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DPS

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Posts posted by DPS

  1. 5 hours ago, kinkilla12 said:

    Went and hiked up with Noah to try and climb Cooper 30 on Saturday. Not quite in yet.

    5dee76821dde8_DSC01499(1).thumb.jpg.6c5fbcc92427bf4ba695b7a0725775d1.jpg

    Looking up at Cooper 30. Still a bit thin.

    DSC01481.thumb.JPG.c5083d832ec8ed92ccd72a20cf758853.JPG

    Flows to the right of Cooper 30. Thought about climbing the right pillar, but Noah couldn't find a safe anchor for me to belay from and we were running a bit low on time.

    Is this below NF Hood/Elliot Glacier?  If so, did you get a look at the NF of Hood and how did it look?  I'm particularly interested in the Right Gulley.

  2. 1 hour ago, Rad said:

    What's the difference between a sewer and a sewer?

    .

    .

    .

    One sews shit and the other sows shit (I have to pay $$$ to fix the latter recently so that shit is on my mind).

    I thought of that when I saw it written out.  How can you tell the difference between a waste water engineer and a drinking water engineer?  A drinking water engineer washes his hands after using the toilet, a waste water engineer washes his hands before using the toilet.

  3. 3 hours ago, tanstaafl said:

    Please reply back with how it goes!  I don't have any need for them this minute but I'm sure I will in the future.

    I called and Kyle said he could do the work for a very reasonable price and will even pick up and drop off my pack.  I'm excited to see how the project comes out and I will report back.

  4. 1 hour ago, tanstaafl said:

    I haven't used these guys (this guy?) so can't testify as to quality, but saw their flyer on the bulletin board at Vertical World:

     

    https://highmountaingearandrepair.com/

    Thanks for link, they look like just the people I need!  I went ahead and contacted them.  They make a nice little alpine hammer holster I will have to buy too.  My tool holster is too big for my little hammer I bring when I climb with leashless (and hammerless) tools.

  5. Does anybody know a sewer who could work on packs and clothes?  I have some repairs and modifications and I don't want to pay Rainy Pass $75.00 an hour because they have F'd up every project I have brought them.

  6. I took a couple of explorarory hikes this weekend and here are my observations. 

    Cascade Pass, my favorite early season hunting ground, is very bony. Mixup and Sahale will probably go, but it will take a couple of storm/melt/freeze cycles to bring the big, sexy un-climbed and un-repeated routes into condition.

    Snoqualmie Pass.  Alpenthal Falls, Chockstone Falls, and Source Lake Line will all need one to two weeks of cold temps to come into shape.  NE Buttress of Chair would go, but very thin and mixed.  East and North Faces will need a couple more storms cycles to bring them in.  Nothing else looked very appealing.

    • Like 1
    • Rawk on! 1
  7. Really nice photos.  I'm always impressed by folks who climb difficult routes and bring back great photos.  Its not easy to do either, and especially difficult to do both.

    I attempted this route in February 2007 with Rob McDaniel, before Dane Burns, Craig Gyleselnik, John Frieh, Dave Burick et. al. climbed it and put it on the map.  We hiked up Aasgard Pass and started traversing to the couloir when the entire snow pack made a 'whump' and settled beneath us.  We looked at each other and hightailed it out of there. 

    Reading the trip reports over the years I don't know if it would have had more ice that late in the season or if we were lucky and dodged a bullet, 'cause it looks really, really hard.

  8. I agree about the quality.  Eric Sweet and I made what I believe to be the second ascent in November 2002, in  'sportier' conditions than currently and it is one of my all time favorite mixed winter alpine climbs.  Up there with NE Buttress of J'berg in winter.   

    I have some photos of our ascent on summitpost.org: https://www.summitpost.org/northwest-ice-couloir/688985 for comparison.  The cruxes were climbing steep, thin ice past big chockstones.  I even belayed in a cave formed by one.  

    We were both climbing on Black Diamond Shrikes and Charlet-Moser S-12s, which did not fit Eric's first gen Scarpa Freneys.  He lost a crampon below the the last steep ice pitch below the summit.  Rather than surrender the fantastic lead, he climbed the rig with one crampon on the ice, the other boot scumming the rock.  

    • Like 3
    • Rawk on! 2
  9. Hiked up Colchuck Peak on Saturday, November 9th.  There were a lot of ice smears but the usual suspects were not filled in enough to be what I consider in condition.  Maybe the NE Couloir on Dragontail was in, but I could not see it from the lake.  I suspect a party that left the TH at midnight may have been on it, but I don't know that for sure.  Maybe they will post up. The smaller lakes were well frozen over and Colchuck Lake had a skim of ice, but Saturday had warmed up considerably and was raining on the summit of Colchuck.  Hopefully colder weather will accompany these storm cycles and after they have had a chance to consolidate/melt/freeze the area should have some good early season hunting.  It had been perhaps five years since my last visit to Colchuck Lake and I was shocked by how much the Colchuck Glacier had receded.  At this pace in 5 years I suspect it will be completely gone. 

    • Like 1
  10. 5 hours ago, marta5 said:

    When do you think it is the ideal time to practice this sport? Do you need a lot of practice to master it perfectly?

    Summer is the ideal time to practice climbing, when the rock is sunny and dry.  Can one master anything perfectly without practice?

  11. One pair of tracks you followed belonged to us.  The other party was from Vancouver.  We all looked at the lines you mentioned and we climbed up to the line you climbed but we were not super inspired and called it a day.  The condition of the route in your photo looks like it is better formed than when we were there.   

    FWIW, I've been calling this little peak Little Purple Nice Guy Peak, so named after the col between Colfax and the peaklet was named by Tvash in 2008. 

    You have much bigger balls than me, I was very happy to be roped for the glacier.

    • Like 1
  12. A couple of parties trekked up to the Cosley-Houstan this weekend.  The consensus was it is not quite in climbable condition. The first pitch is very thin and looked to be unprotectable, the first pillar was two skinny, unconnected icicles, the higher pillar a little better.  The crevasse situation is the more difficult obstacle.  While it could be passed by staying all the way climber's right, it would involve pitching out some  scary terrain above a monster crevasse.   Surprisingly, every pitch on the Polish Route was touching down and was better looking than the C-H.  

  13. Cleaning out the closet and I have a couple items to give away:

     - AT skis: BD Havoc, 175cm.  These are billed as all mountain skis, but are twin tips, which I discovered I don't like.  Pretty good condition, drilled once for Dynafit binders (Mondo 27.5) 

     - Double/half ropes.  A pair of Edelweiss, Sharp, Everdry, 50m x 8.5mm ropes.  Never fallen on, in good condition, but are getting to their age of mandatory retirement.  One yellow/green, one purple.  Would make a great woven rug, dog leashes, rope swing, etc.  

    Pick up in Issaquah

    Please email if interested: daniel-p-smith@hotmail.com

  14. I bootied a brand new # 0.75 Camalot C4 and a couple of carabiners off of Stuart and posted here to find the owner.  Not finding the owner, I climbed on it until getting off route on the Ice Cliff Arete, got it stuck and ended up lowering off it.  The mountain giveth, the mountain taketh.  It's probably still there for all I know.  

    • Like 1
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