Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Super skiing!


YEE-HAW! :-)


Faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locamotive, able to leap tall buildings in a single bound it's, . . Closing day at Alta! I went up to hit up the fun with another person who shall only be known as "snow queen". Fun times was had by all, the cape appears to have super mogul-power as I was doing quite well on the many bumps, with only about 3 wipeouts all day which for me is a record low.

Monday, April 24, 2006

Xtreme climbing for an un-Xtreme girl

I know none of you climbing types will be impressed by the recounting my adventures on a 5.7 crack, but indulge me, ok? I’ve only been climbing twice and the last time was nearly two years ago so what may seem an effete sissy boy climb for some is pretty cruxy for me. Xtreme is all a matter of perspective.

Until yesterday, my climbing experience=a day at the Slips and a day at Dogwood with the novice group at Climb for Life. It’s not that I don’t like climbing, but it’s hard to convince experienced climbers to take on a novice, so I just stick to backpacking and road running (and pretty happily, I might add). But I’m always up for the adventure (and perhaps the embarrassment) so I was excited—and a little apprehensive--for the proposed ascent up Beckey’s Wall. Erin and Bobby arrived before me and Will, so they were already up the first pitch. That meant that I was belaying Will. He’s either really trusting or very confident in his climbing skills—I’m guessing the latter. Of course, as soon as I started up, it started raining and the wind started blowing. I was a bit iffy about the whole thing and I was crying from the dust in my eyes (I promise, it was the dust!) but I kept at it.

Since my previous climbing experiences were with other novices, I was used to climbing with lots of verbal encouragement. As I started up the second pitch, I could hear everyone talking above me, but no one was talking to me. I yelled at them, telling them I needed some company and everyone responded with the appropriate climbing affirmations. I think I’m more of a beginner than the climb demands, but with a lot of cursing, I made it up (with horrible technique and the bruised knees to prove it).





Thank goodness Will is such a sensitive, pink-shirt wearing guy, as he made me feel far less incompetent than I actually was.



After the climb, Erin and Bobby graciously filled us up with burritos and brownies and we watched Return2Sender, which provided me with lots of tips for crack climbing. I even learned that I don’t need positive reinforcement from anyone but myself: “Come on Didier, come on.”

Friday, April 21, 2006

Week's excitement

No photos so I'll try to make the prose colorful.

Boston showed some pleasant and unpleasant sides of itself this week. Tuesday night's bike ride on the trails of the Middlesex Fells reacquainted me and Stacey to trails where you're likely to hit trees and then fall on pointy rocks. Or slip on roots and fall on pointy rocks. Or slip on pointy rocks and crash into trees. But in our 40 minutes of exploration before darkness, we also found some very pleasant smooth doubletrack where I could race the dog and win. Sometimes.

On Wednesday night, I volunteered at Bikes Not Bombs down in Roxbury. It is great to get my hands dirty taking apart bikes that have been donated to the organization, and helping out neighborhood kids with their bike projects. Check out their webpage for more information on what they do - www.bikesnotbombs.org. Afterwards, I cruised down the street to Doyle's Pub where Stacey's frisbee league gathers after their Wednesday night games. As I was parking my pink and purple fixed gear with the dinosaur head on the handlebars, a neighborhood kid came up and grabbed my seat and said something about taking my bike. I held on. The kid's friend was riding a bike and told me I should really just give his friend the bike. I held on, keeping the bike between me and him. This lasted a couple of minutes, neither of us letting go of the bike, then some people came out of the pub and the kids took off. I locked up my bike with shaking hands and went inside. I am a bit surprised at myself that I didn't get scared and let him have the bike, but for some reason I didn't feel too threatened - I did't feel like he was going to swing at me or pull a weapon. If he had, I probably would have dropped the bike.

Last night Stacey and I scouted out another popular area for trail biking, the Blue Hills reservation in Milton. That too promises to provide a good selection of biking fun, though it's harder to get to from our side of town, and we had even less time to ride before dark.

Navigation around the big city, whether on foot, bike, subway, or automobile, is a constant source of amusement. It has been as exciting to get to our recreation venues as it has been to recreate once we're there.
That's all for now.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Escalante in the Spring


M. and I decided it was time for some desert hiking. Unlike most of the time, it was pretty cold all day and there was an extra color I'm not used to down in the desert: Green. We hiked up the Gulch, going upstream with blooming plants, green grass, a high flowing stream, and evidence of recent flooding found in the bent down reeds, flattened plant life, and tangled grass hanging at waist-height off of more stout things. The weather could not have been better and the 10-mile hike in was splendid. After droping packs and setting camp we traveled up a side canyon to see an arch and frolic about.


We topped off the trip with a visit to the Hell's Backbone Grill. Its not what you'd call a dirtbag sort of resturant, even though you can definitely dress like one in there and have nobody care, but after a long hike some gormet food is pretty good. My reccomend: Before you drive home, go in for a cup of coffee and a wiskey and black pepper chocolate bread pudding, which will run you about 10 bucks.

-w&m

Ben and Will's Bugaboo trip is planned!



We just arranged the booking for one week in the summer, in the hut at the glacier in the Bugaboo spires. Above is a picture of Snowpatch spire. Stay tuned for the trip report coming in July...

-w

Monday, April 17, 2006

Xtreme Team 2006

Well, I finally put together a trip report from this year's Xpedition. I did it in a blog cuz it seemed like the easiest way to put together a webpage trip report, ..turns out it wasn't the greatest, but it worked, so here it is...
Xtreme Team Xpedition 2006

Thursday, April 06, 2006

The Gnar and the Not-So-Gnar

I'm posting this partly to make the point that practically anything can constitiute and adventure. And in making this point, encourage others to post their experiences here, even if they are not skiing or climbing-related.

As the Wasatch dumps what might be the biggest storm of the year, here I sit alone in the Decatur Holiday Inn in Atlanta for an academic meeting on bifurcation routes to bursting in neuronal systems. This three-day planed bivouac is no recreational matter: The schedule starts at 8 am and goes till 22:00 hours for two days. Talks Talks and Talks, and Talks... and then poster presentations, including my own. I am glad its only two days... Anyway, I hope all you are enjoying the new snow...

Atlanta seems like a pretty cool city. The peach trees are budding flowers in the warm and humid spring. The buildings are old here with black streaks about the brick-lined windows from all the rain they get here. Its something you dont see in old buildings in SLC... There is kudzu and swamps and sense of history that is older than the Gateway stripmall, the constitution, or slavery. It feels so good to be in a city where the culture is diverse: Black syntax and southern dialects comingle with golfing tourists for the Augusta masters tournament.
For dinner I went down the street to a little belgan-style brew pub. I had some belgan beers and fish and chips. Note that 3 belgan beers > 3 out-of-state beers > 3 utah beers => Will is loaded.

Have fun with the snow...

-w

How to get on a speeding 'cross bike



Lesson courtesy of Ben. I found this picture on the web one day when feeling sad that I had missed out on cyclocross season and wondering how my friends (and my old bike) had done this year.
The photo begs a discussion of proper technique. Is Andrew McLean's advice apropos in this case - i.e., "try to get all your limbs facing in the same direction"? In any case, it's good to see that the old red steed is still rolling, including the plastic juice-jar fenders.
As for me, I spend about 1/2 hour a day baiting Boston traffic and then trying not to get squashed.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Josh the Wasatch Sasquatch Sighted in Porter Fork

The abomitable snowman himself was seen in porter fork last sunday. Its hard to miss Josh when he is coming right at you as can be seen at this link
  • The Sasquatch Himself!!!!!
  • ...


    Anyway.... Josh, Bobby, and I all headed up to porter fork last sunday. I think this might be one of my favorite places in the Wasatch. It was a lesurely day, plodding along in the warmth of spring in heavy sticky new snow but I'm not complaining. At the start Bobby said he was not feeling well and wanted to turn back. This sort of situation requires subterfuge. I told him that the view of the run "lies just beyond that tree" and "you should decide what you want to do when you get up there". The old carrot and stick tactic... After several iterations of this tactic we all got near the top with a view of the porter fork limstone wall that would make for some great sport climbing in the summer. Splitting the wall was a nice chute on a shady northwest aspect. I pointed the chute out to the team and muttered some passing comment about how it would be cool to someday ski it. Bobby spied chute and the fategue turned to excitement as he piped up "I'll ski it!" I said that I would watch and film. Then Josh said he wanted to do it. "Fuck it" I said, "I guess I'll go up there to". I mean how hard can straightlining be. I mean its kind of defined by what you are not doing: turning, which I've only sort of got down, so not turning wouldnt do any harm. It turned out that I did to some turns and a fair bit of sideslipping but anyway...


    What ensued was a great day of skiing. The following links are to films of the event...

  • 1


  • 2


  • 3 (rocket man=josh)


  • 4


  • 5


  • 5


  • 6



  • -will

    Tuesday, April 04, 2006

    Bushwack curse

    The Bushwack curse struck again yesterday. For those of you unfamiliar with this curse, beware, the curse strikes Margaret whenever she tries to climb bushwack (it is not currently known whether Bobby has to be present and have driven, but that clearly strengthens the curse). I sit at the base of the climb, put on my harness, someone decides to lead when all of a sudden BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP the Search and Rescue pager goes off with an injured skier in Big Cottonwood. This requires me to do a crazy car shuttle only to get there and find out there is nothing for me to do. (2 weeks ago it was an injured person who was flown on LifeFlight, yesterday it was an out of bounds avalanche by Brighton- see today's avy report)

    The curse continues, in fact, the warning signs have been there, yet I chose not to heed them "hmm, it's a bluebird monday with high avy danger, maybe I should drive myself, . . ." The curse appears to be active only on Bushwack, as I have sucessfully climbed the Dam Wall in BCC without such complications.