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Posted

Just a heads up, the Everett Mountaineers will have a swarm of students all over Mount Si Saturday Morning. Good alternates are Mailbox Peak, Lake Annette, Rattlesnake Ridge. Sorry for the inconvenience.

 

I'll try to provide a similar warning for future field trips wink.gif

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Posted

Just wondering...what kind of student would you take on Mt. Si....walking students? What do you do up there other than hike a wide trail and then scramble around to the summit? Just wondering?

 

- Dwayner bigdrink.gif

Posted

I know the mounties do lots of hikes, in addition to climbs and more technical outings, so it's possible "students" just refers to everybody but the trip leader.

Posted
Dwayner said:

Just wondering...what kind of student would you take on Mt. Si....walking students? What do you do up there other than hike a wide trail and then scramble around to the summit? Just wondering?

 

- Dwayner bigdrink.gif

 

it could be like a conditioning hike and stuff. i have known people to train for future climbs, by hiking and stuff!

 

have fun kidz!

 

Posted
Dwayner said:

Just wondering...what kind of student would you take on Mt. Si....walking students? What do you do up there other than hike a wide trail and then scramble around to the summit? Just wondering?

 

- Dwayner bigdrink.gif

 

I was wondering the same thing. That place is a bloody hiway anyway but nice of Mountie to warn us. I was there at the crack of sunrise last friday and still saw people in the parking lot.

Posted

There are always some students who are not in as good a shape as they think they are. This hike can serve as a wake up call. They carry a pack equal to 1/4 body weight and have to get to the top in less than 2.5 hours, which is admittedly not that hard, but you'd be surprised, or maybe not.

Posted

Yup, Everett Mounties' basic climbing class conditioner. We'll be there starting at 6am, hopefully all gone by 1:30pm, assuming nobody breaks a leg or some such.

Posted

Minimum 30lbs if you're puny, max 50lbs, 25% of body weight if you're in between.

Sucks, I know. I'll be one of the dorks lugging my water-filled pack up that hill.

Posted
dryad said:

Minimum 30lbs if you're puny, max 50lbs, 25% of body weight if you're in between.

Sucks, I know. I'll be one of the dorks lugging my water-filled pack up that hill.

 

hahahaha

 

sounds like fun!?

 

whats the overall objective? like in the end what are you training for?

 

 

Posted
allison said:

catbirdseat said:

1/4 body weight

 

Dang, that seems like a lot! Is this for the Army or something?

 

Well, for an overnighter on snow (tent, stove, food, sleping bag, pads, climbing gear...) I know my pack weighs more than 40 lbs... more if I have my snowboard strapped on.

 

Posted

yeah 35-40 pounds seems like a reasonable weight to me. i bet there's more than a few people who over estimate their fitness. if it's a beginner course many of them may not have ever carried a pack of any significant weight.

Posted

I took a friend and her beginner friend on a hike up to byrne lake this past summer. That wasn't the hike for a beginner. It was good training for me, however, as I got to jog up to the lake with my pack, drop it, jog back down and then carry her pack the rest of the way up. bigdrink.gif

Posted

I know it is necessary to carry 40# for some things, but in many cases it is easy to be under 30#, including overnight stuff and climbing gear. I just hate to see people carrying more than they need.

Posted
erik said:

whats the overall objective? like in the end what are you training for?

 

Catbird has it right. It's a wakeup call for students in the Basic climbing course.

 

They won't go on any real climbs till June, but things like Shuksan and the local volcanos would be typical as well as one day, summer alpine stuff like SEWS, Kangaroo Temple, da Toof, Ingalls...

Posted
allison said:

I know it is necessary to carry 40# for some things, but in many cases it is easy to be under 30#, including overnight stuff and climbing gear. I just hate to see people carrying more than they need.

 

Yup, Allison is right. The basic climbing course will teach y'all some fun stuff. But be sure to read up on various ways to save weight and effort as you gain experience. Once you start to know the mountains better, you can better judge what can be left out for weight and speed, but only experience will teach you this.

 

That's one of my favorite things about overnighting w/o technical gear now...15lb packs HCL.gifbigdrink.gif

Posted
JoshK said:

 

That's one of my favorite things about overnighting w/o technical gear now...15lb packs

 

Pass on the secrets, dude. How do you get down to a 15lb overnight pack?

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