Sunday, November 13, 2011

November - December Events

-- November 12-13 -- Jailhouse Rock, CA -- Jailhouse Rock Adopt-a-Crag

-- November 13 -- Seattle, WA -- Northwest Snow and Avalanche Summit

-- November 15-16 -- Kalispell, MT -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 15 -- Bellingham, WA -- Reel Rock Film Tour

-- November 16 -- North Vancouver, BC -- Reel Rock Film Tour

-- November 17 -- Collegville, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 17 -- Portland, OR -- Steph Davis Clinic and Slide Show

-- November 18-19 -- Minneapolis, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 19 -- Little Rock, AR -- Little Rock Boulder Bash

-- November 19 -- Bishop, CA -- Buttermilks High Ball Work Day w/ John Long

-- November 20-21 -- Duluth, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 21 -- Ellensburg, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 22 -- Leavenworth, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 29 -- Bellingham, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 30 -- Seattle, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 1 -- Seattle, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 3 - 4 -- Olympia, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 6 -- Tacoma, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 7 - 8 -- North Bend, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 10 -- Port Townsend, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Weekend Warrior - Videos to get you STOKED!!!

Mountain Gear has officially opened up it's registration for next spring's Red Rock Rendezvous!
To sign up for one of the clinics or guided sessions, go to http://www.mountaingear.com/rrr
Here is a little clip with highlights from last year's Rendezvous:



The official Rendezvous dates are March 30, 31 & April 1, but AAI is also holding courses both before and after the Rendezvous. We'll have Basic Rock Camps, Learn to Lean Seminars, a Big Wall & Aid Climbing course, and a Single Pitch Instructor Course & Exam. Call our office for more information on dates and availability.

Here's another clip, this one from the UClimb Seminars that will be running at the Rendezvous this year.



We hope to see you there!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Yosemite Rockfall

In October, it happened again.  Massive boulders sheared away from the East Buttress of El Capitan and fell thousands of feet to the floor of Yosemite Valley.  Nearby climbers were unaffected, but had they or anything else been beneath the rockfall, the results would have been catastrophic.

Rockfall is part of the natural cycle in Yosemite Valley as well as on every mountain on the planet.  Many of us have encountered inexplicable rockfall while in the mountains. And many of us have thought, "wow, that thing has been sitting there for millions of years, and it just decided to come down while I was here...how lucky for me..."

While this is a part of life for climbers and for the mountains, it is important to remember that there are over four million visitors to Yosemite National Park every year.  And while we are constantly on edge about the possibility of rockfall, your average Hawaiian-shirt-wearing tourist has no idea that there is a danger present.  As such, the NPS has hired teams of geologists to study the cycles of rockfall and to try to determine a way to predict it.

As you might think, this isn't the easiest thing in the world to do.

The team the produces Yosemite Nature Notes has put together an engaging episode on rockfall in Yosemite Valley.  You can view the video below:



To learn more about rockfall in Yosemite Valley, check out the Yosemite National Park webpage on the topic.  To learn more about what industry is doing to protect highways and buildings from natural rockfall, check out the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow, and Landscape Research and their studies on rockfall here.

Rockfall is part of life in the mountains.  And unfortunately also part of what creates injuries and fatalities in the mountains.  It's not clear that any scientific research on rockfall could ever be employed by climbers, but it is good to know that there are people out there trying to understand the natural cycles of rockfall...

--Jason D. Martin

Monday, November 7, 2011

The Super Munter

In a serious rescue situation, it might be possible that you would have to lower an extreme weight down a rock face. For example, there is the possibility that you might have to lower two climbers, one cradling another one, or you might have to lower a climber and a litter. There are many ways to do this, but there is one really smooth technique.

The super-munter is a variation on the munter-hitch. It creates a tremendous amount of friction and doesn't have one of the main problems of the munter-hitch, it doesn't tangle the rope. Indeed, the action of the rope as it goes through the super-munter twists the rope and then twists it back.

Following is a short video on how to make a super-munter:



The super-munter creates a great deal of friction. I have never used this for a rescue, but occasionally I have lowered two climbers together with this who didn't feel comfortable rappelling. I've always found it to provide more than enough friction to deal with 400+ lbs of dead weight.

While it is unlikely that you will use this particular hitch very often, it is a valuable rescue tool to have in your back-pocket.

--Jason D. Martin

Sunday, November 6, 2011

November - December Events

-- November 3 -- Seattle, WA -- Snowbash

-- November 5 -- Dark Horse -- Newburyport, MA -- Bouldering Comp

--November 5 -- Victoria, BC -- Reel Rock Film Tour

--November 9 -- Fort Collins, CO -- Reel Rock Film Tour

-- November 11 -- Great Falls, MT -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 12 -- Red Rock, NV -- Coffee with a Ranger

-- November 12 -- Hillsborough, NJ -- Adopt-a-Boulder

-- November 12-13 -- Jailhouse Rock, CA -- Jailhouse Rock Adopt-a-Crag

-- November 13 -- Seattle, WA -- Northwest Snow and Avalanche Summit

-- November 15-16 -- Kalispell, MT -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 15 -- Bellingham, WA -- Reel Rock Film Tour

-- November 16 -- North Vancouver, BC -- Reel Rock Film Tour

-- November 17 -- Collegville, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 17 -- Portland, OR -- Steph Davis Clinic and Slide Show

-- November 18-19 -- Minneapolis, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 19 -- Little Rock, AR -- Little Rock Boulder Bash

-- November 19 -- Bishop, CA -- Buttermilks High Ball Work Day w/ John Long

-- November 20-21 -- Duluth, MN -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 21 -- Ellensburg, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 22 -- Leavenworth, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 29 -- Bellingham, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- November 30 -- Seattle, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 1 -- Seattle, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 3 - 4 -- Olympia, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 6 -- Tacoma, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 7 - 8 -- North Bend, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

-- December 10 -- Port Townsend, WA -- Banff Mountain Film Festival

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Weekend Warrior - Videos to get you STOKED!!!

Well, boys and girls, winter is upon us (at least here in the Pacific Northwest). The calendar may say it has a while yet, but there are a couple ladies - Mother Nature and La NiƱa - who say otherwise. We had our first Winter Weather Advisory Wednesday night/ Thursday morning, and the forecast is for more this weekend.

So if you aren't in that frame of mind yet, here's something that should push you over the edge: The Provo brothers, Ian and Neil, swimming through the powder of Retallack, BC. The clip is a little longer than our normal ones, so grab a cup of something hot and a handful of that leftover Halloween candy, and enjoy.

Caution kiddies, the guys are so stoked at one point there are a couple expletives dropped, so it's earmuffs for you.



P.S. - We hope to see you at the Northwest Avalanche Center Benefit tonight, Saturday, Nov. 5, at Chair 9 in Glacier. They'll be showing the film "Solitaire" by Sweetgrass Productions and holding a raffle, and we'll have a table set up showing off our new fleet of rentable Voile Splitboards. Be sure to come by and say "Hi"!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Offwidth Bouldering with Scott Massey!


Offwidth bouldering. “Why would you want to do that?” Dyan asked me. “Well, its fun. Kind of…” I answered, but inside I knew that answer was far from sufficient. Many rock climbers loathe offwidths, the dreaded spectrum of crack climbing too wide for fist jamming, but too small to get in and chimney. They can be painful, tedious, and quite frustrating, especially to a generation of climbers bred on face climbing and splitter cracks.

For me, this recent fascination with the wide has come from a goal of being a well-rounded climber. My first encounter with hard offwidths came in 2004, where a co-worker on an Outward Bound rock course in Vedauwoo, WY offered to belay me an a 5.11a. Since I was climbing 12a sport routes and 11 cracks in Indian Creek, I thought I had a chance. I was wrong. After aiding the 30 feet to get to the anchor and set up a toprope, several of us worked on the crack for an hour or so, much to the amusement of our students. It was an experience in pain and frustration, of not even remotely knowing how to climb it. Needlesss to say, offwidths got put on the back burner.

As Shunryu Suzuki writes in his book Zen Mind, Beginners Mind, “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities. In the expert’s, there are few.” Fast-forward to September 2008, Vedauwoo. I was ready to begin the learning process. After seeing several articles and lots of pictures of climbers like Bob Scarpelli, Pamela Pack, and Justin Edl offwidth bouldering in the ‘Voo, a friend and I decided to head there and try our hand at the “Dark Arts”, as he called it. We thought learning techniques a few feet off the ground would be safer, lacking the time and commitment of being on a rope. Two weeks, several rolls of tape, and one pair of Carhartts later, we felt like we had opened a whole new door of knowledge. We were rank beginners, despite our collective 25 years of climbing experience, and that may have been one of the most powerful experiences of my climbing career. Frustrating? Absolutely - but incredibly rewarding. It was just the beginning.

Winter 2009, Red Rock Canyon. I’m far from Vedauwoo, in the face-climbing mecca of Red Rock, but the desire to learn is still there. While there are a handful of offwidth routes here, it is still difficult to find partners for them, so I’ve back looking at the boulders. Between the excessively chalked-up, over-hyped crimp ladders, I’m seeing lines. Some new, some old. Maybe Joe Herbst, 70’s Red Rock pioneer and offwidth Jedi Master, played on them at some time. Maybe not. Most are new-school offwidths, overhanging cracks and roof cracks, that use Leavittation, (a hand-stacking/leg-locking technique developed by CA climbers Randy Leavitt and Tony Yaniro) to ascend them. In any case, they provide more great learning opportunities – a place to be a beginner once again.

The following pictures are from the problem Born to Bleed (5.10+ V2), Red Rock Canyon. FA – Scott Massey, 12/09. In the Vedauwoo tradition, crack boulder problems are given a YDS grade and a V-grade, so I decided to stick with that. The name is a reference to a song I was listening to at the time I was working it, as well as the result of two days of trying this roof crack without tape gloves. The rock is somewhat abrasive (90 grit or so…), and hanging off hand-fist stacks will test anyone’s pain tolerance. I finally unlocked the crux sequence on my sixth day of working it. The movement is actually quite fun, and very cerebral.

Scott Massey
AAI Lead Guide, Red Rock Program