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Posted

Living in the PNW it is easy to forget just how close and how good world class ice climbing is. A twelve hour drive from Seattle will get you to the Banff/Lake Louise area and the potpourri of climbs available there with in a few minutes walk.

 

The few minutes walk has become even more important to me recently having barely been able to get out of bed for the last 4 months let alone walk. That, thankfully has changed again.

 

I originally had hoped to just be able to do the approaches with my friends and may be take some pictures on this trip. Climbing I thought might be too much to ask.

 

Surprisingly, with some very kind encouragement and some tough love from Rafal and Nastia, the climbing came back easily with good friends there to support me. Of dozens of trips, this one was the "perfect" trip.

 

I laughed every day and in the end came home bone tired. Ever grateful for being able to just get out again.

 

I hope Rafal's and Nastia's pictures from our 5 days of climbing encourage others to have their own adventures!

 

The professional photos and any serious climbing were by Rafal.

 

http://www.rafalandronowski.com/

 

Nastia and I both wore yellow jackets...if you can't tell and actually care, just assume it is her leading in yellow.

 

 

Professors Falls

 

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Louise Falls

 

The kind Dr. giving me my first lesson of the trip :)

 

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My first 5 lead. Rafal's as well. This was Nastia's turn. Nicely done too!

 

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Cascade Falls

 

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Carlsberg

 

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Marble Canyon

 

Rafal's kind way of remiding me you have to "pay to play" with the big boys.

 

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Snivelling Gully

 

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Weeping Wall

 

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Posted
good to see you're out and about again!

 

Not only Dane is getting "out and about" but he was smoking my ass while climbing and on the approaches. Ha, and here I thought I was not in the terribly sucky shape after all :( .

 

"I am only 1/3 of a man now that can walk for 1/2 mile"! :)

 

After 4 months of excruciating chemo with still lingering side effects and 50 lbs lighter, here is the trimmed Dane Burns on Professors last week:

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Soloing Cascade falls while I was pathetically lagging behind the boys:

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Dane on the Weeping Wall:

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The best chunk of ice I ever climbed:

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Posted

Props to Raf (Rafal A) for the pro quality pics and good times:

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Raf's photo rig:

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Side notes:

Canadian ravens at the Weeping wall are weird. Not only they know how to unzip the Cilogear packs, they find and feed on cigarettes carried inside them.

Posted

Oh man, she fell for the old "raven unziped your pack" story.

We were looking for the russian vodka and cuban cigars.

 

Those emrican tourists are so gulliable :)

Posted

technical explanation? Not UIAA approved :rolleyes:

 

simul climbing..to a good sized ledge with little chance of falling off. One screw used as an "anchor"...single twin rope clove hitched on a third biner attached to a 2 biner Mammut screamer. That was to keep half of team on the wall so pictures and a pee could be accomplished in safely.

 

Obviously great picture, not sure how the pee went down ;)

 

Climbing twins went through single screw to help make a catch in case I tripped over my boot laces (always a distinct possibility I try to account for). Fall factor pretty high on a 60m pitch with 3 screws including this one. Rope laying on spin handle of screw.

 

In other words FUBAR....lesson to be learned? Don't try this at home. Make sure you don't trip on shoe laces using this specific technique. Things will likely get problematic rather quickly in real world load testing. :eek:

 

Posted

Ted is a wily creature. You're better to leave an offering for him then allowing him to rummage through your stuff. Alternately, gear up at the car and carry everything you need in a bullet pack.

Posted

Side notes:

Canadian ravens at the Weeping wall are weird. Not only they know how to unzip the Cilogear packs, they find and feed on cigarettes carried inside them.

 

Years ago a friend and I were climbing up above Bow Lake on a bitterly cold day. Mid climb and I look down and see a Raven pulling drawcords on my pack. I hung off a tool and tried tossing some dinner plates of ice down at him to no avail. When we got back down he had half pulled out a jacket and had open and strewn a package of food everywhere. Smart little bastards.

Posted
Dan, I was mostly puzzled with their peculiar diet choice, a nicotine? :)

Corvids like to be known as the 'bad boys' of the bird world so they steal cigarettes to smoke behind the high school.

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