrow...just SS if the going is good.

     

    Anybody have some current upper mountain snow conditions to report? Slogalicious thigh deep pow-pow...or has the wind kept things manageable enough for a quick ascent?

     

    No skis. I have yet to see the light. Sloggin' it out is the way of the true warrior...anyhoo.

     

    Yes, am looking at NWAC. Considerable above 6k.

     

    thanks and cheers.

  10. Some posts on the taco about it.

     

    Hey all,

     

    We're working on Issue 26. It had been on the presses in October when Alpinist folded. But, as we found out recently, a large number of the original Issue 26 articles had been sold to other mags while Alpinist was closed (and have since appeared or are forthcoming now in those publications). So we're now re-editing and redesigning the issue to fill in those gaps. And some contributors are working hard to finish replacement articles. I'll let you know as soon as we get a sense of the print date. We're aiming, now, for early April.

     

    Thanks so much for your patience and support. It's exciting to get Alpinist going again. We hope to make the magazine worthy of all of you. Advice of all kinds is welcome....

     

    best,

    Katie Ives

    katie.r.ives@gmail.com

     

    Alpinist Re-launch on ST

  11. I gave up and bought new skis on sale from the bad guys at REI, where I would have expected service like this in the first place.

     

    Odd. I'd expect much BETTER service at REI. A friend's skis were mis-drilled and they didn't even bat an eye when they figured it out. Chucked the screwed up skis and remounted on a new pair free of charge - no questions asked.

     

    Who knows, maybe the shop-tech got an earful from the boss later...but they treated my buddy right.

     

    Point being, I think that's the kind of treatment you should expect from a decent shop. Not the bs that Rotary got.

  12. heh - stimulating. :) That's about right.

     

    A few whiteouts and a bit breezy...haven't been up there in anything crazy.

     

    I usually decide I like a cold beer and a warm fireplace too much to go up when things get nutty up there. :brew:

     

    But hell, nothing like a planned mini-epic to keep cabin fever at bay...

  13. Dang it. Three days off this week and a partner available for either NF or Reid HW or whatever...just in time for the next batch of crap to move in.

     

    Figures. :cry: Cragging it is. Anybody planning on heading up? I may still go if it doesn't seem to be getting too bad...but NF is probably off...

     

    Just publicly b****ing and whining. Pardon my moment of weakness.

  14. WageSlave, if i could get my lame-a$$ home connection to upload the pics I would have...sorry. You aren't missing much though. Cheap-ass digi-cam pics and that side of the mountain was still in shade when i was there so not much to see really. I'll upload a couple if I can get things to work though. cheers. =)

  15. Yeah, it was warm today again. 40 in the parking lot at 4:30. Felt like a spring climb. FWIW I was going up to check out Leuthold, scrapped that with the high temps and nasty rime falling out of the sky everywhere. Headed up to the crater instead and watched a bunch of crap tinking and bashing its way down right after sunrise - mostly down the old chute - wide swaths of fist size chunks sweeping more often than looked fun to me. Scrapped that idea and decided to avoid what looked tempting around the crater rim too, for obvious reasons. Went down and took a couple pics of the Reid and Yocum. Looked good to me...but still wouldn't want to be anywhere near the bottom of those couloirs til she sheds some of the nastiness. Back in the parking lot around 10:45.

     

    Couple guys headed up as I came down - and I thought I started late... Curious what they found at that late hour...

     

    Solid sheet of ice and rime gargoyles everywhere above top of Palmer - more than usual for me. Yocum is of course covered. Wheeeee - have at it hardmen.

  16. Anyone up higher on the mountain today/recently for a conditions report? NWAC is suggesting moderate and low. Heard a report of a couple deep layers around 5 ft that haven't set up yet though...and it ain't gettin' supercold overnight right now. Thinkin' west side.

     

    Would do onsight eval...per usual...but any reports welcome.

  17. Past couple weeks have been a little rough...tough to say at this point. I usually say with anything under a 50% chance of precip at Smith, it's usually dry enough to climb. But with the crap moving through here right now, rain is a pretty good bet.

    Dec. 25th...

    474662.jpg

     

    474661.jpg

    Some climbable stuff if you were willing to brush off the holds, mostly not. The rain will have gotten rid of most/all that...but if you are coming a long way it's a risky bet.

     

    That said, come with an open mind and be willing to climb in some wetness...and you just might get lucky. FWIW, it was dumping rain in Bend today, and clear in the afternoon. Not sure about Smith.

  18. No need to over-complicate the issue for yourself. I wouldn't think of either as a "system" you need to "set up". Your primary challenge will just be dealing with rope management issues. More ropes at the belay just mean it's tougher to keep them from turning into a tangled mess. With twin ropes, both ropes go through each piece of protection, and with doubles they alternate. Simple really. I think Petzl catalogs might have some good pictures of this in action, or most any intermediate/advanced rock climbing instruction manual.

     

    Twins can essentially be treated like a single although the belayer needs to be attentive to twists and tangles. Usually running a finger between the ropes as they are fed into the belay device helps to keep them separated enough. The leader just clips and goes.

     

    Doubles present the same challenge for the belayer with the added complication of needing to simultaneously hold both ropes ready for a lock-off in case of a fall while feeding only one at a time as the leader clips. It's something that just takes practice. The leader just needs to keep track of what rope to clip where, call which rope is being clipped to the belayer, and keep the ropes from wrapping/twisting around each other.

  19. 7/10/08 Snow is patchy the entire way in. PCT is pretty clear...gets more continuous just before hitting the N Ridge climber's trail.

     

    North Ridge route is clear of snow the entire way...but east side of ridge still has a good shelf of snow if you want to use it to bypass some of the scramble.

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