Reiner Thoni - Alpine Club of Canada
Transcription
Reiner Thoni - Alpine Club of Canada
Alpine Club of Canada | Club Alpin du Canada Vol. 29, No. 3 Winter | hiver 2014 Profile: Reiner Thoni page 6 Profil: Reiner Thoni page 8 Preserving, practicing and promoting Canadian mountain culture and self-propelled alpine pursuits. | Préserver, pratiquer et promouvoir la culture alpine canadienne et les activités non motorisées en montagne. LONG ROUTES, LINKUPS, ALPINE MEC.CA/CLIMB Get the MEC app mec.ca/iphone Follow us @mec Like us fb.com/mec Read us blog.mec.ca Sarah Hart MEC Climbing Envoy Andrew Querner, Squamish, BC Burn down big projects with lightness, speed and efficiency. Find streamlined harnesses, low-profile helmets, and minimalist packs to keep your setup spare. The Alpine Club of Canada Publications Mail Agreement No. 40009034 Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: The Alpine Club of Canada Box 8040, Canmore, AB Canada T1W 2T8 Phone: (403) 678‑3200 Fax: (403) 678‑3224 [email protected] www.alpineclubofcanada.ca Board of Directors Gordon Currie President Isabelle Daigneault Secretary Neil Bosch Treasurer Wayne Campbell VP Access/Environment Frank Spears VP Activities Carl Hannigan VP Facilities Zac Robinson VP Mountain Culture Sandy Walker VP Sections David Foster VP Services & Athletics David Toole Honorary President Nancy Hansen Interim Exec. Director Publication Lynn Martel Gazette Editor Suzan Chamney Layout & Production Jean-Philippe Gravel Translator Submissions Submissions to the Gazette are welcome! For submission guidelines e-mail your idea to the Gazette Editor at [email protected] Advertising Advertising rate sheet available on the website or by request. Please direct all advertising inquiries to Suzan Chamney, National Office by e‑mail to: [email protected] What’s Inside... Adventures 10 Trekking through the roof of the world 18 Zoomers crush the Wapta 24 A challenging day was a possible first ascent 25 Why skiers need emergency medical travel insurance 26 Alpine Start 26 Pourquoi les skieurs ont besoin d’une assurance voyage Members 7 19 20 28 29 30 31 31 Heritage Club Scholarship honours Ferdl Taxböck What a great ride! Climbing Rocks! Ode to climbing Grimper m’agrippe Ode à l’escalade Volunteer Awards ACC member a Yukon icon ACC Grants Program Huts 12 Richard & Louise Guy Hut at des Poilus 27 The Abbot Pass Hut Restoration Project Athletics 6 8 Profile: Reiner Thoni Profil: Reiner Thoni Publications 14 Biographies pay fitting tribute 22 The Bookpack Community 4 5 15 30 31 Short Rope Route Finding Nominate a Volunteer My turn in the big chair Classified ads and Notices What’s Outside... Cover photo: Reiner Thoni charges up the slope at the Atomic WayMaker in Dachstein, Austria, April, 2013. Photo courtesy Red Bull. Read the story on page 6. facebook.com/alpineclubofcanada twitter.com/alpineclubcan Reiner Thoni à la compétition Waymaker à Dachstein (Autriche), en avril 2013. Photo: gracieuseté de Red Bull. Voir l’article en page 8. SW-COC-001271 Corporate Partners The Alpine Club of Canada 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 Corporate Members Backcountry Access BanffHotels.org CP Railway Forty Below Gripped Helly Hansen Hi-Tec Sports Canada Jardine Lloyd Thompson Lake Louise Ski Resort Ortovox Canada Osprey Packs Patagonia Patagonia Banff & Calgary Petzl Richmond Hill Wines Rocky Mountain Books Sterling Ropes Yamnuska Zaui Software Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 3 Short Rope by Lynn O Martel ne big factor that makes the Alpine Club of Canada unique and very special is that our club is not just about climbing, or only about mountains. The ACC is about people. And through the very nature of join‑ ing, our members engage in the act of belonging to a community. In addition to joining Club sections through which members find like-minded partners with whom they can plan and share adven‑ tures, members also actively participate in our club by planning social events in their neighbourhoods; by organizing photo contests and barbecues and Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour showings; by volunteering their time and muscle to help maintain our backcountry huts; and by sharing their skills with less experienced mountaineers, as you’ll learn Calgary Section member Chuck Young has done for 25 years as an Amateur Leader at the General Mountaineering Camp (page 20). Members also contribute by writing articles to share on the pages of every issue of the Gazette, and, as President Gord Currie writes on page 5, by donat‑ ing money to help support the Club’s great activities and initiatives. And then there are those ACC members who are inspired to give of themselves just that little- or big- bit more. In this vein, the ACC is beyond fortunate to have counted, for more than four decades, Richard and Louise Guy among its members. Over those years, Louise and Richard supported the Club with their time, their energy, their expertise and their generous donations. They each served on numerous Lynn takes in the super view—and a bit of spray—climbing Takakkaw Falls in Yoho National Park. photo by Gail Crowe-swords committees, participated in section trips, and shared their skills and experience acquired through their many global mountain adventures with the extensive ACC mountaineering community. And as many an attendee of the Mountain Guides Ball likely remembers, as the most enthusiastic, spry couple – they were married for 70 years – lighting up the dance floor with their graceful moves and Louise’s dazzling smile. The Guys’ contributions have been exceptionally beneficial for the Club’s General Mountaineering Camp; they participated in a combined 60 GMCs. When the Camp was threatened with discontinuation due to lack of interest in the 1980s, Louise’s now legendary letter writing campaign urging former attendees to continue to participate succeeded in helping ensure its viability and longevity. As if that wasn’t more than enough to give of themselves to the ACC, in memory of Louise, who died in 2010 at the age of 92, Richard made a significant donation that resulted in the creation of the Louise Guy Commemorative Fund, used for training GMC Amateur Leaders. And, just last month, Richard made another substantial donation that will go toward construction of what Club directors unanimously decided should be fittingly named the Richard & Louise Guy Hut at Mont des Poilus, located in the upper Waterfall Valley of Yoho National Park. With some 10,000 members, it’s naturally impossible for all ACCers to be acquainted on a personal level. To learn more about Louise and Richard Guy and the backcountry hut that will be named for them, turn to page 12. Then, on page 14, you can learn more about the ACC’s Summit Series of biographical booklets that celebrate and honour very special members of the ACC and Canada’s mountaineering community, including, you guessed it, the Guys. Happy reading! JLT Canada’s Sport and Recreation Division is a recognized risk management and insurance leader for the Sport, Recreation and Adventure industries Contact us to learn more www.jltcanada.com 4 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 Route Finding by I marmot.com Gord Currie, ACC President met Arlene Flock a couple of times— she was a friend of friends. Arlene died suddenly and unexpectedly last spring at age 67, and as I read her obitu‑ ary in the local newspaper, I was surprised to see that she had asked that donations in her memory be directed to the Alpine Club of Canada. She was only a member for one year, but apparently she loved the outdoors and had spent a few pleasant weekends in our huts over the years. Almost annually we receive donations from ACC members who have made bequests in their wills, and often we do not find out about them until we get a call from their executor. The Club is in my will too, although I am hoping to live long enough that there will not be much left to donate! Many members have made substan‑ tial donations during their lifetimes, and lots of members send smaller donations each year. All are welcome. The people who have donated over the 108-year history of the ACC are too numerous to mention, but a list of last year’s donors can be found on our website in our Annual Report at www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/reports The Clubhouse in Canmore and our huts are really the financial engine of the Club, generating a significant amount of income, and our 30 per cent interest in the HI-Lake Louise Alpine Centre hostel pays a small annual dividend. New huts, such as the one we plan to build at Mont des Poilus next summer, are only made possible by generous donors like Richard Guy—check out page 12 for some exciting news on this. Our Endowment Fund was cre‑ ated when the Clubhouse was rented out during the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics. It has since grown to be quite substantial, thanks to ongoing donations and successful investing. In 2011, the Endowment Fund received a significant injection of $1.5 million from the estate of Toronto Life Member Wally Joyce. It was the largest single donation the ACC has ever received. Endowment fund proceeds support various Club programs. We also have a series of donor-spon‑ sored funds that support our Library, the Canadian Alpine Journal, facilities maintenance, training for amateur leaders L I V ING THE A DV ENT URE Marmot Athlete Hadley Hammer eyeing lines in the San Juan Range backcountry. Protected by the Marmot Women’s Excellerator Jacket. Backcountry essentials safely housed in the Sidetrack 14 pack. Photo: Blake Gordon at the General Mountaineering Camp, training for young climbers, and moun‑ tain adventures for young women. In addition, many wonderful sup‑ porters of the ACC donate items to be auctioned at the Mountain Guides Ball each October. Guides Ball proceeds have supported a variety of initiatives over the past 25 years. The ACC is a registered charity and the generosity of our members is just one of the many things that separates the ACC from meet-up groups. Donations allow us to provide all kinds of programs and benefits to members across the country. When giving, please consider the ACC as one of your charities of choice. The sun is shining outside as I write, but the leaves are falling, which means that snow is not far behind. Have fun and be careful out in the backcountry this winter. Climb on! To find out about our Funds or to make a donation, visit: www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/financial-donations Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 5 Profile: Reiner Thoni by Lynn S Martel ince competing in his first skimo race in 2006, Reiner Thoni has charged ahead, winning the Canadian Ski Mountaineering Championships in 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2014, as well as the US Nationals in 2011. A member of the Canadian National Ski Mountaineering team since 2009, Thoni, 30, also won the North American Individual and Sprint titles in 2012, and the 2013 Way Maker competition in Austria with teammates Mark Smiley (US national skimo team) and fellow Canadian team member, Andrew McNab. He placed 18th and 19th at World Cup races in Italy (2011) and Andorra (2013), finished 15th with McNab in the WC team event in 2012, and 15th again with McNab at the 2013 test piece multi-day Pierra Menta in France. Living in Valemount B.C., working summers in the for‑ estry industry doubles as a training regime and source of income sufficient to keep him skiing through the winters. With the 2015 ISMF World Championships taking place in Verbier, Switzerland in February, Canadian national skimo team members will be training hard and honing their racing skills at Canadian and European WC competitions all sea‑ son. Learn more about Canada’s national skimo team at www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/athletics/ski-mountaineering ❆❆ What first grabbed you about skiing? My first experience on skis was at three. My memories of learning were in Nancy Green going way too fast down bush trails and building little forts. Nancy Green racing was great, everybody got a trophy. We had awesome imaginations. The ultimate freedom to move around the mountains had me hooked and the lifestyle, friends and community sealed the deal. ❆❆ How did you get started in skimo? A friend, Ian Gale, convinced me to try the first Sunshine 5000 in 2006. I had done a lot of backcountry skiing but had never pushed the fitness envelope so far. ❆❆ What did that race teach you? I was in the lead pack at the second-to-last transition, it was a short descent so I decided to leave the skins on. This put me in the front, but it was actually against the rules and I should have Team Canada gathers for a photo at the 2010 World Championships in Andorra. p hoto courtesy ISMF Reiner Thoni boot packs up to gain a peak at the 2010 World Championships in Andorra. p hoto courtesy ISMF been penalized. Then, at the last transition I was so slow remov‑ ing my skis to rip my skins, the organizer, Greg Hill, was likely laughing and waving the penalty as the others passed by. After this race it was clear to me how important transitions are. ❆❆ Why have you continued to compete? The challenge to progress is my draw. I love building up to a race and trying different ways to become faster. It’s like a big puzzle to become as healthy and fit as I possibly can, and it’s pretty awesome to have an excuse to ski so much. ❆❆ What are your biggest challenges in skimo competitions? Depends on the day, but when it’s below -20 C, it’s really a balancing act to hit the right clothing combinations to keep your hands, face and feet warm, while not overheating your core. It’s amazing how you can run around in spandex and actually keep your core warm. ❆❆ What do you like best about skimo comps? I love the environment it creates to move at top speed in the mountains pushing boundaries with your friends. It gives you freedom to temporarily hand over the responsibilities of slope stability and group dynamics to the race organizer, allowing you to just bust your ass with a little shovel, transceiver and a few gels. ❆❆ What was your first WC experience? It was the vertical in Andorra at the 2010 World Championships and it was humbling to race the top athletes in the world and see what’s possible. Over the years I’ve seen the culture in Europe and how supportive they are towards endur‑ ance sports such as skimo. For bigger races, like France’s Pierra Menta, you’re booting up a couloir with the roar of thousands of spectators who all hiked up in the early hours to watch the race. It’s even aired on national TV. ❆❆ What was your most difficult competition? The second day of the Pierra Menta a couple of years ago. I didn’t bring enough calories and suffered for it. I fell over, shak‑ ing and slobbering. It was important for me to keep our pace and make the finish line to not disappoint my partner, but my body thought otherwise. ❆❆ What was your favourite competition moment? The first time I won the US Nationals, skiing down the last descent it was amazing to have accomplished something that seemed almost impossible a few years prior. NEW KODE ABS® SERIES Backcountry Riding ospreypacks.com ABS - ACC Gaette1_2H EN.indd 2 ❆❆ How much has gear changed? A lot. When I started bellows were in, boots weighed more than 1 kilogram and skis and bindings were well over 1 kilogram. Now we’re racing on carbon fibre boots, bindings and skis that all together weigh less than my boots used to. It’s an exciting time for skimo racing and we’re seeing those advancements transferring to general backcountry gear. ❆❆ Are there challenges being a Canadian skimo racer? We don’t get a lot of support, but organizations such as the ACC really help keep the sport alive in Canada. Dave Dornian [Ski Mountaineering Competition Canada Chair], has been the team’s backbone for more than a decade. We face challenges with funding but this attracts people who are truly passionate and is a major reason why I enjoy my time on the team. ❆❆ What’s your dream gear? I’m keen on the new steel tech crampons that attach front points to your ski boots and weigh 125 grams. My wish is for mono point and super light aluminum and carbon fibre models. ❆❆ What’s the best advice you received from a fellow racer? Stano Faban identified how getting to your true peak does not come from simply training hard, but from at least a decade of training smart and building year after year. There will always be ups and downs, but as long as you keep your goals to long term progression it eliminates the stress from any one race. ❆❆ What advice would you give a new racer? Always have fun and realize that over time your body and mind will adapt to make even the hardest things—like intervals—fun. It involves twisting your mind a bit but there is light at the end of the tunnel. 2014-09-26 9:42 Heritage C lub Every year, the Alpine Club of Canada celebrates those members who have been with the Club for 25, 35 and 50 years. The Club recognizes these members with a special lapel pin, with the 25- and 35-year members receiving an attractive certificate and the 50-year members receiving a handsome wall plaque. In 2014, in addition to the members we highlighted in the summer issue, we are honouring another 50-year member and a 75-year member: 50 years Graham Boothroyd, Vancouver 75 years E.C.B Macnabb, Vancouver Congratulations! b Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 7 Profil: Reiner Thoni par Lynn D Martel epuis qu’il a participé à sa première course de ski-alpinisme en 2006, Reiner Thoni a continué sur sa lancée, gagnant le Championnat canadien de ski-alp‑ inisme en 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 et 2014, ainsi que le Championnat US en 2011. Membre de l’Équipe canadienne de ski-alpinisme depuis 2009, Thoni, 30 ans, a aussi remporté en 2012 les titres nord-américains à l’épreuve individuelle et au sprint, et la compétition Way Maker de 2013 en Autriche avec ses coéquipiers Mark Smiley (de l’Équipe US de ski-alpinisme) et son partenaire de l’Équipe canadienne, Andrew McNab. Il s’est placé en dix-huitième et en dix-neuvième position aux courses de la Coupe du monde en Italie (2011) et à Andorre (2013), s’est classé quinzième avec McNab à l’événement de la Coupe du monde de 2012, et quinzième encore avec McNab à l’épreuve de plusieurs jours de Pierra Menta (France). Établi à Valemount (Colombie-Britannique), Reiner Thoni travaille dans l’industrie forestière durant l’été, ce qui est en soi un régime d’entraînement et une source de rev‑ enus qui lui permettent de continuer de skier au cours de l’hiver. Avec les Championnats du monde de l’ISMF qui se dérouleront à Verbier (Suisse) en février prochain, les membres de l’Équipe canadienne de ski-alpinisme s’entraîneront durement et affûteront leurs techniques de course durant toute la saison lors des compétitions canadiennes et européennes de la Coupe du Monde. Pour en savoir plus sur l’Équipe Canadienne de Ski-Alpinisme : www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/athletics/ski-mountaineering ❆❆ Qu’est-ce qui vous a accroché au départ dans le ski? Je suis monté sur des skis pour la première fois à trois ans. Mes souvenirs d’apprentissage, c’est de me trouver à Nancy Green, à descendre des sentiers beaucoup trop rapidement, et à con‑ struire de petits forts. Les courses à Nancy Green étaient formidables, tout le monde recevait un trophée. Nous avions une imagination surprenante. La liberté ultime de me déplacer parmi les montagnes m’a séduit, et le mode de vie, les amis et la communauté ont conclu l’affaire. ❆❆ Comment avez-vous démarré dans le ski-alpinisme? C’est mon ami Ian Gale qui m’a convaincu d’essayer la première course de Sunshine 5000 en 2006. J’avais déjà fait beaucoup de ski hors-piste mais jamais je n’avais mis mes forces à l’épreuve à ce point. ❆❆ Qu’est-ce que cette course vous a appris? Je me souviens d’avoir été dans le peloton de tête à l’avant-dernière transi‑ tion. Comme c’était une descente assez courte, j’avais décidé de garder mes peaux. Reiner Thoni sur ses peaux s’apprête à franchir la ligne d’arrivée des Championnats canadiens 2014 du Dogtooth Dash à Golden (ColombieBritannique). photo by Malcolm Taylor Cela m’a placé en tête, mais c’était contre le règlement, en fait. On aurait dû me pénal‑ iser. Arrivé à la dernière transition, j’ai pris tellement de temps à enlever mes skis pour enlever mes peaux que Greg Hill, l’organi‑ sateur, devait rire et signifier la pénalité pendant que les autres me dépassaient. Après cette course, l’importance des transi‑ tions est devenue très claire pour moi. ❆❆ Pourquoi avez-vous continué de faire de la compétition? Le défi et la possibilité de progresser sont ce qui m’attire. J’aime me préparer à une course en essayant différentes façons d’augmenter ma vitesse. Être le plus en santé et le plus en forme possible est vraiment comme un grand casse-tête, et c’est assez fantastique d’avoir une excuse pour skier autant. ❆❆ Lors des compétitions de ski-alpinisme, quels sont vos plus grands défis? Cela dépend des journées, mais quand il fait sous les -20 degrés, combiner les bons vêtements afin de se garder les mains, le visage et les pieds au chaud sans surchauffer votre centre est une vraie tâche d’équilibriste. Mais il est étonnant comment on peut courir dans du spandex tout en gardant son centre au chaud. Reiner Thoni (à gauche) savoure un moment de victoire avec Andrew McNab (au centre) et Mark Smiley après avoir gagné la compétition Waymaker en équipe à Dachstein (Autriche), en avril 2013. ti ti o n nous faisons de la course avec des fixa‑ tions, des skis et des bottes de fibre de carbone qui, ensemble, pèsent moins que ce que pesaient mes bottes seules. C’est un moment excitant pour le ski-alpinisme de course, et on commence à voir cette évolution gagner l’équipement général hors-piste. ng festiv al a nd c o m pe ❆❆ Qu’est-ce que vous préférez dans les compétitions de ski-alpinisme? J’aime l’environnement qu’ils crééent et qui encourage à se mouvoir dans les montagnes à une vitesse maximale, et à repousser ses limites avec ses amis. Cela te donne la liberté de déléguer les respon‑ sabilités de la stabilité des pentes et de la dynamique des groupes à l’organisateur de la course, ce qui te permet de simplement essayer de te dépasser, avec une petite pelle à neige, une sonde et quelques gels. n d’escalade su rg l a c e | I c e c li m b i ❆❆ Quelle était votre première expérience en compétition mondiale? C’était la vertical race en Andorre pendant les championnats mondiaux de 2010. C’était une leçon d’humilité d’entrer en course contre ces athlètes du plus haut niveau au monde, voir ce qu’il était possible de faire. Au fil des ans j’ai fini par connaître la culture en Europe, et combien ils soutiennent les sports d’endurance comme le ski-alpinisme. Dans les plus grosses courses, comme la Pierra Menta en France, on démarre d’un couloir parmi la clameur de milliers de spectateurs qui sont tous montés au petit matin pour regarder la course. Et c’est même diffusé par la télévision nationale. Festival et c om pé ti ti o ❆❆ Quelle était votre compétition la plus difficile? La seconde journée de la Pierra Menta il y a quelques années. Je n’avais pas apporté suffisamment de calories et j’en ai souffert. Je suis tombé en tremblant et en bavant. Il était important de garder le rythme et de me rendre à l’arrivée pour ne pas décevoir mon partenaire, mais mon corps n’était pas de cet avis. ❆❆ Quel a été votre moment de compétition favori? La première fois que j’ai remporté les nationales américaines. En descendant la dernière pente sur mes skis, c’était vrai‑ ment formidable d’avoir accompli quelque chose qui paraissait quasiment impossible à réaliser quelques années plus tôt. ❆❆ À quel point l’équipement a-t-il changé? Il a changé beaucoup. Quand j’ai com‑ mencé, les bottes pesaient plus d’un kilo, le poids des skis et des fixations étaient bien au-dessus d’un kilo. Maintenant, de Saint-Boniface Festival et compétition d’escalade sur glace Ice climbing festival and competition ❆❆ Est-ce qu’il y a des défis spécifiques au fait d’être un coureur canadien? On ne reçoit pas beaucoup de soutien, mais des organisations comme le Club alpin du canada (CAC) aident vraiment à garder ce sport en vie au pays. David Dornian [président de Competition de Ski-Alpinisme Canada] demeure l’épine dorsale de l’équipe depuis plus de dix ans. Le financement nous pose des défis, mais cela attire aussi des personnes qui sont vraiment passionnées, et c’est une des principales raisons pour lesquelles j’aime le temps que je passe dans l’équipe. ❆❆ Et votre équipement de rêve? J’ai un faible pour ces nouveaux crampons d’acier léger qui attachent des pointes avant à vos bottes et qui pèsent 125 grammes. Mon vœu va pour les crampons monopointe et les modèles en aluminium ultraléger et en fibre de carbone. ❆❆ Quel est le meilleur conseil qu’un camarade coureur vous ait donné? Stano Faban a reconnu comment atteindre son plein potentiel ne dépend pas seulement d’un entraînement intense, mais d’au moins dix ans d’un entraîne‑ ment intelligent qui se construit d’année en année. Il y aura toujours des hauts et des bas, mais tant qu’on garde ses objectifs de progrès à long-terme, le stress qu’on rattache à une course ou une autre est éliminé. ❆❆ Quel conseil donneriez-vous à un nouveau coureur? Ayez toujours du plaisir et réalisez que votre corps et votre esprit, avec le temps, s’adapteront pour rendre amu‑ santes même les choses les plus difficiles — comme les intervalles. Cela demande de se tordre un peu l’esprit au début, mais il y a de la lumière au bout du tunnel. February 14 & 15 février 2015 www.cesb.net Section Saint-Boniface du Club Alpin du Canada Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 9 Trekking through the roof of the world by I Dave McCormick once read of a traveller contemplat‑ ing an upcoming trip to Nepal who was considering all the ways death could come during the journey: being trampled by runaway yaks, falling off a cliff, succumbing to altitude sickness... You get the idea. Lacking such vibrant imaginations and being presented with the opportunity for an extended trek to the Himalayan used-to-be-kingdom, 10 of us jumped at the chance. Our diverse group included Joel Bruneau, Mark Rosin, Kobus Stassen, Chris Parker, Martin Ferguson, Diane vanBergen, Rich Malby, Ray Robertson, Shelia Klimchuck and me, representing places as far-flung as England, Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia. Mark, one of our ACC Saskatchewan Section members, set up the basic structure of the trip, building on his experiences in Nepal two years earlier. The group exchanged emails and eventu‑ ally settled on a 21-day trek following the more recently opened Manaslu circuit, finishing off with the northern part of the Annapurna circuit and ending in Jomsom. Two 5,000-plus-metre passes were included, with a side trip to one of the highest lakes in the world and, for three group members, an attempt to climb Chulu West, a 6,400-metre trek‑ king peak. The author’s group walks the dramatic trail en route to Tilicho Lake, northern Nepal. photo by Dave McCormick Arriving in hot and humid Kathmandu at nearly midnight in a developing country with no local currency in our pockets and no understanding of how anything worked, we were happy to be greeted by representatives of the trekking company we had hired. Nepal is notoriously short of electricity, so negotiating dark city streets, avoiding wandering cattle and just locating our hotel was a task we appreciated leaving to experienced locals. Four of us arrived ahead of the others, giving us time to adjust our internal clocks, experience the sights, sounds and smells of Kathmandu and visit three of the seven World Heritage Sites in the Kathmandu Valley: Swayambunath (monkey temple), the Boudha Stupa, and Pashupatinath (cremation ghats on the Bagmati River). Following a full breakfast on October 17, all of us and our gear were loaded on a bus. Most of the day was spent slowly negotiating the 150-odd-kilometres to Arughat. The last few hours followed a steep, narrow track that reminded me of BC logging roads but with much more traffic—people, trucks, buses, cars and motorcycles. Leaving Arughat on foot the next morning, we entered a more remote part of Nepal as we hiked up the Buddhi Gandaki River valley. There were no vehicles and fewer people than we had become accustomed to, and for the next 11 days we hiked along a single-track path, over very long suspension bridges spanning rivers and deep gorges and past collections of dwellings. The weather and scenery steadily improved. After nearly a week on the trek, we approached Manaslu. The Buddhist culture became more prominent as we were only a few kilometres from Tibet. We passed through small villages, the occasional monastery, lots of goats, yaks, sheep, and fields of millet, rice and lentils. It took several days to hike past 8,156metre Manaslu, looming over us to the south. Our elevation increased gradually and our guides were careful to make sure we were all acclimatizing well. Larkya La, our first high pass at 5,100 metres, passed without incident for our team, but one elder member of a French group just A Tibetan chorten (spiritual monument) is a popular attraction on the Manaslu trek, northern Nepal. photo by Dave McCormick ahead of us collapsed at the pass and died, despite the efforts by some of our group and others. It was a stark reminder of the dangers of altitude and that we must take nothing for granted. At Dharapani, we joined the Annapurna route. As we ascended the Marsyangdi River valley, it became more open and drier with the stupendous Annapurna range rising just to our left. While three of our group went off to attempt Chulu West, the rest of us took a three-day side trip to Tilicho Lake. At 4,919 metres, it’s one of the highest lakes Street vendors ply their colourful wares at an open market. photo by Dave McCormick in the world. It was also cold, snowy and windy, so we didn’t stay long. In a country with so much fabulous scenery, it still might be fair to say that our detour from the main trail to Tilicho Lake treated us to some of the best. Within another few days we had climbed to the foot of the Thorong La, the highest pass on our route at 5,416 metres. An alpine start enabled us to arrive at the pass by 9 a.m., all feeling fine and a wee bit excited, if a bit breathless. From the pass, another two days of steady downhill hiking brought us to Jomsom where eight of the group and the guides flew back to Kathmandu and headed Manaslu forms a stunning backdrop for a woman harvesting grain as photographed near the village of Lho, northern Nepal. photo by Richard Malby for home. Joel and I stayed in Jomsom to explore for another two days, then flew to Pokhara where we hiked to the World Peace Pagoda, beautifully situated on a hill overlooking Fewa Lake. There we sampled some wonderful Newari and Indian cuisine and generally recovered from the rigours of the trek. After the “privations” of the trek and in comparison to Kathmandu, we found ourselves quite taken with the warm, green peacefulness of Pokhara. We had planned a short trek into the Annapurna area just north of the city, but unfortunately, as a result of disruptions leading to constituent assembly elections 10 days away, a national strike had been called. No buses were running and we found ourselves unable to travel to our destination. Plan B became a tourist bus back to Kathmandu (8 hours for about 200 kilometres) where we spent a few more days, hiking for kilometres about the city, visiting Patan, temples, local markets and sampling more ethnic foods before changing our flights and returning to Canada some days earlier than planned. I think, for all of us it was the trip of a lifetime. We were reminded not to take for granted luxuries such as hot water from a tap or even water that’s safe to drink, how to interpret the eclectic menus of Nepali guest lodges and withstand the persistent attentions of the ever-present street touts, salespeople, taxi drivers and other entrepre‑ From left, Martin Ferguson, Shelia Klimchuck, Ray Robertson, Mark Rosin, neurs trying to make a living. I know some of us will be returning. Richard Malby, Joel Bruneau, Dave McCormick, Kobus Stassen (kneeling, Dave McCormick lives in Kaslo, BC, and is a member of the ACC’s front) and Diane vanBergen pause for photos at Thorong-La, the highest Saskatchewan Section. pass on their trek. p hoto by Peak Promotions staff member Kilimanjaro Africa’s Highest Mountain 5895 m / 19340 ft. DIK DIK H o t e l & To u r s Individual safaris in Tanzania Kilimanjaro climb & Safari Specialist Serengeti, Ngorongoro, Tarangire, Manyara Holidays in Zanzibar [email protected] www.dikdik.ch It is the Swiss family’s Vision & Commitment to provide top quality accommodation, food and service in a friendly atmosphere. Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 11 Richard & Louise Guy Hut at des Poilus Through the Guys’ optimism, strength and love for life, they have been role models and guides for many of us. —Chic Scott wrote in Young at Heart: The Inspirational Lives of Richard and Louise Guy ONE STEP CLOSER The ACC is thrilled to announce that we are one step closer to expanding the largest network of backcountry huts in North America due to a generous donation by long-time and loyal member, friend and volunteer, Richard Guy. Situated at the midway point between the Bow and Stanley Mitchell huts, the Richard & Louise Guy Hut will provide the missing link along the world-class Bow-Yoho ski traverse, and will offer visitors an exciting and challenging new hut-to-hut ski experience. The Alpine Club of Canada seeks to raise $500,000 to establish the hut at Mont des Poilus. Thanks to Richard Guy’s generosity we are well on our way to making this project a reality! But, we still need your support. NEW WINTER SHELTER ✔✔ Incorporating new technologies for managing energy, water and wastewater in a backcountry facility. ✔✔ Overnight capacity for 18 people. ✔✔ Equipped with all the usual ACC hut comforts. ✔✔ Affordable, rustic retreat for backcountry travellers. DONATE NOW www.alpineclubofcanada.ca Donations over $20 are eligible for a charitable tax receipt (Canada & USA). ENVIRONMENT Providing visitors with the ability to leave a smaller footprint, the Richard & Louise Guy Hut at Mont des Poilus will be an extension of the ACC’s commitment to reducing environmental impact in the backcountry. ✔✔ Designed in consultation with SAIT’s Applied Research and Innovation Services and the University of Calgary’s Faculty of Environmental Design. ✔✔ A Backcountry Energy Environmental Solutions (BEES) demonstration site. ✔✔ Incorporates sustainable backcountry technology and management practices. ✔✔ Reduces dependence on fossil fuels by offering efficient centralized cooking, heating and lighting systems. The new facility at Mont des Poilus will provide the missing link in a worldclass, hut-to-hut ski mountaineering traverse. And it could not be more fitting that its name will be the Richard & Louise Guy Hut as they are two of the dearest and most inspirational ACC members in history. —Nancy Hansen, Interim Executive Director Louise and Richard skiing to the Bow Hut at ages 76 and 78. DEDICATION For more than four decades, Richard and the late Louise Guy have supported the ACC with their time, energy, expertise and donations. They served on numerous committees, participated in section trips, and shared skills and experience acquired through their many global mountain adventures with the extensive ACC mountaineering community. The Guys attended and contributed to a combined 60 General Mountaineering Camps. In the 1980s, they played an instrumental role in ensuring the Camp’s future viability through personal donations and a letter writing campaign to the ACC membership. The ground was broken for the Richard & Louise Guy Hut at Mont des Poilus in the summer of 2014 and construction is scheduled for the summer of 2015 Biographies pay fitting tribute by Lynn H Martel e served as president of both the Association of Canadian Mountain Guides and the Alpine Club of Canada. He was a mem‑ ber of the first team of Canadians (with British and Indian nationals) to reach a Himalayan peak, the west (lower) summit of Swargarohini, in 1974. And notably, Peter Fuhrmann played a crucial lead role in the development of Parks Canada’s world-respected public safety and moun‑ tain rescue team. Those accomplishments and many more, including receiving the 2010 Summit of Excellence Award, says writer and historian Bob Sandford, makes Fuhrmann unquestionably deserving of a biography. “Peter Fuhrmann is an icon of Canadian mountain culture,” Sandford said. “Throughout many struggles and against a backdrop of terrible tragedy in his personal life he never lost his sense of humour and love of mountain place. If anyone in this country deserved a biog‑ raphy, I felt, it was him.” Con Bravura: The Remarkable Mountaineering Life of Peter Fuhrmann, is the 18th of the ACC’s Summit Series of “Biographies of people who have made a difference in Canadian mountaineer‑ ing.” It was published earlier this year as one of several “backlog” booklets being produced to honour patrons of the early Mountain Guides Balls that took place prior to the series’ creation. Other backlog 14 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 booklets currently in production include biographies of mountaineer and author William (Bill) Putnam, conservationist Andy Russell and former ACC President Bob Hind. This year also saw the publication of Alpine Artistry: The Mountain Life of Glen Boles, by Lynn Martel, honouring the accomplished mountaineer, artist and ACC Honorary Member. As well, Chic Scott wrote The Book of Mortimer: Celebrating a Life of Volunteerism, the colourful and captivating biography of Mike and Heather Mortimer produced in honour of their role as 2014 MGB patrons. It was during his tenure as the ACC’s VP Mountain Culture from 1995 to 2007 that Sandford created the Summit Series. The series launched in 2000 with a biog‑ raphy of Don Forest written by Forest’s daughter, Kathy Calvert. Con Bravura marked Sandford’s sixth of the series, including biographies of Canada’s—and the ACC’s—preeminent Wheeler family, a history of Parks Canada’s mountain rescue program, and mountain guides Hans Schwarz, Don Vockeroth and Lloyd Gallagher. Zac Robinson, the ACC’s current VP Mountain Culture, contributed by writing A Family for the Outfit: Harrisons and the General Mountaineering Camp, and Scott also wrote Young at Heart: The Inspirational Lives of Richard and Louise Guy. Lynn Martel has written nine of the Summit Series books, including biographies of Sharon Wood, Pat Morrow, Leo Grillmair, Rudi Gertsch, Ferdl Taxböck, Syd Feuz and two hist‑ ories of the ACMG, in 2003 and 2013, marking the association’s 50th anniversary. While the booklets are published as projects of the Mountain Culture Committee, it’s the individual authors who undertake the formidable task of recording in-depth interviews with the subjects, organizing the content including photos and writing a book that captures the spirit of the subject’s individuality and accomplishments. Then ACC Publications Manager Suzan Chamney coordinates with the author to work her magic in making the booklets look fabulous. In nearly all cases, the Summit Series booklets represent the only published account of the subjects’ extraordinary Nominate a Volunteer E very year, the members of the Alpine Club of Canada’s Awards Committee volunteer their time to sift through numerous nominations to determine the recipients of the Club’s Volunteer Awards. Nominations are now open for outstanding Alpine Club of Canada volunteers. The following awards recognize and celebrate ACC volunteers for their contributions to the Club and its members: ●● ●● ●● ●● A.O. Wheeler Legacy Award Honorary Membership President’s Award Silver Rope for Leadership Award ●● ●● ●● Distinguished Service Award Don Forest Service Award Eric Brooks Leader Award For details on how to nominate a volunteer and nomination forms, visit www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/awards or call the ACC National Office at (403) 678-3200 ext. 108 to receive the information by mail. Deadline for nominations is December 31. lives—a tall responsibility given the calibre of the members of Canada’s mountaineering community who have been so honoured. In the case of Con Bravura, Sandford explained, the title pays tribute to both his and Fuhrmann’s love of opera. “Because of Peter, I was able to see Mozart’s great Don Giovanni in the same Prague church in which it was first performed in 1787,” Sandford said. “It was therefore quite logical to see Peter Fuhrmann’s life unfold as if it were an opera—tragic at first but through many unexpected turns triumphant at the end. I consider his biography a curtain call.” Born into a life of privilege, Furhmann’s idyllic childhood was inter‑ rupted by the Second World War. Hiding in Dresden with his grandparents, he survived the 1945 firebombing that killed at least 23,000 people. In 1955 he immi‑ grated to Canada and by 1960 had earned his mountain guide’s license through Walter Perren, a Swiss trained guide who created Canada’s national park mountain rescue program. Fuhrmann served as the ACMG’s first president from 1963 to 1969, helping ensure the association was recognized as a serious, competent group of professionals. After Perren died of leukemia in 1967, Fuhrmann became Alpine Specialist for Banff, Yoho, Kootenay and several other national parks. During his tenure, with Banff pilot Jim Davies, Fuhrmann introduced European helicopter rescue capabilities, and was instrumental in developing comprehensive training programs for the public safety wardens, ensuring that Canada’s rescue specialists performed at the highest international standards. In terms of the ACC, Fuhrmann’s numerous and immeasurable contributions include spearheading construction of the first versions of the popular Wapta Icefield huts. When Parks Canada considered demolishing the historic Swiss guide-built Abbot Pass Hut, Fuhrmann arranged for the ACC to assume management of the iconic structure. And, during a period when the ACC was on the verge of insol‑ vency, Fuhrmann assumed the helm as President, restructuring the Club to lead it toward the success it enjoys today. Through creating the Summit Series, Sandford said he hoped to remember and celebrate contemporary figures for their significant contributions to Canadian mountain culture. “I felt that by writing respectful biog‑ raphies of the mountaineering legends it was my great pleasure to know, I was making it possible for others to know them also and, if only vicariously, to appreciate the extraordinary qualities of these people,” Sandford said. “It has meant a great deal to me to be able to affirm the fact that there are great Canadians in our midst and to help recognize them as such. We need to do more of that in Canada.” To learn more or to purchase any of the Summit Series biographies, visit www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/ss Recycle this Gazette Leave it at your library IN A T N U MO E, L P O E P ! E T I N U Simple, high-quality cotton blend tees available in men’s and women’s cuts. Just $20 + shipping to anywhere in Canada. JOIN US AT: highlineonline.ca/swag Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 15 30 Backcount The remote Sapphire Col Hut in the Asulkan Range, Rogers Pass, B.C. Photo: Gregg Cronn ry Huts Find yours! www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/huts Zoomers crush the Wapta by Margaret Imai-Compton L et’s be clear, right from the start! The annual Alpine Club of Canada 55+ Climbing and Trekking Camp is targeted to alpinists who have achieved a chronological age of 55 years or older, according to official state-issued documentation. But the time-tested adage of “You’re only as old as you feel” certainly applied to the participants of the 2014 ACC 55+ Camp. I can say with confidence, no one in our group “felt” even close to 55+ so we renamed ourselves the Zoomer Mountaineers, our definition of “zoomer” being “boomers with zip” (apologies to Moses Znaimer of Zoomer Media). The late, beloved ACMG Mountain Guide Ferdl Taxböck, along with ACC Life Member Patrick Duffy, started the ACC tradition of offering a moderate mountaineering camp for “later in life” alpinists who still have the desire and ability to summit beautiful high places, but who might have more modest objectives. Previous ACC 55+ camps have been based out of Lake O’Hara, the Little Yoho Valley and Kokanee Glacier Provincial Park. In the 2014 version, participants’ ages ranged from a youthful 57 up to a mature 70 years, with most of us falling somewhere in the 60s. We came from all parts of Canada, except for Wendell Martin who hopped over the pond from Scotland. Like any ACC camp, the Zoomer Mountaineers began the trek into Bow The ACC Zoomer Mountaineers climb toward (vertical left photo) and gather on the summit of St. Nicholas Peak. p hotos by Dana Roman (vertical), and Doug Joorisity (summit) Hut with lots of chatter and expectant questions for David Smith, our ACMG mountain guide and Rick McKelvey, our camp manager. We skirted the shores of Bow Lake and fixed our sights on distant St. Nicholas Peak, its impressive prow jutting into the sky. St. Nicholas was certainly on the list of objectives for the week, along with the classic Wapta peaks—Olive, Gordon and Rhondda. This was my third time up to the Wapta to attempt these peaks. On two previous visits (2001 summer and 2008 winter), these summits had eluded me due to whiteouts and inclement weather. I was back as a zoomer mountaineer, hoping that the third time would be the charm to stand on these peaks. I was also at the end of a year-long ovarian cancer journey, having finished chemotherapy a mere five months before this camp, so my anxiety was dialed up a few notches. Would the unpredictable Wapta weather skunk me yet again? Were my energy reserves and stamina sufficient for long glacier travels? Was the peripheral neuropathy on the bottom of my feet (a common side-effect of chemotherapy) going to impede my progress? Happily, the weather was brilliant for our summit shots on St. Nicholas, and held sufficiently throughout the week to allow us a successful ascent of Mount Gordon, as well as an enchainment of Mount Olive’s north and south summits. It wasn’t all mountain summits though; mid-week we had a lovely, mellow hike back down to the river canyon and up the other side to a charming, concealed lake surrounded by alpine meadows in full bloom with arnica, purple aster, fireweed, Indian paintbrush and western anemone. So what defines Zoomer Mountaineers? First, there is a need for rest. Early alpine starts of 5 a.m. were not a problem, but post-climbing naps were certainly mandatory for many of us. Not to mention the unforgettable comment of a young cadet sharing the hut, who was overhead at breakfast saying, “I’ve never heard so much snoring—awesome!” Sign up to become one of the 2015 Zoomers at alpineclubofcanada.ca/55 PSST! Second, Zoomer Mountaineers aren’t a sedentary, foot-dragging group. On the contrary, there are avid mountain bikers, hikers, rock climbers and backcountry skiers among us. For those of us living our “encore life”, getting outdoors is a regular, consistent and adventurous activ‑ ity, without the usual restraints of limited vacation time or obligations that come with a young family. Third, although mountaineering brought us together, we zoomers have rich memories and individual histories that allowed us to land on subjects as diverse as the FLQ crisis (1970), the Hungarian Revolution (1956) and the rise of Beatlemania (1963). As well, having lived as long as we have, individual life narratives were rich with stories full of tension and drama (escaping the Russians in Slovakia and resettling in Canada), youthful exploits (playing in a rock band with “hair down to here”) and life’s dis‑ appointments (divorce and an ovarian cancer diagnosis) as well as triumphs (surviving surgery and chemotherapy with a spectacular outcome). On our last evening, Doug Joorisity shared his stats—daily records of time travelled, elevation gained, weather obser‑ vations and summits achieved. According to Dave Smith, the week was an impres‑ sive achievement for any mountaineer, regardless of age or stage in life. So as zoomers, we took particular pride and satisfaction in our accomplishments. And we proposed that going forward, the camp be renamed the ACC Zoomer Mountaineering Camp! Margaret Imai-Compton is an exceptionally energetic, cheerful zoomer member of the ACC Toronto Section. Fellow zoomer participants included: Dave Ford, Doug Joorisity, Renato Infanti, Nelie Johnson, Wendell Martin, Dana Roman, Alan Stokes, ACMG Mountain Guide Dave Smith and Camp Manager Rick McKelvey. Reservations stRongly recommended... That’s why we now offer the same delicious and well balanced food served on our programs. Why buy mass-produced freeze dried meals when you can have a tasty custom built menu prepared by our resident Chef? • Full meal packages or dehydrated dinners. Adam Greenberg PHOTO Do you dream of being a best-selling author? Ok, how about just a published writer? Contact the Gazette editor at [email protected] to have your article, story or event published in the Gazette. At Yamnuska, we know that food is a critical part of any trip to the backcountry. • Packaged and prepared in our commercial kitchen. • Experience developing nutritious and light weight meals. 200, 50 Lincoln Park, Canmore | 1-866-678-4164 [email protected] backcountryfood.ca | yamnuska.com | canadianrockieshiking.com For a limited time receive 10% off your first order of dehydrated dinners when you order online (use Coupon Code “WELCOME”). • We can ship anywhere in Canada, or you can pick your order up at our office in Canmore, Alberta. • We cater to individuals, groups and expeditions. Contact us for more details and let us focus on the food while you focus on your trip. Scholarship honours Ferdl Taxböck M uch to the delight of Ferdl Taxböck’s family and friends, earlier this year Golden and District Search and Rescue (GADSAR) created the Ferdl Taxböck Memorial Scholarship in memory of the popular ACMG Mountain Guide. In addition to having been named an ACMG Honorary Member, Ferdl was chosen as Patron of the 2012 Mount Guides Ball in recog‑ nition for his long-time contributions to the mountaineering community, and his good natured approach to guiding at numerous Alpine Club of Canada camps, including many General Mountaineering Camps. And, most notably, it was Ferdl who guided the ACC’s 55+ camps since their inception. The purpose of the scholarship fund is to provide financial assistance to the dedi‑ cated volunteers who comprise GADSAR to enable them to take courses to enhance their knowledge and skills in mountain rescue. Active members of the GADSAR Mountain Rescue Team are now able to apply to receive funding through the scholarship to go toward training courses Ferdl enjoys the moment at Mount Waddington, BC Coast Mountains. p hoto by Lloyd “Kiwi” Gallagher such as ACMG guide training programs, rope rescue courses, Avalanche Canada courses, swift water rescue training and emergency medical training. To contribute to the scholarship fund visit http://golden.vr-sar.org/, contact GADSAR manager Shauna Speers at [email protected] or mail your cheque to Golden and District Search and Rescue, 210 Fisher Road, Golden, BC, V0A 1H2. Learn more about Ferdl in the ACC Summit Series booklet Alpine Journey: Ferdl Taxböck’s Life on the Edge, by Lynn Martel. Berg heil! Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 19 Earlier this year, long-time Calgary Section member Chuck Young was honoured with the Governor General’s Caring Canadian Award for his decades of volunteering with the Alpine Club of Canada, including—but not limited to—his dedication as an Amateur Leader at the Club’s General Mountaineering Camp (GMC). As it was on his birthday that he received notice of the Caring Canadian Award—and also the ACC’s President’s Award—Chuck suggested that all 60-year-olds be considered caring Canadians. What a great ride! by Chuck Young M y wife, Lesley, and I joined the ACC in 1984 and attended our first GMC in 1987. We’ve enjoyed exploring different mountain regions that were not easily accessible. Once you get into camp you realize what a special place it is. Everyone on the staff is so welcoming, and the guests are like-minded individuals. For one week a year you eat, sleep and climb in special areas with great people and excellent guides. Great value for the dollar. As the years evolved, I learned to help other participants have a safe experience, and to bring them back with many stories to share at happy hour. I feel very lucky and privileged to have been involved with the GMC for 25 years. The Camp barely survived through the late 1980s, but thanks to Louise Guy it was kept alive after she sent handwritten notes to past participants encouraging them to continue to attend. In addition to Louise, I owe the following ACCers thanks. Orvel Miskiw:In 1986 Orvel told me if I really wanted to become a good mountaineer I should attend the GMC where I would eat, sleep and climb six days straight. Wow, did I learn a lot at that first camp! I summited five peaks, each with an elevation gain of around 1,740 metres, usually returning anywhere from 8 to 11 p.m. after a 5 a.m. start. Chic Scott: In 1990 Chic approached me to become an Amateur Leader at the Vowell GMC. I was hesitant, but accepted. I hedged my bet by going in as a partici‑ pant one week early just to know the lay of the land. A fantastic location, I climbed Pigeon Spire three times, Bugaboo via the Kain route, and over the two-week period a total of nine different peaks. Lesley Young: This would not have been possible without my spouse, Lesley. Starting in 1988, Lesley joined me each year at the GMC. Our friends and kids would laugh, saying we were the only people they knew who went to summer camp while their children stayed home! Brad Harrison: Brad managed the camps his father Bill had outfitted for many years. In my 10th year, while sitting with Brad on Houston Col at the Moby Dick Camp in the Purcells, I was prepared to tell him I thought 10 years was enough. Thankfully, I never did. Brad’s always been supportive, helpful and a strong mentor. 20 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 Chuck Young shares a moment with ACMG Mountain Guide Sylvia Forest on Black Fang at the 2013 Scotch Peaks GMC in the Purcells. photo by Allan Main Cyril Shokoples: A special thanks to Cyril for his many great Amateur Leadership weekend courses, scheduled a month before the beginning of the GMC. The courses covered the latest first aid, short roping and belaying techniques, and much more. It was also a chance for me to learn a few new jokes. Anyone who knows me knows I need new jokes! Professional ACMG Mountain Guides—I’ve been privileged to have worked with and learned from many guides, the backbone of the GMC. They include Don Vockeroth, Peter Amann, Cyril Shokoples, Roger Laurilla, Helen Sovdat, Sylvia Forest, Karl Nagy, Rob Owens and countless others who have shared their talents with me. That’s the real bonus to the Amateur Leader gig, learning from the best. I would encour‑ age all ACC members interested in the Amateur Leader program to become involved with the GMC. I’ve enjoyed many wonderful changes over the years—hot showers come to mind, as do shorter days, higher camps, happy hours, festive Friday nights and out-of-this world meals, every day! (For me, it’s like eating at home.) Each camp has been memorable, thanks to charac‑ ters such as Al the magician, the very experienced Helmut Micros, jokester Paul Rosenberg and great people, particularly Richard and Louise Guy, Wally Joyce, Don Forest and Glen Boles. Many participants have become like family. Lesley and I have developed lifelong friendships with people from all over North America, and enjoy being a part of their lives outside of the camps. I must also thank my many climbing, skiing, scrambling and ice climbing partners who’ve helped me hone my skills: Allan Main, Orvel Miskiw, Lesley Young, Sue Kuznik, Elisabeth Eckhardt, Ray Potvin, Glen Anderson, Clive Cordery, Denis Pelletier and assorted others. This year I was pleasantly surprised when, on the Friday night at the GMC, my many friends who had attended the week organized a 25th year tribute. This included me being awarded the Caring Canadian Award, the ACC President’s Award, and a book of pictures of my friends and me. Special 25th year ball caps were presented to everyone at the camp. Special thanks to Sue Berger, Bill Summers and Allan Main, among others, for a night I’ll never forget. Safe climbing! Join the 2015 Stockdale Group GMC alpineclubofcanada.ca/gmc Think outside. Since 1997, Henry Vaux Jr. has been taking duplicate photographs of the glaciers his grandfather, great uncle and great aunt captured on glass plates a century before. Standing in exactly the same locations with his own tripod and camera, Vaux has documented a century of change and created an extraordinary artistic and historical document that will inspire many and tell a story that was three generations in the making. • hardcover, $30 On January 20, 2003, at 10:45 a.m., a massive avalanche released from Tumbledown Mountain in the Selkirk Range of British Columbia. Tonnes of snow swept 13 members of two guided backcountry skiing groups down a steep run called La Traviata. After a frantic hour of digging by the skiers left standing, the unthinkable became reality: seven people were dead. Assistant guide Ken Wylie tells the harrowing story not only of that day, but of his own struggle to come to terms with the aftermath of the tragedy. • paperback, $25 For many people, moving to a mountain town is the realization of a dream, the final step in a pilgrimage to a relaxed lifestyle in a rugged and beautiful setting. After a long journey that began when he was a teenager in the 1980s with the vague idea there might be a better life somewhere “out West,” Jamey Glasnovic eventually fled the chaos and stress of the big city and tried to settle into an uncomplicated Rocky Mountain existence. It wouldn’t stay uncomplicated for long. • paperback, $25 The Bookpack by Lynn Martel Conrad Kain: Letters from a Wandering Mountain Guide edited by Zac Robinson In a culture that enjoys as many romantic figures as there are mountain peaks on the horizon as viewed from a lofty summit, Conrad Kain holds a special place in the historical landscape of western Canada’s mountains. Robinson, a historian in the Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation at the University of Alberta, and the ACC’s own VP Mountain Culture, makes no secret of his affection for Kain, and that’s a good thing, because he handles the letters Kain wrote throughout his adult life while guiding in Canada and New Zealand to his dear friend in Austria, Amelie Malek, with the care and reverence they so richly deserve. Published by The University of Alberta Press www.uap.ualberta.ca/UAP.asp Available on the ACC website: http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/product/conrad-kain-letters The Calling: A Life Rocked by Mountains by Barry Blanchard I laughed. I cried. I felt like I’d been kicked in the gut. Unflinchingly honest, Blanchard shares the highs and the lows of the climbs and personal experiences that propelled him from the unsavoury environment of his youth to the heights of alpinism in the Great Ranges and his home mountains, the Canadian Rockies. Intimate, exhilarating, sometimes terrifying with delicate strips of poignancy woven throughout, like an alpinist finally reaching a hard-fought summit or a high-altitude orgasm—hands-down (pun intended) the book’s most hilarious scene—the final chapters build tension like a heavyweight boxer landing blows in the final rounds, as Blanchard experiences euphoria and the pain of loss and human frailties. Destined to become a classic alongside those of Blanchard’s own climbing heroes. Published by Patagonia books www.patagonia.com Climber’s Paradise: Making Canada’s Mountain Parks, 1906 – 1974 by PearlAnn Reichwein “The social and cultural history of mountaineering can go far beyond the simple understanding of history as a fixed chronology of great ascents in a progressive evolution of ‘important events,’” writes Reichwein in her preface. The history of leisure and sport, she argues, can be brought together with environmental history and conservation philosophy. In this book, illustrated with rarely seen historical images, she explores how Alpine Club of Canada members helped shape the policies and sensibilities of western Canada’s mountain parks, as the Club imagined and advocated on behalf of those parks to create a climber’s paradise in the Rockies and neighbouring ranges. Published by The University of Alberta Press www.uap.ualberta.ca/UAP.asp Available on the ACC website: http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/product/climbers-paradise Art Inspired by the Canadian Rockies, Purcell Mountains and Selkirk Mountains by Nancy Townshend Beginning with watercolours painted by explorer David Thompson in the East Kootenays circa 1809, and spanning two full centuries, this comprehensive and impressively compiled book explores insights into the interpretation of the mountain landscape by artists ranging from Lawren Harris to A.C. Leighton to Peter Whyte and Maureen Enns. Meticulously curated with full page images of diverse works of art, ACC member Townshend’s text highlights her own deep appreci‑ ation of how artists have so brilliantly interpreted western Canada’s mountains over the decades to reveal social and political sensibilities of the traditional, modern and contemporary eras. Published by Bayeux Arts, Inc. www.bayeux.com Buried by Ken Wylie It’s not often a book will stop your breath, but when it happens, it’s unforgettable. In Buried, Ken Wylie shares his story of having his own breathing shut off when he’s buried by an avalanche for half an hour, and the life wringing despair that follows his rescue when he learns seven skiers he was co-guiding at Selkirk Mountain Experience died in the slide. Stepping back through the stages of his life that led to his role in that fateful accident, in this intensely personal, raw and revealing book Wylie shares his climb from the cold and loneliest emotional mountains of his life to a place of understanding illuminated by love, hope and peace. Published by Rocky Mountain Books www.rmbooks.com Available on the ACC website: http://www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/product/buried 22 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 LIVE THE ADVENTURE SPECIAL OFFER 25% OFF A SUBSCRIPTION TO EXPLORE MAGAZINE For ACC Members EVERY ISSUE OF EXPLORE BRINGS YOU THE BEST IN ADVENTURE • TRAVEL • TALES OF THE GREAT OUTDOORS • TIPS • TECHNIQUES • WILDLIFE • OUTDOOR SPORTS & GEAR REVIEWS N DINGTOIC T WAD EP MOUN ISPORT UNTRY BACKCOIN BANFF SKIING CALL NOW 1.888.478.1183 NNING TRAIL RU& FAST GET FIT MULT ECO- ADVE NTUR E ROUN NUNA V IK’S F IRS T 18 WEISLD PTOLEAXCPLORE ADVE NTUR E R ACE BANF F BACK COUN I ING TRY SK TR A IL NOW RUNN T THEREED GET OUIN VOLV & GET IPS ING T HARD T & SOF SHEL L S TAR TED GE T S R INTO GEA YPACKS, IN ROAD CAL NEW DA & TECHNI BIKESRW EAR OUTE E INSNUIDNAVIK ADVENTURE -45° RACING AT NDLAND’S NEWFOU OUTPORTS REMOTE GUS COLIN SANA TENT PITCHE ED ON PRINT MER CONSU PAPER 100% POSTRECYCLED $5.95 2013 | SPRINGY UNTIL MAY 20 DISPLA PM40069700 DUP ENTURE ECO-ADV P ROUNDU CYCL ING Steven Song snowshoes across alpine terrain on Ghita Mountain under a cold winter sun, with unnamed peaks in the distance. A challenging day was a possible first ascent sotry and photos by T Eric Coulthard he first weekend of March was extremely cold and the forecast was for clear skies. With moder‑ ate/low avalanche hazard, Jasper seemed the best place to go. Despite the minus 35-degree temperatures, I managed to recruit fellow Edmontonian Steven Song to join me—everyone else was busy or too sensible to go out in those temperatures. Searching for a destination in the Jasper area, we decided on 2,549-metre Ghita Mountain in Mount Robson Provincial Park because it has awesome views of Mount Robson and the Tonquin Valley’s Ramparts. We chose to try to bag it from the southwest, approaching via Ghita Creek valley. We parked on the highway shoulder by Ghita Creek, then slept in the car for three hours before starting up the creek at the coldest time of the night. I decided to ski, since my ski boots are much warmer than my mountaineering boots, and Steven brought snowshoes since he was recovering from injuries from his last ski trip. We were happy to find a Steven Song huddles for a quick snapshot on the cold, windy summit of Ghita Mountain. 24 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 cross-country ski track that led up the creek bed for a few kilometres, but that ended where a big tree crossed the creek. We broke trail the rest of the way. A lot of zigzagging up the creek to avoid open patches of water increased our total distance substantially. We expected to ski 20 kilometres; but by the time we returned to the car Steven’s GPS would read 32 kilometres, round-trip. We trav‑ elled a while before emerging into a flat valley bottom beside Ghita Mountain, passing a couple of avalanche paths that ran out into the valley bottom. Then we made the mistake of trying to shortcut up the forest, but the forest turned out to be alders—they were hor‑ rible! We descended to the creek to try to escape them, which was much better. When we reached the upper valley beside the southwest slope, there was left branch of the creek we were aiming for, and once again we tried to shortcut. The bush repelled us, again. Trying further up the valley, we finally escaped the thick bush and climbed into the alpine. At this point, I really slowed down. The alpine was gorgeous, but I wished I had more energy to enjoy it. I stopped to put on ski crampons when the snow became super solid from the wind. At the final scree slope, I ditched my skis and walked on. The summit wind was brutally cold. Fortunately, I managed to snap photos before my camera froze. We saw Robson on the way up, but by the time I reached the summit it was blocked by clouds. Whitehorn, Resplendent and Clemenceau were also disappearing. Cold and tired, we never even noticed there wasn’t any summit cairn. It was 5 p.m. when we started down. My lungs really didn’t like the cold air, and that caused me to travel very slowly. I could only manage a couple of turns at a time before having to stop and breathe for a minute or two. Steven decided that he wanted to follow our tracks back into the alders in the hopes the creek pinched out, but that was a big mistake. I had to put my skins back on to reach the alders. Skiing downhill in alders was the worst part of the trip, by far, my skis kept sliding under them. I kept getting stuck, falling over and having to take my skis off to get up. I wore my parka to stay warm, even though the alders were tearing it apart. By the time I made it out of the alders, at least five big holes were bleeding feathers. I tried to patch them with duct tape, but it was so cold it wouldn’t stick. Unfortunately, we still had a long way to go. My pace was too slow for Steven; with my layers keeping me warm I was tempted to take a nap on my pack. His feet were getting cold though, and he was really worried so he resorted to walking laps to keep warm while waiting for me to catch up. Finally we reached the car at 5 a.m., 25 hours after we started out. We thought our epic was all over, but to our dismay the car wouldn’t start. I was hope‑ ful that if we put the hazard lights on someone would stop, since there is no cell coverage in Robson Park. Crawling into our sleeping bags, we tried to stay warm. I remembered I had a bag of Doritos in the back, but I was too tired to look for them. We could have used Steven’s stove or my candle lantern to warm up but it didn’t occur to us in our exhausted state. Miraculously, a wonderful person stopped and gave us a boost. We were too tired to drive so we just slept for three hours with the car running to keep us warm before heading home. In the end, I feel like our trip was a good lesson in what not to do. In the future I will insist on an overnight trip for similar objectives. I purchased an inhaler that I can take before exercise, which should prevent me from having any lung problems. I hope it works. Despite the suffering though, we’re pretty sure our trip was a first “some‑ thing,” and that’s pretty cool. Afterward, I searched the Canadian Alpine Journal, and the Internet and even the American Alpine Journal’s online page, and found no record of any ascent. Although we cannot be totally sure, believing we probably accomplished a first—at least a first win‑ ter, or snowshoe or ski ascent—certainly made our epic long day that much more satisfying. For more details, visit http://stevensong.com/canadian-rockies/ bc-rockies/ghita-mountain/ and http://summitsearch.org/trip_reports/ 247-first-ascent-of-ghita-mountain Eric Coulthard is an Edmonton Section member with a healthy sense of adventure. Why skiers need emergency medical travel insurance by Leah I Chang f you are a recreational backcountry, slack-country, or ski mountaineering enthusiast, Travel Underwriters’ emergency medical travel insurance can cover you for any misadventures on the mountains (other than avalanches). Even at home, Canadian skiers need travel insurance. Provincial health care plans cover skiers if they are injured in another province, but won’t cover prescription medication, ground or air ambulance trips, or hospital transfers from search and rescue headquarters. Without insurance, travellers to the US or further abroad should expect to pay dearly for emergency medical care. Some provincial health plans pay as little as $75 a day for hospitalization outside Canada. Skiers should not rely solely on credit card or group plan insurance, since coverage may be limited or exclude back‑ country skiing. For Canadians skiing within Canada or abroad, Travel Underwriters’ insurance policy covers: Licensed ground, sea or air ambu‑ lance (without the hassle of needing pre-approval); ●● Emergency air transport from one hospital to another, including US to Canada. If search and rescue trans‑ ports a person to a remote hospital that can’t adequately treat their injur‑ ies, Travel Underwriters’ insurance will cover the costs of transportation to a hospital that can; ●● Front country medical expenses, including hospital stays and treatment, doctor services, x-ray examinations, medication, essential medical appli‑ ance rental, dental services, family transportation, return of excess baggage, return of vehicle, and out-ofpocket expenses. ●● Any plane tickets, rental vehicles, hotel or hut reservations purchased in advance can be covered by Travel Underwriters’ Trip Cancellation/ Interruption Insurance and Accidental Death and Dismemberment insurance. Costs will be recuperated if a trip is cut short or if a ski companion is injured, or worse. “Too often, we neglect to plan for the unexpected consequences. With just a few clicks on a website, many of those contingencies can be easily arranged for a surprisingly reasonable price,” recom‑ mends Peter Muir, ACC Past President. Skiers can plan ahead for themselves, their families and their ski buddies by choosing the right insurance policy. For a quote, contact the Alpine Club of Canada’s National Office to cover your next epic trip. Enjoy those fresh tracks! Leah Chang is a backcountry enthusiast and Marketing Communications Specialist at Travel Underwriters. For more info, visit www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/acc-trip-insurance Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 25 Alpine Start by Jeff A Bullock s all things in life start with an idea, thinking about it for a while and then forgetting or pursuing it, this column began with me contacting ACC Gazette Editor Lynn Martel with my idea for a Mountain Guide’s column. She said yes! My main reason for wanting to write this column is to offer ACC members a perspective on ideas and experiences from mountain guides. For the inaugural column, I think it’s fitting to discuss the dynamics and real‑ ities of an “alpine start.” As a very busy summer comes to an end, I have many recent starts that come to mind, most of which were not too outrageous, but some definitely required more convincing than others. In most people’s professional lives, getting up at 3 a.m. is totally out of the question unless you’re a farmer and it’s harvest season, or an on-call physician, or maybe an airline pilot. For a mountain guide, it’s all part of the daily routine. The evening before a climb people Dawn lights up Mount Cromwell. p hoto by Nancy Hansen often wonder, while prepping for the fol‑ lowing day’s adventures, how the day will unfold. Can I keep up with the group, did I pack my crampons, and, oh yeah, what time are we waking up, Jeff ? Quite often I get an honest look or a sigh when I announce the wakeup call is going to be the crux of the day. Sometimes I get a “Yeah sounds good,” if people are into it. From my experience, a little more sleep goes a long way. For example, waking up at 3 a.m. and then stumbling around in the dark with headlamps on only to arrive at the base of a route at the same time we would have with a slightly later start might result in not-so-droopy eyelids and better coordination of body limbs. Those few precious extra minutes can go a long way. Preparedness the evening before a big climb takes a lot of pressure off; pack your bag, have your breakfast/coffee system figured out. For bivi-style starts I will have stove, water and food all next to me so I can prepare it in the comfort of my sleeping bag—two cups and I’m good-to-go. Knowing the start of the approach or route by having a look at it the previous day, and/or by collecting as much beta as possible, may also give you enough reason to push the wakeup call another 30 minutes. Some mornings are tougher than others, but either way, always remember to look up and enjoy those beautiful alpine start sunrises. Have a great climb! Jeff Bullock is a certified ACMG Mountain Guide—and hard-wired early riser—based in Revelstoke, BC. Pourquoi les skieurs ont besoin d’une assurance voyage par Leah S Chang i vous êtes un skieur amateur de hors-piste, l’assurance voyage médicale d’urgence de Travel Underwriters peut vous couvrir pour toute mésaventure sur les pentes (autre qu’une avalanche). Même au Canada, les skieurs ont besoin d’une assurance voyage. Les régimes provinciaux d’assurance maladie couvrent en effet les blessures dans une autre province, mais pas les médicaments d’ordonnance, les ambulances sur terre ou dans les airs, ou encore les transferts à l’hôpital depuis les centres de recherche et de sauvetage. Sans assurance, les soins médicaux d’urgence aux États-Unis et à l’étranger peuvent coûter cher. Certains régimes provinciaux payent à peine 75 $ par jour pour une hospitalisation à l’extérieur du Canada. Les skieurs ne devraient pas non plus se fier uniquement à leur carte de crédit ou au régime de groupe de leur employeur, puisque la couverture peut être 26 Alpine Club of Canada Gazette Winter 2014 limitée et exclure le hors-piste. Pour les skieurs canadiens, quelle que soit leur destination, la police d’assurance de Travel Underwriters couvre : ●● une ambulance autorisée sur terre, en mer ou dans les airs (sans approbation préalable fastidieuse); ●● le transport aérien d’urgence d’un hôpital à un autre, y compris des États-Unis au Canada. S’ils sont transportés vers un hôpital éloigné qui ne peut traiter adéquatement leurs blessures, l’assurance de Travel Underwriters couvre les frais de trans‑ port vers un autre hôpital; ●● les frais médicaux payés sur place, y compris les séjours et les traitements à l’hôpital, les médecins, les radiog‑ raphies, les médicaments, la location d’équipement médical essentiel, les soins dentaires, le transport de la famille, le retour d’excédent de bagages, le retour du véhicule et les frais de subsistance. Tout billet d’avion, véhicule de loca‑ tion, hôtel ou refuge réglé d’avance peut être couvert par l’assurance annulation/ interruption de voyage et l’assurance décès et mutilation accidentels de Travel Underwriters. Trop souvent, on oublie ou on refuse de se préparer pour les conséquences inattendues. Quelques clics sur un site Web permettent de parer à toute éventualité, à un prix raisonnable. — Peter Muir, ex-président du Club alpin du Canada. Planifiez pour vous-mêmes, votre famille et vos compagnons de ski en vous procurant la bonne police. Contactez le bureau central du Club alpin du Canada pour obtenir un devis et profitez de la poudreuse! Leah Chang est passionnée de plein air et spécialiste en marketing et communications chez Travel Underwriters. Pour plus d’information, visitez le www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/ acc-trip-insurance The Abbot Pass Hut restoration project Phase II – Masonry repointing, Summer 2014 H and-built in 1922 on a rocky strip connecting Mounts Lefroy and Victoria at 2,926 metres by Swiss Mountain Guides employed by the Canadian Pacific Railway, the very special Abbot Pass Hut was designated a National Historic Site in 1992. Operated and maintained by the Alpine Club of Canada since 1986, this past summer Parks Canada stone masons and ACC Facilities maintenance staff members spent a week restoring its masonry components. Clockwise, from right: 1) Specially trained in conservation and restoration techniques, Parks Canada stone masons Nick Bogovic and Ken Druffs were roped in for safety while working on the north side of the hut perched over the steep and dangerous “Death Trap” of Victoria Glacier. 2) Selkirk, Manitoba-based Druffs wets a crack that’s had its mortar removed in preparation for repointing. 3) Bogovic demonstrates the fine art of repointing to ACC Facilities Maintenance Manager Darren Enderwick and ACC maintenance staff member Gavin Boutet. 4) Bogovic uses a Hilti hammer drill to remove cracked mortar in preparation for repointing—chiselling out the old mortar when it cracks, recedes or begins to fall out of joints, and troweling in the new. Photos courtesy of Parks Canada Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 27 Climbing Rocks! by I Ode to climbing Maryse Morel will always remember the first time we met. It’s been 20 and something years, simply by curiosity in a gym. You charmed me with your shapes and colours. I took pleasure momentarily to climb you. No worries, no expectations, only a kid having fun, one who doesn’t think, just lives in the present. To feel you, to touch you, to wel‑ come your uniqueness. You were my first. Afterward, I tasted you outside. So delightful! Your coldness, your smell, your firmness between my fingers. Sometimes I found you. You were tall and I felt my smallness in your presence. Other times you crossed my path and your height didn’t bother me at all, I felt as your equal. Feeling your calmness, every now and then I feel wrapped by your silence and your steadiness in time. For each move that I make to haul myself to the top, to curl up beside you, serenity prevails. On the other hand, there are moments when peace unleashes and transforms itself into storm. When you overhang me, I panic. I cling to you and stop moving. I avoid committing to you. And what would be the worst happening? All the scenarios march in my head and at that particular moment, I am not with you anymore, I am in my illusions creating wild stories. My breathing shortens, every‑ thing rushes and reaches its height. My weaknesses pull me down. The bitterness in my soul threatens me; the defeat, the disappointment of not being able to hang on to you any longer and get to the top. And it’s at that time that I remember the words of a wise man sharing how to attain fullness while climbing. I switch my mind on my breathing desperately with whatever calmness I have left, and try to let go of all the craziness built up in my head. The “Zen” attitude. But who invented that parable? Breathing… present moment… let go of everything… everything running in my head. Damned you Arno Ilgner! You know that you make me work every time I feel you imposing, I lose all Alpine Club of Canada my means. And why should I go back to you after all these years, to be irritated, exhausted, short of breath? It would be simpler to leave you and find another activity. Macramé maybe? No! That can’t happen! You hold me by the guts. You have so much effect on me that I have to confront my fears each time I am with you. There’s no logical explanation, only this absurd desire to mount you and abandon myself in your arms, unsteady, in this blissful salvation. You know, I love you… and in this unconditional love, there is no explana‑ tion and nothing to explain. And, by the way, I miss you. It’s been a while. Now is the time for us to really get together. Seriously… what do you think? Poetic ACC member Maryse Morel lives in, quite naturally, the romantic city of Montreal. She wrote both the English and French versions of this creative essay. Photo on the next page by Marc Dufresne: Maryse Morel expresses her love for rock climbing at the Gunks (Shawangunks) in New York State. MOUNTAIN ADVENTURES What’s your pleasure? Mid-Winter Ice Camp February 14 - 16, 2015 $695 Wapta Traverse Asulkan Ski Camp March 14 - 21 or April 4 - 11, 2015 $1,695 March 15 - 19, 2015 $1,295 Stockdale Ski Camp April 5 - 11, 2015 $2,050 www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/adventures | [email protected] Grimper m’agrippe par J Maryse Morel exprime son amour pour l’escalade dans les Gunks (Shawangunks), dans l’état de New York. photo: Marc Dufresne Ode à l’escalade Maryse Morel e me souviendrai toujours de la première fois que nous nous sommes rencontrés, il y a de cela une ving‑ taine d’années — tout simplement, par curiosité. C’était à l’intérieur. De par tes formes et toutes tes couleurs, tu m’as charmée. J’ai pris plaisir, dès cet instant, à te grimper. Aucun souci, aucune attente, seulement une gamine qui s’amuse, qui ne pense pas, qui apprécie le présent. Te ressentir, te toucher, t’accueillir dans toute ton unicité. Là a été mon premier baptême de toi. Ensuite, je t’ai savouré à l’extérieur. Mais quel délice! Ta froideur, ta senteur, ta dureté qui languissent entre mes doigts. Parfois, je t’ai retrouvé, tu étais grand et je constatais ma petitesse en ta présence. Et d’autres fois, tu m’as croisé et ta hauteur ne me dérangeait pas, je me sentais égale à toi. Mais de par ton calme, je me sentais, et c’est toujours le cas, enveloppée par ton mutisme et ta fixité dans le temps. À chaque mouvement que mon corps effectue pour me hisser tout en haut, me recroqueviller tout près de toi, la sérénité prévaut. Par contre, il y a des occasions où cette paix se déchaîne et se transforme en tempête. Quand tu me surplombes, je perds tous mes moyens, l’état de panique l’emporte. Je m’agrippe à toi et je ne veux plus bouger. J’évite de m’engager envers toi. Et pourtant, quel est le pire qui pourrait m’arriver? Tous les scénarios défilent dans ma tête et, à cette seconde précise, je ne suis plus avec toi, je suis dans mes chimères, je me monte des bateaux. Le souffle court, tout se bouscule et atteint son paroxysme. Je ne me sens point capable de te gravir. L’amertume, la défaite, la déception de ne pas pouvoir m’agrip‑ per plus longtemps à toi et me rendre au sommet me guettent. Et c’est à ce moment que je me remémore les paroles d’un sage dans l’atteinte de la plénitude en grimpe. Je me mets donc à me concentrer sur ma respiration et j’essaie, dans le peu de calme qu’il me reste, de lâcher prise sur toute illusion ou folie édifiée dans ma tête. La «zen» attitude. Mais qui a pu donc inventer cette para‑ bole? Respiration…moment présent... lâcher tout….tout ce qui trotte dans la tête. Merde! Arno Ilgner! Tu sais que tu me fais travailler à chaque fois que tu me sembles imposant. Je perds tous mes moyens. Et qu’est-ce qui fait en sorte que je veuille encore de toi après toutes ces années, à être énervée, à bout de bras, le souffle court? Ce serait tellement plus simple de te laisser tomber et de me mettre au macramé. Mais non! Tu me tiens par les tripes! Tu me fais tellement effet que j’affronte mes peurs à chaque fois que je suis avec toi. Il n’y a pas d’explication logique. Seulement ce désir absurde de vouloir te monter et de m’abandonner dans tes bras, chancelante, dans cette béatitude salvatrice. Tu sais, je t’aime…et dans cet amour inconditionnel, il n’y a rien d’explicable ni à expliquer. Et en passant, je m’ennuie de toi. Il me semble que ça fait longtemps. Il est donc temps de se réserver une rencontre sérieuse, tu ne penses pas? Membre-poète du CAC, Maryse Morel habite, bien naturellement, la ville romantique de Montréal. Elle a écrit les versions anglaise et française de ce récit. Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 29 My turn in the big chair by I Nancy Hansen. photo by Renée Lavergne Nancy Hansen have been an employee of the Alpine Club of Canada for more than 18 years, and have been involved as a member and volunteer for 20. That’s a whole lot of ACC in my life. As I sit in the chair of the Executive Director for a six-month stretch while Lawrence White takes parental leave, I am reminded daily about what an incredible organization this is, and why I stay involved. Let’s start with the staff. Every single year, after the staff Christmas party, my husband, Doug Fulford, says, “Boy, you sure do work with a great bunch of people.” And he’s right. Because the ACC is such a vibrant, thriving, outdoor-fo‑ cused organization, we attract great staff. When other businesses in the Bow Valley are struggling to find and retain employees, we rarely have troubles. I am frequently heard saying, “Nobody ever really leaves the ACC,” as I see past staff members return for either more employ‑ ment or as volunteers. One of the reasons our staff love it here because they get to Show off your ACC pride with this stylish ACC-crested Icebreaker sweater Tech Top Long Sleeve Half Zip 260 Midweight 100% Merino Wool Member Price $99 Non-member price $135 Men’s and Women’s sizes. One colour (black) fits all. The perfect sweater for ● Layering up for adventure ● Looking stylish around town ● Keeping cozy all winter www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/icebreaker99 interact with you—the members—on a daily basis. Next up: the Board of Directors. At the ACC’s strategic planning meeting on a beautiful Saturday in mid-August, I was struck again by how lucky we, ACC members, are to have such an energetic, engaged and intelligent Board. All of them are fully committed to the best interests of the ACC, and they have been for many years. Volunteers all, many of them are also deeply involved with their section’s activities. They have real jobs during the week, and they appear to consider their significant volunteer con‑ tribution of time, work and good ideas to be a reward. Wow. Now for the sections. The sections are the true heart and soul of the ACC. I’ve been a Rocky Mountain and Calgary Section member for 20 years. Whenever I wonder who will possibly take over as the new Section Chair or Trips Chair or Secretary, somebody terrific steps up, without hesitation. New members join, go on trips, take courses and become trip leaders. The cycle repeats week after week, decade after decade. That’s not to say that things haven’t changed. Members now commonly stay connected through section Facebook pages and e-newsletters. In “the good old days” 20 years ago, com‑ munication was done by making phone calls and stuffing newsletters in envelopes. It matters not—volunteers still do all the work, of their own accord, on their own time, without pay. All of this adds up to one vibrant organization that has a rich and deep history and very bright future. I am proud to be a part of it. Volunteer Awards I n addition to the ACC Volunteers who were highlighted in the sum‑ mer issue of the Gazette, there were two other recipients whose names we did not publish so that they would be surprised when they were given their awards later in the summer. They are: President’s Award: Chuck Young Don Forest Award: Louise Proulx Congratulations to you both! CLASSIFIEDS AFFORDABLE HIMALAYA & MOUNT ELBRUS 5% discount for acc members Climbing and walking trips for men and women, with Dan Mazur. All ages and abilities, expert to novice. Everest summit climbs, training climbs, and treks, Mount Elbrus, Ama Dablam, Cho Oyu, Baruntse, North Col, Lhotse, Everest Glacier School, Island Peak, Muztagh Ata, Mera Peak, Shishapangma, Aconcagua, Kilimanjaro, Mount Kenya. Charity Service Walks near Everest, Seattle Glacier School during summer and Canada-USA Friendship winter climbing school (free, no charge). www.SummitClimb.com [email protected] 360-570-0715 Skype: summitclimb NOTICES UPCOMING MEETINGS Board of Directors meetings: February 21 / 22 – location TBD ●● May 24 in Canmore ●● Section Council meetings: May 23 in Canmore ●● Annual General Meeting: May 23 in Canmore ●● CANADIAN ALPINE JOURNAL SUBMISSIONS Deadline for submitting articles for the upcoming CAJ is February 1, 2015. For more information, visit: www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/caj STAY ON TOP OF THE NEWS Subscribe to the ACC NewsNet, our weekly e-bulletin, to receive ACC national and regional news, mountain highlights and much more. Subscribe at www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/newsnet facebook.com/alpineclubofcanada twitter.com/alpineclubcan ACC member a Yukon icon O ne of the Yukon’s most accom‑ plished mountaineers, Monty Alford was a principal planner and a party leader of the 1967 Yukon Alpine Centennial Expedition—a col‑ laborative project between the Yukon Government and the Alpine Club of Canada, that resulted in 13 first ascents in the Saint Elias Mountains, to commem‑ orate Canada’s Centennial. A native of Britain, with a friend he paddled by canoe from Castlegar, BC to the Gulf of Mexico, travelling 4,800 miles over nine months. Smitten by Canada, he invited his French fiancée to join him, and in 1951 he and Renée married, mov‑ ing to Whitehorse in mid-February. During the course of his 35-year career as a hydrometric surveyor for the Water Survey of Canada, Alford explored some of the Yukon’s farthest corners. He par‑ ticipated in several major expeditions to the Saint Elias range, and was involved in U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s 1965 climb in memory of his brother, President John F. Kennedy. Alford also spent two seasons in Antarctica with a Yale University scientific expedition, was appointed to the Polar Commission, worked as a member of the Yukon Geographical Place Names Board, and wrote five books and many more articles. In 1974, he was named a member of the Order of Canada. Honouring his significant experience in the Saint Elias Monty Alford explores Pine Lake, Yukon, near the Saint Elias Mountains in December 2011. photo by Jacqueline Carew mountains, in 1985 Parks Canada invested Alford as a Pioneer of the Saint Elias. Married for 63 years, the Alfords raised six children, have 13 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Making time to share outdoor adventures with all his children individually, Alford also shared his skills and enthusiasm teaching outdoor travel and survival skills courses. Fit and active his entire life, he took up sailing at 70, and since then greatly enjoyed sailing off Alaska’s coast every summer and fall. Alford died on August 19 at the age of 90, shortly after completing a 10-day sailing trip on the Alaska Coast with one of his sons. Fortunately for ACC Yukon Section members, he presented a slide show on the YACE on July 25. Farewell Monty! ACC Grants Program T hrough the generosity of many donors, the Alpine Club of Canada has estab‑ lished funds to support mountaineering related projects and initiatives. The deadline for submission of grant applications is January 31, 2015. Grant recipi‑ ents will be announced mid-March 2015. The Environment Grant provides support that contributes to the protection and preservation of alpine flora and fauna in their natural habitat. The focus of the grant is wilderness conservation. The Jen Higgins Grant promotes creative and energetic alpine related outdoor pursuits by young women. These projects should demonstrate initiative, creativity, energy and resourcefulness with an emphasis on self-propelled wilderness travel, and should provide value and interest to the community. Jim Colpitts Grant encourages young climbers between the ages of 17 and 24 to participate in mountain related courses and programs such as wilderness first aid, avalanche training, rock/crevasse rescue and mountain leadership training. For info and application forms visit: www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/grants or call the ACC National Office at 403-678-3200 ext. 108. Club alpin du Canada Gazette hiver 2014 31 INNOVATION FOR FIRSTS N E V E R S T O P E X P L O R I N G ™ THENORTHFACE.COM/SUMMITSERIES