Author Topic: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides  (Read 107686 times)

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #20 on: February 09, 2011, 10:30:37 AM »
Yeah, hair raising. I led all three pitches when they were still rusty old quarter inch bolts (three bolts each on the two, full rope length, first pitches).

Truly a case of cursing the rusty old bolts while wishing like hell that there were more of them!


squiddo

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #21 on: February 09, 2011, 10:42:03 AM »
Yeah, hair raising. I led all three pitches when they were still rusty old quarter inch bolts (three bolts each on the two, full rope length, first pitches).

Truly a case of cursing the rusty old bolts while wishing like hell that there were more of them!



Well its well known that you have eggs of stone. Mine are more Styrofoam. Loved it but the second pitch now has a contrived line of confusing bolts on an independent line.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Every climb gets 3 stars from me until I climb it.
-Anonymous spirited climber

mynameismud

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #22 on: February 09, 2011, 01:01:01 PM »
I have to disagree with the this. 

A great weekend does not involve this.

Squiddo: A great weekend consists of sport climbing (with tons and tons of people) in the Owens River Gorge one day,
Here's to sweat in your eye

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #23 on: February 09, 2011, 01:05:12 PM »
Obviously Dennis is right. This is what I said (that he disagrees with): "Squiddo: A great weekend consists of sport climbing (with tons and tons of people) in the Owens River Gorge one day"

To make it correct it would have to read like this: "Squiddo: A great weekend consists of sport climbing (with tons and tons of people INCLUDING DENNIS) in the Owens River Gorge one day."

I stand corrected.

mynameismud

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #24 on: February 09, 2011, 04:48:19 PM »
DIE
Here's to sweat in your eye

F4?

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #25 on: February 09, 2011, 04:56:37 PM »
Quote
To make it correct it would have to read like this: "Squiddo: A great weekend consists of sport climbing (with tons and tons of people INCLUDING DENNIS) in the Owens River Gorge one day."

you forgot Dennis with tights, since it is the gorge and he would be sport climbing.

I'm not worthy.

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #26 on: February 09, 2011, 05:27:02 PM »
Mud, you must have been busy at work. It took you forever to post my well earned "DIE." About time you got to it.

mynameismud

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #27 on: February 09, 2011, 05:57:04 PM »
Yep, busy.  Hopefully hand off tomorrow.
Here's to sweat in your eye

F4?

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #28 on: February 09, 2011, 06:10:13 PM »
Did you find your protege?

The tights and sport climbing didn't even get a die
I'm not worthy.

mynameismud

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #29 on: February 09, 2011, 07:24:16 PM »
Was that busy.

How about

DIE
Here's to sweat in your eye

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #30 on: February 09, 2011, 08:42:30 PM »
There are quite a few good photos from the next set. These are from what was probably the single best, most productive High Sierra climbing trip I've ever done. In July, 1999, Jim Lundeen and I went into the Palisades from the east. We took one day to do the approach and one to hike out. In four climbing days we did four Sierra Nevada Classics: 1. Mount Winchell's East Ridge, 2. The Swiss Arete on Mount Sill, 3. The V-Notch Couloir, 4. The U-Notch Couloir.

Jim is one of the great climbing partners, strong and fun to hang with. At the time he was very into photography.

This is on the summit of Mount Winchell, looking north toward Mount Aggaziz and Bishop Pass:





This is me with my old friend Squamish Chief, who came with us on this trip. A few of you knew him in his prime (Munge, Mud). In the background is the beautiful Sam Mack Meadow, where we spent our first night (I spent another few nights here, years later, with Jim McC, when he and I did Starlight and Thunderbolt):





Of course, Chief carried his own weight:





We finished Winchell early enough in the day that we had time to move camp from Sam Mack up to the Palisade Glacier:







The camp at the foot of the Palisade Glacier is almost magical in its beauty. The Palisades are to the west and the whole Second/Third Lake basin and Temple Crag are to the east. Jim took some nice photos in camp:









The next morning we got up early for the most difficult of these routes, the V-Notch. We moved fast back then, though, and did the climb, summited Polemonium Peak and got back to camp by early afternoon (that's another great thing about Jim, he can also haul buns in the back country). This is Jim leading across the bergschrund:









We got to the V-Notch when it was in good shape. Counting the 'schrund we did six pitches of blue, water ice:









The ice climbing on the V-Notch ends at the Palisade Crest. A few hundred feet of traversing that crest leads to a short section of technical rock to the summit of Polemonium Peak (one of California's 14,000 foot peaks). Here I am on the summit of that peak:





By the way, Polemonium Peak is named after Polemonium, more commonly called "Sky Pilot," a fabulous flower that grows in the Sierra Nevada above 12,000 feet. It is plenty beautiful to the eye, but the subtle, sweet fragrance is absolutely not to be missed:





Next up, two more Sierra classics and a pretty hike out.

rhyang

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #31 on: February 09, 2011, 10:31:15 PM »
Sweet pics.

MUCCI

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #32 on: February 09, 2011, 11:55:20 PM »
Man keep em coming Brad, gotta dig the high sierra.




skully

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #33 on: February 10, 2011, 04:52:31 AM »
Word. These are good, man. 8) 8) 8)
Holy crap! oh, please little hook stay, please stay, that's right you're fine........And  Yes! off THAT manky shit. Whew.

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #34 on: February 10, 2011, 06:13:02 AM »
Here's a photo of both the U-Notch and the V-Notch from near where we camped:





We did the Swiss Arete the third climbing day. This has a fair amount of fifth class, up to 5.6, but mostly much easier. It leads straight to the summit of Mount Sill, another 14,000 foot peak:





On the summit:







On the fourth day we did the U-Notch, which we found in great condition; it was perfect styrofoam snow. We climbed to the notch itself unroped, then switched to climbing shoes and summitted North Pal:













On the summit of North Pal (Mount Sill and the Swiss Arete are obvious in the background):





On the way down occurred one of the few truly intuitive moments of my life. I believe in intuition, but I think my brain works on a nearly empiric basis, and that I as a person don't have much of it. But I did on the way down from the U-Notch.

On the ascent we'd crossed a huge bergschrund on a narrow snow bridge to get to the main couloir. It was morning when we did this, and when we tested the bridge it was rock solid frozen; way more bridge than we needed to get across the gap. Then, as I said, we hiked up perfect styrofoam snow in our boots and crampons. But we brought ropes. We thought we might want them for the Norman Clyde "fourth class" rock above (we did). We also used them to rappel the bottom parts of the rock section on the way down. After finishing the rock rappels we started walking down the softer, afternoon snow in the couloir. This was very easy walking, and after several hundred feet of descent we reached the snow bridge.

Then my intuition kicked in. The bridge looked fine. The 'schrund still plunged down out of sight, but the snow bridge was there and looked as it had in the morning. Jim was in the lead. As he plunge stepped toward the bridge it hit me that we had to use the ropes. Had to. I told Jim this. He seemed surprised by my concern, but quickly agreed when I asked him to wait so I could set up a rappel. Once the ropes were set Jim started across the bridge. He easily walked out to and past the middle of the bridge. Then, "whoosh," most of the bridge collapsed and Jim fell with it. But he fell only a few feet, onto his rap ropes. He was able to quickly lower to a thin part of the 'schrund and scramble up and out the other side onto the main glacier (we had crampons on). I followed him using the ropes. I'm not sure what would have happened if Jim had plunged into the bergschrund. I know it wouldn't have been good. I also know that I listened to the voice, I spoke up, and we both walked back to camp.

This is me just after the rappels:





Sunset over the Palisades:





We hiked out the next day, tired and satisfied:




mungeclimber

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #35 on: February 10, 2011, 08:32:59 AM »
good story and pics!
On Aid at Pinns... It's all A1 til it crumbles. - Munge

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #36 on: February 10, 2011, 08:36:56 PM »
In August, 1999, Jim and I went in to Iceberg Lake to do Whitney's East Buttress and a route on Mount Russell. Eventually, because of the weather, we settled for the East Ridge of Russell ("settled," for the most exposed class three I've ever been on).

The long trudge up North Fork Lone Pine creek:





High up on the East Buttress:







On the summit:





More Polemonium:





Alpine Gold is another flower native to high in the Sierra. But it looks like dandelions and has no real smell. It's nice, but it isn't "Sky Pilot."





We hiked part way out, dropped packs and then ran up Russell. I've never met anyone else that's done the East Ridge (although I'm sure many, many  climbers have), but I've met more than ten mountaineers who were in the process of bailing off the route due to the exposure:







On the summit with Whitney in the background:


skully

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #37 on: February 10, 2011, 09:16:59 PM »
You're on a roll! This is great stuff, man. ;D
Holy crap! oh, please little hook stay, please stay, that's right you're fine........And  Yes! off THAT manky shit. Whew.

Brad Young

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #38 on: February 11, 2011, 08:33:55 AM »
On Labor Day, 1999, I did the first ascent of a climb I had discovered while hiking and looking around with my daughter Katie. It's on the Sonora Pass Highway, near the Columns of the Giants. And it's very unusual. Basalt columns which, presumably over eons, mother nature has turned on end. It was an eerie lead, onsight, dead vertical, but with huge holds. When I finished I thought it was strong 5.8. The other four people with me followed and thought 5.7 (the holds are big, and it's only 40 or 45 feet high). It also required some interesting trundling.

We called it Hexentric:




















Of the folks who post here, I know Munge has led this too. Munge, would you post some comments about and photos of this weird route if you've got them (even though, obviously, this part of this thread is on the wrong forum!)?

squiddo

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Re: Not So Far Back in the Day: More Scanned Slides
« Reply #39 on: February 11, 2011, 08:54:16 AM »
On Labor Day, 1999, I did the first ascent of a climb I had discovered while hiking and looking around with my daughter Katie. It's on the Sonora Pass Highway, near the Columns of the Giants. And it's very unusual. Basalt columns which, presumably over eons, mother nature has turned on end. It was an eerie lead, onsight, dead vertical, but with huge holds. When I finished I thought it was strong 5.8. The other four people with me followed and thought 5.7 (the holds are big, and it's only 40 or 45 feet high). It also required some interesting trundling.

We called it Hexentric:




















Of the folks who post here, I know Munge has led this too. Munge, would you post some comments about and photos of this weird route if you've got them (even though, obviously, this part of this thread is on the wrong forum!)?


The pictures of this climb always made it look surreal. These do no less justice
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Every climb gets 3 stars from me until I climb it.
-Anonymous spirited climber