Once Upon a Mountain Once Upon a Mountain
Transcription
Once Upon a Mountain Once Upon a Mountain
Vol. 17, No. 1 ● Winter 2003 Once Once Upon Upon a a Mountain Mountain page page 15 15 Consolation Consolation Hut: Hut: Asulkan Asulkan Cabin Cabin page page 7 7 Absolute Swiss Quality T H E A B C O F L I F E S AV I N G : Life size A: SWITCH ON SEARCH MODE B: FOLLOW DISPLAY INSTRUCTIONS C: RESCUE Locating people buried under avalanches is faster and more reliable with MAMMUT Barryvox. The basic functions have been optimized for simple operation. Technical data: small and light (170 g including batteries), approx. 60 m range, can transmit for over 300 hours. Additional functions for professionals. For further information: Jim Sandford, P.O. Box 871, 38096 Clarke Drive, CDN-Squamish BC VON3GO Phone +1 604 892 2073, Fax +1 604 892 2075, sandford@telus.net www.mammut.ch The Alpine Club of Canada Corporate Supporters The ACC thanks the following for their support, and encourages you to consider them and the advertisers in this newsletter the next time you purchase goods or services of the type they offer. Corporate Sponsors Explore Magazine Helly Hansen Marmot Mountain Hardwear The North Face Corporate Members Adventure Medical Kits Alberta Sport, Recreation, Parks & Wildlife Foundation Association of Canadian Mountain Guides Backcountry Access Black Diamond Equipment Canadian Avalanche Association Forty Below GearUp Sport (Canmore, AB) IBEX Outdoor Clothing Katadyn La Sportiva Leki Mammut Mountain Culture at The Banff Centre Mountain Safety Research (MSR) Patagonia Petzl The Hostel Shop (Calgary, AB) Therm-a-Rest TUA Ski Yamnuska (Canmore, AB) The Alpine Club of Canada Box 8040, Canmore, Alberta, Canada T1W 2T8 Phone # (403) 678-3200 Fax # (403) 678-3224 info@AlpineClubofCanada.ca www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca David Toole, President Rod Plasman, Secretary Gord Currie, Treasurer Cam Roe, VP Activities Peter Muir, VP Access / Environment Carl Hannigan, VP Facilities Bob Sandford, VP Mountain Culture David Zemrau, VP Services Mike Mortimer, Director, External Relations Peter Fuhrmann, Honorary President Bruce Keith, Executive Director Submissions to The Gazette are welcome! The deadline for the Spring issue of the Gazette is April 15. If possible, please save your submission in digital format and e-mail it to gazette@AlpineClubofCanada.ca Otherwise, feel free to type or handwrite it, making sure it’s double spaced and legible and mail it to the address above. Please be sure to include complete contact information with your submission. Gazette Editor: Bonnie Hamilton Assistant Editor: Paul Thompson Copy Editor: Lynn Martel Publishing Coordinator: Audrey Wheeler Layout & Production: Suzan Chamney Advertising rate sheet available upon request. Please direct all advertising inquiries to Bruce Keith, National Office (403) 678-3202 or by e-mail to: bkeith@AlpineClubofCanada.ca Letter from the Editor Recently, I saw Yvon Chouinard participate on a panel of speakers discussing corporate responsibility towards the environment. His simple yet uncompromising view is that we all impact the environment at every turn and therefore, we should pay for this use personally over time. Chouinard proposes that companies annually donate one percent of their gross revenues to environmental causes of their choosing. This idea of taxing ourselves, coupled with his reverent tone when speaking of his passion for extreme landscapes, left me thinking about the ancient concept of tithing. A tithe, as it is used in certain traditions, is the practice of giving one tenth of your income to a religious organization. Climbers though, often find their spirituality more in the mountains than in a formal place of worship. Many of us get as much out of watching a tree grow in the wilds as sitting in an urban, manmade church. Alone, among close friends or with like-minded strangers, we walk through high alpine meadows overflowing with wildflowers, the mountains rising majestically overhead and experience our religion directly rather than having it explained. It is truly a spiritual understanding. The mountains imbue us with the basic tenets of the other great traditions of the world – compassion, truth and humility. A formal place of worship is as much about community as reciting scriptures and following sacred rules. In similar fashion, our alpine experience is also based on cohesive friendships. Friendships found in the mountains that have shaped our lives, our perceptions of the world and showed us who we are. Perhaps it is time we formally acknowledge our commitment to this “Church of the Outdoors”. It is our obligation to protect the environment that gives us so much. Other religions believe it is God’s desire for your tithe to have a hand in seeing that you are spiritually fed. It is a matter of faith not law. Perhaps we climbers and hikers should also give our tithe, of time or money, to grassroots environmental organizations that will bring us closer to our church, drawing it closer to ourselves and in turn protecting it for future generations so that they may also renew their spirits in these places so sacred to us. Bonnie Hamilton What’s Inside... 3 Editorial Letter from the Editor Heidi’s Hints 4 Facilities Consolation Hut 6 Special Events The Wonder of Water Festival d’Escalade 6 Mountaineering Help! National Topographic Map System Needs Changes Challenge in the Selkirks Ramparts Roundabout Across the Roof of Canada Rutscblock 15 Mountain Culture New Mandate for Publications Committee Once Upon a Mountain John Clark Awarded the Order of Canada Mountain Forum Painting Peaks: It’s More than Pop Music 18 Section News Mt. Sir Sandford The Adirondack Stewardship Award 20 National News Clemenceau to Columbia Traverse Fall ’02 Board of Directors Meeting Executive Directors’ Slate 24 Classified Ads What’s Outside... Front cover: Mike Simpson near Mt. Longstaff: photo by Leon Kubbernus Front inset: Asulkan Hut; photo from ACC collection Canada Post Agreement Number 40009034 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 3 Consolation Hut Heidi’s Hints Dear Heidi, story & photo by Lynn Martel I have been asked to join a week-long ski tour. Although I have been out a fair bit on day trips; winter camping and longer traverses, I haven’t done. I was wondering if you could give me some tips for our traverse so I can impress the guys who have invited me. Trying to get a date Dear Trying, There’s no doubt the best way to have these guys begging for your phone number is to break trail out front while they plod along behind, gasping to keep up. But, in case your fitness isn’t there, maybe you can impress them with your all around competency in the mountains. So, let’s start with your gear and what to bring. Obviously, you’ve been out a bit this winter and your boots feel good with skis and bindings that work. This is important and often overlooked even by experienced skiers. Bring along a small tool kit with wire, pocket knife, pliers, extra parts for your binding and some duct tape. Your first aid kit should at least include, again, duct tape, which can be used in place of moleskin (it’s cheaper, less bulky and sticks better), packets of salt (an antiseptic when mixed with water), butterfly band aids (used on cuts instead of stitching or gluing), matches, a triangular bandage, sewing kit and syringe. These are just some suggestions; the best thing thing to do, if you have time, is take a first aid course. The most important thing when winter camping is staying dry and warm, otherwise you’ll be miserable. This is best accomplished by layering; start with a layer that will help move moisture away from your skin, followed by a second layer that will provide warmth and finally a wind and snow proof barrier. An excellent tip for spring, when the snow is sticking to your skins underfoot, making it feel like you’re wearing stilletos, is to spray them with a silicone lubricant. Make sure you put the skins on first or they may not stick.You can even spray the tops of your skis to keep the snow sliding off and avoid more extra weight. You may need to do this every two or three days, so if your trip is longer you may want to bring a can with you. Definately one to impress the boys. Heidi 4 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 I couldn’t really say I was lost, because I had a really good idea where I was. I simply wasn’t nearly close enough to where I wanted to be. I was on a very rough, little travelled logging road with potholes capable of swallowing a family of moose, 31 kilometres deep into the towering cedars and eye-level devils club of remote B.C. bush. I had suspected a few kilometres back – as I had urged my little Mazda hatchback forward in second gear, occasionally speeding up to 30 km per hour – that this road hadn’t been traveled in quite some time. Na, I’d told myself, this has to be the right road and since by that point I’d been following it for 17 km I stubbornly didn’t want to contemplate the notion that I might have been going the wrong way for 40 minutes. So I had continued forward. After bouncing and lurching along for another half hour, I finally accepted my route-finding failure. This surrender came only after I had scraped the belly of my car on the bank of a metre-deep trench while crossing a single lane wooden bridge that spanned a turbulent creek – only to find the trench on the far side was twice as deep and wide, and indeed, impossible to cross in my vehicle. So, it was while I slowly reversed across the bridge, feeling very alone and vulnerable, that my imagination suddenly fixed upon the dozens of enormous mounds of bear scat I’d seen in the previous hour and I had finally accepted that I was not on the road I wanted to be on. Had I taken the right turn – which had actually been the right fork – shortly after leaving pavement, I would have been boarding a helicopter with several other eager mountaineers being flown into the spectacularly remote Trident/Neptune group, in the Northern Selkirks, to help tear down the General Mountaineering Camp (GMC) and bag a peak or two in the process. But no, as I nervously stooped to pee next to the scant safety of my little car, I knew I’d missed the flight and was simply alone, deep in the B.C. woods, somewhere in the vicinity of a bear as big as a mastodon. Exhausted and eager to be on pavement again before dark, I retreated, dodging the minefield of potholes back to the Mica Road. Relieved I hadn’t punctured my car or my kidneys, I drove back to Revelstoke, only to learn the first restaurant I approached that August Saturday evening had just run out of food. No, nothing special was going on in town, the manager insisted, the streets – and restaurants were simply busier than usual. Zombie-like after more than nine hours of driving, I queued up a few doors down the block and waited 25 minutes to be seated at a table for one beside the swinging kitchen doors. My server could not have possibly brought me a glass of wine fast enough, but after a thankfully yummy salad and plate of pasta, I drove off to a nearby campsite. No sooner had I crawled into my bag did a light as bright as an operating table’s pierced the fabric of my tent, noisily followed by a train thundering along the very nearby track. Utterly drained, I fell asleep. Late the following afternoon, I sat quietly contemplating my surroundings at Asulkan Hut, a solid wooden cabin perched on a bench at the uppermost reaches of tree line in Rogers Pass. Asulkan Hut was not where I wanted to be, but I had decided that morning I would make it my consolation trip. The last time I had stayed at Asulkan Hut had been a dream come true trip. I’d always wanted to spend New Year’s Eve in a backcountry hut and to ring in 2001 I’d joined 13 old and new friends there for three nights and days of skiing and laughing. This time however, I was at the same hut because I’d just missed out on a dream come true trip. The very idea of the GMC has always been intoxicating for me. To spend an entire week meeting new people, climbing mountains and exploring an unfamiliar landscape so remote it took over an hour on a logging road and a helicopter flight to reach, is my kind of dream trip. The kind of trip that is, at this point of my writing career, far beyond my means. To be invited to volunteer my time and energy to help tear down the camp in such a spectacular location was a dream come true. And I’d blown it by forgetting to bring the directions to the helipad. Throughout my hike up to the hut I’d replayed the futility of the previous day’s drive in my mind, searching for some great cosmic reason fate had kept me from that camp, but I found none. As the sun slid down toward the western peaks, I coaxed myself to accept the beauty of my surroundings without obsessing over the place I was not. There have been times when I was happy to be alone to savour the peace and solitude of the mountains with only the company of a good book, but this was not one of those times. I needed company to help dissolve my disappointment, in my predicament and myself. I needed company to laugh about it. But there was no denying I was not where I wanted to be, and my imagination – although it had no memory or previous knowledge to reference – was fixed somewhere up in the Northern Selkirks. Still, I knew I had to be grateful. People from all over the world travel to see the mountains of western Canada and there Diny Harrison lives for the mountains. As the first North American woman to become an internationally certified full mountain guide and member of the International Federation of Mountain Guides, she climbs and guides throughout the world. As a Canadian Mountain Holiday Heli-Ski Guide, she leads groups down remote, virgin snow covered peaks in the winter. And as a parttime artist, she silk screens mountain landscapes in her spare time. So it’s only natural that when she dresses for work, she prefers clothes that are as at home in the mountains as she is herself. Photo|Brad White Namely, the Sharp Point Jacket. She knows that on nasty early morning descents, she can rely on the WINDSTOPPER® Soft Shell, a revolutionary new fabric that’s highly resistant to wind, rain and snow. And she knows she can rely on the anatomically shaped soft shell design to move with her so she can be comfortable among the peaks year round, whether she’s scaling a summit in the Selkirks or silk screening one in her basement studio. It’s no wonder people who work outdoors for a living are the inspiration for the clothing that works for them. The Sharp Point Jacket. Count on it.™ WINDSTOPPER and design are registered trademarks of W. L. Gore &Associates, Inc Is it any surprise a woman who climbs the Canadian Rockies, skis the Canadian Rockies and silk screens the Canadian Rockies gravitates to sharp points? marmot.com I was after hiking up at the spur of the moment, spending a night at a refuge as charming as Asulkan Hut. Like the Trident/Neptune group, this place too once took days on horseback to reach. Did the mountain explorers of a century ago dream of the possibility of jogging up to a mountain refuge, on the spur of the moment, for just one night, from their home hundreds of kilometres away? Funny, I thought how much I’d love to spend a week or two on horseback to slowly go anywhere in the mountains. Inside the hut I pulled out my food to prepare dinner. One by one I opened the windows to let in the mountain music of tumbling creeks, wind rushing down the glacier and the distant rattle of rockfall and I shed my disappointment just as I’d shed the sounds of highway traffic as I hiked up the trail. Then I heard voices as two men reached the top of the trail by the outhouse. No sooner had they come in the front door was I reminded how strangers sharing the same wooden dinner table in a hut automatically share similar passions, priorities and values – the same qualities that brought them to the hut in the first place. Marvelling at the sunset, I realized I wasn’t on a consolation trip, that being among the peaks of Rogers Pass was a dream come true trip. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 5 The Wonder of Water Help! The National Topographic Map System Needs Changes United Nations (UN) has proclaimed 2003 the International Year of Fresh Water. Canadians are making plans to use the UN Year of Fresh Water to launch a two-year celebration of the importance of water to our cultural and ecological heritage. In 2003 and 2004, Canadians will be celebrating how water shapes the land upon which we live and how it defines us as a nation. Sponsored by the federal Department of the Environment and Parks Canada, the two-year Wonder of Water (WoW) initiative will engage Canadians and their guests in the understanding and appreciation of how community social well-being and economic vitality are sustained by water and the part it plays in creating and sustaining a healthy environment and in fashioning spectacular landscapes. For further information visit the WoW website at www.wonderofwater.ca If your section is interested in planning events that celebrate the importance of water in our mountains, please contact the Chair of the UN Year of Fresh Water and Wonder of Water Celebrations, Bob Sandford, at sandford@telusplanet.net Le Festival d’Escalade sur Glace de Saint-Boniface The St. Boniface Section of the Alpine Club Canada and Club d’Escalade de SaintBoniface will host its third annual Ice Climbing Festival and Competition February 21 thru 23. The competition will take place on one of Canada’s highest free-standing ice towers. Two events will be featured: Speed and Difficulty. Great prizes, ice climbing clinics and social events will make this ice festival a truly fun experience. We hope to see you there! For more information contact André Mahé through the St. Boniface Section or visit www.cesb.net 6 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 by Murray Toft No doubt you caress and cherish your old dog-eared, hole-ridden, taped, laminated, 1:50,000 series 100foot contour interval maps – with good reason. We took these for granted as an inviolate navigation standard. However, in recent years the on-going process of metric conversion by Natural Resources Canada has left us with a less user-friendly result. Maps get more costly while the information gets poorer. First, there was the dysfunctional blunder of combining both a 20-metre and 40-m contour interval on the same map sheet. You might remember in the early 90s when at 2000 m the interval changed, resulting in the alpine becoming totally ‘softened’. In many cases micro terrain was completely lost. Now that we’ve crossed that speed bump, the current practice is to adopt a 40-m convention for the entire map, thus eliminating the confusion around tree-line. Although this would seem like a good step forward, the process practically eliminated micro terrain features from valley floor to summit. Remember the good old days when we kidded about the ‘99.5-ft cliff ’ lurking somewhere out there between 100-ft contour lines? Well, that cliff just got bigger by 31 ft! And that’s just too much detail to be lost. If the conversion standard had been a 20-m interval it wouldn’t be necessary for you to send a short e-mail to: Jean Cooper Acting Director General Mapping Services Branch Natural Resources Canada e-mail: JCooper@NRCan.gc.ca But now it is. Please ask her to adopt a 20-m contour interval on our 1:50,000 NTS maps for the Rocky Mountain region. Let her know that your life depends on accurate and complete map products. Let her know this is in the interest of mountain safety and that the 40-m interval does not provide sufficient detail for your navigational needs. She claims to be customer service oriented. Many voices will encourage her to deliver. Thanks for your help. Murray Toft chairs the ACC Safety Committee. Challenge in the Selkirks by Paul Geddes This year my summer trip to the mountains included the opportunity to participate in The North Face Leadership Course. This course was set up by The Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) several years ago and has been improved upon with knowledge gained from year to year. It is one of the best opportunities to gain general mountaineering leadership training within the Canadian climbing community and is presently offered in both summer and winter versions. Each summer ten course participants, representing a cross section of climbers from the ACC’s 18 sections spread out across Canada from Victoria to Montreal, meet at the Club’s annual General Mountaineering Camp (GMC). This year, the rock ridges of Trident and Dolphin provided challenging routes for short roping, while the glaciers leading up to Rhea were the classroom for ice and snow work. With the ages of participants spanning decades, the sharing of experiences added to the learning opportunities encountered during each phase of the course. The requirements for being accepted into the course are that participants have at least basic mountaineering skills on rock, snow and ice and are also active in leading trips for their sections or the national club. The course goal is to have graduates pass on to other ACC members the skills they have learned by continuing to lead trips. Many participants have gone on to become amateur leaders at the GMC and other national camps. Association of Canadian Mountain Guides members Cyril Shokoples and Helen Sovdat have applied their extensive mountain knowledge to develop a curriculum that encompasses a wide spectrum of skills. Each day participants improve their ability to make good decisions in potentially bad situations. From glacier travel to traversing rock ridges, belaying to lowering, both hard and soft skills are taught and practiced. This year Bob Stirling from Calgary acted as amateur leader to give an experienced trip leader’s perspective. Preparation for the course begins months earlier with an impressive list of reading materials downloaded from Cyril’s web site at www.rescuedynamics.ca. Another must read is Outdoor Leadership, written by John Graham and published by The Mountaineers. Arriving at the camp photo by Patricia Daum physically fit and mentally prepared goes a long way toward ensuring that you will get the most out of your experience. Aspiring leaders interested in joining the program in August 2003 need to submit their applications to the Canmore office by May 1st. It’s a week well spent that will serve both you and the Club for years to come. August 2002 participants: ● Peter Woodsworth, Vancouver Section ● Mark Earle, Prince George Section ● Gary Page, Okanagan Section ● Geoff Ruttan, Rocky Mountain Section ● Gabrielle Savard, Calgary Section (camp doctor) ● Bruce DeAeth, Central Alberta Section ● Clive Mullins, Ottawa Section ● Christopher Meyrick, Montreal Section ● Maria Michails, Montreal Section ● Paul Geddes, Toronto Section (article author) Many thanks to The North Face for their generous sponsorship of this program and the fine vests we each received. www.thenorthface.com Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 7 Ramparts Roundabout photo by Nancy Hansen by Andy Haden The account of this trip begins with a picture that’s probably at least 60 years old. The picture in question hangs in the Wates-Gibson Hut, which is located at the south end of the Ramparts in Jasper National Park’s Tonquin Valley. As a frequent visitor to the hut throughout his career, Peter Amann, Association of Canadian Mountain Guides (ACMG) member and long-time Jasper guide, was fascinated with the picture. It appears to have been taken sometime in the 1930s or early 1940s and it shows the peaks surrounding Icefall Lake, on the B.C. side of the Ramparts. In 1999, Peter converted his fascination into action and led three companions on a circumnavigation of the Ramparts via Icefall Lake and Scarp Pass. Peter decided to repeat the experience in 2002 with the 8 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 support of the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC), by agreeing to guide the Icefall Lake Traverse. In 1999, I happened to be at the hut when Peter completed the first trip and I heard much of his account first-hand. When I found out that he was going to lead a second trip in 2002, my response was immediate: “Where do I sign up?” Peter and I met fellow ACC members Greg Davidson of Calgary and Jim Cossitt of Kalispell, Montana in Jasper on the morning of Sept. 7. We spent the next eight days together on the ‘Ramparts Roundabout.’ The trip began at the Astoria River trailhead and continued past the east side of Amethyst Lakes, before turning west to pass Moat Lake into Mount Robson Provincial Park. Years from now, when chance encounter brings the four of us together again, no doubt we will share memories of all eight days. I’m inclined to think that much of the conversation will linger on the third and fifth days. The third day started with an ascent of the saddle between Tonquin Ridge and Barbican Peak. Expansive views of the headwaters of the Fraser River greeted us from the top. Another hour or two of easy descent down through Geikie Meadows and some easy bush made for pleasant hiking. Unfortunately, that was the last of the easy going on this day. The descent to Geikie Creek was down a much steeper slope, with much deadfall and what I like to call ‘muffwells’. These are patches of apparently firm ground that turn out to be illusory once you step on them, thanks to the thick layer of moss and duff (hence, muffwell) obscuring the open hole beneath. Travel on the valley bottom was straightforward although wet and marshy in places (but no bugs, thanks to early fall frosts!). At one point, we ambled along on a veritable superhighway of a moose trail right beside the creek. However, from the creek to our campsite at the south end of Icefall Lake, we experienced the worst of the day. The bush alongside the outfall creek from Icefall Lake was heavier, thicker and extensively undercut by the waters of the creek. Stepping through a muffwell now usually involved extracting one’s boot from the running water underneath. Ascending the creek to the lake meant scrambling lichen-covered quartzite (greasy!) boulders. Finally, getting from one end of the lake to the other meant more boulders, followed by a narrow strip of gravel between the willows and the water’s edge all the way to the…last 50 metres. Here, in this final stretch, the willows barred our way and we were forced to bash up from the lake and then to the right in order to finally stagger into camp. Heavy fatigue was the order of the day and a contributing factor toward the self-imposed rest day at Icefall Lake on day four. Where day three was the ridiculous, day five was the sublime. Leaving camp, we scrambled up through a narrow canyon that carries the meltwater from glaciers on Simon and Scarp peaks down to Icefall Lake. More scree was followed by ice and rock moraines and by a traverse under two heavily crevassed, hanging glaciers. Crampons went on at the start of a moderately steep snow slope, followed by a laborious ascent to a high notch, still 100 m or so below Scarp Pass. At this point, the trip took an unanticipated twist. When Peter had led the trip three years previously, the bergschrund below Scarp Pass had not been much of an issue. Now, three years later, the ‘schrund was wider, longer and very definitely, an obstacle. Peter tried a direct crossing of the ‘schrund. No go. Going to the right below the ‘schrund wasn’t going to go either – a large crevasse barred our way to the snowslope leading up to the east ridge of Scarp Peak. But – what about the ‘schrund itself? By deciding to enter a crevasse, we were able to bypass a crevasse, if that makes any sense. Peter led into it and worked his way past some large ice blocks. He took us to the back wall of the ‘schrund and then along the back wall to a point above the first crevasse that had blocked our way. A couple of steep steps up and we were back on the snowslope, eventually dropping down to photo by Andy Haden Scarp Pass. The payoff was the fabulous views to the south – down Simon Creek to the sea of peaks beyond. The view to the north was equally rewarding as we traced out the day’s route and the peaks we had passed in previous days – Postern, Barbican and Geikie. A short, steep scramble down from the pass brought us to the Mastodon Glacier and a day later, to the Wates-Gibson Hut. Two days later, we concluded the trip, returning to the Astoria River trailhead. Mountaineering can be an intense experience. For some, that is the essence of mountaineering, as the literature so often demonstrates. There was much that was intense about this trip, not the least of which was the opportunity to travel some through wonderfully wild country that sees little human use. However, when we concluded the trip at the Wates-Gibson Hut, we had time to sift through some of the old journals where the names of Cyril Wates, Rex Gibson and others still resonate. This gave us a deeper appreciation for our trip. It had allowed us to re-trace the steps of some of the mountaineers who first explored this part of the Canadian Rockies – the same explorers who almost certainly took the picture that still hangs in the Wates-Gibson Hut. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 9 Across the Roof of Canada by Jacqui Hudson In summer, dawn arrives early on Canada’s highest mountain. But the accompanying light brings little cheer to the soul of a tired climber. Our team of four is at Camp Three and as night’s shadows pale, there is a scene of almost total devastation, capable of making a grown man weep. Happily, there’s only one man present. The other three are women. Together, they cluster in two small tents at 4300 metres on the East Ridge of Mount Logan. Outside, the wind has dropped (thanks for small mercies), but there’s a whiteout and soft snowflakes are falling out of a socked-in sky. Inside, things are only slightly better. Rime ice coats the tents and it’s -20˚C. Every time a gust shakes the taut nylon, it seems to snow as much inside as out. This is not a cheerful spot. Jacqui Hudson reaches for her watch, but the face is frozen and blank. She pulls it into the warmth of her sleeping bag along with her spare clothes, boots, water bottle, extra socks, gloves and boot liners. It’s day 34 of the adventure, day 8 on Mt. Logan itself. Merrie-Beth Board (MB) fumbles with the tent zipper, opens the vestibule and regards the outer world of white. Climbing narrow ridges with corniced overhangs to the left and right, in zero visibility, is not a popular pastime. “Rest day,” she says with conviction and zips St. Elias Mountains 10 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 the tent firmly shut, but not before spindrift eddies in, settling on her sleeping bag. Something Different The idea for the trip was simple enough at the outset. In 2001, Kari Medig (the only male in this year’s team) and Lena Rowat were members of an extraordinary ski trek that started just behind the city of Vancouver in mid-February and ended 2000 kilometres and five and a half months later at Skagway, Alaska. It was a bold and ground breaking transect up the spine of the Coast Mountains. Yet even as they finished in mid-July, both were wondering if the real prize was the section beyond Skagway, where the great coastal range curves west into southern Alaska, passing through the roof of Canada – Kluane National Park and Wrangell-St. Elias National Park in southern Alaska. Mountaineers are forever talking about the ultimate LGP (Last Great Problem), and always the bar is being raised. “Why not ski the whole St. Elias Range?” reasoned Lena in the fall of 2001. “It’s only 700 km and along the way we can knock off Logan. Up the East Ridge and down the west.” On such casual plans are expeditions formed. Putting a team together proved easy. MB moved from Ontario eight years ago and now hails from Golden, BC. At 28, she has made her reputation on long alpine photo by Istvan Hernadi rock routes, short fierce ice climbs and is a long-time climbing partner of Lena’s. Jacqui Hudson, the kid on the team at 23, has climbed in New Zealand and in Canada’s Coast Range. Just finishing a degree at University of British Columbia, her role was to act as trip medic. Lena Rowat has been backcountry skiing for years and the 2001 traverse was simply the culmination of experience gained from many trips. She recently returned from exploring King George Island in Antarctica. Kari Medig, as token male on the trip, was “getting in touch with his feminine side,” in the company of three females. From Cranbrook, BC, his primary interest was as photographer and filmmaker. He was carrying Sony’s latest pocket movie camera and was to shoot over 40 hours of footage before the trip was over, to make a TV documentary. Logistics in an Empty Land The St. Elias Range is a vast network of interlocking glaciers, isolating soaring peaks in rivers of ice. Normal access to this frigid world of white is by ski plane. This team’s plans were anything but normal. While we used air support to place food caches along the way, we set out on foot, from tide-line close to the town of Haines in the Alaska Panhandle. It was a low snow season, so for the first few kilometres the party incongruously carried their packs, skis, poles and sleds across arid shoreline, before starting up the Sullivan Glacier. Once onto the icefields of the Fairweather Range, the daily routine of skiing 20 to 30 km began: rise early while the snow is still firm, eat, break camp, ski, rest, ski, rest, eat lunch, discuss the route, ski, rest, ski until evening, select a spot in the vast emptiness and set up two small tents. Crevasses were always a problem, but for much of the journey, there was sufficient visibility to see them before they saw us. Nevertheless, some areas were a maze of jumbled ice blocks and plunging cracks, while other glaciers were so vast and blank that on cloudy days the person out front had trouble keeping a straight track. Why did they all trend to the left? Apart from routine aching muscles, there were few medical problems. Kari injured the roof of his open mouth when reflected sun burned this usually protected part of his anatomy. Lena complained of eye irritation, but the eye drops caused her pupils to dilate so much she was in danger of going snowblind. For several days the group travelled only at night to avoid worsening her situation. Even on warm days the temperature was well below zero, but UV radiation could set any dark object on fire. Lena and Jacqui skied in skirts to keep cool. Thus began a pilots’ rumour that quickly spread across the north. What started as “Several women in skirts are coming to Mt. Logan,” metamorphosed via radio interference into “Seven women in mini-skirts are coming over Mt. Logan.” A reception committee formed at the Arctic Institute’s base camp in the King’s Trench on the west side of the mountain. Finding food drops wasn’t always easy. Despite having a GPS receiver and good maps, the glaciers were huge and the air so clear that distances were deceptive. At one locality, only the faint ski tracks left by the plane guided the group to the luxury of new food, including whole onions and carrots preserved by the cold. Meals became a popular topic of conversation. Lying in our bags at night, ‘air menus’ were planned, cooked and devoured. they leave camps behind as they climb. Not so for our team – we must carry everything with us, including skis and poles. Over the 37 days of glacier travel, each skier has developed a special love/hate relationship with her/his sledge. In the late afternoon snow, sledges stick and water accumulates in them, soaking their contents. On descents, they crab sideways or slide into the backs of legs, tangling ropes and making ski turns impossible. And they seem to be drawn to crevasses like opposing magnets. On a positive note, the sledges left on a ski plane from the foot of the East Ridge and for now the team is sled-free. Leaving Camp Four at 4650 m we climb towards the East Summit. There’s no wind and the sky has cleared above. Down slope, the lower peaks and valleys are hidden in a bank of cloud that stretches out to the Pacific. We are moving early, but the loads, the altitude and three days of storm-induced inactivity are taking their toll. Two of the party have developed Acute Mountain Sickness. The pace is slow and getting slower. Late in the day we decide to place Camp Five at over 5500 m. The air is brutally cold and everyone, without saying it, knows it’s going to be a rough night. Crossing the ‘The Big One’ Day 41. Logan Day 15 – The wind was strong throughout the night, but by morning has dropped off. I just about pass out and vomit. Have to rest and breathe hard, between putting my liners into my boots. Do we turn back and descend the East Ridge? Or try again to climb the last thousand feet to the col between the East and Main Summits? I take drugs – more than I’ve taken in an entire year – and promptly vomit them and the water. I’m too tired to fish out replacements. At this altitude the mind plays tricks or stops functioning altogether. A stove fuel fire starts, but is extinguished with minimal damage. We finally get moving at 9 a.m. and it takes five agonizing hours to gain just 300 Mt. Logan is Canada’s highest peak at 5959 m and North America’s second tallest. But it is not simply its height that sets it apart. Mt. Logan is truly massive. While other summits are narrow pyramids, Mt. Logan sits atop a huge block whose sheer mass makes it the largest single volume of mountain in the world. Plus its latitude, at 60˚ N, translates to a climbing equivalent of a 7500 m peak in the Himalayas. The East Ridge sees a number of ascents most years. This season, there’s a group from France and a Scottish-Canadian party climbing at the same time as us. Both these teams will return down the ridge again, so Diary Entry m to the summit col, a distance of under 2 km. At 5890 m we put on skis and as we do, the mood changes. From here on it’s downhill almost all of the way. That night, we sleep at 5000 m and two days later, in a blur of speed, we telemark down a thigh-straining 3000 m into the King’s Trench, where the sun is warm, the air is thick and our energy levels soar. We are over Mt. Logan. The Final 230 km A week later, with a further 200 km under our belts, the only accident of the trip occurs. Skiing through a steep icefall, I lose my balance as my sled drops into a crevasse, pulling me down after it. Landing 10 m below in a tangle of skis, poles, rope, pack and sledge, I’m relatively unhurt and capable of climbing out under my own power. Bruised and shaken with what are later diagnosed as neck and rib fractures, I emerge into the sunlight and the team makes camp. I spend an aching night, unwilling to take painkillers in case I have a head injury. The next morning, fragile but determined, I continue with a light pack while MB, Lena and Kari split my gear. Five days later, after climbing two mountain passes to bypass the crevasse-riddled snout of the Miles Glacier, we come across our first trail in almost two months. Minutes later we emerge at a bridge on the Copper River where a surprised family of tourists in a mini-van offers to take us the 60 km into Cordova, AK. It’s over. The expedition acknowledges financial support from the Jen Higgins Fund of the Alpine Club of Canada and the Canadian Himalayan Foundation, plus sponsorship from Mountain Equipment Co-op, Intuition Liners Vancouver Co., G3, Miso Cup A Soup Co., Rebar Co. Sports Bars and Kettle Valley Fruit Bars Co. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 11 Join Us for a Mountain Ice Climbing Camp 2 Classic Peaks - Jasper Columbia Icefield Date: March 2-7 Cost: $1250 + GST Staff: Grant Meekins, TBA Date: July 5-12 Cost: $1595 + GST Staff: Peter Amann, Cyril Shokoples, G. Ruttan Date: August 1-9 C Staff: Dave Smith, Lisa P This camp will be based out of Rampart Creek and Shunda Creek Hostels on the Icefields Parkway and in Nordegg. There are a variety of challenges for everyone from the novice to the experienced climber. This camp will include instruction and lots of great climbing! Jasper National Park offers the mountaineer a wide variety of opportunities in a world class alpine setting. Classic rock climbs, snow and ice, and mixed alpine routes are available for all levels of climbers. Join us for a summer excursio America”, home to several of t Canadian Rockies. Extensive g and higher elevations provide atmosphere - a good test piec for more extended trips to lof First Summits First Summits 2 Date: March 14-17 Cost: $750 + GST Staff: Sylvia Forest, Doug Nelson Located on the world renowned Wapta Icefields, this hutbased camp is aimed at members with little or no winter mountaineering experience who want to learn the basics, or to those looking to improve skills. Instruction will be the emphasis of this camp. Date: July 12-19 Cost: $1250 + GST Staff: Ferdl Taxbock, Jackie Clark This hut-to-hut mountaineering traverse across the Wapta and Wapituk Icefields will be the high point of your summer. Ascents will be attempted on several peaks, providing an excellent opportunity for members to learn about glacier travel and summer mountaineering. Lyells Mountaine Date: August 9-16 C Staff: Roger Laurilla, Cam Participants will be whisked b camp at the headwaters of Ice box canyon. As well as produc camp location will allow easy area. Climbs will be mainly on rock climbing. Wapta Traverse Women’s Mountaineering Camp Date: March 22-29 Cost: $1250 + GST Staff: Peter Amann, Diane Schon Date: July 13-18 Cost: $850 + GST Staff: Kirsten Knechtel, Jen Olson, Sarah Meredith The Wapta Traverse is a world class ski mountaineering destination. Join us to learn the basics or to improve your skills. The comfortable accommodations of the ACC huts can’t be beat. Several ski ascents will be attempted on this adventurous icefield journey. This six day camp provides opportunities for women to summit together, work on leading skills and gain more mountaineering experience. The camp will be based out of the Stanley Mitchell Hut in the stunning Little Yoho Valley. Traversing over the spine of th through three National Parks, will involve glacier travel, rock ice, and spectacular scenery fr Waddington Area Ski Camp Rockies Panorama Fryatt Climbing C Date: April 26 - May 7 Cost: $3295 + GST Staff: Steve Ludwig, Dana Foster, Ron Andrews Date: July 19-26 Cost: $1295 + GST Staff: Peter Fuhrmann, Dave McCormick Date: August 16-23 C Staff: Peter Amann, Sylvi Mt. Waddington is the highest summit in the vast Coast Mountains of British Columbia. We will use helicopter access to reach the mountains first explored by Don and Phyllis Munday and we will retrace some of the pioneering ski ascents of this remote and beautiful area. This traverse through three spectacular National Parks is a superb introductory mountaineering adventure combined with a great introduction to ACC huts. Past participants have always given this experience rave reviews! The Fryatt Valley in Jasper offe climbing based out of the Syd Climbs will be on rock, snow a abundant hiking opportunitie meadows to explore. U25 - Canmore Classics and Yoho Albert Icefield Date: July 19-26 Cost: $1000 + GST Staff: Lars Andrews, Geoff Ruttan Date: August 23-30 C Staff: Helen Sovdat, Dav This camp is for members aged 17-25. The first half of the week will be based out of the Canmore Clubhouse, where time will be spent at the local sport crags and on multi-pitch rock routes. The group will then travel to the Stanley Mitchell Hut in Little Yoho Valley for ascents of the glaciated President and Vice President mountains. The Albert and Primrose Icefie area southwest of Rogers Pass mountaineering will begin wi remote and spectacular base mountaineer – beginner to ad Peak Weekend – Bugaboos Date: August 1-4 Cost: $795 + GST Staff: Lars Andrews, Masten Brolsma photo by John Derick This fabulous long weekend get-away offers members a chance to explore the world renowned Bugaboo Provincial Park. Ascents will involve snow, ice and granite rock climbing on fourth and low fifth class terrain. Heart of the Rock Date: August 16-23 C Staff: Peter Fuhrmann, D Silent Pass to Rog Date: September 5-13 C Staff: Jim Gudjonson, Ch Starting with a helicopter flig Glacier National Park, this spe stay above 8000’ for most of t of opportunities to bag peaks n Adventure ds 2003 General Mountaineering Camp Cost: $1495 + GST aulson Dates: July 12 to August 16, 2003 (five one-week camps) Cost: $1195 (one week) + GST $1140 (additional weeks) + GST on to the “Apex of North he highest peaks in the glacier travel, snow camping e an expedition type ce for those with ambitions fty summits. This year’s camp, located in the Snowy Pass group of the Rockies, is a fly in/fly out; your knees will love you for this! At an elevation of 2225m/7186’ , we will have a spectacular campsite located just south and above Snowy Pass. This protected site will be very comfortably situated beside a number of beautiful lakes, and is surrounded by glaciers. The views are spectacular! Mts.Tsar, Clemenceau and Columbia dominate the skylines. Climbing peaks in the area include: Mt. King Edward, Chaba Peak, Omega, Triad, Wales, Watershed, and many others. This remote and seldom visitied area will afford opportunities for new climbs and routes – the variety is endless. In addition to the longer, technical challenges, there are many pleasant, shorter and non-technical routes near the camp. The GMC operates on a seven day, Saturday to Saturday basis. Attendance fees (per week) will cover tent accommodation, guiding and instruction in all disciplines, sumptuous meals and group climbing equipment (other than personal gear). eering Cost: $1750 + GST m Roe, Vicki Laurilla by helicopter to a tent-based efall Brook on top of a 2000’ cing spectacular vistas, the access to the peaks of the n snow and ice, with some an ACC tradition since 1906. You Won’t Forget! Peru Climbing Expedition kies Dates: June 1-24 Cost: $5295 (no GST) Staff: Tim Pochay, John Derick Cost: $1450 + GST Dan Doll Join us for more than three spectacular weeks of climbing, trekking and enjoying the culture of the Peruvian Andes. This trip includes a smorgasbord of stunning 6000 metre peaks and chaotic glaciers, exciting snow and ice climbs with plenty of exposure and phenomenal views. he Rockies two times and , this exciting hut-based trip k climbing, steep snow and rom mountain-tops. Camp Cost: $1495 + GST ia Forest, Ken Larlee ers a wide variety of excellent dney Vallance (Fryatt) Hut. and ice, and there are also es with lakes, glaciers and Cost: $1395 + GST vid Dornian, B. Critchley elds are a seldom visited s. Seven days of classic ith a helicopter flight to our camp. This camp is for every dvanced. photo by Patricia Daum Find Out More For more information on each camp, including their levels of difficulty, please visit our website at www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca and follow the links to Mountain Adventures. Alternatively, call Lawrence White at the ACC’s national office (403) 678-3200, ext. 112 or email him at: lwhite@AlpineClubofCanada.ca 2003 has been recognised as the International Year of Fresh Water. We invite you to join us in celebrating water on this trip: Tatshenshini Rafting and Scrambling Adventure Date: Aug. 17 - Sept. 3 Cost: $4295 + GST Staff: Jim Gudjonson, G. Otcenasek, David Toole The Yukon’s Tatshenshini River flows through an amazing, undisturbed, protected region of spectacular glaciers, offering unparalleled wildlife viewing. This unique trip will allow us to split our time between rafting downstream and hiking \ scrambling on the peaks adjacent to the river. photo by Lisa Gober gers Pass Cost: $1595 + GST had Rigby, Doug Nelson ht to the southern tip of ctacular alpine traverse will he week. There will be plenty s and explore the terrain. photo by Daniel Dufresne Leadership Course Date: August 9-16 Cost: $600 + GST Apply by: May 1, 2003 Staff: Cyril Shokoples, Helen Sovdat, Bob Stirling Held at the 2003 GMC in Snowy Pass, this course will deal with these leadership skills: rope handling skills (specifically in general mountaineering situations); glacier travel; route planning and selection; navigation; multi-pitch routes; rock and crevasse rescue systems; group dynamics, interaction and management; and emergency-situation management. Re-Evaluating the Rutschblock by Murray Toft and Dr. James Wakeling For over a decade in Canada, the Rutschblock test has been included in the battery of snow stability evaluation techniques used by backcountry skiers. Based on the work of the Swiss snow scientist Paul Fohn, the test was popularized in western Canada largely by Dr. Bruce Jamieson at the University of Calgary (U of C). The Rutschblock has become a widely used stability test due to the common sense nature of its design. An isolated column (block) of snow roughly 150 cm wide by 200 cm across the face is excavated on a preferred 30-degree slope to below the suspect shear layer(s). The load of a standing, then hopping, then jumping skier is increased until the shear layer produces (or does not produce) a failure. Incremental numerical scores indicate the relative strength of the snowpack and the final score aids in assessing stability. Yet the quantitative nature of the score tends to make lay practitioners think in absolute terms and that the higher the score is past five, then the more stable the snowpack must be. But just how valid is the test? Flaws within the snowpack itself, plus load variations due to wind and terrain shape across a slope can lead to significant variations in the score from one location to another. This is why avalanche course instructors are quick to point out that this test should not be relied on solely by itself, but as a complement to other regular field observations. During the winter of 2002, a team from the U of C’s Faculty of Kinesiology examined additional variables affecting the Rutschblock score. These included: 1) the force differences between telemark and alpine ski touring equipment 2) the variation in Rutschblock scores as a function of the jumper’s weight 3) the damping affect of loose surface layers on the applied force to the block Data was gained from both clinical testing in the Human Performance Laboratory (HPL) at U of C and fieldtesting at Mt. Fidelity, Glacier National Park in Rogers Pass. Available force platforms in the floor of the HPL allowed us to record the peak forces of 18 male and female subjects who jumped using both alpine touring and telemark ski 14 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 equipment. Impact forces across gender, weight, and height ranged between 3 and 8 kN (1 kN = 220 lbs force). Our original hypothesis was that the dropped heel of the telemark ski during a jump would soften the impact force, as the boot sole rocked back onto the ski upon landing, much like the clapper effect of hinged speed skates. This idea was to be proved void. The data showed that skiers on telemark equipment produce forces equal to or greater than jumpers on alpine touring equipment. Anecdotal reporting from the subjects suggested that this was due to the increased ability of foot flexion in a telemark boot. It is biomechanically more natural to jump on telemark bindings with a free heel than fixed heel touring bindings where the jump is more contingent on knee flex. The higher the jump, the greater the force. In the field, our study plot closely averaged the optimum 30 degrees and provided almost perfect test conditions: 35 cm of low density fist hardness new powder snow topped an increasingly dense base which included 2 convenient shear layers at 50 (compression test moderate) and 70 cm (compression test hard). Here, we laid out 2 horizontal rows of 5 Rutschblock columns, one immediately above the other, to discover if there would be any score variation between jumpers of different weight. In our case, the subjects weighed in at 22 kilos apart (65 and 87 kilos). The first round of testing using the lighter subject on alpine touring (AT) equipment, saw no shear failure – all Rutschblock scores were 7! However, when the heavier subject repeated the tests on a fresh block, also on AT gear, the increased force was sufficient to initiate a failure at the shear plane. Here the Rutschblock score jumped down repeatedly to 5, a significant difference of 2 loading steps. We then performed the same test sequence using telemark equipment. The ability to create higher forces that permeate deeper into the snowpack on this equipment showed in the lower final scores. Here the lighter jumper averaged a score of six, while the heavier subject consistently produced a score of five. Force transducers mounted on a special pair of skis allowed us to log field data and compare them to forces that were generated in the lab. The potential damping effect of fresh powder snow was profound, with a 50 per cent decrease in force applied to the block when compared to what we found in lab tests. As the data demonstrated, the final score of a Rutschblock test should be held suspect. The variables of snow surface density, variations in jumper’s weight and the type of ski / binding used for testing, not to mention the need to find a truly representative test slope, create conclusions that can be misleading. All of this confirms that our stability evaluation should not be limited to this single popular test, no matter how practical or realistic it may seem. Some additional points may summarize the discussion. ● Since force increases with mass, then the greater the weight of the block tester, the greater the probability the score will be lower. Be sure to apply this obvious truth when performing the Rutschblock test by having the heaviest (and most adept) skier do the jump. Otherwise, you could be potentially sand bagging the score. If this is not possible, then factor in at least one score less as a correction factor if you must use a lighter jumper. ● A 20-kilogram weight difference in jumpers may affect the Rutschblock score by up to 2 loading steps (scores). ● Increased forces are produced by harder surfaces. In other words wind slab at the jump surface may produce larger forces, but how these are dissipated will depend on how thick the layer is. ● Telemark equipment produces larger forces on the block due to the higher jumps created by metatarsal flexion of the foot. Thanks for making this project possible are extended to Parks Canada: Snow Research and Avalanche Warning Section, Bruce McMahon, John Kelly and Eric Dafoe; the HPL at U of C; Carol Scovill, Kath Boyer; the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC); Kevin Chmilar; and the lab test volunteers who all generously donated their time and expertise. Murray Toft chairs the ACC Safety Committee and Dr. James Wakeling is a member of the HPL, Faculty of Kinesiology, U of C. Mt. Lucifer photo by Leon Kubbernus New Mandate for ACC Publications Committee The Alpine Club of Canada’s (ACC) energetic Publications Committee has recently been reorganized around an expanded mandate. At the National Board Meeting (NBM) and Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Vancouver last May, it was proposed that the title for the Vice President, Publications be changed to Vice President, Mountain Culture and that the focus of this portfolio be the celebration of art, science, literature, history and mountain culture in Canada. This motion presented at the AGM was passed at the NBM at Lake Louise in October. This change in portfolio title will stimulate new interest in the committee’s work and expand its partnership possibilities with the sections and with other areas of club functions such as Facilities and Activities. Potential projects might include revolving exhibitions in the public spaces in the newly renovated Canmore Clubhouse, an expanded focus of the relevance of the Club to Canadian culture and new mechanisms for celebrating the historical contribution of long-term Club members. It will also allow us to return to the original Club mandate relating to understanding of science as it relates to mountain places. This expanded focus will also help in profiling the ACC centennial in 2006. For further information please contact the editor of the Gazette, Bonnie Hamilton at Gazette@AlpineClubofCanada.ca or the VP of Mountain Culture, Bob Sandford, at sandford@telusplanet.net Mike Simpson near Mt. Longstaff Mike Simpson & Lyn Michaud on Mt. Sir Sandford photo by Leon Kubbernus Once Upon a Mountain by Mike Simpson Once Upon a Mountain is the third in the Summit Series of mountaineering biographies. These monographs recognize outstanding individual achievements and lasting contributions to Canada’s unique heritage. At the 2002 Mountain Guides Ball and as part of the International Year of Mountains celebration, the monograph honoured the Grizzly Group and its legacy of mountain experiences. Members of the Group began climbing together in the early 1970s. Increasingly, they sought each other’s company when planning multi-day outings in the mountains. In 1973 the group was dubbed the Grizzly Group after an encounter with Ursus Horribulus! On this, their 30th anniversary, the members continue as close-knit friends in many areas of outdoor pursuits including climbing. Glen Boles, Walt Davis, Don Forest, Jim Fosti, Leon Kubbernus, Lyn Michaud, Gordon Scruggs and Mike Simpson are members in the cadre. Outdoor adventures of all stripes are planned well in advance and often climbing, backpacking, skiing and photo by Leon Kubbernus wilderness-canoeing friends become part of the Grizzly’s backcountry trips. The Group’s story portrays the whole mountain experience from the rocks to the ice and snow, to the flora and fauna and most importantly, the camaraderie of the camp. These camps would often be planned to include the spouses of the members. This story provides an example for those who strive for a complete mountain life among friends. Over the many years of outdoor adventuring, a large photographic record has been amassed. Many images are of little known places in the Rocky Mountains as well as different views of familiar peaks. Slide presentations are made to clubs and organizations on a regular basis. Glen Boles also shares his images through popular drawings. For those interested in a record of a few of the Grizzly Group trips, refer to the 1970s and 1980s Canadian Alpine Journals. The planning of new and exciting adventures in the mountains continues today. Already the 2003 ski mountaineering, backcountry skiing and climbing ventures are being formulated by the members of the Grizzly Group. Long may it be so! Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 15 John Clarke Awarded the Order of Canada by Manrico Scremin On August 31, 2002 John Clarke received the Order of Canada, our country’s highest honour for lifetime achievement. The Vancouver Section of the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC), of which John is an honorary member, has often been treated to slide shows of his trips in the Coast Mountains, usually to places where no one else has been before. He has foregone a conventional career and has completely dedicated his life to mountaineering/exploration, conservation advocacy and wilderness education. One of the keys to John’s success in conservation advocacy and wilderness education is his personality. His honest and boundless enthusiasm, passion and charm make him an instant friend of everyone he meets. On a personal level, John was married in the summer of 2001, (something he vowed never to do) and he and his wife had a child early last year. Sadly, John became ill in the months that followed. After undergoing treatment for a brain tumour, John is now in the palliative care unit at Vancouver General Hospital, surrounded by family and friends. We are proud of you, John, and wish to thank you for all you have done. Our hearts are with you and Annette and Nicolas at this time. Below is an extract of the letter, sent three years ago, nominating John for the award. It was written by a couple of people and strongly supported by 25 others representing a diverse range of organizations from the ACC to the Squamish First Nation to the Vancouver City Council. Please join me in congratulating John on his wonderful achievement! Mountaineering and Exploration Accomplishments John is truly a living legend when it comes to mountaineering and exploration in the Coast Ranges of British Columbia. Besides being the first person to visit much of the vast alpine areas of coastal B.C., John very likely has made more first ascents of mountains than anyone in the world, ever. (By his own reluctant admission he has made more than 600 first ascents of 16 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 mountains and explored over ten thousand square kilometres!) What makes this achievement all the more remarkable is the style in which it was done. In an era of large, expensive expeditions supported by corporate sponsorship and media fanfare, John’s approach was the exact opposite. His low key, multi-week expeditions are accomplished on miniscule budgets with no corporate sponsorship or media exposure. These ground-breaking trips are modestly recorded in a series of articles in the Canadian Alpine Journal, an annual publication of the Alpine Club of Canada. Conservation Advocacy Work John played and continues to play a leading role in advocating the preservation of the area now known as the Randy Stoltmann Wilderness and the establishment of a national or provincial park in the area. Together with Chief Bill Williams, hereditary chief of the Squamish First Nation and photographer Nancy Bleck, John initiated the Witness Project, a remarkable and highly successful partnership between artists, First Nations, conservationists and the general public. The Witness Project is a major factor in raising public awareness for this important wilderness area; one of the few remaining ancient forests on the B.C. coast. In recognition of John’s efforts he was inducted into the Squamish Nation in a traditional Naming Ceremony. His Squamish name, Xwexwsélken, means Mountain Goat. John has also given numerous public presentations on the topic of wilderness conservation to thousands of people. In a relatively short time he has become known as one of the leading spokespersons for wilderness conservation in B.C. In the crowded arena of environmental voices, John is known for his balanced views, unique sense of humour, spectacular images and well-researched presentations. Wilderness Education Work In the last six years, John has increasingly dedicated himself to spreading the message of wilderness conservation and responsible wilderness adventure. He is at the hub of the Wilderness Education Program (WEP), which was founded in 1996 by a small group of diverse individuals who recognized the growing need to educate youth about the vital importance of wilderness in B.C. and its central role in the history and heritage of Canadians. During the school year John devotes all of his time to educating and inspiring students of all ages. Kids love John! He has an unending enthusiasm and capacity to share his unparalleled knowledge with them, distilling his decades of wilderness exploration and thousands of beautiful photographs into a captivating, inspiring and often-hilarious presentation. He brings wilderness to youth, many of whom have never been outside an urban setting, stimulating their curiosity and sense of wonder about our wild places. In just four years, John has reached some 25,000 youth with his unique presentations on the natural history and heritage of B.C.. Many of these students have also participated in field trips to experience the wilderness first hand. John has also conducted many workshops for teachers at their conferences and professional development days.” The Order of Canada is our country’s highest honour for lifetime achievement. Since its inception in 1967, only a few mountaineers have been recognized. These are Hans Gmoser, Pat Morrow and Phyllis Munday. In 1995, John was the subject of the film, Child of the Wind, which won an award at the Banff Mountain Film Festival. The film offers wonderful insight into John’s remarkable life and the places he loves. Manrico Scremin is a member of the Vancouver Section. Mountain Forum The international Mountain Forum is now up and running in North America. Mountain Culture at the Banff Centre is coordinating the North American Mountain Forum from its offices at the Banff Centre in Banff, Alberta. Mountain Forum is an international network dedicated to mountain communities, environments and sustainable development. Members use this virtual meeting place to share information and network in support of mountain regions. To find out more visit www.mtnforum.org or email northamerica@mtnforum.org Painting Peaks: It’s More than Pop Music “The mountains, the peaks, the glaciers, that’s where I want to be and what I want to paint.” - A.C. Leighton. painting by Max Elliott by Amy Krause Great mountain landscape art is like the exposé of wonder – wonder joyous, wonder tender, wonder terrible. Landscape is the most popular genre of art in the world. It also has a reputation among critics for being ‘the pop music of the art world’ – easy to consume but less than first-rate. “Great landscape art does more than try to paint a ‘pretty’ picture,” my trusted art advisor told me. “Really good landscape art tries to do… more.” She must be right, because how could every landscape artist be attempting to do nothing more than copy nature and paint a ‘pretty picture’? No act of imitation could be so satisfying as to result in a genre so prolific, so voluminous. Looking back over two major movements in Canadian landscape art, I spoke to three contemporary mountain artists in an effort to unravel the mystery: If not to copy, then to accomplish what? Some of Canada’s first landscape artists were ‘railway artists’. Back in 1886 the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) began an innovative mass marketing campaign that brought hundreds of artists west by rail and saw the fruits of their travels purchased and scattered upon the walls of fashionable tearooms in London, Paris and New York City. The resulting art collection made mountain landscapes a defining feature of Canadian identity. Painting pleasant pictures was the very purpose of the CPR’s program. They would have accepted nothing less. However, some railway artists did “more.” Artists like Belmore Brown and Thomas Fripp toiled to capture the subtleties of weather and the indefinable qualities of mountain colours that only careful observation and time reveal. As J.E.H. MacDonald later said, they painted “to realize one’s sensations, not to copy what is before one.” Banff-born artist, Wendy Bradley, identifies with MacDonald. “There is something about being right there in the moment…how fast the wind is blowing across Bow Glacier and Bow Lake, holding your French easel with one hand and painting with the other for six hours. When it’s over, you may not be able to feel your toes, but you have a tremendous sense of accomplishment and achievement.” This idea of realizing ones senses revolutionized art in Canada in the 1920s and 1930s. Leading the charge was an indomitable band of passionate nationalists – the Group of Seven. The Group of Seven wanted their art to not only capture the landscape, but also the national identity of an entire country. Painting ‘one’s senses’ was how they set about to do it. Expressive and modernist, the Group of Seven’s paintings were characterized by bold colours, lighting and forms that threw tradition to the wind and ground established rules beneath trail hardened feet. Rejecting tradition earned them harsh criticism – people compared their work to “hot mush” – but the Group believed breaking with tradition was the only way to capture the raw energy they felt in the land. In order to capture this energy, they shunned the railway’s posh hotels for canvas tents – boot testing the very landscape they wished to commit to canvas. Hiking the trails revealed landscapes inaccessible by rail and provided more than creative fodder. Landscapes – and mountain landscapes – became reflections of both personal identity and spirituality. All of the artists I spoke with confirmed that this sentiment is, perhaps, not unusual. Banff artist Max Elliott spends time on the trails as an indispensable part of her creative life. Last summer she hiked nearly 14,000 vertical metres, camping alone and with friends. It took her many years to realize it, but she says that for her “it’s nature first, art second.” In other words, the natural world is more than subject matter, but context through which she can approach some of life’s most profound truths – experiences she expresses through art. Matthew Wheeler of McBride, BC, captures “pieces” of the natural world – rocks, stones, leaves, fish bones – which remind him of the larger more profound processes that created them. “My paintings leave a lot out,” he says. “But sometimes it is the most ethereal of material that is the most powerful. It is extraordinary that unimaginably large rocks are pulled to pieces with water vapour and gravity. I grapple with that in my art.” Yes, many landscape artists indeed do “more.” By expressing their senses, identities and spirituality, some artists reflect more than just the landscape, something quite profound. Like the wise climber knows, it’s not the peak that counts but what you find along the way – wonder joyous, wonder tender, wonder terrible. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 17 Mt. Sir Sandford - ACC Calgary Section Camp August 3 - 24, 2002 Edited by Jacqueline Louie Mt. Sir Sandford. It’s a place you’ll never forget. “I could have stayed for another week!” said Iain Combres, a participant in last summer’s Mt. Sir Sandford camp, organized by the Alpine Club of Canada’s (ACC) Calgary Section. “What a magical place that was! The views from the summits were amazing.” Last August, a total of 49 people from Calgary and across Canada took part in the self-catered, self-guided section camp, based out of the ACC’s Great Cairn Hut in B.C.’s northern Selkirks. It’s an incredibly spectacular area with a wide variety of objectives, ranging from easy scrambling to serious mountaineering. During the threeweek camp, ACC members summitted 10 peaks: Alpina Dome, Belvedere, Big Black Friar, Citadel, Guardsman, Guardsman’s Daughter, Palisade, Redan, Sir Sandford and Silvertip. Silvertip Mountain, with its majestic views of Sir Sandford and the Adamants, was one of the most popular trips. “I enjoyed Silvertip because of the variety of the climb – creek crossings, scrambling, snow slopes, exposed rock ridges and the view from the summit,” one participant said. But it was Sir Sandford that was the huge draw: 21 ACC members reached the summit of Sir Sandford (3,530 metres), and at least a dozen more attempted it. This is how Ted Davis of Victoria remembered Mt. Sir Sandford. “I had climbed mountains as large and 18 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 challenging as Sir Sanford before. Indeed, in 1973, Budge Gierke and I climbed the North Ridge – a considerably more difficult route than what we were contemplating now. But that was nearly 30 years ago. (At the ACC camp) I was restless that night because of an irritating chronic shoulder injury and a sort of global self-doubt. But at 3 a.m. there were enough stars in the sky to attempt the climb and once up, I started to feel better. So the four of us – Doug and Wendy Hogg, Gretchen Whetham and myself – set off by headlamp from the Great Cairn Hut,” Davis said. “My doubts about my fitness evaporated as we climbed toward the col and I felt confident as the sun broke through the clouds at dawn. Doug leading, we shortroped up the west-side ledges. These ledges, although technically easy, were exposed and route finding took some care. It was novel for me not to be leading, but I noted that Doug took about the same route I would have taken and everyone seemed stable enough that we weren’t going to have some sort of regrettable epic. Finally, by the time Doug put in ice screws for a belay at the base of the Hourglass – I knew that I was a strong member of a good team and if the weather held, we would all make the summit. “This climb was probably the most serious I have done in a decade and was enjoyable and satisfying as a climb can be: a beautiful mountain, a challenging but not terrifying route and good trustworthy companions.” Ted Davis, Doug and Wendy Hogg and Gretchen Whetham were the first of photos by Bill Corbett two teams heading up Mt. Sir Sandford that day; close behind were Tim Jellard, Gordon Gruber, and Martin Gleixner. Diane Colwell, an ACC member from Calgary, remembered watching both parties on Mt. Sir Sandford: “Maurice De St. Jorre and I went on a sightseeing trip to Minaret col to check out the rock on that incredible spire between Sir Sandford and Vidette Peak. Along the way we caught glimpses of both Sir Sandford teams going up the glacier, heard the action from the radio reports and were thrilled to hear that all had summitted. For me, a highlight of the trip was being in the welcoming group when the climbers returned and taking photographs of those beaming, exhausted faces. Listening to the first stories of the mountain’s unrelenting difficulties was awesome,” said Colwell, who deeply admired the generosity and goodwill of so many Alpine Club members in teaching and supporting climbers of all abilities. “Being part of the history and tradition of the ACC, with its emphasis on co-operation and camaraderie, is a special thing.” Another participant, a self-described second year climbing novice, also praised the opportunity to learn from others. “I appreciated that the more experienced climbers were prepared to have me along, were patient and offered good advice. The location was great with a huge variety of accessible climbs . . . Belvedere is a classic alpine climb: a long time on snow bridges working around the toe of the Silvertip glacier, trudging across the glacial plain, then a snow slope topped off by scrambling over big granite blocks to the summit.” Another party – Iain Combres, Shaun Fluker and Mark Lane – headed toward Mt. Belvedere and climbed Azimuth Mountain along the way. Belvedere was “an easy scramble that afforded views of mountains, icefields and valleys in all directions,” Lane said. While nearly all of the climbs during the section camp went without incident, there was one accident: Doug Miller was hurt descending Palisade ridge. Miller’s regular climbing partner, Vic Bell, described what happened: “Doug Miller was walking sideways across the snow slope when his foot slipped. He tried to arrest with his ice axe, but it was pulled from his hand in the first moments. He was trying to grab it again as it hung from his wrist strap above him. He accelerated faster and faster and hit the rocks at the bottom before he was able get his axe.” Miller noted later that he had just moved down steeper snow slopes further up the mountain and had negotiated many similar slopes in the past. “I don’t think he was complacent about the slope, but he didn’t anticipate losing the hold on his axe or the speed of his slide,” Bell said. Recovery has gone well for Miller, who broke a hip joint in the accident. Looking back, the experience has hammered home the importance of practicing self-arrest. “I could have been more cautious in hindsight, but didn’t think I was taking unnecessary chances,” Miller said. Overall, the section camp offered something for everyone and came with some of the comforts of home. The Great Cairn Hut served mainly as a gathering place to cook, store food, eat and talk. Participants set up their tents nearby, in lush alpine meadows. “The hut provided a cozy central meeting place, complete with the comfort of camp chairs and tables,” said one participant, who also praised the overall organization of the camp. “Communications were top-notch with radios and a satellite phone. Trips were organized the night before, people happily pitched in to do hut duties and extra tasks if they were in camp for the day.” Camp organizer Bill Marriott enjoyed every minute of the camp – even the sleepless night spent praying for four of his group who were bivied in a snowstorm at 3050 metres on Mt. Sir Sandford. “The only thing I enjoyed more was being able to give them all a hug when they finally staggered back into camp.” A Saturday morning “deadline” scramble up Silvertip mountain, while the rest were nursing hangovers from the end-of-the-week party, “had three of us giggling like kids,” Marriott recalled. Also part of the experience was being woken at high camp at 6 a.m. by a helicopter – “which did not enhance my respect for heli-climbing, but then it got me thinking . . . weren’t we doing the same thing but only to a lesser degree?” Held in a different location each summer, the Calgary Section camp is becoming more popular each year. “It looks like this type of trip is gathering the momentum it needs to carry on,” Marriott said. For more information, visit the ACC Calgary section website at www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/calgary The Adirondack Stewardship Award David Gillespie of the Montreal Section recently received the Adirondack Stewardship Award given by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Erin M. Crotty. “Stewardship is one of our most important tools in managing and preserving the beautiful lands and waters of the Adirondacks,” Commissioner Crotty said. “It is truly gratifying to recognize these conservation minded individuals and the groups they represent for their tremendous contributions in protecting Forest Preserve lands, restoring forests and trails, and educating people on the wise use of our natural resources.” The Adirondack Stewardship Award is presented by DEC to groups or individuals who demonstrate outstanding stewardship of the natural resources of the Adirondack Park. A plaque was presented to Dave Gillespie “in recognition of his role, through his work with the Alpine Club of Canada, in facilitating communication between the DEC and Canadian visitors to the Adirondacks and for fostering stewardship of the Forest Preserve in Canadians and Americans alike.” Congratulations David! Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 19 Clemenceau to Columbia Traverse story & photos by Jack McGhee Last winter I noticed my friend Barbara Robertson, a member of the Alpine Club of Canada’s (ACC) Prince George Section, walking around town every day for an hour or so with 50 pounds of potatoes in her pack. I knew she must have been training for something! When she later told me she had been accepted for the ACC Clemenceau/Columbia Traverse, I was envious and immediately applied for the trip. I had been in the area in 1982, led by Phil Hein to the base of Mount Clemenceau; and again in 2000 led by Karl Nagy to the top of Mt. Columbia. The traverse covers about 100 kilometres, through the largest icefield complex in the Canadian Rockies – a huge remote glaciated wilderness. With only one successful completion documented by Bob Enagonio (Canadian Alpine Journal 1993), I knew this would be a big, challenging adventure and I was keen to try. I had no idea of the challenges that I would face just to get on the trip. The group of six was full. Fortunately a couple of weeks later, because of demand, a second trip was planned, so I could apply for that. My wife got on the computer and painstakingly filled out the lengthy application form, with references, only noticing at the end that the answers were supposed to be in blue! After correcting all the answers she finally sent off the form by e-mail in February. In April I was told on the phone that I had been turned down for this extra trip because I was too old. I was only 70. A few days later, another call informed me that I had mysteriously been accepted for the original group. Could it have been that some of my references were actually consulted? Great! My wife now had to repeat the form-filling performance although the only thing that was different was the date of the trip – couldn’t the office have made that adjustment? Anyway I was on! Driving to Golden from Prince George, Barbara and I discussed the attempts of the same traverse by our friends. They had made three attempts, the most recent being in April 2002 and all had been stymied by weather. We met the rest of our group of nine in Golden, including 78-year-old Peter, our guide Lars Andrews and his father Ron, who was equipped with his special sled to carry essential equipment. Lars told us that the ACC trip planned for the previous week – the one I had been refused for – had not been able to go because of bad weather. Poor weather stopped us from flying on May 11. Oh, oh, were we going to be out of luck too? Fortunately, the next day was clear. The one-hour ski-plane flight with pilot Steve Neil of Alpen-Glow Aviation was spectacular with Mt. Columbia clearly visible to the north. On the flight, Lars had a good view of the possible high-level route up the Mt. Columbia headwall. We landed on the Tusk Glacier between Tusk Peak and Mt. Clemenceau, set up camp, did a rope and transceiver drill and skied on the west slope of Tusk. The next day was clear and warm again. We decided to omit the climb of Mt. Clemenceau because we had lost a day and our main purpose was to do the traverse. We skied 20 km up the Clemenceau Glacier and down a col southeast of Apex Mountain, with great views on the way of Tusk, Clemenceau, Duplicate and Tsar mountains. We camped on Apex Glacier. Lars shortened his lunch break to go ahead several kilometers and find a route avoiding the Apex headwall. The third day it was snowing with flat light – so poor that a lost swallow decided to use a tent guy rope for a resting stop. We traveled southeast on the Apex Glacier to gain the Chaba Icefield. The going was awkward with cold, blowing snow, whiteout, big crevasses, some uncertainty about the route and a shivering lunch stop. We camped next to Mt. Chaba – so Lars said – we couldn’t see a thing. We awoke to a warmer overcast day and had a short climb up along the side of Mt. Chaba. We came to a notch and had to be lowered two at a time by Lars down a 50 degree stable snow slope, thus avoiding the bergschrund which we could see about 150 Chuck and group summitting headwall, May 18th 20 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 were a couple of feeling that the worst was over. gully spots where The sixth day, we were up at 3 a.m. only the tips and under the star-filled sky. The temperature tails of the skis were was -5˚C with perfect snow. The morning’s three- hour climb up the spectacular ramp, on the snow, and as the sun lit the peaks of Columbia and the slope below was King Edward, was out of this world. We ever so steep. I am skied out across the main Columbia Icefield not sure how Ron and Athabasca Glacier to the Icefield Centre managed the sled – I by 1:30 p.m., a distance of 21 km. didn’t dare look. We Everyone on this traverse had a great followed upwards, time. The success of any ski-mountaineering lathered in sweat, journey requires planning, teamwork, guts until Lars called and good food. Lisa Palechuk organized a break where the the food, which was lightweight, tasty and terrain looked easier. satisfying. Lars and Ron Andrews and the At the rest stop, ACC are to be congratulated – they worked Lars skied up to Group at supper May 16, Columbia Icefield hard to get us safely across this rugged find the route. The terrain. weather was getting worse. We climbed up m to the south – an alert move by the guide. The group participants were Chuck several hundred metres on 30-degree slopes, Lars then led us down the Wales Glacier Lummer, Edmonton AB; Roy Ballantine, in a whiteout. He called a halt at a flattish un-roped for a great ski in corn snow for Wolfeboro NH, USA; David Hanna, spot, a possible campsite, but probing 600 m. The bottom moraine marks the Montreal; Peter Moffat, Seascale Cumbria, indicated crevasses. After a tarp stop we headwaters of the Athabasca River. We UK; John Coates, Newcastle-upon-Tyne sideslipped downhill to a safe campsite. climbed up the Triad glacier 700 m to UK; Barbara Robertson, Prince George Everyone was knackered. Luckily the storm camp below Triad Peak. Barbara Robertson BC; Jack McGhee, Prince George BC; Ron passed an hour or so after we set up camp. decided to try hauling the sled and she went Andrews, Maple Ridge BC; Lars Andrews, We had spectacular views of Mt. Columbia well up the Triad glacier for two hours – the Maple Ridge BC. and Mt. King Edward swept with mist and spuds paid off. later, alpenglow on Mt. Bryce. We had the We climbed up to the Triad Col and skied down to the western part of the Columbia Icefield, just south of Mt. King Edward, to our food cache, placed there by our pilot, Steve. As we were sorting out the food cache, Steve flew overhead to check on us. However we were in the midst of a heavy wet snowfall and our radio was dead, so we P.Bauer - H.Buhl - Ch.Bonington - W.Bonatti - E.T.Compton couldn’t speak to him. The snow stopped G.O.Dyhrenfurth - K.Diemberger - M.Eiselin - P.Habeler - T.Hagen abruptly and we worked our way east over H.Harrer - A.Heckmair - K.M.Herrligkoffer - M.Herzog - T.Hiebler – L.Hill a crevasse field and down to camp on the - E.Hillary - J.Hunt - G.Lenser - H.Kammerlander - G.Kropp - E.Loretan moraine below Mt. Columbia at 2300 m. The scenery was amazing with a good view R.Messner - D.Scott - W.Rutkiewizc - etc... (often with SIGNATURE ! ) of the crux – the route up the headwall. The following morning was stormy Books by great mountaineers and travellers..! and we were climbing by 7 a.m., with ski books - climbing - hiking guides - maps (worldwide) - journals - videos - CDs crampons. It was my first time on these bargain books in different languages. contraptions. They seemed awkward Pay with VISA-MASTER-EURO-CARD at first, but I soon felt comfortable and (We have 20 years experience sending books around the world) realized their value. Lars got us up and over Visit our Webpages in german/english ! some tricky terrain to the moraine next to To all members of the Alpine Club of Canada New and old mountaineering books by Mt. Columbia. Then we skied down the moraines with difficulty to the main valley. The light was flat and the snow rock hard. We watched anxiously as Lars looked for a route up the onset of the ramp system. Although we were not trapped, the alternative to our dismal slide-strewn spot did not look great: it would be to bail out and struggle down to the Bush River. We followed him up. I was nervous, relying on my ski-crampons to hold me on the steep, hard slope – there AREE GREUL Intern.Alpine-/Polar-/Trekking-Literature Mailorderbookseller / Antiquariat Am Goldsteinpark 28 - D - 60529 FRANKFURT a/M - Germany Tele / Fax: 069/666 18 17 - email: greulalpin@t-online.de www.mountain-bookshop.de www.mountain-bookshop.de Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 21 Fall ’02 Board of Directors Meeting Rod Plasman, Secretary On October 26 and 27, members of the Club’s national Board of Directors gathered in Lake Louise for their semi-annual meeting. The prospect of sitting inside for a day-and-a-half meeting is never an uplifting one, but some took the edge off that feeling by hiking up a local peak on the Friday proceeding the weekend. Also, a reception was held Friday evening, highlighted by a slide presentation by Glen Boles and Mike Simpson documenting 30 years of hiking and climbing by the Grizzly Group. (see article on p. 15) On Saturday morning, David Toole, President, welcomed all Board members and it was down to work. Highlights of the reports submitted and decisions taken at the meeting included: ● Club memberships continued to show a steady year-to-year increase. The total number of members in the Club is now over 10,000. ● Bylaw changes were approved to change the name of the Publications Committee to the Mountain Culture Committee (thereby reflecting its current role), and to allow the Board to vote by email on significant issues that arise between Board meetings. ● The National Access and Environment Coordinating Committee has been successful in keeping the local access/ environment section reps in touch with Enjoying the Guides Ball r - l Bob Sandford, Mike Mortimer, Charlie Locke 22 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 Board Members on the summit of Paget Peak. each other, and with national and section issues. ● The Accidents in North American Mountaineering publication has a new Canadian editor, Edwina Podemski (Edmonton Section), who also coordinates the Alpine Accidents in Canada database available on the Internet (www.alpineclubofcanada-edm.org/ accidents). Photo by Paul Thompson ● The national Mountain Adventures program was so popular in 2002 that more trips and camps had to be added. As well, interest in the Club’s General Mountaineering Camp continues to increase, with members registering earlier and earlier each year to make sure they get a spot. ● Renovations at the Clubhouse in Canmore took place in 2002, with more on the way. Also, the Clubhouse is now an Associate Hostel in the international Hostelling network. ● Two major work parties took place in the national huts system in the summer, thanks to many dedicated volunteers. At Abbot Hut, a new outhouse, propane/ firewood storage area and stone patio were installed. Fairy Meadow Hut saw the construction of a new outhouse and vestibule, roof repairs and some interior work. ● Through the Mountain Culture Committee the Club enjoyed significant participation in the International Year of Mountains during 2002. Related activities took place at the national and section levels. ● Roger Payne, representing the UIAA (Union Internationale des Associations d’Alpinisme), outlined his organizations’ initiatives in 2002 to raise international awareness of the need ● ● ● ● to protect mountain environments. He also described the UIAA’s efforts to have the International Olympic Committee recognize and include certain mountaineering-related sports (like competitive ski mountaineering) in the Olympic Games. The National Office is enjoying the benefits of a high-speed connection to the Internet, and there are plans for 2003 to ensure similar benefits are passed on to members (watch for on-line hut bookings!). Effective immediately the Club will release members’ personal information to third parties only if they have given their prior consent. Until now, the Club could release such information if a member didn’t specifically request nonrelease on their membership application or renewal. The Centennial Committee, chaired by Past President Mike Mortimer, outlined its plans to celebrate the Club’s 100th anniversary in 2006. It is intended that the centennial be celebrated in a wide variety of ways that represent both the national and section aspects of the Club’s structure. The annual ACC Endowment Fund grants program will be suspended for the next four years (2003-2006). Instead, the annual grant monies will be accumulated and used to support the many planned activities to celebrate the Club’s centennial in 2006. Board members left the meeting on Sunday in an optimistic mood. There was also a commonly expressed desire to involve more volunteers in Club activities, particularly at the section level. Thanks to all those who participated in the meeting, and the Club looks forward to the next Board meeting May 10 and 11 in Canmore. Executive Directors Slate for 2003 to 2005 The ● ● ● ● Nominations Committee, chaired by Past President Mike Mortimer, presented the slate of Executive Committee officers being nominated for the Spring ’03 to Spring ’05 period. The proposed slate is as follows: David Toole: President Gord Currie: Treasurer Rod Plasman: Secretary Cam Roe: Vice President, Activities ● ● ● ● Peter Muir: Vice President, Access & Environment Carl Hannigan: Vice President, Facilities Bob Sandford: Vice President, Mountain Culture David Zemrau: Vice President, Services Unless further nominations are received, those named above will be declared elected and the membership informed at the Spring 2003 Annual General Meeting. Additional nominations must be accompanied by the signatures of 50 members in good standing, and arrive at the National Office no later than February 28, 2003. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Winter 2003 23 ANNOUNCEMENTS CLASSIFIED ADS The ACC Annual General Meeting EVEREST 50th Anniversary. will be held on May 11, 2003 at 9:00 AM at the Westridge Country Inn, 1719 Bow Valley Trail, Canmore, AB. For more details contact the National Office. South side CLIMB and TREK with leader of BC’s first and Canada’s first truly national EVEREST expedition. Peter Austen. e-mail : peter@austeneverest.com web: ww.austeneverest.com tel: 604-898-9775 Conference UIAA Safety Commission Conference will be held in Canmore, June 10-14 Birthday Wishes! Polly Prescott, an Alpine Club of Canada member since 1926, celebrating a new summit, her 100th birthday!!! Congratulations Polly! DEADLINES Submit Applications by: May 1 - Summer North Face Leadership Course May 31 - Jim Colpitts Fund grant applications www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/grants ACC Custom Portering Services now available for all huts summer and winter. If you are planning a backcountry hut trip and would like to have your food and equipment carried in, contact the Facilities Administration Manager, Luther McLain, for details at (403) 678-3200 ext. 104 or e-mail lmclain@AlpineClubofCanada.ca Classified Ads: Up to 25 words for $100 per issue $75 for Club Members E-mail your ad to: ads@AlpineClubofCanada.ca or mail to the address on page 3. HELP NEEDED Civil Engineer The Clubhouse Committee is looking for a member with a civil engineering degree to assist in the long term planning of the clubhouse property. If you can help us e-mail Bruce Hardardt at bhardardt@shaw.ca An honourarium will be provided. Summer Job Opportunity The ACC is looking for two responsible individuals to work as Custodians at the Conrad Kain Hut in Bugaboo Provincial Park from mid June to mid September. In order to qualify for the job, you must be: ✔ honest and reliable ✔ customer service oriented ✔ mechanically minded and handy with tools ✔ experienced in backcountry travel ✔ physically fit and healthy The job is scheduled on a week-on, week-off basis. During the week-off, subsidized staff accommodation is available at the Clubhouse property in Canmore, or the custodian may stay at the Kain Hut. Custodians will be paid $75 per day, plus a car allowance, plus a bonus, if earned. The deadline for applications is April 15. Please submit your resume to: Luther McLain, Facilities Administration Manager lmclain@AlpineClubofCanada.ca Box 8040, Canmore, Alberta T1W 2T8 OR fax: (403) 678-3224