Saturday, October 30, 2010

The Next Chapter


Life moves on and the next chapter begins. Moving to a new geographic location usually takes some getting used to, but in this case it feels like I'm on vacation, a never-ending vacation. Year-round skiing in alpine terrain, rock climbing, paddling, it's all right here in the Columbia River Gorge.

Self belay session in my backyard while a barge rolls down the Columbia.

Peaceful dawn SUP outing

Learning to fly a kite on the summit of Mt Adams. Rainier in the background. A buddy and I skied Adams on Oct 18, horrible snow/ ice conditions but this is why I moved to the Gorge- year round skiing.

Ordering pizza while waiting for my partners. Skinning in a t-shirt, then skiing pow on Oct 27, Mt Hood.

This place is sweet, after a summer of going to Minnesota Twins baseball games and cruising around to climb at places like Indian Creek and the Gunks, I'm getting settled in. Quick sessions on columnar basalt splitters, stand-up paddling and skiing pow have eased the transition for the city lifestyle. Next week I'll be headed to Switzerland for an attempt on the Eiger (weather permitting) and soon after I'll be ski patrolling on Mt Hood. Peace.


Monday, October 25, 2010

Good times!








Wow ... It has been way too long since i last posted! Life's been super busy, but also crazy good to me lately! Since the trade show in August, I took a beautiful week vacation in Maple Canyon on my way home ..... and have been going non-stop ever since. Between two jobs, I have still managed to make it out (almost weekly) to Rifle ... usually just for a day or two, but worth it none-the-less. It is my first season climbing in Rifle, so it has been humbling to say the least!

However... It is finally Indian Creek season! I'm leaving Sunday for a few weeks. The weather is getting perfect for my project down there. I am so psyched to go play in the desert! I'll keep you posted!

Sarah Watson
October 26th, 2010


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Saturday, October 23, 2010

Rocktober!














Onsighting the fantastic slabbyiness of The Afterlife (5.12d.) at the Wizard's Gate. Photo JacobFuerst.com



Left: redpointing the brilliant Cloak and Dagger (5.13c), also at the Wizard's Gate, with nice views of Estes Park. Photo Jacob Fuerst.
Left: our cat Sky harnessing the eye of the tiger for Rocktober!
Thankfully I've been able to start climbing in earnest the past few weeks, and haven't missed the great conditions October always seems to offer. My back is getting better all the time, and I've been leading and bouldering without too much fear of breaking myself again. I even managed to get up a long 5.12+ in the Black Canyon called Air Guitar, which I been wanting to climb for the last few years, without feeling entirely crippled the next day. It probably helped that we used a Serenity Rope, and that every 'biner on the rack was a Moses, making the overwhelming pile of gear feel light. Off to Switzerland next week for a dealer camp, some product design meetings, and a few days of climbing. I'm very excited, and thankful for the opportunity! Hope you've all been sending whatever "project" life has thrown your way!

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Climbing til Ski Season









A crazy thing happens each fall as the leaves tweak their colors and the peaks recieve the first dusting. My mind shifts to the upcoming season of pow shredding. Boxes start arriving from Mammut, K2, Scarpa, and Smith to fuel the fire even more. Nights are filled with quality time enjoying Greg Stump and Dick Barrymore classic ski flicks. Its true I am adddicted-a true powder and tele ski junkie. The only thing I can do to get my mind off this winter obsession is spend lots of time rock climbing at the City of Rocks, Idaho.

There are so many things I love about climbing .Climbing requires your mind to be very present and to focus. Climbing gives us an opportunity to get out to beautiful spots and challenge ourselves. They're is also the extra fun that goes along with the climbing experience-camping,beers by the fire, hot springs,alpine starts, and great time with friends.
Cheers,
Danny Walton

Monday, October 11, 2010

A home in the Sandia Mountains

Sandia Mountains, New Mexico October 1 & 2, 20

I’ve been at home here in NM since late August. Being home follows a great summer season in the Alps as always but it’s so good to be home and climbing in my favorite backyard range, the Sandia Mountains. September and October are almost always the best months to be climbing here. The temperatures are perfect; the weather is clear, crisp and so blue. Combine this with the changing colors of the fall and the mountains here become magical.

Many times I’ve missed this magical time at home due to work in other parts of the country but this season I’ve aligned the stars to keep me at home for work and play. This little backyard playground that helped shape me as a climber continues to yield great adventures and new routes that to me are some of the best in the world.

On October 1st I was able to get out with one of our local guides who had just spent his first season guiding on Rainier. Like me he’s enamored with the Sandias and was keen to get out. We went to an area that I’ve been actively developing called “The Secret Garden”, which has 20 or so new routes ranging from 5.7 to 5.11. On this day I was keen to head up into unknown terrain on a beautiful headwall I had seen from another formation earlier in the summer. To get to the headwall we climbed a 5.11a route called Pocket Cougar, which my lovely wife Carolyn Parker and I had done the first ascent on earlier in the summer. From the belay at the top of this pitch I cast off on to the headwall of seemingly unbroken granite. I new the crux of this pitch was going to be finding pro. From afar I was optimistic that what looked to be horizontal seams every 10ft or so would yield some type of protection. As I climbed up on thin crimps and knobs I was pleased to find solid but small pro in the horizontals every 1-3 body lengths. This went on until the last 8 to 10 meters, which turned blank both for pro and for positive holds. I tickled in a 000 C3 in the last horizontal and headed up for what looked to be good holds. Sometimes all you need are some good holds for protection. From the last good holds I only had a couple body lengths to the top. I looked down at the tiny cam now 20ft below me and figured falling wasn’t an option. I took a moment to find my inner butterfly and carefully floated the final friction moves to the top. I called the new 5.11 pitch Rawdawgin’ due to the unprotected nature of the last section of climbing.

I got to get out again the next day to make the first free ascent of a new route we had been working on. The new route is an extension of a forgotten classic called The Sorcerer’s Apprentice III 5.11a. Our new line would continue directly up for 2-3 more pitches of steep and clean face climbing to the top of the Sandia’s steepest tower, Torreon. I joined up with Mick Shein, an old friend and local guidebook author for the ascent. The first three pitches went well as we had already climbed these pitches on previous attempts. The final headwall was the only question mark. I had been out the week before on a solo mission to clean and establish the line, where I placed four protection bolts on an otherwise unprotect-able section of thin face climbing. The pitch starts with a fun 3-4ft roof. This gets you on to the headwall where a shallow seam splits the wall for 50ft or so. I was keen to send this pitch so Mick let me have the lead. The roof went easily so now all I had to do was not fall off the sustained thin seam above. I began pasting and lie backing my way up the seam. A few desperate moves on small slopers with no feet is the real crux and some how I manage to stay on. The rest of the pitch backs off a bit and leads more easily to the summit. The new route we named The Sorcerer (III 5.12b) since just like in Goethe’s Poem the master Sorcerer has to come in and save the day after the apprentice let’s thing get out of hand.

Mammut toys used:

Neon Pro Pack

70m 9.8 Tusk Rope

60m 9.5 Infinity Rope

8 Moses Express Set

4 Element Express Set

Bionic Mytholito Biners

Cotopaxi Zip Pull

Mica T-Shirt

Boulder Pants

Pro Rock Shoe

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Patagonia Cronicles:




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 2: Always a waiting game

I admit, I am quick to preach patience. It seems a good virtue to spout. Yet, at this moment patience is overrated. Here I sit, atop a couloir I arduously booted up, staring down at the delectable line before me, waiting. My heart picks up a few beats in anticipation. The snow is angelic and tender. The tall hallways are inviting, spaced perfectly for a fast and fluid descent. I want it now. Yet, still waiting. And waiting. And waiting for that elusive sun to burst through the cloud cover swimming above me. We need her rays to get the shot. But as of now, the clouds playfully swirl in front of her, like an erotic dance, occasionally allowing a glimpse of skin. “What a tease,” I think to myself. If I had balls they would definitely be blue. I can hear Zac across the way, nearly a half miles distance, singing out loud, passing the time as he waits to film us skiers. Forrest, fellow athlete, sits atop the neighboring couloir, also waiting and presumably salivating over his own line. My boots are buckled, my goggles on, I am ready for the “pop” of the light.

Time continues to pass. My feet are cramped. My fingers are cold and my patience is dwindling. I try to divert my attention from counting minutes to assimilating the moment. In this moment I am in some remote region of Patagonia, hanging out at the top of some nameless couloir that may have been skied only once before, eating snow and passing time. To think, if I weren’t here I would be floating the Salmon River, guiding a wine tasting trip, while rocking my flip-flops and my river tutu. Not a bad alternative, but not comparable to suffering in Patagonia.

Presently the clouds continue to tease, as a snow flurry sets in. Beyond, an aggressive wind rips down the valley, but here, within the protective walls of the couloir, everything remains peaceful. Here snowflakes frolic throughout the air, dancing and mingling as they wisp about in latent air currents. Groups of flakes weave to and fro like schools of fish. My tongue hangs from my mouth as I fish for some flakes. This playful interaction seems to aerate the snow, resulting in a divine bed of powder. It makes me think of sending styrofoam through a wood-chopper.

It has been nearly 3 hours of waiting and the sun has yet to show her cheeky face. At this point the flurry has passed and I can see across the valley. The sky is still overcast and it is getting late. Up until now, Zac has periodically checked in on me, yelling from across the way. I have continued to reply that I was fine and happy to wait, having found things and thoughts to entertain me. Now Zac calls out again. This time he asks me if I am ready. I look up at the sun and notice that she has fully draped herself in cloud cover. The peepshow is over. I give her a hard glare, letting her know of my contempt and reluctance to relinquish. Fine. Zac and I both realize this was our best shot. “Sure! I am ready,” I yell. I buckle my boots for the seventh time, adjust my pack straps and wait for his signal.

Heart rate surging, I drop into my first turn. My skis slice into the powder, regenerating the frolicsome snowflakes into the air. The snow is soft and forgiving but not bottomless. Luckily beneath the fluff there is a supple, yet dense bed of snow, allowing for fast and dynamic turns. Each time I extend my angles a little further, allowing my hip to sink a little lower and kiss the surface of the snow. Then I spring to the next turn. I continue to ricochet down the couloir, all the while being completely enthralled in the moment.

As I approach the exit of the couloir, the snow conditions change from forgiving to challenging. (“Challenging”-A euphemism for breakable-crust.) The towering walls slowly converge and I ramp up on their sides to shut down speed. I then sling out the bottom into the apron of snow below, letting my skis run and riding my tails most of the way.

So much of our time in Patagonia is a waiting game. Up until this point we have endured an onslaught of rain, sleet and heavy winds. The tumultuous and ferocious weather here makes for challenging filming conditions, to say the least. Mentally it can be taxing and physically draining. It is never easy waiting to get a shot that may never happen. Yet, the vitality and power of this weather warrants our respect and appreciation. Only a few are eligible to even suffer in these mountains, let alone successfully play here. We must value and savor all the moments, as they culminate in an epic experience.


(Above is my tryptic illustration of these stunning mountains)


erica laidlaw