Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Best Of Both Worlds, by Chris Thomas

I was truly torn on what to do for the weekend.  On the one hand I had just been to a stellar limestone crag in NE Utah for the first time and was desperate to go back and finish up a couple of routes I had tried.  One the other hand it was mid-august, 100 degrees in Salt Lake, and the idea of going ice climbing at 12,000 feet in the Tetons seemed super worthy as well.

I think that’s one of the reasons climbing has captivated me for some many years now.  Ice climbing in the mountains and sport climbing at the crag are worlds apart in terms of the experience they offer and the skills required.  I would most certainly be better at one or the other if I could just focus and commit myself to one discipline.  But the variety and unique but related challenges of doing both are just too much fun.

  After talking with my friend JT, it was decided.  We’d drive to the Hoop and hopefully send our sport projects.  After that we’d pack up, drive to the Tetons, catch a few hours of rest and then start hiking.  I was set on soloing the Black Ice Couloir, JT had his sights on Middle Teton’s NW Ice couloir.

Conditions at the Hoop were perfect!  At over 9,000 feet and shady, it’s streaked and pocketed limestone walls offer a perfect summer retreat while the rest of Utah is blazing hot.





Success!

The rock at the Hoop is razor sharp – you only get a couple of tries before you’re bleeding from your fingertips.  By mid-afternoon we had finished up and hiked back to the car.

Next up was the 5 hour drive to the Tetons.  We got some dinner in Moose and waited till dark so we could grab a couple hours of sleep.  The trick is to time your start so you arrive at the base of the climb at first light.  I left at midnight, JT decided to sleep in until about 3AM.



The approach to the lower saddle went quickly.  As I navigated the Valhalla Traverse via headlamp I started getting really excited – the Black Ice Couloir has been on my to do list since the year I started climbing.

I guess I got up a little too early – it was still pitch black when I got to the base of the route.  I waited in the dark for about an hour.  At first twilight I started up the rock pitch, and by the time I got to the ice in the couloir I could put my headlamp away.


The climbing was easy and low angle, but the ice was bullet hard!  Front pointing up a few thousand feet of gully ice is a hell of a calf work out!



After topping out on the lower saddle I jogged back to the car.  Running down the steep trail is hard on the knees, but I was ready for tacos and beer.  JT met me in the parking lot – despite his later start he had crushed his objective and was already relaxing and taking in the views.

All in all a great weekend.  Variety is the spice of life!

Chris Thomas

Monday, July 23, 2012

Work Trip to Utah: 15 hikes, 80 walking miles, 17,000 vertical feet and 2,000+ driving miles

I'm still writing a book on hiking in Utah and, though we took a big research trip to southern Utah in March, I still had something like 70% of the book's hikes left to do. So a few week ago, we took another trip to Utah to knock out another several hikes. We had a lot of other things to take care of on the trip, and it was brutally hot (triple-digit highs), so I ended up only getting 14 hikes finished. Still, I covered a lot of miles (~2000 in the car and ~80 on foot) and took a lot of photos.


1 .  Waterfall Canyon, Ogden: 2.4 miles/ 1200' gain/ 94 degrees F




2. Indian Trail, Ogden: 2.7 miles/ 800' gain/ 94 degrees F





3. Skull Crack Canyon, Causey Reservoir, Ogden Canyon: 4.7 miles/ 700' gain/ 96 degrees F




4. Ogden Overlook, Snowbasin Resort: 5.3 miles/ 1200' gain/ 96 degrees F




5. White Rock Bay, Antelope Island: 7.3 miles/ 700' gain/  105 degrees F!!!




6. Frary Peak, (the tallest point on) Antelope Island: 6.6 miles/ 2200' gain/ 105 degrees F!!!




7. Wheeler Creek, Ogden Canyon: 3.9 miles/ 720' gain/ 102 degrees F




8. Mt. Aire, Millcreek Canyon, Salt Lake City Area: 3.3 miles/ 2200' gain/ 102 degrees F




9. Dog Lake from Upper Big Water, Millcreek Canyon, Salt Lake City Area: 5.2 miles/ 1300' gain/ 102 degrees F




10. Notch Loop, Uinta Mountains: 5.7 miles/ 1040' gain/ much cooler




11. Lake Country Loop, Uinta Mountains: 7.5 miles/ 1000' gain/ much cooler




12. Amethyst Basin and Lake, Uinta Mountains: 10.9 miles/ 2600' gain/ much cooler




13. Notch Mountain Trail from Bald Mountain Pass to Trial Lake Trail Head, Uinta Mountains: 9.8 miles/ 1000' gain/ much cooler




14. Bald Mountain, Uinta Mountains: 2.8 miles/ 1205' gain/ extreme! wind and blowing rain on the descent





slira


Friday, July 20, 2012

New Routes and Man Tricks

I've been quite laden with work this summer, particularly the type of work that requires a lot of driving and time away from our home in Wyoming. However, during the weeks we have been home, we've been getting out here and there to put in some new routes. Though bolting beats me up severely, it doesn't seem to wear out the men as much, and they demonstrate this fact regularly in the form of evening circus tricks. 

Here are some images of our recent times up in "them mountains over there."
 He's not scared. Are you?

 Forest fires and smokey skies

 Route parts

Bolts with a positive message

 David sampling his new work

 ...David sampling another piece of his own work

 David sampling a piece of my work