Monday, December 22, 2008

Day 7- Montreal Hill


Even though we started skinning around 8 AM, there was already a skintrack all the way to the top. On the way up, we analyzed the number of pole holes trying to determine the size of the party, as well as any down tracks to subtract from that number. I can't remember what we deduced. I know that I was wrong, but that's nothing new. It was obvious once we reached the bottom of the run, and could see the entirety of Montreal Hill. There were two skiers, and they we just starting down their run. They saw us as well. Next thing I knew it was mad dash to get up the trail first.

Of course, the skiers were cool and there was no need to rush. The coolest part was when the guy started telling us what a good skintrack they had put up. I know where the guy is coming from. Everyone likes to have his/her work admired and respected. It was a good skintrack, for the most part, except for where it went through the trees and the roots pushed you one way and the braches the other. Drew said the hardest part of the day was getting out of the tree pit when the awkward V3 skin move pushed him down. I wish I could have seen it. There are few funnier things than someone stuck in a tree pit.

We hear them on top of our second lap. The ceaseless "wup-wup-wup-wup" of the rotors send anger from my brain to every part of my body. This was the first time for any of us on Montreal Hill, mainly because this is the first stop on the Powderbirds Heliskiing tour. Now, they were coming to poach our lines. I see them coming over Poleline Pass, and with a few quick switchbacks I am standing on the ridgetop at the start of the run, giving them the single-finger salute at full attention. They fly over, see us, and fly off to another spot in the drainage. We know they'll be back. The avalanche danger today is high, leaving few spots that are safe for them to ski. The favorite one of the heli-maggots is the one we are standing over. The group of Drew, Tyler, Jade and me regroup on the ridge. We take our time with the change-over, and are still on top when they make the next fly-by. We salute again, this time from a relaxed position.

We ride the snow and it is beautiful. This is the pinnacle of existence, to ski untracked, soft and fluffy powder snow. I can hear the snow collapse under me with the tell-tale "whoopf," but this slope is not steep enough to slide, and the sound propels me down a little faster.

Day 5- Upper Days


"Whoopf!"

I recognize the sound. Knowing I was on a steep slope I was already moving when I heard Drew's voice yelling, "Avalanche!!!" Three quick steps and I was behind a big pine, leaning into it, waiting. Only a few seconds pass before snow is tumbling past my ski tips on its quick trip to the bottom of the run.

It was the second of three that we knocked off that day. This one was bigger and faster than we had expected. Our protocol wasn't perfect. Luckily it was all still managable and gave us the head check we needed to ski smart to stay alive. This year's snowpack will prove to be exciting, and we will need to have our heads about us!

Check out the video of the third one on my face book page.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Day 4- Grizzly Gulch

Obviously I wasn't the only on with the idea. If I wasn't solo I would go another route. But now I am too far into it, and the danger is high enough that there is some security in the fact that if I go down, someone will find me soon enough. When did the backcountry become so popular? It is a lot of work, enough that I think most people would be kept away. And the cold! Especially today! Wouldn't all of these people be more comfortable drinking cocoa at the Gold Miner's Daughter? I keep going. I pass many groups doing avalanche training. They dig pits that are two feet deep before hitting the ground. Choss-crust-pow. Every pit. Choss-crust-pow. At least I am moving. They have to be freezing just standing around listening to instruction.

As I get to Michigan City, I can see at least twenty people in the area. It is like a resort without the lifts. I skin quickly to the top of Patsy Marley and take my homerun to the car. Short tour today.

Day 3- Meadow Chutes


Sunshine. It is better to skin when the sun is out than when the cold wind blows snow in your face and there is no sign of it quitting. The sunshine lets me skin without an extra jacket and a hat, and to see the others further down the skintrack, advancing upward, smiling, taking in the celestial love. Day three was all sunshine and twelve inches of powder on top of a nasty rain crust. Underneath the rain crust is the faceted layer, one that will haunt the year with avalanches I'm afraid. Sunshine is also better than avalanches.

Nate and I skin ahead and put lines in the fresh snow. By the time we establish an up track we meet with Danielle, Shane and the man who fired me from REI all those years ago- Mike. We joke about it now. It is far in the past and exactly what I needed to happen when it did. Now, we are skiing together. If he were buried in the snow, I would dig him out. We all put our mark on the hill, one at a time, like delicate strokes from the artist on the canvas of the hillside.

The next day I skied at Solitude. I didn't realize how wonderfully framed our tracks are from the top of the Eagle lift. On every ride up I see people oogling over the marks in the snow across the drainage. I hear someone say, those look so good. I smile and think, "It was. It was so good."

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Day 2- Superior Skirt

Twas another beauteous mornin' in LCC. On our last run yesterday we ran into the Gong show at the base of Alta, reminding me of the old days of hiking in the ski boots. Praise be those days are over! With the crowds in the obvious spots, we thought long and hard about where the carpet would be, and thought correctly. So Nate, Drew and I headed up Superior from the bottom and took a cherry line from about half way up. Less than two hours later we had two runs each in some decent fluff before the sun started warming the snow to the consistency of mashed yams. I called Sport to let him know that we would be visible to him while he was working away the day at the bird. Nothing like a little jealousy to make my turns sweeter!

If you're looking for me tomorrow morning, I'll be either on the way to the Dez' or getting some more on the north face!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Christmas Come Early


What a day! Last night was a total dream with Obama mopping up. I woke up thinking that it was still a dream and checked the news immediately to make sure the the Republicans hadn't pulled any of their tricks to steal the nation's hope. Sure enough, the country has come a long way. I almost feel patriotic again. After talking to my brother last night about how no one ever really knows what they are going to get when they elect a candidate, all we can do now is hope that some of this momentum continues and Obama is able to live up to half of the expectations that are now upon him. He and I are both keeping our fingers crossed, though we cross them different ways!

My second gift from the world came this morning, when, after checking the news, I went downstairs and Nate was getting his gear together. I was thinking that the idea of skiing might be premature and wasn't going to go, but once I felt the energy of someone gearing up for a tour, there was no use fighting the urge. I packed my stuff in record time and was ready by the time Drew showed up. It was worth it. What we skied was seriously the goodie-goodie yum-yums. I might have had the first line of the season from Gunsight at Alta. To top it off, it was bottomless and I didn't touch a single rock/tree or anything but the POW the whole line. This video is Drew taking his line on Gunsight. After you watch the video you might have to fight the impulse to quit your jobs. Think carefully before you do, because we are still in a recession and Dubya is still at the helm. Maybe wait until after inaguration day.

Hopefully both of these glorious surprises are signs of good things to come!

Monday, November 3, 2008

San Rafael Swell




The desert is always beautiful this time of year. For a few weeks every fall the cottonwoods turn to gold, and as the wind travels through them it sound like water is running through the dry stream beds they line, even though no water has wetted the banks since the spring. They stand in stark contrast to the red and tan rocks and the sky, adding surreal bright spots to the landscape. The vertical walls of Wingate sandstone frame the sides of the sky, with the endless sea of blue above. For the third weekend in a row we have traveled to this place to share each other's company as we test our mettle mentally and physically against the uncompromising cracks and fissures of the vertical world. Last weekend we went three days without seeing a cloud, maximizing the enjoyment every minute possible by being outside all the time except when taking the short drive to the crags.

I've entered a phase that has increased my discretionary time. I find no better way to spend it than climbing and simply being in the desert. I wake up in the morning to a slight glow on one side of the canyon, while the other is still masked in the darkness of the dawn. Slowly the light grows until the first beams of sunlight illuminate to upper parts of the tallest cliffs to the West. Soon someone quietly gets out of bed and starts to boil water. The activity is contagious, and soon camp is bustling with breakfast and hot drinks. The sun won't hit camp for another hour and puffy jackets are the norm to fight off the morning chill. Once we are fed and the sun moves closer to enveloping camp, we throw a round of frisbee or play some hacky-sack to get the mojo flowing through stiff limbs. Then, as is the purpose, we climb.

Last week we climbed at the Chocolate wall. One of the things I like about the Swell is that there isn't a good guide for the area. A few of the routes can be found in old guidebooks or on-line, but the overwhelming majority of climbs are not documneted. One simply explores the area, looks for anchors at the top of cracks, and determines if the challange is acceptable. Personally, if I don't think I can do it, I like to try to heckle pals to persuade them to try. It is great adventure cragging. The Chocolate wall is a good example. After some research we found only its location and two route descriptionl although there is much more climbing than that. We found a couple of plum lines that Nate and Drew put up, and I spied a line that had not been climbed and got Kurt to belay me. The first few moves up a flake showered sand and broken rock down onto Kurt as I tried to move carefully so as to not break off the pieces of fragile rock on the edge of the crack. A few dubious moves and I stepped onto a pedestal. Ahead of me was a 600 pound pillar of rock that defended the crack behind it from being climbed. As I tried to move around it, the whole pillar shifted. I jumped back to the pedestal and instinctively balanced not falling off the pedestal with being in the most secure location as not to be crashed by the pillar should it fall. It didn't. But I still had to figure a way around it. "Kurt, are you in a good position if I pull some rock off?" "Hold on!" ws the reply and we discussed appropriate steps for dislodging the rock. He pulle gear and rope from the base of the climb. I tied off to a piece below the pillar and did what I could to tuck the rope into the crack so that the pillar wouldn't cut it when it fell. I planned my movement trying to utilize whatever space I had for my own safety. Once ready, I placed my hand behind the pillar and flex my fingers against it. It moved again and I jumped to my safety place prematurely as it didn't fall. I would have to put pressure on it until it fell and then move quickly. I warned Kurt, stepped back to the pillar and flexed my hand once again behind the pillar and watched as it began to dislodge, almost in slow motion. Once the motion was started and toppling as inevitable I stood back and flattened myself against the wall as the block came loose and exploded on the pedestal. I felt the shards of rock against my bare skin. I closed my eyes. The percussion began with the first explosion and then intensified as the pillar fell to the ground and impacted the ground and rocks at the base and then tumbled down the hillside. Drew said he could see the plume of dust Twin Towers style from around the corner where he was climbing. My heart surging with energy, I yelled down to Kurt to see if he was alright. He was. Calls came from the others to see if we were alright. All I could do was scream with delight!



Behind the pillar was a splitter crack- a little treasure that the desert had revealed to us for our effort. Out of the destruction came something beautiful.

Yesterday it rained, and I only had one day of climbing to show for the weekend. Eight of us stood beneath a tree for shelter and drank PBR while watching Nate climb a soaking wet crack. Generally it is a bad idea, but he had climbed it the day before and discovered that there were no anchors. Drew, Monica and I were returning from across the canyon climbing in costume (festive, eh?) and heard the call for "bolts and beer" from Nate, and obliged. We did our part, but the bolts weren't cooperating and after much hammering and explicatives Nate rappelled from a few few cams at dusk. They then pulled the rope and it stuck in the crack. So there we were the next morning in the rain watching Nate on a cliffside that was reflecting the sky it was so wet and he retrieved gear and won the bolt battle. He descended safely, wet, but glad to have escaped the vertical slip and slide.

We'll be down there again this weekend. Your welcome to come along and do your best with the disc golf and the campfire antics and the belching contests. You might find an arrowhead, or find yourself worn-out, tired and scared, but you'll definitely find yourself indelibly marked by the soulfulness of the experience.