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dave schultz

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Everything posted by dave schultz

  1. Hubba Hubba was great this past Saturday. Central flow was fat, L of HH was pretty good, a little thin down low but I thought it was more than fat enough up on the second pitch (screw anchor at the end of the 60m rope). R of HH was good down low, but then turned very thin on the top half, with almost no gear except for a shitty little bush right next to the rap station. 60m rope does both the second pitch of L of HH and the full pitch on R of HH.
  2. sounds like a sick ass little trip. you considering running at all or just speed/all day hiking? i'll be out of town starting in late march, otherwise i'd be interested. post a TR
  3. I'm probably heading up that direction late friday to climb ice Sat and Sun. Right now have a partner already lined up, but we could probably figure a safe way to get a group of three. Shoot me an email ... daveschultz125@gmail.com
  4. Looking for a partner this weekend, and have several options: -Would like to climb some ice, possibly in Entiat River Valley or anywhere else. -Would also be up for some backcountry skiing, if avi conditions improve and stabilize. Bagging peaks or a high mileage. Would enjoy a tour towards either Baker or Shuksan on the Ptarmigan, or any other ideas. If worse comes to worse, I'll probably end up t Steven's doing some in-bounds skiing, but would prefer getting on ice or backcountry skiing. I'll be coming from everett and could do overnight or day trips. Dave
  5. Wondering if anyone has any information about what the Cascade River Road might be like? Is it drivable, if so, how far? Looking at trying to get into the Eldorado or Boston Basin areas.
  6. Josh and I headed out to Hubba Hubba this morning. Got there a little before sunrise and didn't take long to get to the base of the route. It was in, a little bit of running water, but not a lot of ice debris at the bottom. We also did Left of Hubba Hubba (a little thin/mixed start, great top pitch) and Right of Hubba Hubba (again, thin/mixed start, great middle, scary top out). Right of Hubba Hubba had JUST enough for a 60m to reach a tree to the right to belay and rap from, done in one pitch. To our astonishment we had the WHOLE place to ourselves, except for one group of SEVEN Russians (and their two well behaved dogs) who TOOK OVER Hubba Hubba (I was glad to have gotten out of there before something bad happened). Go out and get it while its there and before it gets beat up.
  7. Are you a skier at all? What boots did you intend on using? I find with investments like these that the more initial money you put in, the happier you are at the end. Also, skimping on stuff tying to save a buck generally just leaves you wishing you had gone all in, besides, next year will you really notice if you splurged a little bit on a setup that is awesome vs one that leaves you wishing for more.
  8. anything for sat?
  9. anything for Sat?
  10. Looking for a partner for ice in the Leavenworth area. My eyes are on Drury Falls, but would be willing to climb anything. I am cool leading everything or swapping leads. I would also be willing to climb elsewhere, but the Leavenworth area would be preferred ... anywhere is better than nowhere. I would be coming from Everett. Dave
  11. Goran and I headed up to Chair Peak on Sunday to climb the NE Buttress. We started the climb around 11am-ish and only did the first pitch. It took me a little while to lead it, and there was a party that appears to be going fairly slow on the upper pitch before the waterfall and decided it wasn't worth the 3.5 pitches of snow for the .5 pitches of ice. We bailed with two rappels and lead a little bit of cord to back up the first rappel. I'm sure we would have had similar snow on Sunday and am glad we didn't head up into it. Fun to get out and get after it though.
  12. good luck getting past the gate ... i think they average 10am openings ...
  13. There is a good TR here: http://www.turns-all-year.com/skiing_snowboarding/trip_reports/index.php?topic=26840.0
  14. Hey - I'm also looking for a partner for both Friday and Saturday night. Weather looks great for the whole weekend. My initial list of ideas are: Shuksan, Rainier, Buckner, Ice (anywhere, up to WI4+), Joffre/Matier (in BC). I'd be open to anything if I get no interest on my own advertisement, but would prefer to get one of the above listed ski objectives. What is you method of travel? Skis? Snowshoes? Dave
  15. Hi, Looking for a partner in crime for the weekend. The weather looks great across the board. I have a few ideas, and would be open for others: 1) Shuksan, probably via the shuksan arm to set a high camp, tag the summit and ski some of the lines, Friday and Saturday night out. 2) Rainier, summit via Fuhrer Finger / Kautz, definitely both Friday and Saturday night 3) Ice at Strobach, Friday and Saturday night (climbing on Saturday and Sunday) 4) Joffre Peak, Mount Matier, both in BC. Big couloirs. 5) Mount Buckner, N Face and N Couloir, great lines, but a big approach and a high risk of not actually getting to ski the objectives, but it would be a great adventure regardless. 6) Any ice anywhere (follow anything, lead WI4+). I am in Everett and can get started at about 3pm. Avi, glacier, crevasse, WFR, WI4+ lead, beer, big truck, juiced to get out. Let me know if any of these ideas spark your interest. Dave
  16. I might be able to swing a trip to MT over the MLK weekend. Leave Friday afternoon, climb Sat-Mon, and drive back Monday night in time for work Tuesday. I agree, that might be the best bet.
  17. Looking for a partner for Wed 9 Jan. Looks like it'll be pretty warm on Tuesday, with a healthy amount of snow Tuesday and Wednesday. I'd like to get on any ice route, but not sure about Tuesday's warm temps ... Could also do some backcountry skiing at the passes (never skied there before) or would love to get back up to the Baker area, but not sure about the avi conditions ... Would be willing to give The Tooth a shot in these conditions if anyone was game ... I could get started Tuesday night if that seems like the best course of action, but would prefer a simple day trip. I'll be coming from Everett and can drive, have a full rack, avi gear, WFR, beer, etc Let's get out, Dave
  18. Tuesday's temps will probably play havoc on all our hopes for ice ...
  19. I've never heard of a flexible thermos, since the thermos needs that vacuum insulation property in order to maintain the hot or cold beverage. I have put pretty hot beverages into a platypus with no problems, and then they compress down as you consume the fluid. For resort skiing a thermos is not too big to sit in your pack. For backcountry skiing, a thermos is required since having your water freeze out there really sucks.
  20. What a great end of the year thread. This is my first complete calender year of climbing - so REALLY hard to pick out a top 5; definitely cannot put them in order. So, in no particular order (listed in chronological order): 1. Mt Washington, NH - solo ski mountaineering via Huntington Ravine (Central and Diagonal Gully x 2). Complete day of skinning, ice climbing, rappelling, and tight couloir skiing. Not to mention bluebird day with temps in the upper 40s (climbing in a t-shirt). 2. Modern Times, Gunks, NY - first really awesome route, something you look at and are like, "holy shit" (older books rate it at 5.8+ and one newer book gives it mid 5.10) 3. Thin Slice, City of Rocks, ID - first 5.10 trad lead. 4. DC single push from Paradise - though without reaching the summit; first climb in WA, partner was having problems with AMS and pulled the plug at 12,500 feet; first night spent in the state was overnight on the climb 5. CNR of Stuart - incredible alpine route, first grade IV (barely beats out Backbone on Dragontail and Outer Space at Snow Creek)(the descent via Cascadian Couloir was terrible though, and almost makes the climb not worth it) Of Only WA climbs: 1. CNR on Stuart (see above) 2. DC Route (see above) 3. Outer Space - almost crag-like route, with 5.10b variation start 4. Coleman Deming - first volcano summit 5. Beckey Route - first route in WA (after Rainier)
  21. Haha ... maybe a sleeping bag for two? http://www.backcountry.com/big-agnes-king-solomon-sleeping-bag-15-degree-down - maybe a little two warm, but you can always leave it unzipped. Protection is for people who ask questions ... just don't ask the question
  22. Not sure about my January schedule yet, but would love to get out over that MLK weekend. I would have 19-21 off, if I don't have a weekend shift and could start driving Friday in the afternoon. Would love to carpool, I would be coming from Everett. I am a safe and conservative climber, especially in ice. Can lead WI4 and would LOVE to take the tools out for a walk .... I'll post when my schedule is more well known. Dave
  23. The BD Bullet is 18l, but has a zipper (though small and only about halfway down) and compresses really small (stuff it in your bigger approach pack). It's my go to pack for day multi-pitch cragging. The Arcteryx Silo 18 is also small, but much more rigid and a lot stronger than the bullet. It's my go to alpine pack since I can leave the rope coiled on the outside (pack strong enough to support it) and get the gear inside it, then I am climbing with only an 18l pack. I used this system on Dragontail (22hr day C2C on backbone ridge) and on Stuart (24hr day C2C on Complete North Ridge). I had the Cierzo 25 and didn't like it, sent it right back to backcountry.com. Hope that helps a little bit.
  24. Trip: Mt Rainier - Gibralter Leges Date: 12/28/2012 to 12/30/2012 Trip Report: The goal was a summit ski descent via the Gib Ledges, the standard winter route. Partner would be on snowshoes, and this would be my first time with a mixed snowshoes-ski party … more on that later. The plan was an overnight at Muir, summit with second night at Muir, then back down on Sunday. Saturday started off pretty late, with the idea that our speed would not be too slow and that a descent in the dark would be acceptable. This plan would give us a full night’s sleep, plus maximize what little acclimation would occur overnight. We headed up the Cowlitz at about 8am; budgeting about 2 hrs to the ledges, 1 hr for the ledges, 1 hr for the chute, and 2 hrs for the final snowfield to the summit (6hrs) with about 3 hrs of fluff before sunset. I felt this timing to be a little on the slow side for a ski plan, which I thought might be appropriate for a ski and snowshoe group – I was wrong, big-time wrong. We ended up taking a little over four hours to reach the ledge system (noon); and then after a long break moved about a third of the way across the ledge system by 1pm; with some quick math my estimate was about half of the actual time which meant summiting at about 8pm vice 2pm. After some chit chat about the situation we decided that it would be best to head back down to Muir and call it at that and made it back to Muir by 3pm. I broke trail cutting switchbacks up the Cowlitz all the way to the ledges; this may have been the wrong route selection, possibly heading along the ridge more climber’s left might have been better, but at the time it seemed you would be taking the same angle and similar distance. Weather started okay on Saturday morning, nothing great but nothing too bad; some wind but nothing your goggles and gor-tex can’t handle. I was able to use skis all the way to within about 100 feet of the ledges; when on ski crampons and balancing my way across final 100 feet of hard snow and ice part of my crampon broke (evidence discovered later) and I immediately started the accelerate down the slope. After about 100 feet I was finally able to arrest my fall with a single whippet (Austin had my second one). The avi conditions on the Cowlitz seemed calm: the slope appeared to be stable, no crack propagation, a breakable wind crust on top of powder made for slow and painful travel (at least for non-skiers), and frequent isolated columns yielded nothing of significance. On our way down the conditions deteriorated into a white out, and the skiing was not very enjoyable – in good visibility the Cowlitz would be a great 1500 feet of steep skiing. I stayed in my tent Saturday night, but Austin decided to head to the shelter. The freshly fallen and wind deposited snow forced me to shovel snow from away from the tent twice. Sunday started early enough to ski down at sunrise. SpO2 Sunday morning was 91%. The Muir snowfield was a mixed bag of powder pillows and breakable wind crust, probably pretty good shape compared to what it could have been. It made for sections of forgettable skiing and sections of outstanding turns. Saw a couple of groups on Muir snowfield, one was just out testing their gear another was on their way to Muir and then the summit. The weather was excellent. I was able to scout a couple super steep ski runs that I will have to take a look at from below before dropping in. The Fuhrer Finger across the Nisqually looked like a stellar route; the Turtle Snowfield also appears to be a great line with lots of smaller lines below it; the Gib-Nisqually chute (once crevasses are a little more filled in down low) also appears to be a stellar big route. Other items of note: I was the only person of at least ten who were heading for the summit on skis, I was very surprised to see such a high number of snowshoers going for the summit, especially with a high camp established only at Muir and not any higher. I was also very surprised at just how slow snowshoeing is, I had never been a part of a group with snowshoers and after this experience I don’t think I will ever try it again. Skiing is just so much faster and so much easier. Even though the summit ski descent did not happen many valuable lessons for future climbs were learned, and it just leaves the summit open for another attempt. All cooking was done inside the tent, using a jetboil SUMO, we used about 4oz of an 8oz canister. This was Austin’s first winter climb, my first winter climb besides Japan and the Northeast. The Nisqually River is close (if not ready) to be skied down to the bridge, giving 10k vert from the summit. Pics: Parking Lot at 11am Gib Rock from just above Paradise Gib Rock from Muir near dusk Tent with wind protection Heading up the Cowlitz, we were having some snowshoe technical difficulty at this point Looks like great skiing on the way down Taking a break about 1/3 of the way across the ledges; this was our high point Sunrise from Muir on Sunday Mt Adams at sunrise with Austin trying to get a head start Looking back up to Muir with my fresh tracks at dawn Gear Notes: Standard glacier gear. I brought two screw and several pitons just in case I had an opportunity to place them. We never even broke out the rope. Approach Notes: Drive to Paradise?
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