--CNN is reporting that, "A climber who had stopped to rest during an expedition on Mount Hood was rescued after falling into a snow-covered volcanic crevice. Caroline Sundbaum, 32, of Portland, Oregon, was climbing the mountain at around 11,200 feet on Friday when another climber saw her sit down to rest on her pack and then disappear, the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said in a news release." It should be noted that these fumaroles are far more dangerous than a crevasse, as they often contain poisonous gas. To read more, click here.
--Native pictographs near Bend have been vandalized. To read more, click here.
--The Bellingham Herald is reporting that, "two people were injured after a chairlift detached from its line at a Washington ski resort, according to a news release from the resort. At 11 a.m. on Dec. 5, a chair carrying two people broke from the lift line on Chair 1 at 49 Degrees North Mountain Resort in Chewelah, the release said." To read more, click here.
Desert Southwest:
--Another day, another monolith. This one is near Joshua Tree National Park. To read about it, click here.
Colorado and Utah:
--A climber was injured at Garden of the Gods in Colorado this week. Limited information can be found, here.
--The Arkansas River Watershed Collective is doing some work near Monarch Ridge that could have an impact on Colorado backcountry skiers. "While our fuels mitigation and forest health treatments along Monarch Ridge have created additional lines along Perfect Trees, there are also new hazards from logging operations including stumps, slash and stacked logging decks. Be aware that tree removal may increase the avalanche risk. Be safe and use caution if you ski here this winter." To read more, click here.
--The Wilderness Society is reporting that, "on November 30th, the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes and The Wilderness Society filed an official petition to rename Mt. Evans, in Colorado’s Front Range, as Mt. Blue Sky. The new name would honor the culture and traditions of both tribes; the Arapaho are known as the Blue Sky People, and the Cheyenne practice an annual life-renewal ceremony called Blue Sky. Mt. Evans is a beloved landmark and “fourteener” that overlooks the Denver skyline, but it carries the weight of a gruesome and still-relevant atrocity that occurred about 183 miles to the southeast: the Sand Creek Massacre." To read more, click here.
--The Aspen Times is reporting that, "an affidavit requiring visitors to acknowledge they have come to the area with a negative COVID-19 test and understand the local public health orders is being prepared for mass distribution in Pitkin County so that lodges and businesses are prepared for its implementation on Dec. 14." To read more, click here.
--A group of artists is claiming that they're responsible for the Utah monolith and all the other monoliths that appeared following that. To read more, click here.
Notes from All Over:
--BMC and many others are reporting that, "Doug Scott – one of the most legendary and respected mountaineers of the twentieth century -- has died aged 79. Scott, from Nottingham, began climbing at nearby Black Rocks in Derbyshire in 1953. From that point on he became a regular climber and within five years he was making his first alpine seasons. However, it is with the high mountains of the world that Scott will always be associated and he made 45 expeditions to the mountains of Asia." Scott died after a battle with cancer. To read more, click here.
--Climbing has been officially included in the 2024 Olympics. Thankfully, this time speed climbing will be in a separate category from boulder and lead climbing. There will be four events eligible for medals in the climbing category. To read more, click here.
--The BBC is reporting on the new official height of Mt. Everest. "Until now the countries differed over whether to add the snow cap on top. The new height is 8,848.86m (29,032 ft). China's previous official measurement of 8,844.43m had put the mountain nearly four metres lower than Nepal's." To read more, click here.
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