How NEice.com ranks

NEice continues to be one of the top players for climbing web sites.

* Click to enlarge

Below are the rankings of some popular climbing web sites. Now remember smaller is better. I left out the big guns, climbing, Rock and Ice, exct. as they are in a different league. But this will give you a feel of where we stand among our peers.

Web Site World Wide Rank
Mountain Project.com 107135
Super Topo.com 181398
Alpinist.com 377495
American Alpine Club.com 958094
NEice.com 1466486
Alpine Club of Canada.ca 1614223
Will Gadd.com 1737577
Gripped.com 1841200
Climberism.com 1922600
Metro Rock.com 1924640
Ouray Ice Park.com 2150202
Gunks.com 2958114
Gravsports Ice.com 3184387
Gravsports.com 4978549
New England Bouldering.com 5029044
NEclimbs.com 6136644
Escalade Quebec.com 6506015

* Figures are from Alexa.com 1/4/2013


Some other stats that stand out

One month (Dec. 4, 2012 – Jan. 4,  2013)


Unique Visitors: 27,765

Page Views: 484,117

Online Photos of Ice Climbing: over 10,000

Value of items sold  in the Classified: $55,206

Visits to the site this year increased by 100.12% 

The Forum has over 65,000 Posts made by 4,757 Members

Type ice climbing in Google and we always come up on the first page, today we were  #4

 

~ Doug Millen

 

 

 

A Season Within a Season

Article by Courtney Ley

It is when one season weakens and surrenders to the growing strength of another that we can most clearly see the movement of time changing space.  The leaves brown, crumble and fall at our feet.  The water slowly comes to a halt and freezes.  It is quiet and I’m alone.  As if I’m in the middle of nature’s own time lapse, I peer around the same corner but I find my surroundings are different.  The air is warm but the ground is cold.  I am winding my way around a dark, shaded place but I have a clear objective.  I am climbing up towards the top where the light begins.  Before I reach it, I am confronted with unknowns despite being in a place I’ve travelled many times before.  During this time, everything is unpredictable, and often one day is strikingly different from the next.  I am confident I can handle anything I encounter but my movements must be thought out.  I place my ice tools delicately in the newly formed ice and my crampons on a thin shelf of rock.  Upwards, slowly, as if not to disturb the passage of time that I find myself enveloped in.

Before I had set off, I didn’t know what the condition of the ice was going to be, if there would be any ice at all.  For in that time before the heart of winter takes a hold, just a few degrees up or down has a drastic effect. Winter just doesn’t arrive full strength right away.  It comes and goes until the warm air of autumn finally gives in.  Ice may appear and disappear within hours.  Despite this, I am able to find peace in the battle of the seasons.  Autumn has allowed winter to take a hold of this place, for now.  I sink the first couple of teeth on my pick into the ice.  At times, I’m putting a tool away and grabbing a hold of the rock.  A kick with my crampons proved too hard and some ice has fell away.  I find another place for my feet.

In early season, I find adventure in the mountains I’ve visited time and time again.  It is necessary to keep constant watch on the weather, to plan and strategize when and where to go, because the ice is never guaranteed.  I travel light, unburdened by ropes or gear.  I start early because the approach is long and the place is high.  I want to reach the top, but I linger. Finding ice to climb during this time is worthy of a little savoring.

My mind is so focused at the task at hand that I don’t see anything else beyond this place.    But every once and awhile I will pause and watch the surrounding mountains grow smaller and more plentiful.  On this day as I reach the top, I’m greeted by warm sun.  Wind sculpted rime ice covers the rocky landscape.  I have climbed up a ravine I had before in a gully I had before, but the climb was different.  Soon winter will move in and the ice will grow and the snow will arrive and people will begin heading into this place.  Tool and crampon placements will be easier to find, the ice will be more reliable and conditions predictable.  The three dimensional world of rock, thin ice, running water and vegetation will relent into world of white snow and white ice.  For now, I have this place to myself.  I walk in the frosted alpine terrain satisfied and content that I had climbed ice that only few knew existed.  And ice that would most likely melt away before it returns.

There is depth and variety to early season.  The trees in the valleys still hold on to their last leaves as they flicker in the wind. Higher up the branches are encased in ice.  As I make my way up and down the mountain, I experience the two seasons as separate entities above and below. During my climb, they are melded into one.  When I descend, I start to hear the crunch of autumn under my feet.  Whites fade away as pale greens and yellows return to the woods.

It is now that this early season, this season within a season, is beginning to fade.  I watch the snow fall, the ice build and number of people grow quickly and fill in the gullies, slots, corners and clefts of the mountains.  I thought it only appropriate to bid a farewell to this time and place as I now seek out more remote places to experience that sense of adventure I am always thirsting for.

UP!

The new logo for the RC Helicopters….UP! …YES!

UP Logo

Icefest Events!

The Ice Climbing Festivals are almost here!

Be sure to attend one, or all of them if you can!

NEice Ambassador, Guide & Owner of the Petra Cliffs, Andrea Charest will be at the Smuggs Bash &  MWV Icefest.
Photo; Mike Bauman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Adirondack Mountain Fest – Jan 18-20, 2013

Smuggs Bash – Jan 25-27, 2013

Mount Washington Valley Ice Fest – Feb 1-3, 2013

Catskill Ice Festival – Feb 8-11, 2013

UP!

20121224-211416.jpg

An eye in the sky for NEice

Meet our newest team members..King Kong (right) and WooKong.

I designed and built the WooKong to be light and simple so we can bring it where we like to go, UP! The King Kong is the heavy lifter and ready for anything.

I was inspired by the Mammut video celebrating 150 years. http://vimeo.com/50029357   The use of RC helicopters for photography quickly became my newest addiction.

I want to show the ice climbing in the Northeast the same way, from a perspective we are not use to.  I look forward to flying all winter to bring you the most spectacular images and movies I can capture.

We will be at the MountainFest Jan. 18-21, 2013 in the Adirondack’s for the grand unavailing of our efforts. Hope to see you there.

Doug Millen

PS…I want to send special thanks to team member Courtney Ley for all her help and enthusiasm. This project would not be the same without her.

 

Photos by Joel Dashnaw and Doug Millen

Fund Drive – December 2012

What would the ice climbing season be like without NEice?…Think about it!

It’s time for the year end Fund Drive.

NEice is a community web site run by volunteers, but we still have hard costs to run and maintain the server and the related costs. While sponsors and Google ads help,  it’s the viewer donations that make the difference.

If you like what we are doing and want us to expand our efforts and bring you the best there is in Northeast Ice Climbing. Contribute to the site and make a donation today.

 

Donate!

$25.00 / Season is the standard donation. More is greatly appreciated

It’s Easy!

1. You can click the donation logo below to make a payment using PayPal. PayPal is secure and easy to use system for online payments.

2.You can also send a check payable to NEice.com to the address below

NEice.com

PO Box 360

Bartlett, NH 03812-0360

 I would like to thank this seasons sponsors and supporters

The American Alpine Club
The Mountaineer
Alpine Web
Black Diamond
Outdoor Research
Mountain Tools
Boston AMC Mountaineering Committee
Google
Members Donations

Thanks for your support!

~ Doug Millen

First Dates

First Dates.  We’ve all had them – those initial encounters with someone.  Usually, it’s awkward, you’re trying too hard to look cool, you don’t know if offering to pay for the meal is chivalry or chauvinism, and you have no idea where things are going.  Other times it just clicks and works out perfectly.

Article by Patrick Cooke

Even for those of us not really on the dating bandwagon right now, there are plenty of first dates to be had: new partners, first day out of the season, or just a new crag.  Wednesday was all three for me.

I haven’t had a chance to climb with Erik Eisele, but we’ve been in touch a bunch lately.  He reached out to me when I was asking for beta on the Cathedral Cave, and I’ve found his writing on his blog, Shades of Granite, to be particularly articulate and compelling.  We hatched a plan to meet on Wednesday for a session in the Cave.  We’d meet at 7am since Erik has to work on weekdays, which meant a 5:15 wakeup for me.

7:20 am:  The soft light drapes over me and I’m fully aware of my surroundings. FUCK!  I’m in my bedroom still! Instead of getting my ass kicked by some severely overhanging drytooling, I’m comfortably tucked in a cocoon of warm blankets.  I’m instantly wide awake and give Erik a call to let him know what’s up.  Fortunately, our mutual friend, Ryan, was also on board for the morning session and is capable of correctly setting his alarm.  With Ryan on board, my botching the first date at least didn’t ruin Erik’s day – he sent his long term project, The Mercy.

*****

Meeting a new partner and exploring a new crag was off the table, but there was still the chance to salvage one of the three facets of a first date – the first day out for the season.  With this in mind, I drove over to Crawford Notch in hope of climbing Shoestring Gully.

The exit of Shoestring Gully 12/19/12

Cars were already parked below Shoestring and tracks led down to the river, so I figured there was probably a good way across.  There was, but that didn’t stop me from putting my boot into the river and feeling the water run down into my left sock.  So much for making a good first impression.

To climb Shoestring, regardless of whether it’s your first date or another day in a long relationship, follow these directions: “you park, you walk straight down to the river, you go across the river, then you go straight across the trail, head straight up the gully… then you walk straight up.”  This is good advice.  I, however, having already botched the first impression, proceeded to follow a set of tracks heading up and left despite knowing that really I just needed to head straight up.  Thus my path, instead of looking like a straight arrow, resembled the footprints on one of those annoying Family Circus cartoons.  So much for looking cool.

After an hour(yes an hour, on a climb I did car to car in 90 minutes last year) of wandering, meandering, at times wallowing, and wondering if I was about to make a bushwhack ascent of the mighty Mt. Webster on one of the most meaningless, laughable “taking the tools for a walk” moments in New England mountaineering history, my predecessor in bone-headed self-imposed suffering led me to the base of the climb itself.  Although late, I’d have that first date after all.

Sometimes, even on a first date, you just KNOW

 

 

Ice!

From the NEIce Gallery, a Members Sample.

The view from Mt. Colden, ADK

 
The ice is here and with this snow, it will only get better!  Enjoy some shots provided by NEice members from  New York, Vermont & New Hampshire spanning the last two weeks. Thank you to everyone for posting info and/or images! Doug and all of us that attempt to help out here are very appreciative.
Get psyched! ~ AC

Photographs by;  Broken Spectre, Amy, WooKong, Coup, The Rockytop, tfarr3,  AOC, Wewidlund, adkmorgan,  Jacon & afendres.

Clink on images to enlarge.

 

Never Stay Home – Erik Eisele

“At 11 a.m. this morning my (non-climbing) plans for the day fell apart. I suddenly had five hours of daylight but no objective or partner. “Perfect,” I thought, “a chance to wrestle with the art of climbing firsthand. An opportunity to forgo a rope in search of focus, to see what I can learn from the experience.

Three hours later and 200 feet off the ground, the ice reared cold and ruthless in my face. One pick felt rattly, the other was surrounded by white, fractured ice. My feet were good, but a bulge forced me off balance “What the fuck am I doing?” I thought as my hands started to ache. “I’m no soloist. This shit will get me killed.”…. Read the rest here

 

Photo: Dracula 12-16-12

Photo: Dracula 12-16-12

Photos and words by Erik Eisele

Time Lapse Photography in the White Mountains

Time lapse photography has quickly become an obsession of mine. I want to timelapse everything. I thought at first that anything in time lapse would be interesting, but I’m learning what makes for a dramatic scene and likewise, finding out the lack of certain elements can make for a dull scene. This time of year I feel can be somewhat drab for most photographic pursuits unless one has a keen eye for photography.  I strive to be that type of photographer.

This is the first year of a multi-year time lapse project in the White Mountains. So with things being in it’s infancy, I’m dreaming big, learning alot and having too much fun in the process. Ultimately, this view of Cannon Cliff will be shot several times throughout the year and integrated together. I figure if I can make this grey, snowless December a little interesting to view, then the other seasons may be visually pleasing.  You’ll be viewing the entire sequence in which only certain clips will be used. But I don’t want to give away too much just yet!

Photography, specifically the hunt to capture unique shots has been a passion of mine alongside climbing.  The two blend very well together.  It leaves me thrilled to be apart of the NEice team, where that exact passion has a good home.

(Choose 1080p from the drop down menu on the lower righthand side for ‘best’ quality.)

-Submitted by Courtney Ley / leaf