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DPS

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Posts posted by DPS

  1. I agree with TTK, to some extent. I live in Issaquah and commuted to Pioneer square for eight years. I took the bus or rode my bike. Commute by bus was about 20 minutes. It would be an easy enough to commute by bus to Harborview, but I am guessing your schedule reguires you to drive. I would hate to drive into Seattle. If that is the case, I would consider renting an apartment/buying a condo in city within walking distance to Harborview and then buying a cabin in Leavenworth or Mazama if you want a place to get away to. A colleague of my wife and her husband did that. Small apt in Capital Hill, house on Orcas Island. (They were avid boaters).

  2. I am selling a Feathered Friends Widgeon sleeping bag. The bag was custom built with 850+ fill and 2 oz overfill with an Epic shell in regular length. The bag weights about 3 1/4 pounds, stuffs small, and is very warm. It has been used exactly twice, once on Denali once Aconcogua. The current MSRP is $629, I am asking $350 and will include a genuine yellow Evazotte winter weight, full length sleeping pad. If interested, email softwareninja AT live DOT com. This will need to be a cash, local pick up deal. I live in Issaquah. I can email photos if interested.

  3. Thanks G-d we have KirkW to police these here newbie boards lest someone get some salty talk along with their nickel's worth of free interwebs advice. Although I feel a little dirty knowing that he he follows me from interweb forum to interweb forum. I think that, much like my 10th grade girlfriend, he has an unhealthy obsession with me. It is probably because I look so attractive in Prana.

  4. It's real easy for someone who doesn't even climb anymore to armchair the decisions made by people they've never met doing things you no longer do.

     

    You got me there Kirk, you must feel very clever for 'outing' me. I am not climbing right now as I am struggling with a serious immunodeficiency. You're just too awesome for me. Make sure when Dane comments, you call him out as an armchair mountaineer, because he's sick too. Asshat.

  5. I'm an expert skier with years of experience skiing remote backcountry routes on the east coast, but i prefer to avoid avalanche prone areas due to my limited experience with such conditions.

    You are an expert backcountry skier, yet you lack avalanche forecasting/rescue skills? Really?

     

    Thank god SOMEBODY said it. They dont have avalanches back east??

    Yeah, and KirkW jumped down my throat for it.

  6. Geez Kirk, I apologize for offending your delicate sensibilities. Allow me to rephrase my response so no one's feelings get hurt mmm-kay?

     

    I'm an expert skier with years of experience skiing remote backcountry routes on the east coast, but i prefer to avoid avalanche prone areas due to my limited experience with such conditions.

    Most expert backcountry skiers in this neck of the woods have completed avalanche training and are able to make in the field assessments of slope stability. Furthermore, most experienced backcountry skiiers ski in groups and carry beacons, probes, and shovels and the knowledge to use them in case of a burial.

    I'm looking for some nice routes at lower elevation that i can tour with my Alpine Touring setup and skins that will most likely not require probe/beacon/shovel. I'm hoping to find something safe, maybe 1000+ ft. vert in the Mount Hood and Mount Adams areas. I don't want to step out into something unsafe.

     

    I would not recommend someone not intimately familiar with local areas, weather patterns, and avalanche conditions to go backcountry skiing alone.

     

    East coasters in the past have underestimatded the local weather conditions to tragic ends.

     

    Is that better Miss Manners?

  7. I'm an expert skier with years of experience skiing remote backcountry routes on the east coast, but i prefer to avoid avalanche prone areas due to my limited experience with such conditions.

    You are an expert backcountry skier, yet you lack avalanche forecasting/rescue skills? Really?

     

    I'm looking for some nice routes at lower elevation that i can tour with my Alpine Touring setup and skins that will most likely not require probe/beacon/shovel. I'm hoping to find something safe, maybe 1000+ ft. vert in the Mount Hood and Mount Adams areas. I don't want to step out into something unsafe.

     

    I would not recommend someone not intimately familiar with local areas, weather patterns, and avalanche conditions to go backcountry skiing alone.

     

    Seems like the last east coasters who started wagging their dicks around Mt Hood in winter ended up dead.

  8. I am selling a NEW unused pair of Black Diamond Viper ice tools. These are the copper colored version, one with a mini hammer, the other with a mini adze. I would like to sell these as a set with a NEW unused Black Diamond Spinnner Leash for $400. This set up would cost $510 + tax in the stores, so I think $400 is reasonable. This would have to be a local pick up deal as I am not really mobile right now. I am in Issaquah so you could be swinging your new tools inside an hour of buying them. Please email softwareninja AT live DOT com if interested. I can take photos of them if you want to put your glazzies on them.

  9. You're totally wrong (but way to run with it). They only get paid for actually plowing, they just have some discretion over when that occurs, which is intended to benefit the greatest number of users. Good luck fighting that snopark ticket!

    Thanks for the clarification, I misunderstood the intent of your previous post. The fact remains that I paid for a Sno Park permit to use a specific Sno Park that was never plowed all winter. I went on weekends at a Sno Park that access Mount Rainier. Obviously the plower's discretion sucks. BTW, fighting tickets is easy, you just show up to court, request the officer issuing the ticket be at the hearing (officer has to take time out of his schecule to attend, never happens for a parking ticket) and the ticket has to by law be dismissed. The odds are very much in my favor, believe me, but thanks for your well wishing.

  10. It sounds like there is no oversight of the commerical operators paid through Sno-Park pass sales. They have no schedule to adhere to and plow at their discretion meaning that the less they plow, the more free $$ they get. I think if I get back to it, I will not be purchasing Sno Park permits and if I get a ticket in an uplowed lot or near one I will fight it in court.

  11. I am selling some carpentry tools. All are in excellent condition. I thought I'd try here before going to Craiglist.

     

    10" Bosch Portable Tablesaw similar to this one, but with a non rolling, folding stand. $250 OBO. http://www.lowes.com/pd_294100-353-4100-09_4294857520+4294965864_4294937087_?catalogId=10051&productId=1208633&Ne=4294937087&N=4294857520+4294965864&identifier=Bosch&langId=-1&Ns=p_product_prd_lis_ord_nbr%7C0%7C%7Cp_product_qty_sales_dollar%7C1&storeId=10151&rpp=24&searchQueryType=1

     

    7 1/4" Dewalt worm drive framer's circular saw with case: $75 OBO http://www.lowes.com/pd_74269-70-DW364K_4294857528+4294926871_4294937087_?productId=1209479&Ns=p_product_prd_lis_ord_nbr|0||p_product_qty_sales_dollar|1&pl=1&currentURL=%2Fpl_Corded%2BCircular%2BSaws_4294857528%2B4294926871_4294937087_%3FNs%3Dp_product_prd_lis_ord_nbr%7C0%7C%7Cp_product_qty_sales_dollar%7C1&facetInfo=DEWALT

     

    Senco air Finish Pro 35 nail gun with case: $100 OBO http://www.homedepot.com/Tools-Hardware-Air-Nailers-Nails/Senco/h_d1/N-5yc1vZbl93Z1ct/R-100615085/h_d2/ProductDisplay?langId=-1&storeId=10051&catalogId=10053

     

    Senco air stapler. $50 OBO

     

    Photos on request and I will consider reasonable offers but I am tyring to pay medical bills, not clean out the garage. Thanks for looking. Also, I live in Issaquah and will need to have suff picked up. I am home all the time, so stop by on the way to Snoqualmie Pass and take a look. softwareninja AT live DOT com if interested.

  12. Last time I tried to use a Sno Park it was unplowed and I got my truck stuck in the lot resulting a $240 towing bill. The previous time it was also unplowed and some dudes with a big trailer for their snomachines complained that we took up too much room in the small area in the driveway that was plowed.

  13. The dog became aware of [blackwater's K-9] and became extremely aggressive, lunging at the K-9 and prompting the k-9 handler to place his body between the two dogs and draw his pistol. The K-9 handler and another [personal security specialist] assigned to cover him shouted at the stray dog, kicked it, and struck it with a [redacted] muzzle to try to repel it, but the stray dog would not back off. [T]he PSS member shot the stray dog with two [redacted] rounds.

     

    This shit happened to me, that dog would have received the same treatment. Our dogs are given rank (higher than ours) and are brave and awesome Americans. If you think I am going to let an aggressive, loose and potentially rabid dog take a chunk out of my highly trained pooch while on restraint, you have another thing coming....

    My wife had to physically restrain me from beating some hipster's ass when he insisted he needed to 'help habituate our dogs' by allowing his unleashed dogs near mine. I'm sure that was the last time he tries something like that. I could see the 'oh shit' look in his eyes as I charged him, dukes up. You don't fuck with my dogs.

  14. Weather typically becomes much more stable after July 4th and continues to stablize through August leading to long stretches of good weather that can persist through September. Depending upon your objective, earlier in this time frame may be better in terms of solid snow bridges and less icy conditions. Even two hot weeks can turn a route from a steep snow climb into an ice climb that requires a second tool and ice screws and belays. I would first decide what your primary objectives are and come back and ask for more specific weather advice for those routes.

  15. My preferance is to stay in the shelter, others prefer to tent it. If you are planning on a longer trip and have the weather window, spending the first night at Muir and a second night at Ingraham Flats can aid in acclimatization. Then again, spending a day to move camp will only save you like 90 minutes on summit day and you eat an entire day to shelp all your crap another 1,000 vertical feet. The Beehive is an exposed, small spot and is inconvient unless you are descending the Gib Ledges, not recommended in May due to rockfall late morning.

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