Monday, September 27, 2010

Patagonia Chronicles:

An account of an 11-day ski excursion in Patagonia with Sweet Grass Productions. Here 5 athletes and 2 filmers head into the mountains outside Cerro Castillo, Chile in hopes of shooting some new footage for Sweet Grass's upcoming film.

Part 1: The Approach

I plopped down into the saddle with a feeling of familiarity. In actuality the situation was entirely unfamiliar, but the feeling of mounting a horse felt all the same. It had been nearly ten years since I had ridden a horse. Once an equestrian, now far less of a lady, I have only salvaged a few blue ribbons and my riding crop from those days.

I adjust myself in the saddle and reach down to give my beast of burden a friendly rub. The rest of the crew mount their rides. The gauchos cinch down the final straps, as the pack horses brace under their heavy loads. A heap of packs, boots, skis, and camera equipment dwarf these stout, surly little horses. At last we are ready to embark.

The crew makes for quite a caravan: 7 gringos, 3 gauchos, 12 horses and a puppy we call “lil Buddy”. The convoy of horses clips and clops along, slowly bobbing through the quaint little town of Cerro Castillo. It is about mid morning and the town is active. People are going about their day, dogs are going about their play. Yet, they are all willing to momentarily stop and observe our procession rolling past.

We reach the outskirts of town and head toward the mountains. We follow a dirt road along the valley floor adjacent to the river. Presently the river is relatively tranquil and modest. However, judging from the girth of the river bed and the distinctive high water mark, this rio will soon rage as it strains to drain the runoff of these Patagonian peaks. Along the river, the terrain is rocky, rugged and dry. Clipping along we pass a few modest ranches and encounter a herd of wild horses. Both physically and romantically this area draws many parallels to the American west at the turn of the century. Perhaps this explains my attraction to it. Finally we stray from the road and head for higher ground. We begin to make our way up a drainage, leading towards an amphitheatre of mountains, far above. At the top of this creek and at the base of those peaks will be our new home.

By this point I am sick of being on a horse. I feel slightly violated and realize that cowboys walk distinctively bow-legged for a reason. Looking around I notice much of the crew has a similar look of discomfort. I proceed to squirm in my saddle, causing my horse to through his ears back in disgust. We continue to climb, over rocks, through the woods, up steep embankments, to finally reach the snow line. I am quite eager to get off this horse, get on my skis, through on my pack and start skinning. I looked over at Drew, fellow athlete, and he seems reluctant to dismount. I conclude he either has balls of steel or would rather compromise his comfort and posterity for a free ride up to base camp.

We begin to organize our gear and top off our packs. The horses and gauchos start their return home, looking relieved to finally be rid of us. With everyone’s packs bursting with gear, we decide to sling the majority of our food up in a tree. Our packs are already approaching 60+ pounds, and we still have a 4-mile skin ahead of us, featuring a few challenging obstacles. Thus, we plan to return tomorrow for the rest of the food.

I am psyched to be in my boots, on my skis, and heading into the mountains. It all feels right again. My stress dissipates. Finally we are here. As we stroll through the glades, trees become illuminated by neon lichen adorning their trunks. They cast dark slender shadows that striate the crisp white snow beneath. For the most part we plug along in silence, observing this new world. Far above the mountains loom and with every approaching step the peaks grow in stature. They look gothic, with towering dark walls and tall spindly spires resembling witch fingernails. These mountains are the ominous cathedrals of Patagonia, where religion and suffering reside- along with salvation.

We continue on, as the straps on our packs start to dig in. Thankfully from here we haven’t too much elevation to gain. We navigate through brush, over logs, around drainages and cross several creeks. Finally, after about 3 hours of skinning we reach our destination, our new home, at the base of these momentous mountains.


Due to the obscene size and weight of my camera I decided not to bring it on this backpacking trip. Thus, I have no photos to provide at this moment. But check out Forrest Coots' Blog for additional anecdotes and pictures from this trip.

http://forrestcoots.squarespace.com/blog/2010/9/20/on-the-road-to-the-castles-in-the-sky.html

Enjoy!

erica laidlaw

Injuries and the Benefits of Maple Canyon

Dealing with injuries has got to be the hardest part of being a climber (or serious athlete in any sport, for that matter). All the struggles and failures that go with day to day climbing and training seem pretty inconsequential when you are no longer able to climb. I've had many injuries over the years, but the one I sustained in the spring of 2010 will go down as being one of the hardest, psycologically.

After a great year of climbing in 2009, I rolled into 2010 full of optimism. All that optimism was quickly crushed on a single Squamish bouldering move in early April. The diagnosis was a tear in my glenoid labrum, but not the common SLAP lesion most climbers suffer. My tear was located at the base of the ring, making it somewhat less threatening, but also less responsive to surgery. I choose the conservative route and entered into five months of serious physical therapy to re-balance my shoulder and give the injury time to settle down (cartilage tears never really "heal", unfortunately). In the process, I learned a great deal about the anatomy of the injury, patience and the benefits of social climbing with friends. I also benefited a lot from speaking to people with similar problems, so if anyone has any questions or needs a sounding board for a how to deal with a similar injury, please feel free to get in touch. Really.

So after months of low level climbing and rehab, we faced a tough decision: risk booking tickets for the great fall trip to Turkey we had planned or be conservative and wait and see what happened with the injury. We choose the risky option, booked the tickets and hoped for the best.

So here we are in Maple Canyon trying to get some endurance back for the crags in Europe. We figured the smooth cobbles of Maple would be reasonably non-threatening and that the long endurance climbs would whip us into shape. Both have turned out to be true and we are gaining fitness with minimal injury aggravation so far. The steep cave routes are a slap in the face after months of vertical cruising, but in order to get fit for steep rock, you have to climb on steep rock, so here we are. The canyon is beautiful at this time of year and, if nothing else, the time has been relaxing and therapeutic.

The pictures are random shots from the canyon and surrounding area. The climbing photos are of Mindi, a Salt Lake City climber sending the route Toxic Turkey (13c). Nice one, Mindi!

Stay tuned for pics from Turkey and enjoy the fall season everyone!

Marc Bourdon - Squamish, BC








Turkish Countryside/ Limestone Everywhere

Just a few shots of the mountainous environs near JoSiTo! Pretty beautiful. (And one of the first days it was cloudy/ cool enough to walk during the middle of the day.)

JoSiTo Camp's Colorful Laundry


The Trebenna Sector...


Sarkit, Magara (and other) Sector(s)




-Christine Balaz

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Extreme Turkish Wildlife, Parts1, 2, and 2.5/// We're not in Montana Anymore

Still in Turkey, near Antalya/ at JoSiTo. We've been climbing -more and more, appreciating this cryptic limestone/ tufa (+ sometimes blocky conglomerate) area- it's amazing, but hard to learn!

Though the routes, learning process, etc... here has been great, the coolest photos + videos so far are of the local wildlife. Behold...!


Mammut's Wing Jacket (Mens/ Black/ Medium), an awesome wind beaker, also provides a cozy home for soft, white scorpion babies.


Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Chamonix 2010

After having missed the guiding season in Chamonix last summer due to an ACL repair, this year I was anxious to get back into the swing of things. I spent the spring ski touring season in the European Alps as well, guiding classics such as the week long Haute Route traverse from Chamonix to Zermatt, the steeps of the Cosmiques Couloir, the Glacier Ronde and the Tour Ronde and of course the Valle Blanche-the most classic one day all downhill ski tour in the Alps.

Descending the snow arrete from the Aiguille du Midi Tram

The summer season started off with great weather and conditions. I hit the ground running with guiding ascents of the Matterhorn and Mont Blanc as well as some classic Chamonix rock routes like the Index, Petite Floria, and the Papillion Arrete. Classic mixed climbs were in great condition as well, and the must do Cosmiques Arrete saw many ascents. My Outline Hoody was my constant companion and go to layer for all conditions.


Upper pitches of the Matterhorn

The "Razor" Pitch on the SW face of the Crochue with Mont Blanc in the background

In between guiding trips, I still managed to get in some great sport climbing in the Chamonix valley as well as in Italy and Switzerland. The proximity to the borders and the weather patterns which get blocked and pushed around by the Mont Blanc Massif allows for easy travel to find good climbing weather and conditions somewhere in the Alps on any given day. I got to put my new Togir Light harness (the most comfortable harness I have ever worn!) and Pro shoes to the test on lots of rock.

"Poem a Lou", 6 pitch 6c+ on the Brevant above Chamonix

As September rolled in and the temperatures dropped snow began accumulating up high and turned to ice creating the amazing 1000 meter mixed lines that the hard core alpinists come to Chamonix for. With the guiding season winding down and some free time on our hands, my brother and I are looking toward these routes for our fall adventures. Of course, that means leaving the valley sport climbing and cafe's behind for cold bivies and airy exposures!

Dry tool training in the valley
We are looking toward Mont Blanc du Tacul for some easy mixed-climbing-day-trip-warm-ups to prepare for some classics like the Walker Spur on the Grandes Jorasses and the Charlet-Platonov (put up by Armond Charlet in 1935!) on the Aiguille Vert. Hopefully my next post will have photos on these amazing mountain routes!
Steve Banks-Chamonix, France

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Antalya Region, Turkey: Limestone

Right now in the Antalya region of Turkey, daytime highs are in the mid-90s (around 34 or 35 degrees C) in the shade! Much hotter than "sending temps, bro!"... but at this time of year, heat is a much better problem than rain and cold!

We'll be working-for-food-and-camping at JoSiTo climber camp/ guest house for about seven weeks. So in that time, we should hopefully get into shape, get used to the rock, and see the temperatures fall significantly!

Hopefully more "sports action" soon. Right now, we're just getting into shape after work and injury healing this summer. Also getting used to the very cryptic slopey-tufa-techy style here. Quite different than anything we've seen before -including other tufas.

Taking the bus from Karlstad (Sweden) to Stockholm.


Turkish Visa (Required of American Citizens)

Batman!

Um... I think the mountains are... THAT way.




View from JoSiTo.

The kitchen.


Keep on rockin in the Free World.

Sweet, sweet 80 m Serenity rope. Saving lives every day!

Feasting on vegetables, feta, etc...

Playing Monopoly... the new tradition.

Stretching...



-Christine Balaz

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Wisconsin's Very Own Motherlode

I went out with the boys (unfortunately I am usually one of the only girls!) to Willow River State Park in my hometown of Hudson, WI to climb on our chossy-but-proud limestone roof. I had just taken my new 9.5 Infinity rope out of its packaging and the guys were itching to test it out. We ran a few laps with it on some of the classics. The consensus: "it's slick, light, and slides through a belay device as smooth as butter."
Living in the Midwest, we take what we can get when it comes to rock. Willow's slight chossiness is constantly ignored because the climbing is long, steep and fun, and the park is beautiful, with multiple waterfalls flowing right beside the cliff. My favorite part about climbing there is taking big falls and swinging out over the falls. What a rush! For Wisconsin rock climbing, it's some of the best around. And the season is just getting good...

Alex "AJ" Johnson

Friday, September 10, 2010

Desert season is almost here! I’ve caught myself numerous times lately daydreaming of virgin tower summits, splitter cracks, and big open skies. We’ve gotten a few hints of fall here in SLC over the past few days and it won’t be long before wind, sand, and sunburn are part of the daily diet.

Here are a few photos from a recent trip to an amazing canyon near Hanksville, UT. We found towers that had never been climbed before, overhanging black streaked walls with perfect cracks running up them, and never saw another soul for the entire trip.


Chris Thomas