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Everything posted by spionin
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thanks guys - it was a great presentation. one suggestion: you should either provide beers for everyone next time, or give us a heads-up to pack our own.
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route 155 is currently closed between steamboat state park and just south of electric city. the road will remain shut until april 10 and will reopen with single-lane traffic and flaggers thereafter. construction is expected to go until mid-may. http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/sr155/electriccityrockscaling/ the easiest way to access highway rock is to detour to the town of grand coulee (one option is via 17) and drive south on 155 until the "road closed" sign. it's a 25 min walk from there. a nice local lady let us park in her driveway near the closure.
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Slovenia and Croatia Beta?
spionin replied to Wallstein's topic in The rest of the US and International.
misja pec has very stout routes (like, 9s), is mad overhung, and thus great for rainy days. crni kal is also well worth checking out. viki cafe on the way there is the standard meet-up for climbers in the morning. cheers! -
holy shit dude! put it to rest already! i get it, ok? what would you like me to do? apologize to the climbing community for getting on that pitch? promise to never climb again? censor every picture of me that someone else puts up on the web?
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wow nice!! love the comment about 6ft+ Armenian machine! hi Raf!
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second winter ascent [TR] Mt Huntington - Nettle-Quirk 3/19/2011
spionin replied to John Frieh's topic in Alaska
you make it sound so... straight-forward rad, dude. -
[TR] Rainier - Emmons 7/15/2005 - 7/17/2005
spionin replied to KaskadskyjKozak's topic in Mount Rainier NP
very kind words and a fitting tribute. nice report, thanks! -
[TR] norway - vang - some more routes 3/8/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in Ice Climbing Forum
thanks for the kind words and the suggestion, vinny! heinrich - i feel like a bioterrorist -
[TR] norway - eidfjord - some climb 3/5/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
ha! rabbit fur climbing gloves? ... ...and a norwegian belay jacket! -
[TR] norway - vang - some more routes 3/8/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in Ice Climbing Forum
thanks much! mmm! maggot soup! i think i'll leave this option until after i let the antlers spend a hot, dry summer vacation in eastern washington. -
[TR] norway - rjukan - various 3/2/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
i found these two reports from january, and they mention serious avy conditions in eidfjord area: http://www.alexandrebuisse.org/resources/trip-reports/The-fifteen-most-terrifying-seconds-of-my-life http://sightly.net/peter/trips/norway2011/ -
[TR] norway - eidfjord - some climb 3/5/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
just found a pair of links on gravsports to climbing in Eidfjord. it really seems that we picked a great time to go - http://www.alexandrebuisse.org/resources/trip-reports/The-fifteen-most-terrifying-seconds-of-my-life http://sightly.net/peter/trips/norway2011/ -
Trip: norway - vang - some more routes Date: 3/8/2011 Trip Report: after leaving Bergen, we had only a few days left before flying out. we decided to spend a few more days climbing inland, and headed to the region of Oppland, just west of Lillehammer. our friend (and local hardman) Øyvind had mentioned seeing mad ice around Lillehammer in January, so that was a great suggestion. also, this site has a nice map with clickable locations, which sealed the deal: http://www.isklatring.no/kart.html. off to the Valdres district we went! oh, and the weather looked great (notice a pattern here??) 03/07: drive east to Vang 03/08: climb some big ice line (~200m) 03/09: climb Drøsja (~180m) 03/10-03/12: Oslo, fly back to Seattle despite some information about the general area, we once again didn't have a definite climbing plan or lodging this time. we decided to drive to Vang/Fagernes area and just stop whenever we saw something worth climbing. HA! the drive was painful. we could have stopped every 10 minutes along our 280 km route. consider this image and the striking ice line visible from afar. and as we got closer it's difficult to communicate its actual size. this is the type of stuff we had to deal with on our way east. when we finally decided to stop, we had to find housing. it seems that most huts were closed for the season, or we couldn't find owners to ask about rental. we literally went around knocking on doors, and came across Skogheim hytter. the owner, Tormod, agreed to rent us a hut - and gave us an amazing deal! our mountain palace could sleep 6, had a wood burning stove, a full kitchen, and sat on top of a cliff... 2 minutes away from the lines we were hoping to climb! roughing it at breakfast anyways, our 1st day there (8th day in Norway, and 5th day climbing overall) we climbed this: the approach took us up a powdery drainage and to a couple of ice steps. Doug chose the very stout pillar for p1 (about 45m) i followed up with a long moderate pitch (60m) two more moderate rope stretch pitches took us up to a large snow shelf there's all the ice above too, but we couldn't even see it through the trees, and the prospect of hiking up through deep powder wasn't very appealing. it was mid-day and we felt that we got our fill with the steep pitches we'd climbed. ah, the luxury! as in Eidfjord, all raps were off v-threads and trees. guess what we found on the approach??! another C-T hammer hard at work! after some serious banging, we succeeded at breaking the skull and splitting the antlers. we shipped them home, but will probably need to treat them somehow before hanging on the wall. if anyone has suggestions for killing off the current residents of the marrow, please let me know. the 2nd day we climbed a huge flow east of our previous day's line. this line is also described in this guide: http://www.isklatring.no/valdres/drosja.html and this overview of the area: http://www.isklatring.no/valdres/vangsmjosa_nord.html. it's listed as a 70m route, but really the ice goes on and on... we pitched out 4 sections totaling at least 180m, and there was a snow walk in-between. it was amazing, what can i say? as usual, Doug took the odd- and I, the even-numbered pitches. long, sustained pitches. warm sun. no belay jackets. sparkling ice! INTENSE CLIMBING! last swings... and another completed climb to bring a stellar finish to our norwegian vacation.
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[TR] Hyalite - The Days of Jack 3/25/2010
spionin replied to John Frieh's topic in Ice Climbing Forum
found this picture in a norwegian climbing guidebook - thought you'd appreciate! -
Trip: norway - eidfjord - some climb Date: 3/5/2011 Trip Report: ...having nicely warmed up on ice cragging in Rjukan, Doug and i continued west towards the coast. the drive took us through the Telemark region and past Hardangervidda national park. it seems like every town has its own ski resort! the terrain is super beautiful, the pictures just don't do it justice. the rolling hills and perfectly-spaced trees looked amazing for skiing. 03/04: drive to Eidfjord 03/05: climb some ice 03/06: drive to Bergen, hike up Fløyen 03/07: drive east to Vang Eidfjord is a village of about 900 on the Hardanger Fjord in south-western Norwegian county of Hordaland. big thanks to Andreas Spak for answering our emails about Eidfjord. his guiding company (Rjukan Adventure) runs some trips there and has put up a small website about the area (http://iceclimbeidfjord.com/). not much info is available about the area, although Will Gadd, Caroline George, Chad Peele, and former local Seth Hobby have all done some spectacular ascents there. the climate is mild and it was raining when we rolled in late in the evening. we weren't sure whether anything would be in. but the forecast wasn't looking too bad: we got put up in a posh hytte in Måbødalen and decided to just look for something to climb in the morning. we got up around 6 as usual, had our huge breakfast of coffee, bread, cheese and jam. norway is the most expensive country in europe, BTW. we really cut costs by cooking our own food, but not necessarily skimping on the local delicacies. pepper herring goes well with instant Idahoan potatoes. fish cakes (fiske kaker) are delicious cut into a lentil stew mix. and fish pudding and shrimp are cheap enough for sandwiches all day long. a loaf of cheapest bread goes for about a dollar/loaf at grocery stores. candy bars? $5-6 apiece! and the beers are $12+ a pint. burn. anyways, back to climbing. hmm... what to climb? maybe zees thing outside of our window?? (this picture is meant to be viewed with Norwegian national anthem playing in the background) this route is also shown on this page: http://www.iceclimbeidfjord.com/index.php?action=page&article=1866379550&node=219 the ninja and i got started from the car at 8:40, and approached the first ice step at around 10. p1 was a WI-warmup of about 45m. then followed a 65m WI fun, and 200m+ of simuling WI calf-burning rambles on some enormous pieces of ice. the weather got more and more beautiful as the day went on [i'll just give you a minute to look at that ice again] ok. then came the full 70m pitch of WI real. it was 70m. on that picture above i'm at ~ dot 3 from the bottom. it took me longer to climb than expected, and by the time doug got to the belay, it was 15:20. we decided to avoid having stupid rappels in the dark, and started to descend. it was heart-breaking. we did three full 70m raps and one 35 m rap. RAPPELS. you can do the math. the following morning we drove around the area and wildly pointed fingers out of the car window like we'd never seen frozen water before. i'm just going to put a few pictures up, but there are many, many more. these are just photos and don't show how huge these lines are. i'd like to think we weren't just drooling because we are ice-starved pnw-ers. the size of ice lines there is truly increidble. our next stop was in the coastal city of Bergen. we didn't climb ice there, but we ate some good food, including reindeer steak for doug, and some smoked whale (tastes like sin). and we hiked up a local hill Fløyen (elev. 1050 feet!) along with about half the city's population. some hikers were dressed in fur coats and heels, and others - in full spandex and running shoes. with a populace that actually voted for prohibition and a resulting $12/pint of beer, i guess this is pretty entertaining activity for a sunday evening in norway. next stop - Vang! Gear Notes: 70m rope is very helpful. Approach Notes: left car at 8:40. back at the car at 18:45.
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[TR] norway - rjukan - various 3/2/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
Rjukan got about 2 feet of fresh snow about a week before we got there. it remained very light and fluffy when we were there, and didn't seem very layered at all. the avy danger was about zero - the sides of the canyon are fully vertical, and there was no accumulation on the top. we were warned, however, that eidfjord has much higher avy potential. there, i think, mostly because of possibility of wet slides. -
[TR] norway - rjukan - various 3/2/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
no joke. $12/pint is more expensive than just about anywhere. but hey, this helped waking up at 6 every day we were there -
super cool! congrats, sol and jjb!
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[TR] norway - rjukan - various 3/2/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
the conditions were amazing. all routes were HUGE. we heard that rjukan had a banner year, and it was incredibly cold from november on. however, it seems that the standard ice season inland is from late october to april, and i'm not sure how lean it looks in "bad" years. we were told that Vemorkbrufoss Øst was really lean - go figure. climbing conditions were variable: rjukan ice fest took place a week before we were there. the climbs definitely saw traffic and some felt very bucketed. the grades felt soft, but i'm not really a numbers person. and i haven't climbed in canada so i can't compare. all ratings i've listed are those in the guide, not assessed by me personally. the other places we went to - we did not see a single screw hole or pick mark. saw a faint trail near one of the routes, and few steps on the approach to another. -
[TR] norway - rjukan - various 3/2/2011
spionin replied to spionin's topic in The rest of the US and International.
thanks guys! p.s. reports from the other areas coming up...!