Tug-of-War
AAC – Northeast Region Craggin’ Classic – Games
Tug-of-War at Echo Lake, North Conway NH
Cathedral Fest: Northeast Region Craggin’ Classic: North Conway, NH
September 21-23
Video by Doug Millen / NEice.com
Tug-of-War at Echo Lake, North Conway NH
Cathedral Fest: Northeast Region Craggin’ Classic: North Conway, NH
September 21-23
Video by Doug Millen / NEice.com
Yeeeesss…..we were up in the zone today, and winter is coming! It was cold and frost feathers everywhere. Have you ever had the screeming barfees in September? Time for winter “hand towels”.
I bet that I will be climbing ice in just over a month from now!
I can’t wait!
– Doug Millen
Photos form our journey…
Photos by Doug Millen / NEice.com
With temperatures reaching into the mid-80s last week, it seems that winter is finally over. Tools, boots, and screws are being replaced by chalk, shoes, and rock gear all over the Northeast. Some of the more stubborn among us may hold out for one last hurrah, but most are calling it a season. Below two members of the NEice team reflect on the season that was and look ahead to the season that will come at the end of next fall.
Article by Courtney Ley
For me, the ice season started on Halloween weekend. The day before the big snowstorm. I got lucky and found a shaded corner in Yale Gully with enough ice to swing my tools into. For that time of year, hiking in for just that tiny flow of ice was completely worth it.
Pat Cooke called it No Mans Land. That ‘catch me if you can’ time when you are wondering if you are even going to take your tools off your pack. I love early season. It’s a full on hunt for ice. It involves a week of dedicated weather watching, condition guessing and decision making on where to go for your best chance to find ice. I live for those weekends where I feel climbing becomes what it is meant to be..a leap into the unknown, when you don’t know what’s around the corner ..where you plan hard but with no guarantees and when the difference between climbable and unclimbable ice can be mere hours. It’s a time that I find what I do really captures the true spirit of climbing.
November went lazily on: there was an honest attempt at Pinnacle Buttress under cold temperatures and icy conditions, a warm day of rock climbing at Cathedral Ledge and a rather heinous and scary ascent of Odells Gully right after a weekend snow dump. Certainly nothing that compared to last year’s November when I had my own personal four day Thanksgiving ice-feast back to back to back, well, you get it. I began to wonder how the season was going to shape up. There were similar thoughts. Was Winter Cancelled? At least I knew when I was getting on ice I really was ice climbing. Whew.
The first weekend in December, my partner Joel and I nailed it right in Kings Ravine and then I knew the game was on. It was followed by a quick Shoestring Gully day and then a long, fantastic day in Damnation Gully.
But did it still feel like November out there? Was it time to sit on the couch whining and complaining that Standard Route in Frankenstein looked like the frost on my windshield?
If you were getting out, there was no time or any reason for such complaints. As I was messing around in the ravines, the heavy hitters were making their rounds on the Black Dike and Fafnir.
By the time January hit, new climbs like Seams Thin and Road Warrior were put up as I was keeping Joel out until dark on Mt Willard, pretending I could climb a M6 at Kinsman Notch and learning the most efficient way to blow out my forearms on full day of Grade 5 at Rumney with Art Mooney.
I couldn’t ask for more in February. Neither could others finding sweet lines that don’t come in often or get climbed much at all. It was a year for Cannon Cliff and off the Kancamagus. Bust ice season? I don’t think so. Once again, I walked into Huntington Ravine and caught Yale Gully with a belly full of ice, finally got into the Green Chasm high on Mt.Webster and spent a little time cragging at Frankenstein. Then on the last Friday in February, I trekked into the woods with my good friend and climbing partner, Kristina, and snagged a prize in Jobildunk Ravine on the north side of Mt. Moosilauke. The low snowfall and prolonged early season conditions gave us the opportunity to be among the few that have ever swung a tool into the ice in that ravine. It was no prize in terms of hard climbing or first ascents. There were no insane overhanging mix sections, chandeliered ice in the grill, or exposed pumpy moves. In fact, we climbed one and a half pitches of grade 2+ ice. Prior to that, we hiked a mile on a road, 2 miles along a trail and 3 miles bushwhacking up a drainage. After that, we endured one of the tougher snow engulfing, scrub thrashing, pure heinous wallows I’ve ever experienced to reach the remnants of an abandoned trail that ran along the top of the ravine.. just to slog down 6.5 miles back to the car. And oh, there were no views. But that day will probably be the one I remember most about this ice season. The timid winter had handed us a great little adventure.
Now it’s March, and for me, the ice season ended where it began – in Huntington Ravine. Sure, the ravine looked and felt like Mid April, but I wasn’t complaining. Its how the whole season played out. It was December, but it felt like November. Now it’s March and it might as well be April. But that is what I love about ice climbing. Ice is ever changing, rarely predictable and always keeps you on your toes.
The title of the post is pretty self-evident. Seasons do indeed change. In fact, it was inevitable that winter would come to an end. Granted, it’s ending at least a month too early after starting at least a month too late, but you have to play the cards you’re dealt. It’s probably possible to limp the season along at this point by going high and staying in the shade, but it’s 80 degrees out here in Boston. I figure if my wife is wearing shorts (she’s perpetually cold… shorts are not a given, even in the middle of summer), ice season is officially over.
The weather is turning, but the passing of Joe Szot last week is another telling sign for me that it’s time to hang up the tools for the year. Before I moved to MA this past summer and started climbing more in NH and VT, Joe was the mayor of my ice climbing experience. Sadly, I never had the chance to rope up with Joe. I was always somewhat intimidated by him and the fear of not living up to his high standards or expectations. I truly regret that I did not jump at the opportunity to share a rope with Joe when I had a chance. Nevertheless, I’m extremely thankful for the many evenings of Bivy Golf and conversations by the wood stove I shared with him over the past several years.
Thinking of Joe leaves me with a small feeling of emptiness, but more importantly it leaves me psyched to get out and push myself. Joe established many great lines in the northeast over the years, and his passing is a blunt (because let’s face it, if there’s one thing Joe wasn’t, it was subtle) reminder that we only have so many opportunities to get out and get after it. For years Joe’s eyes would light up when he mentioned Spike as a route I should get on. Granted, there was no way I was ready for it at the time, but Spike and Dark Lord just moved to the top of my tick-list. What better way to pay tribute to Joe than to enjoy the lines he put up and that inspired him to push the envelope. Winter may be over, but that won’t stop me from thinking about next year’s ice season already.
This winter may not have been a banner year, but there was plenty out there for those who were willing to look for it. Courtney even managed to get out every weekend between Halloween and mid-March! I may not have gotten on every route I had hoped to this winter, but I wasn’t lacking new routes to climb either. For me, the sign of a good season is a list of routes to go back and clean up, finish up, or finally sack up and get on. I finally finished off some unfinished business with the Dike, but now I can add Repentance, Remission, Dropline, and Fafnir to an already long list of routes that’ll be messing with my head from now until next winter (and probably beyond!).
It seems like winter’s come to it’s end, but enjoy the summer and the many vices it brings. Trade in alpine starts and freezing belays for lazy mornings and clipping bolts. There’s a rhythm to the seasons and winter will be back again. Until it is, enjoy the video clip below as Courtney and Alfonzo say goodbye to the ice season: A Send off to the Ice
“The line runs right up the obvious overhanging face, although it isn’t the diagonaling crack. On the right side of the face is a straight-up-and-down crack. The ice at the start is obscured as well. The corner above is the obvious finish” – Erik Eisele
The 2012 recipients are: Mark Richey, Steve Swenson and Freddie Wilkinson (USA) for their ascent of Saser Kangri II (7,518m), India.
The first ascent by experienced U.S. climbers, Freddie Wilkinson, Mark Richey, and Steve Swenson of 7518 meter Saser Kangri II in India garnered the trio a 2012 Piolet d’Or Award.
The summit is the second highest previously unclimbed mountain in the world. Their climb, “The Old Breed”, WI4 M3, 1700m, is a great example of committing lightweight alpine-style climbing at high altitude. They gained the summit by ascending the steep 1,700 metre south-west face over four days of climbing, utilizing three bivouacs. According to Alpinist magazine, “Their climb is one of the highest first ascents of a peak in alpine style in the history of mountaineering.”
The trio used special lightweight ice hammocks designed by Richey to create flat bivi sites on the route.
Way to go guys!!!!
for more about their ascent: http://www.alpinist.com/doc/web11x/n…d-highest-peak
Also see: https://www.facebook.com/thepioletsdor / http://www.pioletsdor.com/
~rockytop
Photo / Source: https://www.facebook.com/thepioletsdor
“Walt Nichol, man of few understandable words, slows the snowmobile to a stop about twenty feet form my battered Toyota Corolla and I jump out. For the third time in as many days, Alden Pellett, Ryan Stefiuk and I thank Walt and step out of his cedar sleigh. We’ve all agreed before we’ve hit the beer store: the past three days of climbing in Newfoundland have been the best consecutive days in the mountains we’ve ever had…..”
Read the whole report on his blog, Farnorthclimbing.blogspot.com
“Michael Wejchert put together an awesome trip report about our little Newfoundland adventure last month. It can be found at his blog Far North. Expect big things from this youngster.” – Ryan Stefiuk
See more on their trip at Ryans website Bigfoot Mountain Guides with a post titled – The west Coast
NEice Cover Shot 2-14-12
Feature Photo: With the sea rocking below, Michael Wejchert finds his way to the bottom of the route in Cox Cove, Newfoundland. Photo by Ryan Stefiuk
Source: NEice photo post, Alden Pellett, Michael Wejchert & Ryan Stefiuk
Sunday March 4, 2012
The winter is waning and the lower elevation climbs have their days numbered but Erick Eisele and Peter Doucette are still getting after it on Cathedral Ledge NH.
Click photos to enlarge
Double V — much harder as an ice climb, especially if it’s falling as you are trying to climb it – Erik Eisele
Feature photo – Erik Eisele on “The Big Flush” Cathedral Ledge NH – photo by Peter Doucette, Mountain Sense Guides
Note: An email with these photos has been traveling around the web titled “Winter in Russia” but “Surfer Bill” has informed us that many of the photos arn’t, but they are fun anyway. We have made the corrections to our post. Let it Snow! is a better title….thanks Bill – See his remarks below.
Among the ancient Greek legends, it is impossible to separate the tales of Icarus, Daedalus, and the Minotaur. The same is true of their namesakes on Cannon. The legacy of these bold lines on Cannon and those who put them up is far greater than the sum of its parts. Each line tells a compelling story of its own, but the web these stories weave propels them from mere tales to legends.
In 1974, Rick Wilcox and John Bouchard pioneered a bold new line on Cannon. Dubbed “Icarus,” after the legendary son of the Greek craftsman Daedalus, the two of whom having fashioned their own wings of feathers and wax to escape imprisonment by King Minos of Crete, the line was the first new route on Cannon to be put up in winter. Just as Icarus and Daedalus saw unbridled freedom in the skies above their cell in Crete, Bouchard and Wilcox saw possibility in the unclimbed slabs and corners of Cannon’s upper reaches.
“Icarus” was a fitting name for Bouchard and Wilcox’s new line: not only did the line rise into uncharted territory, it also saw an epic fall. Whereas Icarus flew too close to the sun, thereby melting this homemade wings and falling to his death, Bouchard’s fall was arrested by Wilcox’s belay, but not before Bouchard broke his ankle. Fitting of the New England hardman ethos, however, Bouchard and Wilcox pushed their line to the top and self-rescued – a precedent of daring, skill, and resourcefulness we all can take something away from.
The Minotaur was part man and part bull. Locked in the Labyrinth of Crete, the Minotaur fed upon the human sacrifices of Athenian children every ninth year as part of the Athenians’ quest to end the plagues that afflicted their city. At the time of the third sacrifice, Theseus, son of the Athenian King, entered the Labyrinth and slayed the Minotaur.
Although the Minotaur of Cannon did not have quite the fearsome reputation as that which Theseus slayed, Matt and Bayard nonetheless had to rely on similar traits: prowess, strength, and cunning. Below are some of their thoughts on the climb, but we’ll leave it to them to spin the tale of slaying the Minotaur:
When King Minos of Crete needed to cage the Minotaur, it was Daedalus he turned to; in fact, it was Daedalus who revealed the Labyrinth’s secrets to Theseus so he could slay the Minotaur. In response to this treachery, King Minos imprisoned Daedalus and his son, Icarus, within the Labyrinth itself. Their only escape – upward, towards the heavens.
With this chronology in mind, perhaps it is fitting that Cannon’s Daedalus rose after the Minotaur was slayed. Bayard Russell returned to Cannon not even a week after climbing the The Minotaur and pushed Daedalus to the top. He thought he had just re-climbed Icarus, but looking at Wilcox’s and Bouchard’s photos, came t realize it was actually a different line. Regardless, the ambiguity of these lines and their history adds to the mystery and overall mythical nature of them as the line between fact and legend becomes blurred.
When I first tried the 2nd pitch of Icarus a few years ago I thought it was M8, this time around I’m not so sure. All that ice made the cracks pretty secure, but the gear was a little tricky. I’m figuring M7+?, who knows. It was a blast!
Read the whole story on Bayards web site www.whitemountainrockandice.com
*****
Ultimately, these new routes on Cannon are only the tip of the iceberg. Last winter, Kevin Mahoney and Elliot Gaddy climbed the Ghost and repeated (or perhaps created a new variation to) Icarus. This winter, Matt McCormick and Freddie Wilkinson completed the winter girdle traverse of Cannon. With ever-changing conditions, Cannon has countless lines still to be explored, and Bayard, Matt, Kevin, Elliot, and Freddie represent only a small handful of the climbers up to the task of adding to Cannon’s mythology.
Sources: Bayard Russell, Matt McCormick, Wikipedia, whitemountainrockandice.com, mattmccormickclimbing.blogspot.com, Ice Climbers Guide to Northern New England by Lewis & Wilcox
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