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DPS

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Posts posted by DPS

  1. I have a stretch woven softshell. Like most of Seattle, I enjoy wearing it on the bus to work. So much more handsome than a hardshell. While climbing, I wear a Marmot DriClime windshirt. It is lighter, more compressible, warmer, windproof, resists light precipitation and layers better as the nylon shell allows fleece or other insulation pieces to slide against it.

  2. edited to add that I understand it is customary to cross the ledges unroped, just a little unconventional to continue unroped for the glacier portion between the top of Gib rock and the crater.

    The biggest crevasse fall I've ever had was at about 13,500 ft above Gib Rock in January. Sastrugi snow had concealed a weakly bridged crevasse and I walked out on it length wise when I poked through. As I fell the rope broke the bridge behind me. The crevasse was massive; 50 ft across and was far deeper than my headlamp beam penetrated. When I prusiked out, I discovered my partner had self arrested at the very edge of the crevasse. I had fallen the entire rope length between us. Seeing folks unroped on this section makes me ill with the thought of the consequences of an unroped fall.

  3. I have a master's degree. My first chemistry job after grad school paid $15.00 an hour, $2.50 less an hour than the carpentry job I left to take it. And this was at a government lab that paid much better than commerical labs. I wound up writing software for the last ten years. More lucrative, more jobs.

  4. This is a great idea. In my previous job I did a lot of mapping of environmental data for Web based apps. I toyed with the idea of developing a client side scripted map (i.e. Google Maps) to map avalanche risk in near real time.

     

    In my opionion, one would need to do the following:

     

    -Create polygons on the map using he same rubric the avalanche forecasters use. Aspect, elevation, slope angle, position, etc.

     

    -Include telemetered data including temperature, recent snowfall, wind, etc to fine tune the existing forecasts.

     

    -Avalanche forecasters would need to be consulted to come up with a workable algorithm.

     

    -The polygons would be shaded with different colors to indicate varying risk levels (green, yellow, red).

     

    You could need a web service or at least do a web scrape to get data for a near real time map that would be usable to climbers, skiiers and other winter back country travelers.

     

    I would personally not use ESRI (user hostile software as one collegue called it). Google maps have enough data to do this, although drawing the polygons would slow the map rendering a lot.

     

     

     

  5. I climbed TC back in February 2000. The runnels were completely dry so we climbed to the top of the Hidden Couloir. Three 60 meter pitches of pretty sustained 5.7 rock (our estimation of what it would have been in summer in rock shoes, felt much harder in crampons) lead to the North Face bowl - 60 degree rock slabs with 1/4" of snice. We should have unroped, but simu-climbed the entire bowl hoping for pro. None was found. We climbed three more pitches of 5.7 rock to exit into the third couloir. Came back in April of 2003 and found the runnels well iced. It was far, far easier than what we climbed 3 years before. Passed Dave Burdick and Eric ? on the route.

  6. I've looked at both Leaveanworth and Mazama. Both would be great locations. Leavenworth more accessible in the winter. I decided that for the cost of a cabin, I could take an awful lot of vacatons all over the world staying in nice hotels.

  7. At the advice of some guys at the ski shop, he bought Volkl Mantas and is really having a hard time skiing aggressively enough to stay over the front of the ski as is recommended (mandated?) with the twin tip design in steeper and deeper terrain.

     

    I switched from a pair of noodley Atomic Tour Carve Alpins to BD Havocs and had the same problem. It was like learning how to ski all over again.

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