Jump to content

30-foot First Ascents for sale!


Redoubt

Recommended Posts

From the NY Times - This may need a subscription, so here's the whole article.

 

January 15, 2006

 

EXPLORER: ICE CLIMBING IN ONTARIO; In Thin Air, Making a Mark In the Ice

 

By STEPHEN REGENOLD

 

ON a snowy December morning, 15 miles inland from the icy east shore of Lake Superior, in the hills beyond the tiny town of Batchawana Bay, Ontario, a 52-year-old climber from Michigan was perched and hesitating on the face of a frozen waterfall.

 

A foot of fresh snow covered the forest floor below; a line of deep boot tracks led to the base of the cliff. Ice creaked and crumbled underfoot as the climber, Doug Furdock, kicked to reset his spiked mountaineering boots. Shards and small white pebbles of ice exploded as he swung an ax into the frozen vertical wall.

 

''Get your ax solid in the ice,'' said Shaun Parent, a local guide who stood 20 feet below, holding a yellow climbing rope, belaying Mr. Furdock up the three-story-high formation. Thousands of tiny ice chunks, like shattered glass, littered the ground. ''Get your left foot up onto that ledge.''

 

Mr. Parent, a 49-year-old Canadian who has guided ice-climbing courses for 15 years in the Lake Superior region, was conducting a climbing clinic for the weekend. As a bonus, he was helping Mr. Furdock make a small mark in the annals of local sporting history.

 

Indeed, Mr. Furdock, who ascended the icy cliff after 25 minutes of slow, methodical progress, made claim to being the first person to have attempted and climbed that particular route in the remote Canadian wilderness. Following tradition, he named the route immediately after his first ascent. In future climbing guidebooks, Mr. Furdock, co-owner of a Troy, Mich., physical therapy clinic, will be recognized as the route's pioneer, with all bragging rights his to keep.

 

''It definitely looked easier from below,'' he said after rappelling off his new route. Snowflakes blew by, large and fluffy, as Mr. Furdock turned to look back up the wall of ice, which he christened Mini-Me.

 

The North of Superior Climbing Company, Mr. Parent's Batchawana Bay-based business, has mapped out hundreds of similar frozen waterfalls in the Ontario wilderness, from Thunder Bay, a city on Lake Superior's northwest shore, to Sault Ste. Marie at the lake's east end. More than 200 established climbing routes exist, and many dozens more, according to Mr. Parent, stand unclimbed and ready for a first ascent.

 

But the Lake Superior wilderness, and the Batchawana Bay area in particular, is by no means a climbing mecca. Despite its potential, the region is remote, sparsely populated and relatively unexplored by climbers. Its winters are long and harsh, with arctic fronts that may plunge temperatures to minus 40 degrees, not to mention the wind chill. Winter days are short; the black, star-studded nights, preposterously long and frigid. Remnant snowdrifts and ice can be found in the month of May if you know where to look.

 

Lake Superior, a 31,700-square-mile inland sea, is a dark and steely abyss that rarely freezes over. Waves roll in from hundreds of miles of open water to pound the rocky coast. Rivers rush to the lake from the hills, scoring deep gorges into the eons-old bedrock of the Canadian Shield. And the lake brews epic storms, dumping four or more feet of snow at a time. Its infamous gales sank the Edmund Fitzgerald 30 years ago last November, the wreck found just a few miles offshore from Batchawana Bay.

 

Climbers see the Lake Superior region as an obscure no man's land between the Rocky Mountains and Appalachia. Its cold temperatures are known to produce brittle ice that can crack and shatter like glass. Compared with Colorado or popular climbing areas in the Northeast, the Lake Superior wilderness is all but deserted, even though there are climbs near Batchawana Bay higher than almost anything found in the mountains.

 

The savage tools of the sport -- ice axes with thin, sharp blades, crampon boot spikes and razor-tip ice-screw anchors -- allow climbers to ascend the solid walls of ice that form each year on cliff faces in northern Ontario. The old hills, though craggy and choked with ice, are wooded and lack distinct mountainous summits, causing climbers to focus on the region's frozen waterfalls and ice-caked cliffs. Like vertical glaciers, some icefalls are 20 feet thick and hundreds of feet tall, composed of multihued yellow, blue, white and translucent curtains and columns of solid ice. Gentle picking and kicking with axes and crampons allows passage up the dripping, creaking, cracking, moaning and everchanging frozen medium.

 

Ice climbing has grown in the last two decades from obscurity into a sport with more than 220,000 United States enthusiasts, according to a new report issued by the Outdoor Industry Association, a Boulder, Colo., organization that tracks outdoor-recreation participation. Dozens of equipment and apparel companies now cater to ice climbers, and competitions are held each winter in North America and Europe, including the toughest, the Ice Climbing World Cup championship events.

 

Recreational climbers like Mr. Furdock, who took up the sport in 2004 after he turned 50, may never aspire to compete on the ice or ascend death-defying mountain routes. ''I'm not a hard-core thrill seeker,'' he said. But exploration, especially in the guise of first ascents, is a facet of the sport many climbers love, no matter their ability. Today, almost every significant mountain on the planet has been climbed, and the world's best climbers now concentrate on pioneering increasingly difficult, dangerous routes. Mr. Parent sees his first-ascents program as an outlet for recreational explorers.

 

Since last January, when the North of Superior Climbing Company began offering first-ascent trips out of Batchawana Bay, Mr. Parent has led beginner and expert climbers up the area's frozen falls. Mr. Furdock had signed up for a special program called First Ascent Private Guiding, which costs $300 per person a day based on two climbers; if only one climber, it's $400. (A wide range of programs is available.) In this program, the outfitter delivers the climber to the base of these virgin waterfalls. A guide assists in the ascent, leading or allowing skilled climbers to place the anchors and go first. Climbers get their picture taken on top, their efforts recorded in an official log book and, if requested, a message-board alert posted on a regional ice-climbing Web site.

 

First-ascent routes range from just 30 feet in height for neophyte clients to skyscraper-proportion epics that the North of Superior Climbing Company reserves for its most experienced customers. An 850-foot route called Stratosphere, for example, was climbed on a first-ascent trip. A middle-aged father of four from Michigan last season completed four first-ascent climbs in a weekend, naming each route after one of his children. A 14-year-old girl from Wisconsin, accompanied by her parents, pioneered a 30-foot frozen slab of ice, naming it with zero pretense: Jessica Climbed It.

 

For Mr. Furdock, his first ascent of Mini-Me was one of three new climbs for the weekend. After a season of practicing, climbing ice about a dozen times last year with guides as well as independently with his two sons, he was confident enough to sign up for the first-ascents program.

 

On the last day of his course, Mr. Furdock plodded uphill in a snowstorm, following Mr. Parent through a ravine that dead-ended at a wall of ice. The climbs ahead were not tall or difficult, as Mr. Furdock is an intermediate climber, but they were virgin. Even practice routes in this part of the province, Mr. Parent said, can be first ascents.

 

Ten feet off the ground, again clinging to the face of a frozen waterfall, Mr. Furdock yelled down for advice. The climbing rope dropped from his harness; an ice ax creaked under the climber's weight, shifting in its shallow impact crater.

 

''Clip the anchor there on the bulge,'' said Mr.Parent, belaying and coaching from below. ''You got it, man.''

 

The North of Superior Climbing Company, Box 129, Batchawana Bay, Ontario, Canada P0S 1A0; 705-946-6054; on the Web at www.northofsuperiorclimbing.com.

 

TAKING ON FROZEN FALLS, ICE-CAKED CLIFFS, ICY CANYON WALLS

 

 

North America is home to the world's top ice-climbing destinations, and the sport, which is a discipline of mountaineering, has gained a following of thousands of enthusiasts in the past decade. Weekend warriors and superstar climbers alike have explored and mapped ice-choked mountains and river valleys from Maine to Alaska. The following is a geographic sampling of some of the continent's best and most popular ice destinations.

 

Banff National Park, Alberta. The colossal ice climbs in and around the park are arguably the best on the planet. Skyscraper-size routes like Polar Circus, a 2,000-foot ice climb on Cirrus Mountain that takes a full day to ascend, are lifetime goals for many climbers.

 

Ouray Ice Park, Colorado. This park in southwest Colorado crams nearly 200 ice climbs in a milelong gorge. A system of pipes set up to drip water over cliff faces guarantees optimal formation of climbs each year. The annual Ouray Ice Festival, held this weekend, is a must-attend event for hundreds of climbers from around the globe.

 

Lake Superior Region, Ontario. In addition to the climbs of Batchawana Bay, more than 200 ice-climbing routes are found along Trans-Canada Highway 17 on Lake Superior's east and north shores. Climbs range from multitiered frozen waterfalls in woodsy river canyons to exposed 400-foot walls overlooking the icy plane of Lake Superior.

 

Lowe River, Alaska. Of Alaska's more than a dozen established ice-climbing areas, Lowe River, also called Valdez, is the best known. Frozen waterfalls of 1,000 feet and up are found at Lowe River, 150 miles east of Anchorage.

 

Northern New Hampshire. Huge ice climbs form every winter on Cathedral Ledge, a 600-foot cliff near the town of North Conway, on State Highway 16. Cannon Cliff, off Interstate 93 in White Mountain National Forest, is another popular ice-climbing area, with routes like the Black Dike, a 400-foot climb. Mount Washington, the state's highest peak at 6,288 feet, has long ice climbs on its high, windy faces.

 

Hyalite Canyon, Montana. Just south of Bozeman, in the Gallatin National Forest, Hyalite Canyon features dozens of climbs ranging from 200 to 600 feet in height. Long mountain gullies, sheer faces and mixed routes, with sections of rock and ice, are among the canyon's renowned ice offerings. STEPHEN REGENOLD

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 16
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Shaun parent is an interesting and controversial figure in Canadian climbing. In the 80's and early 90's, according to the letters to the editor and CAJ articles that I've read he was known mostly for aiding free climbs, overgrading, and self-promotion. I believe he has mellowed with age and may actually be certified as an ACMG guide now?

 

There was a funny pic in a Canadian mag a few years ago depicting Shaun in a retro styled hot pink one-piece Goretex suit.

 

He has definitely done a lot to put the northern Ontario ice scene on the world stage.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

fully agreed that Shaun is an interesting character. a half dozen of us Vancouverites went to Langtang Lirung in Nepal on a trip he put together in 1984, and we laughed our heads off most of the 2 months we were gone. the stories he had to tell almost seemed too good to be true - and probably many of them WERE!

he just seems to thrive on misadventure - like the time Shining Path guerillas invaded his basecamp in the Huayhuash (during which time he hid and protected from certain death a local police officer); or his misfortune in being swept off the roof of an Indian bus as it passed under a roadside tree (he was not missed until his wife noted his "absence" when the bus stopped in the next town - I saw the casts!); or his tales of watching the Detroit riots from the roofs of Windsor Ontario; or his reports on the "national sports" of Thunder Bay: drinking and wife beating! etc, etc...

the first ascents may be only 30 feet tall, but Shaun's tales are WAY bigger than that! and probably worth whatever one pays...

cheers, don

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recalled something about this guy from my time in thunderbay. My friend in Tbay had this to say about Shaun Parent:

I've never actually met the guy. My information about him comes from the

local Alpine Club guys. The core group dislikes him rather intensely

because

he apparently claimed a lot of first ascents that were not his and

apparently portrays himself as some great leader of the climbing

community

here. I do know that that part is false. He is no leader in this

community.

No one I know will climb with him, but he apparently gets some work

guiding

Americans. (At least that was the state of things a couple of years

ago.)

 

I vaguely remember something about him having started an indoor

climbing gym

a long time ago, but it died a rather sordid death and there was some

talk

that he walked with a bunch of the money/equipment that others had

invested.

He is also something of a prima donna, and the AP guys around here are a

little more rugged, self-effacing, and open to beginners.

 

Keep in mind that this is all second-hand and was told to me to make a

particular point about Parent's character. Knowing the Alpine Club guys,

though, I'm sure there is a lot of truth in it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recalled something about this guy from my time in thunderbay. My friend in Tbay had this to say about Shaun Parent:

I've never actually met the guy. My information about him comes from the

local Alpine Club guys. etc, etc...

 

wow! thread-drift. now it's about Shaun, not about the activity itself. and while i don't really want to get into a "defense" of Shaun, i've just gotta speak up.

 

i don't know Shaun well enough to know what he HAS done and not done. but i do feel moved to suggest that this thread has drifted into "uncomfortable" terrain. and as usual, the anonymity of websites is the culprit.

 

maybe we should be just a little cautious about slandering somebody based on third-hand (or more remote yet) reports. perhaps, in some dream world, posters would not type stuff they wouldn't be comfortable saying directly to the person involved, face to face. could we try to live the golden rule, even in our "wasted hours" on sites like this?

 

i'm well aware Shaun is not everybody's "cuppa tea", and i'm also well aware that there is "controversy" surrounding his activities, his guiding, his self-promotion, and so on, BUT:

 

he's energetic, he gets lots of people involved, and he HAS done a bunch of the exploration (and publicizing of) the ice in the "north of Superior" area. if part of what he has to offer to make part of his living is 30-foot first ascents for middle-aged office workers or 13 year old girls, and if they go away happy, i see no harm at all.

 

some people find him abrasive (i do too, in a way), but my judgement over quite a long period around the Langtang trip was that if you take yourself too seriously, you'll almost certainly not get along very well with Shaun - but if you are "light-hearted" enough to just laugh at his crap, he turns out to be stimulating and hilarious company.

 

i have no FACTS one way or 'tother about false first ascent claims - does anyone out there? if so, was there intent to deceive, or just lack of information?

 

i have no FACTS one way or 'tother about a gym going broke (but if it did, that's called bankruptcy, and for sure people get burned when it happens - unpleasant, but perfectly legal. a cpl of my best friends have gone thru it...)

 

we've all seen jealousies and rivalries in every one of our climbing communities. "strong" characters provoke others. myself, i LIKE "characters", flaws and all, and Shaun qualifies BIG-time. i'd gladly share climbing time again with him.

 

so if you want to criticize the commercial, self-aggrandizing, "false" side of first ascents for hire, let's fly at it. but could we just shelve the character assassination? 'ad hominem' arguments are unworthy and demeaning, not to mention dangerous logical fallacies (the danger being that you lose focus on the ISSUE when you pay attention to the PERSON). rid your life of them and you (and the planet around you) will be better for it.

 

i'm not sure what set all of this off - friendship coupled with the instinct to defend those who aren't "here" to defend themselves, i suppose. plus the knowledge that NONE of us are perfect, and the conviction that bulletin boards are not the places to "list" those imperfections.

 

here endeth my tirade.

 

as you were...

 

cheers, don

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dru, I have no idea but that is how I interpreted the OP. I linked it here because I simply think the post reflects the kind of turmoil that's going on north of me. It's quite a shame. The responses to that post since yesterday engender some hope that things might get better. I don't know Shaun and wouldn't pass judgement on him or anyone based on second hand information.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...