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cowpoke
climber
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Aug 11, 2009 - 08:28am PT
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those two Scotland in winter pictures are tremendous...cold-sweating fear just looking at em...tremendous.
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Saltydog
climber
NC
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Aug 11, 2009 - 11:12am PT
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Aug 11, 2009 - 11:25am PT
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Great cool thread for a hot day!
Reilly, I was asking because that one shot below your OP doesn't say if it was on Rainier also...
My shot is from the top of Serpentine Ridge 5.9, Dragontail Peak.
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Fritz
Trad climber
Hagerman, ID
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Reilly: Too great a thread! Deserves another shot on the forum.
I was over on the Willis Wall side twice in the late 70's early 80's, on my way to Liberty Ridge. First trip, after driving from Idaho, we camped on the glacier well below Liberty Ridge. My buddy refused to go any higher the next morning, after spending the night listening to rock fall and ice falls on Willis Wall.
I had been in the Hayes Range in Alaska a few years before and considered that side of Ranier to be "Alaska scale."
Speaking of timing icefalls: after we backed off the North Ridge of Deborah in the Hayes Range, our next project was to climb its very well defended neighbor Mt. Hess, from the Northeast side. I had figured out a "pretty safe" route off it from up-high on Deborah and we had a "pretty bold" route up it.
The only "slight problem" was a very active icefall that I watched for most of a day, before our climb. It dumped a city block of ice about every 3 hours. I convinced my buddies that since we would only be under it for about an hour: all would be well.
The two days we were on the mountain, the icefall never dumped anything. That was good, since I lost my "pretty safe" descent route in a storm and we ended up descending right under the icefall.
Timing is everything!
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Jingy
Social climber
Nowhere
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cool pics above.. night B&W.. great stuff.. too bad everything looks so very cold!!!
Baltic!
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Dick Erb
climber
June Lake, CA
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Quite an impressive undertaking Reilly. I am reminded of the naivety of my youth when I thought that the difficulty or seriousness of a route could be described with a few numbers. I also remember the short winter days in the Northwest when the daylight decreases to about eight hours per day.
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IntheFog
climber
Mostly the next place
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Mar 10, 2010 - 09:52am PT
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Old guys, ice, B & W's and dogs. What more do you need on Wednesday morning?
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cleo
Social climber
Berkeley, CA
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Dec 17, 2010 - 12:19am PT
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Whoa! Missed this one the first time around!
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Fritz
Trad climber
Choss Creek, ID
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Dec 17, 2010 - 10:05am PT
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cool bump
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PellucidWombat
Mountain climber
Berkeley, CA
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Jan 23, 2013 - 03:43pm PT
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Another bump. Bump again for pre-digital night shots!
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