I just moved to the Pacific Northwest (Seattle/Issaquah) from the San Francisco Bay Area where I started mountaineering less than a couple of years ago. I got my share of adventures in the Sierras despite the last bad two snow seasons. With all my good mountaineering partners left behind, I am now looking for new connections to start my exploration of the Cascades and beyond. I am in my mid/early 30s, I work out regularly to stay in "mountaineering" shape, and I am willing to commit almost every weekend for day climbs, and a couple of weekends a month for overnight trips.
I am interested in pretty much all aspects of mountaineering: ice climbing, steep snow, glacier, rock alpine, multi-day backpacking, winter ascents.
I have most of the basic gear: ice tools, step-in crampons, a few ice screws, snow pickets, 4 season tent. Planning to build a light alpine rack soon (only a set of nuts so far, but some cams in the near future), and get my own rope
Experience: I received proper mountaineering training through multiple paid classes over the past two years (glacier rescue, snow and rock anchor building, snow/ice climbing, etc..). I got a decent amount of general mountaineering climbs in CA (Shasta Casaval Ridge, the Palisades in the southern Sierras, Mt Whitney mountaineering route, and some spicy unroped class 4 in Yosemite). I am not super experienced due to the bad past two snow seasons in CA and a lot of traveling to China with my previous job, but I have the training, I stay in shape, I have the gear, and I am willing to commit. Not overstating my climbing skills is one of the first lessons I learned.
Right know, I would not mind to take the chance for some waterfall ice climbing until cold temperatures last. Not much experience in this regards, only two days of top roping training in Lee Vining CA last year, then the waterfall ice climbing season ended (if even ever started...), but my still shiny ice tools are craving for revenge.
I am also trying to get into pure rock climbing (always mountaineering oriented), with final objective of some easy multi-pitch alpine, but I am still working on consistency with top rope low 5.10s indoor at the moment. Planning to take some lead climbing classes in a few months.
My training/learning approach is the overkill: Practice waterfall ice, and those 60 degree alpine ice couloirs are going to seem like a piece of cake. Practice pure rock climbing, and those low class 5 / exposed class 4 rock climb sections at 14000 ft in mountaineering boots are not going to be that shaky.
Cheers,
Diego