Canadian climbers train for Youth World Championships
Transcription
Canadian climbers train for Youth World Championships
Vol. 19, No. 3 ● Fall 2004 Canadian climbers train for Youth World Championships page 4 Austerity Audacity Perversity Page 10 The Alpine Club of Canada Corporate Supporters The ACC thanks the following for their support, and encourages you to consider them and the advertisers in this newsletter the next time you purchase goods or services of the type they offer. Corporate Sponsors Helly Hansen Marmot Mountain Hardwear The North Face Corporate Members Adventure Medical Kits Alberta Sport, Recreation, Parks & Wildlife Foundation Arc'teryx Association of Canadian Mountain Guides Backcountry Access Black Diamond Equipment Canadian Avalanche Association Forty Below GearUp Sport (Canmore, AB) G3 Genuine Guide Gear IBEX Outdoor Clothing Katadyn Leki Mammut Mountain Culture at The Banff Centre Mountain Safety Research (MSR) Outdoor Research Patagonia Petzl The Hostel Shop (Calgary, AB) Therm-a-Rest Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies Yamnuska (Canmore, AB) The Alpine Club of Canada Box 8040, Canmore, Alberta, Canada T1W 2T8 Phone: (403) 678-3200 Fax: (403) 678-3224 [email protected] www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca David Toole, President Rod Plasman, Secretary Gord Currie, Treasurer Cam Roe, VP Activities Peter Muir, VP Access / Environment Carl Hannigan, VP Facilities Bob Sandford, VP Mountain Culture David Zemrau, VP Services Mike Mortimer, Director, External Relations Peter Fuhrmann, Honorary President Bruce Keith, Executive Director Submissions to the Gazette are welcome! The deadline for the Winter issue of the Gazette is December 10. If possible, please save your submission in digital format and e-mail it to [email protected] Otherwise, feel free to type or handwrite it, making sure it’s double spaced and legible and mail it to the address above. Please be sure to include complete contact information with your submission. Gazette Editor: Bonnie Hamilton Assistant Editor: Lynn Martel Photo Editor: Rob Alexander Publishing Coordinator: Audrey Wheeler Layout & Production: Suzan Chamney Advertising rate sheet available upon request. Please direct all advertising inquiries to Bruce Keith, National Office (403) 678-3202 or by e-mail to: [email protected] Printed on recycled paper Canada Post Agreement Number 40009034 What’s Inside... Mountain Culture Editorial 3 Letter from the Editor Mountaineering / Climbing 4 Canadian climbers train for Youth World Championships 6 Cold passion 8 Tropical Storm Marcey 9 Fifty years of rock climbing at Bon Echo 10 Austerity – Audacity – Perversity 17 Kama Bay ice climbing web guide 22 New rules for custodial groups Facilities 16 Club opens door to new backcountry cabin 19 Fay Hut - at home in the mountains 20 The history of Keene Farm part II 14 Melting Mountains 15 Jumbo decision comes in for a landing 18 Because it beats complaining 23 Hot Links National News 22 22 23 24 Volunteers required Mountain Guides’ Ball National Office news Centennial Fund Campaign Awards / Notices / Classified Ads 12 15 17 20 22 23 Get the Goods Kokanee ski week available Karl Nagy Memorial Scholarship Financial Grants AWARDS AWARDS AWARDS Classified Ads What’s Outside... Front cover: Canadian junior team climber, Cathy Laflamme, of Calgary puts her skills to the test in the Carrot Creek area on August 21, 04 while training for the Youth World Championships in Scotland; photo – Craig Douce© Inset: Summiteers: Fairy Meadow climbing camp; photo – Peter Albinger Letter from the Editor Aaaahhh, it’s that relaxing season of autumn. The time of year when life ticks down, the mercury plummets and cooler temperatures ease the pressure to get ‘out there’. That is, of course, unless you’re an ice climber. For the rest of us, contemplation and introspection fills the air, it’s the time for harvesting all you have learned and experienced over the summer, storing it for next season. Now is the occasion to take stock and reflect on the importance of the mountains. This precious landscape that tests us and teaches us, leads us to reach deep into the core of who we are and pushes us to reach our potential. Perhaps you had a poor harvest this past summer and it is at this moment, the autumn season, when new commitments are made. A promise to yourself, that next summer that long dreamed of mountain sojourn will be realized. As part of this reflective season, I personally have decided it is time to step down from being editor. These three years have been a fulfilling, educational experience, the best part being the people with whom I’ve crossed paths. Whether they were describing the challenges of a 14-day high ski traverse in the Coast Mountains or a technical, two-pitch traditional rock climb at Bon Echo, their enthusiasm and passion motivated me to help them convey these experiences through writing. I learned much about the unique landscapes that stretch across Canada and the dynamic people who adore, treasure and protect them. The opportunity to support our writers as they put their funny anecdotes, huge adventures and mystical mountain experiences to paper has been a wonderful challenge with some engaging conversation. Thank you all for your efforts and please continue to share the stories and photos of your backcountry adventures by submitting them to the Gazette. —Bonnie Hamilton, Editor Beginning with the 2005 winter issue, Lynn Martel, assistant editor for the past three years, will assume the role of Gazette editor. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 3 Canadian climbers train for Youth World Championships by Lynn Martel In many ways, the scene was familiar. Two-dozen teenagers gathered on a Saturday afternoon, girls chatting in small groups while the boys joked and challenged each other. The setting however, wasn’t a shopping mall or video arcade, but the gravel bank of a tumbling creek at the base of a limestone cliff in Banff National Park’s Carrot Creek, an hour’s hike from the trailhead. With only three others climbing in the canyon, Parks Canada’s request for limited use of the environmentally sensitive area appeared to be heeded. These teens however, were climbing the vertical and overhanging rock walls with a purpose. Canmore’s Celeste Wall, Zak McGurk, Charlie Hitchman, Nani Woolings and Jessie Newton were among 24 members of Canada’s Youth National Team preparing for the 2004 Youth World Championships, which took place in Edinburgh, Scotland from Sept. 10 thru 12. Climbing outdoors, explained coach and owner of Canmore Alberta’s Vsion climbing gym, Düng Nguyen, helps develop essential route-reading skills. “You have to try out different kinds of rock,” Wall agreed. “Climbing inside we can see all the holds. Out here we have to find the holds.” photo by Craig Douce Encouraged by shouts of, “Come on Charlie! You’re strong! Hang on!” 17-yearold Hitchman determinedly inched his way up ‘Cup o’ Joe’, rated 13b. With sloping holds on smooth water polished rock, the drastically overhanging route presented a level of difficulty demanding quick, efficient movement, precise foot placements and advanced balancing techniques. Hanging from one hand to shake out his pumped forearm, Hitchman’s feet suddenly greased off the rock and he dropped two metres before his belayer, managing the rope, caught his fall. Dangling in mid air, Hitchman grinned as comfortably as a circus performer. Minutes earlier, Vancouver’s Sean McColl, 16, on-sighted the route - climbing 15m from the ground to the permanently fixed chain anchor without any prior attempts or knowledge of the route. Last fall, McColl won the 16-17 Boys category at the Youth Worlds in Bulgaria. Throughout the summer, he and his teammates have trained to improve their strength, endurance and climbing skills. Facing his fourth Worlds, McColl said training demands motivation. “I’d rather be going to the beach and hanging with my friends,” he admitted. “You have to sacrifice, but I think it will pay off. I’ll always have the chance to hang out with my friends, but you don’t always have the chance to go across oceans and represent Canada.” With nearly 400 competitors from over 30 countries, the World Championships see 50 to 60 competitors in each category. Edinburgh would be Hitchman’s second Worlds since he started competing – and climbing – three years ago. “I thought I’d prepared myself for the international scene, but when I got there I realized how enormous it was,” Hitchman said. “The French are really strong, last year they only sent their B team, the A team went to adult events. They take it really seriously, there’s no parents allowed. It’s their national sport. It’s inspiring, but you need to look past it. They don’t have any super-human powers. You just need to focus on what you’re capable of, not get caught up in what they’re doing.” Going into the Worlds, 14-year-old Wall, a Canmore native, had never travelled beyond competitions in Vancouver and Saskatoon. photo by Craig Douce “It’s going to be different. I’ve never had more than 10 people in my group before,” she said. “It’s probably going to be crowded when I’m trying to warm up. I could have to fight my way to the wall. It’s going to be a big learning experience.” Advice from Calgary’s Stacey Weldon, 19, veteran of Youth Worlds in Italy, Amsterdam, Austria and France - where she finished seventh - is helpful, Wall said. “It’s definitely inspiring to watch the older climbers, the experienced ones, you want to get on that route and try it,” Wall said. “If someone gets it, we all feel good for them.” Like several of her teammates, her lithe teenage body showing well-developed arm and back muscles, Wall admitted she’s afraid of heights. “When I first started I’d go five feet and I was terrified,” Wall said. “You get used to it. It definitely boosts your confidence when you do something hard.” While earning a coaching degree at the University of British Columbia a decade ago, national team head coach Andrew Wilson coached junior climbers at Vancouver’s The Edge climbing gym (which he now owns). Historically rebellious and undisciplined, Wilson sought ways to make their training more systematic and structured like traditional sports. “Climbers can train and benefit from training just like triathletes and rowers,” Wilson said. A hockey player and sporadic climber through his teens, Wilson said he became disillusioned as a hockey coach. “I started to see an atmosphere of kids being introduced to things that were – not positive,” Wilson said. “Then I went to my first climbing competition and said wow! The two closest competitors were cheering each other on.” That camaraderie endures he said, as competitive climbing is welcomed into the World Games in 2005, a pre-requisite step toward the Olympics. And Canada is competitive. “These kids are really focussed and really dedicated,” Wilson said. “They understand training to get results. This is the strongest team I’ve even been involved with for sure. We’ve got seven or eight capable of cracking the top 10. It’s a really exciting time.” That’s a tribute to Competition Climbing Canada, Wilson said, and to the generosity of the local indoor gyms where the kids train. With 100 competitors across Canada benefiting from structured instruction from day one, compared to 900 in the U.S. who have neither national team nor coaches, young Canadian climbers profit from the experience of former competitors, including Calgary’s Knut Rockne, the only other coach to join Wilson in Scotland. As well, having the help of two-dozen parents making the trip is invaluable, Wilson added. For parents, competitive climbing isn’t much different than other sports, said Fraser McGurk, whose three sons compete in hockey, cross-country skiing and climbing. “Your kid either finishes school or whatever activity and you somehow try to get food into them and get them out the door to train,” McGurk said. “There’s not as many competitions as a hockey player has games, but the training is just as intense.” Having Zak make the national team increases the financial commitment, McGurk said. Two weeks before the event, about half of the $20,000 needed to send the team to Scotland had been raised. “It’s phenomenal, the support from businesses in town,” McGurk said. “It’s really good life experience for the kids, the donation is not just given to them. The athletes feel a sense of responsibility not just to climb well but to represent the country.” And Canmore parents helped out in August by billeting visiting team members from Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton and Saskatoon. “It’s really neat. Normally these kids compete against each other to make the team, now they’re working together, building stronger friendships,” McGurk said. “They’re very supportive of each other. It’s an interesting sport, a very calm sport compared to hockey.” Still, competitive climbing is serious business. At 15, McColl won his category in both speed and difficulty events, but just as Kokanee Cabin ski week available There is one week still available at the Kokanee Glacier cabin for the 2004/2005 ski season. The week of December 18-24 is open for an exclusive booking of 12. $595 for ACC members with the huts option, $645 for all others. Includes flight. Don’t miss out on this early season opportunity. Contact the National Office today! 403-678-3200 or [email protected] quickly lost his title when he tested positive for pseudoephedrine in a routine urine test. He had innocently taken Claritin® before the event. Competitive climbing’s first year of drug testing, Wilson admitted it was a learning experience for all. When McColl won again last year, his accomplishment was indisputable. “Now the kids see it’s possible,” Wilson said. “We know Canadians can be the friendliest team and the best liked team but we can have results too.” Editor’s note: Sean McColl successfully defended his title, capturing first place out of 63 competitors in his age category. Stacey Weldon finished seventh out of 35 in her category. In all, six Canadians finished in the top 20 of their age groups, one more than last year. Reprinted with permission from the Rocky Mountain Outlook. To learn more visit www.competitionclimbingcanada.com Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 5 Cold passion by Margo Talbot Competing at the ESPN X-Games in 1996 on Jeff Lowe’s man-made ice tower, I was one of about 60 ice climbers witnessing the genesis of spectator ice climbing competitions that were about to explode onto this continent. While the event would not have raised any eyebrows in Europe, where their existence was already firmly rooted, here in North America there was a wave of excitement at this new venue. Let’s get a few things straight about these humble beginnings: performing gymnastic feats of stupendous power did not necessarily reflect the abilities and talents of the athletes who were new to the concept. I can remember Alex Lowe and Barry Blanchard performing quite badly in the speed climbing competition, even as Will Gadd came in at a close second after being off the ice for more than a decade. He had gotten bored with traditional ice climbing but liked to compete and the money was fat. He was also a highly trained competitor on the plastic rock climbing walls, and he instinctively knew that he could transpose his skills onto a different medium when he badgered Jeff Lowe to include him in the event. Even today, with the advent of overhanging mixed walls, which incorporate wood, plastic and metal holds, it is generally those with a rock climbing background that tend to do well because they specifically train for these events and possess the necessary flexibility, power and movement skills. Competitive ice climbing has come a long way since then, with many changes to its face along the way. One of my favourite parts of ice festivals and competitions is how they serve to evolve the sport in question. It was at the European World Cup series several years back that the athletes and organizers decided the competitors had to go leashless to make the event more interesting, in addition to making it more of a test of endurance for the competitors who were used to hanging out in their leashes for extended periods of time. Climbing equipment companies, in conjunction with their sponsored athletes’ feedback, began experimenting with various designs for new leashless tools. These same athletes designed boot spurs so they could pierce dangling icicles that were too ginger to be front-pointed. It was in training for these events that climbers decided to adopt different techniques such as speed climbing, climbing without axes or crampons (or both), as well as inventing energy-conserving techniques. All of these leaps filtered out into the general community of ice and mixed climbers, giving everyone the chance to broaden their repertoire and hone their skills. But perhaps the most important skill of all was refined at the after-comp parties where all of that focus and hard work paid off as everyone vied for the real prize of the day: to see who could win the party. While ice climbing is no longer a featured sport at the winter X-Games, ice festivals are still going strong. Ouray Ice Park in Colorado hosted its first ice festival two years before I competed for ESPN, and other climbing communities were following suit with increasing zeal. In Canada we witnessed this phenomenon take root in Orient Bay, Ontario, Quebec City, Canmore and Nordegg Alberta and Lillooet, British Columbia, with a smattering of smaller ones cropping up in the outer Meccas. Here’s your coast-to-coast guide to outdoor winter pleasure in the form of picking your way up a slab of frozen water. Eric Landmann on Sycho Icycho, one of the classic fun lines at Orient Bay photo by Steve Behrend Point-Rouge photo by Andrew Querner Festiglace Sponsored by The North Face and held on natural ice routes, this magnificent gathering of enthusiasts will run from February 18 to 20, 2005. Over 5000 people are expected to show up at events ranging from ice and mixed climbing competitions featuring the world’s top climbers (who get to choose which natural routes they will climb as well as see how many they can successfully scale in their allotted time), to speed climbing competition for all abilities, plus a plethora of tertiary events including a Tyrolean traverse, snowshoe trails and climbing clinics. The event takes place in Pont-Rouge, and for anybody not familiar with Quebec in the wintertime, you’re in for a real treat. www.festiglace.com Nipigon Ice Fest Originally called the North of Superior/ Orient Bay Ice Festival, this is the longest running ice festival in Canada. It was started in 1986 and primarily attracted climbers from the Midwest. In 2003 the organization of the event fell into new hands and was renamed the Nipigon Ice Fest. Taking place the first weekend of March, this celebration attracts 500 participants and brings climbers from all over the continent to check out the local ice. The difficulty competition happens on natural routes, plus there’s an array of social events including films, slide shows and dinners. Participants also have their choice of ice or mixed clinics with some of the sport’s better-known talent. www.nipigonicefest.com photo courtesy Granite Publishing www.climbingcentral.com 6 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 Montreal River – Batchawana Ice Festival Held in late February, this event takes place in a small town on the east side of Lake Superior, 30 km north of Sault Ste. Marie. While the social events happen in the town site, all of the climbing happens on day trips to surrounding areas. One destination is Cerro de Hielo (Mountain of Ice) where there are 30 climbs up to 60 m in height. There are also trips out to McKay Complex, which sports the highest climb in the mid-continent at 258 m, called Stratosphere. www.northofsuperiorclimbing.com Nordegg’s Tri-Ice-a-Thon Started on request by the Centre for Outdoor Education in Nordegg Alberta, this event is in its fifth year. The festival hovers on that wonderful fine line where it’s big enough to pull in the gear sponsors and Canadian talent, yet small enough to have that hometown climber-gathering feel. Sporting three man-made walls for time trials and gear demos, the actual competition happens on a natural route in the Cline River Gallery. Described by its instigator as “a great way to have fun and win some prizes,” this event is the one to attend if you want your weekend to be about your climbing as opposed to being focused on the elite athletes of the sport. The famous climbers of the region are on hand, but more as instructors and gear company representatives than as the main course. The focus is on the beginner who wants to try the sport, and the existing climber who wants to share their passion with other like-minded souls. Because this event is not strictly competition orientated, its goals are aimed in the direction of fun and instruction with the all important sponsor prizes thrown in. www.coe.ca Canmore Canmore Ice Climbing Festival Festiglace du Quebec photo courtesy Festiglace Agawa Canyon Ice Festival Accessed by train from Sault Ste. Marie Ontario, this is a climbers-only event held in a canyon at railroad mile 112. The canyon sports 60 routes up to 240 meters high. It takes place the second weekend in March, and is celebrating its seventh season in 2005. www.northofsuperiorclimbing.com Lillooet Ice Festival This festival takes place in the town of Lillooet, just north of Whistler, B.C. The organizers rent out the local Legion and plan the party. There are slide shows, climbing clinics and sponsor booths, and participants head off to nearby ice climbs to pass the time between social events. Informal and fun, this event happens the last weekend in February. www.ice-mixed.com >V]b](5O{bO\4]\bOW\S photo by Andrew Querner Sponsored by Arc’teryx this annual event is held the first weekend of March. All competitions and events take place in the beautiful town of Canmore, Alberta, with the exception of the climbing clinics, which happen at ice-filled canyons just outside of town. The event starts off on a Thursday with the indoor dry-tooling competition at The Vsion climbing gym. On Saturday and Sunday over 1200 participants flank the courtyard where the man-made structure lives. Initially an ice only competition, last year saw the advent of a World Cup style outdoor mixed wall designed for top-level athletes. The event proved not only to be a statement of physical gymnastic ability, but crowd-pleasing entertainment as well. Incorporated into the wall were a number of other potential lines for intermediate competitors as well as those who wished to try the sport for the first time using demo gear available from adjacent sponsor booths. www.canmoreiceclimbingfestival.com ESAYW BVSPObbZSZW\SaVOdSPSS\S`OaSR/\QWS\b`WdOZ`WSaT]`UWdS\ BVST`SS`WRS`Sd]ZcbW]\WaQ][^ZSbS/BbSZS<]`RWQO\R `Sa]`b`WRS`aO`S¿\OZZgc\WbSRW\OQ][[]\^c`^]aS³b]U] PWUUS`U]TOabS`O\RVOdSeOg[]`STc\R]W\UWbA]eVSbVS` g]c¸`SZ]]YW\UT]`OPWUTObT`SS`WRS`WU]`OadSZbSO\RZWUVb <]`RWQaSbc^g]c¸ZZ¿\ReVObg]c¸`SZ]]YW\UT]`Ob;31 DWdOZO`Sd]ZcbW]\ &$$! $$% EgdjYeVgicZgd[ Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 7 Tropical Storm Marcey by Howard Buckle It really shouldn’t have come as a surprise. After all, the forecast called for thunderstorms in the late afternoon. Besides, Marcey was coming. Dave and Marcey introduced us to rock climbing in Ontario. On our first day out, Dave told me he had “ruined more people’s lives that way.” I had incorrectly assumed he was joking. A few years, thousands of dollars in climbing gear and three tattoos later, I found myself taking early retirement, moving into a condo in Canmore, Alberta and dreaming of 5.11 rock, WI5 and 11,000-foot (3355 metre) summits. My plans for a peaceful retirement on a sailboat in the Caribbean disappeared in a cloud of chalk dust. After that, my wife Gayle and I regularly travelled with Dave and Marcey in the east to climb. Inevitably, Marcey brought the storms. I have sought shelter from the rain in Kentucky shortly after Marcey’s arrival. I have glared at her in Tennessee while putting a tarp over the tent in the rain. Road trip after road trip, Marcey meant rain. We started calling her T.S. - short for Tropical Storm. So when Gayle told me Dave and T.S. would be passing through Canmore and wanted to spend a day climbing, we decided to go to Grassi Lakes. Thunderstorms being in the forecast, the idea was to be where we could get back quickly to the car should it rain. The plan seemed sound. I failed to include the ‘T.S. factor.’ Gayle and I drove up the Smith Dorien Highway to Whitemans’ Gap parking lot with Patrick, another friend of ours. The sky was cloudy but not particularly threatening as the three of us walked down to the crag. Smith Dorien Highway washed out by the storm 8 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 We had given Dave directions and they would meet us there. We had a couple of routes in when Dave came down the trail. Marcey followed a short time later. Handshakes and hugs were exchanged. As Marcey put on her harness, I swore I heard thunder. Dave incorrectly assumed I was joking. Dave was halfway up his second climb when the unmistakeable rumble of thunder rolled down the valley. Patrick and the girls packed up as I exchanged a worried look with Dave. The “here we go again” went between us unspoken. Patrick, Gayle and good old T.S. were on their way out and rain was falling by the time Dave was off rappel. He and I tucked in under a little overhang to see if the rain would let up. The rest of our group was out of sight. The rain showed no sign of letting up, so we decided to press on. After 50 m, it was raining so hard we had difficulty seeing. We found a small cave and sat down to wait it out. We were joined by a half dozen others. Our little cave grew crowded as we pressed together. Remembering that one of the worst places to be during a lightning storm was inside a cave, I briefly considered leaving. It began to hail. I reconsidered and sat on my pack, hoping it would provide insulation if lightning struck. Fifteen minutes later, the hail was still falling. The time between the lightening and thunder was still less than a second. One of our six new friends commented they had never seen hail fall for so long before. I realized the pack I was sitting on was now almost under water. The rain was flooding in from both sides of our cave. More worried looks were exchanged as the streams flowing in both sides of our cave turned into lava-like flows of gravel sized scree. Small photo by Craig Douce rocks were washed off from the loose choss above us, falling sporadically in front of us. The falling rocks increased in size and frequency as the rain and hail continued. A falling boulder exploded in front of me and a fragment smacked my chest. Once again I reconsidered. A couple was crouched in another cave on the opposite side of the canyon. The rain was still falling hard, but there were longer breaks between the rock falls. When the couple signalled for us to cross, eight of us ran. Ten of us crammed into a smaller cave but there was less rockfall hazard. I noticed one of the people in the cave wearing wet denim jeans and shivering badly. Fearing she would become hypothermic, I helpfully offered a well-meant suggestion that she remove the soaked cotton pants. This was, however, not well received by the shiverer’s boyfriend. A short time later, the sky grew brighter and we realized the rain had stopped. We made our way out of the cave and away from wet girlfriends in denim. Dave and I met back up with Patrick, Gayle and T.S. The girls had apparently been forced deeper and deeper into a cave filled with what Gayle described as rat droppings. Patrick chose to wait under a small overhang, protected from rockfall but not the rain and hail. During the storm, Gayle joked with Patrick about metal climbing equipment making a good lightning rod. Realizing he was still carrying my six-foot long aluminium stickclip purchased on my last road trip to Smith Rocks, he threw it as far as he could. He politely advised Gayle he would buy me a new one. A dozen new waterfalls now flowed down the face of Ha Ling Peak as we made our way back to the car. The path was filled with gravel, mud and sludge washed down from above. Gayle complained her pedicure was ruined. A helicopter circled the area. Driving down the road back to Canmore, we found the road blocked by three cars. Continuing another 100 m on foot, we found why the helicopter was circling. A rockslide 5m deep and 10m wide buried the road. Four-wheel drive was not going to help. The 15-minute drive north to Canmore was now not an option. We headed south. Two hours later, after driving the Kananaskis circuit, we were back in Canmore - in time for our dinner reservation. Two to three hundred truckloads of gravel were removed from the road and used to patch the washouts before the Smith Dorien was reopened. Dave doesn’t plan to bring T.S. back for at least two years. Things could have been worse, I guess. She could have visited us on a sailboat in the Caribbean. Fifty years of rock climbing at Bon Echo by David Brown Located 130 kilometres west of Ottawa and 220 km northeast of Toronto, Bon Echo Provincial Park features a cliff about 100 metres high and 1 km long that grows abruptly out of Mazinaw Lake. The first ascent of this cliff, on a route named Birthday Ridge, was accomplished Sept. 1, 1956 by four Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) members: Alan BruceRobertson, David Fisher, Marnie Gilmour and Kathleen McCormick. They climbed Front of the Pinnacle the next day. Today we know them as David and Marnie Fisher and Alan and Kay Bruce-Robertson. Sadly, Alan passed away in 1996. In 1963, the ACC’s Toronto Section purchased a cottage lot on the lake immediately north of the cliff and built a small cabin. This cabin is still the centre of Toronto Section climbing activities today. Two years from now, the Toronto Section is planning to host a 50th anniversary party at the cabin. If you climbed at Bon Echo, have fond memories and want to see just how little it’s changed, mark your calendar now – Sept. 1, 2006. Track down your old climbing partners and tell them, too. We’ll publish details in the spring 2006 issue of the Gazette. We’re also collecting material for an expanded coffee-table style hardcover version of the Bon Echo climbing Above: Fall colours at Bon Echo dock Left: Susan Andrew on Vertigenous guidebook, A Guide to Rock Climbs at Bon Echo, by Steve Adcock and David Brown, now in its third edition. To have a look, visit www.climbers.org/bonecho/guide01 If you have pictures, can we borrow them? We can scan prints, 35 mm negatives and 35 mm slides. Would you write down your best Bon Echo stories and anecdotes? For example, could someone reveal the secret behind Top Secret? And when did the shrimps learn to whistle? Contributions to the book can be sent to David Brown at 2075 Castlefield Crescent, Oakville, ON, L6H 5B4, or to [email protected] Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 9 Austerity – Audacity – Perversity ACC Fairy Meadow 2004 Climbing Camp by Margaret Imai-Compton “The big objectives up here are Mount Adamant and Mount Austerity,” began our guide Jim Gudjonson, as he briefed us upon our arrival at the Bill Putnam (Fairy Meadow) Hut in British Columbia’s northern Selkirk Mountains. “This is an excellent area to use a variety of your mountaineering skills. For sure there will be roped glacier travel, rock climbing and maybe some ice climbing if you want it. We’ll just keep an eye on the weather and take it a day at a time.” The expressions around the table were eager and curious as Felix Camire, our camp manager, outlined hut protocol and led us through introductions. We were six clients; Brian ‘BD’ Danneman, Mike Dinkel and John Seward from the U.S., plus Peter Albinger, Brian McCrindle and me, all from Toronto. Jim and Chad Rigby were guiding and Paula Zettel had been released from her desk duties at the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) National Office to cook for the week. As I hiked from the heli landing area to the hut earlier in the evening, the charm of the setting worked its magic. I found myself humming tunes from my daughter’s repertoire of nursery rhymes, for this was truly a fairy kingdom. Lush verdant meadows, abundant alpine flowers and meandering creeks above rocky waterfalls were framed by the spectacular Granite Glacier and the Adamant Range to the west and the misty skyline of the Rockies to the east. This was to be our playground for the next week. Climbing Mount Austerity 10 photo by Peter Albinger Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 The first three days we stretched our mountaineering muscles with climbs of 2700-metre Mt. Pithias, the Horn, 3012 m, the Unicorn, 2992 m, and three of Mt. Quadrant’s four peaks. “The weather’s holding. Let’s go to Austerity tomorrow,” Jim announced on From left, Brian Danneman, Chad Rigby, Paula Zettel, Jim Gudjonson (partly Tuesday evening. We hidden) and Margaret Imai-Compton photo by Peter Albinger were setting off for the summit register, I wondered how this second highest peak in the Adamant Range, mountain had come to be named Austerity. 3348 m (10,980 foot) Mount Austerity via The Greek root, ‘austeros’, means harsh or the Ironman By Pass route.> severe and yet the summit experience was Jim and Chad led off in the dawn as completely sublime and blissful as we took we wound our way out of Fairy Meadow, in the wonder of the Selkirks immediately over the moraine and on to the Granite surrounding us and the peaks of the Rockies Glacier. After three heart-thumping hours, further afield. Within the next hour, I was we reached the bergschrund at the bottom to have my own harsh encounter with Mt. of what the Selkirks North guidebook Austerity. describes as a, “130 m 45 to 50 degree twoAs Jim lowered Peter and me over some pitch ice slope.” rocky ledges, I totally misjudged a downward “Hmmm - this should be interesting,” step onto a ledge. My left foot skidded over I mused as I glanced down at the infinitely a boulder and in the next moment I felt the sloping glacier below us, then up to what knee twist, wobble and collapse entirely. I looked like a direct ice route to heaven. I landed in a heap. took a deep breath as Peter and I started up “Damn, Damn, Damn!” I was so angry together. Within seconds I heard myself yelp and embarrassed at my clumsiness, I was on as I slapped into the slope and got pulled the verge of tears but I had promised Jim at downward. Peter was dangling at the end of the beginning of the camp that I was not a the rope while I hung with one arm on to whiny, weeping camper, so I smiled through my ice axe planted into the slope. This was the pain and struggled to my feet. Then I the point at which I berated myself with (at looked at our descent route and realized least once on every climb), “What the heck there was still the ice pitch to negotiate do you think you’re doing here Margaret? plus three or four kilometres of glacier and Are you CRAZY?” moraine travel back to the hut. Having put the ice climb behind us, we Jim obliquely mentioned something tackled the rocky ridge that would take us to about “getting a rescue up here”, but as soon the summit. Jim expertly scoped out routes, as I understood that meant being plucked established anchors and safely belayed us off Austerity/Audacity/Perversity by a from one pitch to the next. Mt. Austerity helicopter, my pride decided that I would was starting to feel more like Mt. Audacity. get back to the hut on my own steam, even I mean, how audacious and impudent were if it meant hopping all the way. Chad, Mike we, lowlanders from Toronto, labouring our and Brian showed infinite patience and way up this mountain? When we reached understanding as they slowed the pace to the summit, Brian McCrindle had renamed accommodate my lopsided gait, continuing the mountain Perversity because, in his to escort me after we had unclipped from words, “You have to be a little perverse to the rope. I believe in the ‘love of teammate’ do what we just did.” concept, and my teammates, plus Jim’s calm, As Jim and Chad entered us into the WWWMARMOTCOM0HOTO!CE+VALE watchful attitude and BD’s expert diagnosis/ treatment of an MCL sprain got me through that day and the remainder of the week. Jim described our Austerity/Audacity/Perversity climb as a perfect day, with the exception of my boo-boo near the summit. On Thursday morning, as the team was leaving for the east side of Outpost mountain, Felix had some sombre news. “Hey guys, we have a serious problem here.” I saw Jim momentarily brace himself for the bad news. Felix elaborated, “We have way, way too much food and we have to carry it out with us on Saturday so we have to eat as much as we can in the next three days.” From this point onwards, the camp became an exercise in force-feeding. Felix and Paula delivered food to us non-stop boxes of snacks and candy bars, grocery bags full of oranges and apples, a tray of 40 eggs, bins full of cheese, cereal, bread, gobs of pasta and rice, dozens of Kokanee beer and - best of all- desserts including chocolate cheesecake and apple pie. We dutifully consumed as much as possible and became pudgier by the day, despite our vigorous daily mountain outings. Perhaps it was the abundance of food, or mayonnaise gone bad, but the dreaded puke-itis made its way into camp on the last day. The first victim was Felix, heaving into the darkness, followed at dawn by Mike. Within an hour of departing for the east side of the Gothics, the other victims returned to the hut at staggered intervals first BD, then John and finally Jim. Chad, Peter, Brian and Paula valiantly continued on to reach their destination. On our final evening, we sat around the dinner table in the muted halo of candlelight. Generous amounts of whiskey and wine softened our conversation as we talked of humorous, embarrassing and awkward moments in mountaineering and guiding. Then, inevitably, we spoke of the sadder side of our passion - the near misses, the mishaps and the deaths. As we blew out the candle and retired for the night, I was saddened that the week had come to a close. But at the same time, I appreciated how much each of my guides and teammates had contributed to the rich experiences and enduring memories of the week. Thank you Jim, Chad, Felix, Paula, Peter, BD, Mike, Brian and John. And thanks to the ACC for the excellent hut system and organization that goes into every one of these camps. 4HE7ORK'LOVEBY-ARMOT)NSPIREDDESIGNEDANDTESTED BYOUTDOORPROFESSIONALSOBSESSEDWITHGREATGEAR%NGINEERED WITH-ARMOTSOWN-EM"RAIN©WATERPROOFANDBREATHABLEINSERTS ANDTHEATTENTIONTOFUNCTIONALITYANDDETAILDEMANDEDBY PEOPLEWHOWORKOUTDOORSFORALIVING/BSESSIONISSIMPLY PARTOFTHEDEALWHENYOUREA-ARMOTFOR,IFE Felix and Brian photo by Peter Albinger Join us for a week at the CAMPBELL ICEFIELD CHALET Fully catered and guided April 16-23, 2005. Also for self-sufficient groups: X-Mas and New Year, Jan. 9-22, And from April 23 on. Phone 403-673-2198 www.skigolden.com Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 11 Get Goods the Active Wear ACC Vest T-shirts 200 weight Polartec Fleece, Forest Green or Ash Grey with ACC logo S, M, L, XL 100% Heavy Cotton, available in S, M, L, XL Short & long-sleeve with ACC logo Ash Grey Members: $74.95 Non-Members: $79.95 Forest Green T-shirts with ACC leaf image Short-sleeve Long-sleeve Sand Sage Green Medium Blue Natural Forest Green Short-sleeve: ACC Mountain Leaf Image Cap Long-sleeve: Members: $16.95 Members: $23.95 Non-Members: $18.95 Non-Members: $25.95 *Sizes / colours are limited. 100% Brushed Cotton, Stone with Green Brim Stainless Steel Mug Multi-function Pocket Knife Swiss Guides Poster 12 ounce, double walled mug to keep your beverage at the desired temperature. Non-slip rubber base. ACC mountain image in forest green. Stainless steel, includes nylon, velcro case with belt loop. (approx. size: 7 x 2 cm) Englehard & Feuz on Mt. Victoria Members: $11.95 Non-Members: $12.95 Members: $9.95 Non-Members: $10.95 ACC Mountain Leaf Sticker Club Logo Pin Club Crest (approx. size: 9 x 5 cm) Brass ACC pin (approx. size: 2.5 x 2 cm) Sew-on ACC logo crest leatherette on felt (approx. size: 7 x 8 cm) Members: $16.95 Non-Members: $18.95 Accessories Members: $14.95 Non-Members: $16.95 Members: $1.87 Non-Members: $2.80 (actual size: 46 x 61 cm) Members: $4.95 Non-Members: $5.95 Members: $4.95 Non-Members: $5.95 Cards Acclaimed Books Greeting Cards The Canadian Alpine Journal 2004 Enjoy the tradition of sending season’s greetings with these 4 x 6 inch cards, featuring a gorgeous photograph of the Bill Putnam (Fairy Meadow) Hut nestled snuggly beneath the Northern Lights. – edited by Geoff Powter Packages of 10 cards with envelopes, seasonal message or blank inside. Members: $9.95 Non-Members: $11.50 TO ORDER: This high quality annual journal contains a wide range of reviews, reports and articles on Canadian mountaineering. Members: $25.95 Non-Members: $29.95 Member subscription price and back issues of the CAJ available – call for details. call: (403) 678-3200 ext. 1 email: info@Alpin Great holiday gift ideas! Ways to the Sky A Rocky Mountain Sketchbook – by Andy Selters – by Donna Jo Massie This historic book charts the evolution of alpine climbing in the United States, Canada and Mexico, from the evidence of ancient native ascents to the latest cutting-edge climbs. Andy Selters highlights key personalities, then points readers to the mountains where they can experience firsthand many of these historically significant routes. Learn to create beautiful landscape paintings through the instruction and examples of this stunningly produced book, a step-by-step guide to watercolour painting and drawing in the mountain landscape. Members: $29.95 Members: $16.95 Non-Members: $19.95 Non-Member’s : $33.95 Bruno Engler Photography Every Other Day Bruno Engler, last of the Swiss mountain guides, spent over 60 years photographing the Canadian Rockies. In 1987, at the Banff Festival of Mountain Films, Bruno received the inaugural Summit of Excellence Award, representing the highest of honours from his peers for his contributions to Canadian Rockies culture and for his enthusiasm and dedication to photography, guiding and skiing. – edited by R.W. Sandford & Jon Whelan Members: $59.95 Members: $29.95 An engaging and entertaining account of the exploits of a brash, very confident, 19 year old amateur climber, A.J. Ostheimer III, and his guide, Hans Fuhrer. Together they climbed some 35 peaks in the Columbia and Clemenceau Icefields area of Jasper National Park in a seven week period during the summer of 1927. Twentyeight of these peaks were first ascents. Non-Members: $59.95 Non-Members: $34.95 Accidents in North American Mountaineering 2004 Artists of the Rockies Inspirations of Lake O’Hara An annual compendium of accident reports from climbing accidents in the United States and Canada. Through analyzing what went wrong in each situation, ANAM gives mountaineers the opportunity to learn from other climbers’ mistakes. From inadequate protection, clothing, or equipment to inexperience, errors in judgment, and exceeding abilities, the mistakes recorded in this book are invaluable safety lessons for all climbers. Members: $11.95 Non-Members: $13.95 A Mountain Life – editied by R.W. Sandford The Stories and Photographs of Bruno Engler. Members: $30.95 Non-Members: $33.95 Also available: – by Jane Lytton Gooch Illustrates 100 years of landscape art inspired by the Lake O’Hara area in the Canadian Rockies. The book has an introduction outlining the history of artistic activity, including the Group of Seven, and the 50 colour plates, documented and described, show a variety of media and styles from 27 artists up to 2002. Members: $24.95 Non-Members: $29.95 Backcountry Huts & Lodges of the Rockies & Columbias – by Jim Scott Comprehensive guide to wilderness lodging including the ACC’s mountain huts. Each description includes location, GPS coordinates, amenities, features, cost, access descriptions, best guidebooks and reservation instructions. Members: $24.95 Non-Members: $24.95 Guidebooks on mountaineering, climbing, skiing and hiking, as well as history and general interest books. Maps - topographical and Gemtrek's recreational maps. nClubofCanada.ca GST & shipping extra. visit: www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/store Melting Mountains – the ACC’s climate change awareness program by Chris Joseph “What can we do?” It’s a question the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) has heard over and over from the mountain recreation community since we initiated Melting Mountains, an awareness program about the effect of climate change on our alpine environment. In fact, the community’s response has been phenomenal. The brochure we developed in 2003 - a colourful collection of climate change facts and solutions - went out the door as fast as it came in. Within a month of the initial print run, nearly 30,000 brochures had been claimed by mountain enthusiasts around the world. To address this overwhelming response, the ACC has joined forces with the David Suzuki Foundation, the Government of Canada and Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC) to expand the scope of the program. A number of plans are afoot. These upcoming efforts will continue to show our club’s leadership on this critical issue and should continue to rally the troops into responding. But before we get into describing the new elements of the program, let us update you on the latest science and news. Mountains as global barometers Sadly, the evidence continues to arrive: our mountains are responding dramatically Recession of the Helm Glacier, Garibaldi Provincial Park, BC. 1929 photo courtesy of British Columbia Archives (I-67145 & 67146 composite); 2002 photo by J. Koch to climate change and are showing themselves as ‘global barometers.’ For example, in British Columbia’s Garibaldi Provincial Park, scientists are charting substantial reductions in ice coverage. Simon Fraser University scientist Johannes Koch and his colleagues have found that the park has lost about a third of its ice mass in the last 300 years, with the most loss occurring in the last 20 years. Glaciers elsewhere in western Canada are evidencing similar changes, as are glaciers throughout the world. In 2003, American scientists reported that Patagonian icecaps doubled their rate of melting since 1975. This summer, Peruvian researchers declared, “if climatic conditions remain as they are, all the glaciers in Peru below 18,000 feet (5490 metres) will disappear by around 2015.” A number of other physical changes are also being observed. Earlier this year, a team of European scientists suggested that the extraordinary rockfalls from mountains in the Alps in the summer of 2003 - in which portions of a number of famous climbing routes literally fell off the mountainside are the result of melting alpine permafrost. Such events support earlier predictions that climate change will bring about greater numbers of landslides, debris flows and outburst floods. Mountain weather is also changing. Data collected throughout the West, including Mount Logan, show that snowlines are rising and winters are getting shorter. What does this mean for us? Our winter snow will feel more and more spring-like and we may lose some of our favourite climbs. We really can’t ignore the fact that our hallowed grounds will be transformed substantially by climate change. Mountain community responses Fortunately, the mountain recreation community is beginning to take action. In the U.S. last year, the National Ski Areas Association and the Natural Resources Defence Council launched the Keep Winter Cool program to mobilize skiers and ski resorts to curb their greenhouse gas emissions. Lots of fantastic initiatives have sprung up. For example, California’s Mammoth and a handful of other resorts are powering portions of their operations with wind or other renewable energy sources and Arapahoe Basin in Colorado offers discounts to customers who arrive via 14 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 carpooling. Perhaps the most forceful move was by Colorado’s Aspen Ski Company. In July of this year, the resort called on the U.S. government to implement effective climate change policy. In 2001, Aspen announced a 10-year plan to cut their greenhouse gas emissions by 10 per cent. Here in Canada, we also have some great examples of leadership. One third of B.C.’s Whistler-Blackcomb’s snowmobiles are lowemission Bombardiers and low-emission GMCs compose a growing portion of their vehicle fleet. Throughout Canada, MEC has been renovating its stores with energy efficiency in mind. Due to recent retrofits, its Ottawa store is charting $23,000 in energy savings annually. Clearly, there is a momentum growing. The Peak Challenge Each of us must now take our efforts to a new level. There are a number of things to be done. The brochure introduced us to the Peak Challenge – a rally call directed at all of us in the mountain recreation community. The Peak Challenge stems from our national emission-reduction goal as determined by Canada’s obligations under the Kyoto Protocol. To reach the national goal, each of us must cut one tonne, or 20 per cent, of our greenhouse gas emissions annually. Is this hard? No. For example, in Alberta, where most electricity is generated by coalfired generators, replacing all standard light bulbs with compact fluorescent or halogen bulbs cuts emissions by an average of 1.48 tonnes and saves $135 in electricity bills! It’s that easy. But we can’t stop there. We must continue to be stewards of the mountains and demonstrate continued leadership among our climbing circles and in our communities. Melting Mountains coming to you We are currently in the process of organizing for our fall and winter presentation tour. Through these presentations, we will continue to spread the message that our mountains are indeed melting, hear about the changes local recreationists are noticing around the West and talk with interested parties about how they can effectively combat climate change. Melting Mountains needs volunteers and host sections to coordinate these presentations across B.C. continued on the next page Jumbo decision comes in for a landing by Amy Krause You are standing 3400 metres above sea level, eye-to-eye with the peaks of the Purcell mountains, blue sky above, snow under ski, it smells of rock and ice, and it is July. You are 50 kilometers from the nearest major highway. You are also 15 metres from the nearest chair lift. This could be the scene in the Jumbo Creek region of British Columbia, plunked half way between Invermere and the tiny town of Meadow Creek, in what is currently the domain of heli-ski companies and backcountry travelers alone. By the time you read this issue of the Gazette, the fate of the proposed Jumbo Glacier Ski Resort should already be known. The B.C. Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) is expected to pass down its decision Sept. 17. Regardless of the outcome, the fate of the Jumbo Glacier Ski Resort will reverberate continued from the previous page and Alberta. If you or your section would like to participate, please contact Chris Joseph at [email protected] to get organizing. We should also point you towards our new website at www.MeltingMountains.org Here, we have posted the latest on scheduled presentations, information about climate change and its impact on our mountains, as well as resources and suggestions to help you succeed in your Peak Challenge. As well, we will soon be introducing a number of interactive components to our website. Through Meltwatch you can follow changes to mountains you hope one day to climb, submit information and photos describing changes you’re observing in your local peaks and help scientists track the effect of climate change on our alpine environment. We in the mountain recreation community have a lot to lose with climate change; we also have a lot to offer. Ian and I look forward to meeting and working with many of you in the coming months as the Melting Mountains program develops. Chris Joseph is a guide and mountain skills instructor in Squamish, BC. Ian Bruce is an avid skier and climber living in Vancouver, B.C. and is Melting Mountains’ program director. Both Chris and Ian can be contacted at [email protected] throughout the region and beyond. It demands that we ask difficult questions that cut to very heart of what wilderness means to Canadians, to alpinists and to the residents of the Kootenays – questions such as: What is wilderness? How much of it should be protected? Who should have access to it, and Society Jumbo Pass, looking north-east into the Jumbo Valley, Mts Jumbo how? photo courtesy Jumbo Creek Conservation The Jumbo Creek and Karnak Conservation Society has environmental assessments and over 4500 legitimate concerns about the development. public comments submitted over the 90It worries about the strain placed on 68 day comment period. resident grizzly bears in the Purcells, the Yet there is no easy answer in all ability of alpine watersheds to support a this data. It begs the difficult questions: 5500-bed village, and the risk of drawing How much of Canada’s alpine wilderness economic growth away from existing resort should be protected? Can we weigh one communities, including Fernie, Panorama person’s personal devotion to place against and Kimberley. another’s potential livelihood? Do mining Jumbo Glacier Resort – Pheidias Project and forestry destroy a wilderness forever? Management and Vancouver architect Or are abandoned, but ecologically viable Oberto Oberti - argue that the resort is lands worth protecting too? If we can’t see located in a valley that was forested and development from adjacent valleys, does it mined until 1991, that it will protect make significantly less impact? And finally, watersheds with a state-of-the-art water if alpine and glacial landscapes are integral treatment plant, be the smallest resort in to Canadian identity, then are ‘average the region, provide year-round training Canadians’ obliged to conserve them or opportunities for Olympic athletes, create entitled to access them? up to 800 jobs and contribute millions in Can we do both by taking people to the local tax dollars. peaks of the Purcells? Can we do both from Finally, it argues that the resort will the top of a chairlift? provide ‘average Canadians’ with access To learn more visit the B.C. EAO to alpine and glacial landscapes – icons of website www.eao.gov.bc.ca; Jumbo Glacier Canadian identity. Resort at www.jumboglacierresort.com; or The British Columbia EAO has 30 the Jumbo Creek Conservation Society at days to wade through feedback from www.jumbowild.com. Comments on the local, regional, federal and aboriginal decision are welcome, even after Sept. 17. governments, multiple economic and Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 15 Club opens door to new backcountry cabin by Lynn Martel From the front stoop of the cozy log cabin, towering jagged peaks peeked out occasionally from behind swirling clouds, only to be quickly hidden again by thick grey masses heavy with rain. To the south, Mount Aosta’s steep rock cliffs were striped with snowmelt, its pronounced ridges and pillars suggesting potential climbing routes. To the west, white patches of Castlenau Glacier offered tempting destinations for adventure in a place that felt so remote and wild I found it hard to believe it took less than 90 minutes to reach by mountain bike following a power line trail bordered by pasque flowers and glacier lilies. Situated about a 20-minute stroll from Lower Elk Lake in Elk Lakes Provincial Park, the two-story, one-room log cabin was built by B.C. Parks in 1991 to accommodate park rangers whose duties included manning an information counter. But with rangers now spending more time patrolling broader regions of the park rather than focussing on a single location, the hut has seen infrequent use in recent years. That all changed in July however, as the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC), in partnership with B.C. Parks, took over operation of the cabin, offering overnight accommodation in a remote area with relatively easy access. And with the ACC providing volunteer custodians on a fulltime basis through the summer months and performing duties including registering users to the Lower Elk Lake campsite, area visitors will be provided with an enhanced experience, said Glenn Campbell, B.C. Parks area supervisor. “We’re really pleased to have an organization with the values the Alpine Club has to help deliver some of our recreational needs here,” Campbell said. “The ACC has a large group of volunteers to draw from who are enthusiastic about the backcountry and who have a lot of experience, which we see as being of benefit to the park as a whole, not just for accommodation purposes.” The arrangement, according to ACC director of facilities Lawrence White, is mutually beneficial. “Parks really respects the values of our volunteers,” White said. “And it gives the Alpine Club a presence in a different part of the country. We can show off a new area that a lot of people might not realize is there.” With a rushing creek supplying water 16 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 only 30 metres from the door, Elk Lakes Cabin is equipped with foam mattresses for 10 people, a propane stove for cooking and lighting, plus pots, pans, dishes and cutlery. Visitors need only pack in sleeping bags and food and with access from Kananaskis Lakes trailhead consisting of a three to four hour summer hike or winter ski, or a 10 kilometre bike ride, the cabin is not only accessible to a wide range of users, but affordable averaging $20 per person per night, or $42 for two parents with up to three children. But the biggest attraction is the location. Ranging between 2900 and 3200 m, mounts Fox, Foch, Castlenau and Aosta dominate the skyline, with massive cliffs, plunging waterfalls, hanging icefalls and jewel tone lakes at their bases. In winter, ice climbers can tackle frozen waterfall routes on the Seeping Wall while summer hikers can explore easy to moderate trails to Frozen Lake, Fox Lake and Lower, Middle and Upper Petain Falls - all of which are closed to bikers. With a full-time maintenance crew of two to four people (in summer), the non-profit, membership-based ACC relies heavily on volunteer manpower to maintain 23 alpine huts, ranging from spartan bivy shelters perched above treeline below formidable climbing routes to charming log cabins set among flower-filled meadows and alpine lakes throughout the Selkirk and Rocky Mountains of Alberta and B.C. Typically the ACC arranges logistics for helicopter flights to fly in materials - and fly outhouse barrels out - but volunteer members do 90 per cent of the physical labour. Over two weekends in June, volunteer work crews at the Elk Lakes Cabin removed a hot water tank and shower unit and installed a propane lighting system and a two-burner propane hot plate (to augment the four-burner stove already there). With vehicle access via a 70- km logging road from Elkford, B.C., the ACC hopes to install an underground outhouse pump system, which would be far more economical to service than barrels. Inside the bright, skylight-fitted cabin, Malcolm “Tabs” Talbot, ACC Huts Committee chair, moved from the common room to one then the other of two smaller rooms on the main floor, planning the cabin’s future. Take down this wall, move the kitchen into here, extend the living area out to there, put a dining alcove over there. Upstairs, extend the sleeping quarters to Elk Lakes Cabin photo by Bruce Hardardt the opposite wall and build a bigger staircase so people can climb up comfortably with their packs. Make the custodian’s room only as big as absolutely necessary, build front and back vestibules and outside, he added with a twinkle, build a wood-burning sauna. A finishing carpenter from Calgary who’s been renovating ACC huts for nearly 20 years - the first was Fairy Meadow - Tabs said he likes to spend a few days at a hut, living among other guests before formulating any renovation plans. “I like to stay in a crowded hut,” Tabs said. “I like to watch how the place works when it’s full of people.” His aim, he said, is to give people who want to sleep as much space and privacy as possible, while others can cook, eat, play cards or relax by the woodstove in comfort. “I’m preparing all the huts for my retirement when I can’t camp anymore,” Tabs joked. In June, Tabs joined a work crew at Lake O’Hara’s Elizabeth Parker Hut in Yoho National Park, to rebuild the outhouses. With overnight fees averaging $20 per night for Class A facilities, Tabs explained the ACC’s Huts Committee decided several years ago that visitors deserved outhouses equal in quality and workmanship to the huts, rather than being forced to use cold draughty biffies with spindrift blowing through cracks. Poor workmanship, he added, such as improperly installed doors can easily blow their hinges or become jammed by snowdrifts. Renovating huts isn’t entirely without adventure or intrigue, Tabs said, as he shared a favourite tale. Once when a couple of Huts Committee members arrived at Elizabeth Parker Hut to begin some renovations, they discovered some gear left behind by a couple (who shall remain nameless), who had neither registered nor paid to stay in the hut and had gone up to Abbott Pass Hut for a night. The work crew tore out the bunks, gutted the entire log cabin and placed the pack right in the centre of the stripped hut before leaving. After a hearty round of laughter in the Elk Lakes Cabin living room, the nineperson work crew - including six-yearold Emily and eight-year-old Lucas, who admired their pet worm housed in a yoghurt container while their dad, Calgary’s Bruce Hardardt, ACC Clubhouse Committee chair, packed up hammers and drill bits enjoyed a lunch of soup and leftover pasta from the previous night’s dinner. Lunch was followed by a frenzy of sweeping and mopping, quickly transferring the renovation zone into an inviting mountain retreat. “That’s the trouble with work parties,” said ACC mountain adventures coordinator Jon Rollins. “Just when you’re about to leave the hut looks all comfortable and organized. The rest of the time it’s chaos.” To book a reservation or volunteer as custodian, check out www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/facility Kama Bay ice climbing web guide now available After years of filming in bitter cold temperatures and countless painful hours on the computer, the Hangdog Production crew has finally finished designing a web-guide to the ice climbs in Kama Bay, Ontario. This guide has up-to-date information on new climbs including the first ascents of NC-17 (M5+), Stone Cold Cowboys (M4, WI4), G-Rated (WI3+), as well as old classics such as Getting Oriented (WI4+) and Icebreakers (WI5+). Contents include printable maps, photographs of many local climbers and descriptions for each climb. The Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) Thunder Bay Section will be updating this guide annually, so please inform the Club of any new route information or photographs you have to contribute. Hopefully this project will inspire other Club members (like yourself ) to produce a similar web-guides for other climbing areas around Thunder Bay. To view, go into the Thunder Bay Section home page, then go to Local Climbing, then to Ice Climbing Areas. At the top of the page, there is a sub-category called Kama Bay Ice Guide. This is the home page for this project. The contents are grouped in sub-categories at the top of this project’s main page. This project was made possible through a grant from the ACC’s Helly Hansen Mountain Adventure Award program. PSST! Do you wanna be a famous writer? Ok, how about just a writer? Contact the Gazette editor at [email protected] to have your article, story or event published in the Gazette. Karl Nagy Memorial Scholarship The Karl Nagy Memorial Scholarship was established in 2001 to assist aspiring amateur leaders and guides in the development of their leadership and people skills. Until his death in 2000, Karl set an outstanding example as a mentor in the mountains and was well known for his leadership, safety and success. Karl was admired and loved for his exuberant attitude in the mountain environment that he played and worked in. This scholarship is intended to provide an opportunity to Association of Canadian Mountain Guides candidates and/or Alpine Club of Canada aspiring amateur leaders to develop their skills and abilities within the ACC General Mountaineering Camp environment. All applicants must be current members of the ACC. The Karl Nagy Memorial Scholarship Selection Committee will review all applications received and approve one application for attendance at a designated week of the GMC Mountaineering Camp each year. The individual selected will be sponsored to attend the GMC to observe and assist current guides and amateur leaders roughout the week. Alpine Club amateur leaders and ACMG candidates will be given priority in alternating years. The year 2005 is set for an aspiring ACMG guide. The deadline for applications is January 31,2005. For more information, visit www.alpineclubofcanada.ca/activities/leadership.html#nagy Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 17 A volunteer’s commitment to the Alpine Club of Canada The Gazette continues to recognize the contributions of some of the Alpine Club of Canada’s (ACC) most dedicated and long-serving Executive Committee volunteers. Peter Muir has served as the Vice President of Access and Environment since 1998 and was the recipient of the ACC’s Distinguished Service Award in 2001. Peter works as a lawyer and resides in Winnipeg Manitoba with his wife and two children. Because it beats complaining Peter Muir by Peter Muir Poor Mr. Mallory; when asked a stupid question, he gave a frustrated answer. And now his overused response is changed and used again by some duffer climber from Winnipeg. Oh well, better to be thought of than not, I suppose. Mallory’s answer reflects my usual initial reaction when asked why I volunteer - if you have to ask, perhaps you will never really get it anyway. But, although likely, the only thing he and I have in common - he missed a great chance and I hope not to miss mine. For the most part, I will spare you the details of an otherwise pretty ordinary climbing and skiing life. Yes, I climb rock, mountaineer and more than anything, love to ski and I live in Winnipeg. Good, old Winnipeg flowered with abundant cultural relief but not blessed with topography beneficial to my chosen passions. So how and maybe more importantly why, would a prairie boy become the VP of Access and Environment for the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC)? Sometime in the dark ages, that period of time in which most sport climbers believe that people must have been forced against their will to listen to Van Morrison and rock climbers used stoppers for more than paper weights, I took a climbing course. It was fun. It was taught at an old quarry north of Winnipeg by the first of a long line of great friends I have come to know through the ACC. Tibor Bodi is a true gentleman of the sport who encouraged me to climb and to get involved with the local Manitoba Section. I became section secretary around 1986. As you can well imagine, there were few other places to meet climbers in Winnipeg. From that point forward my life is road signed with the many people and experiences that are part of and surround the ACC. Truly fantastic folks, too many for mention in a short article but truly memorable characters. When the Manitoba chair became the secretary of the national club, he encouraged 18 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 me to become Section president and, in so doing, I joined the whole new world of the national club. Many challenges and interesting questions later, the main benefit for me remains the same - the people and the experiences tied in with them. So many great days and meetings as reward for a few short hours around a boardroom table. Don Forrest’s excited remembrances of Mount Manitoba. Open encouragement to keep climbing from Glen Boles. Going on The North Face course and learning from Cyril, Peter and Kristen to demand more of myself. For the cost of the course, I would have to volunteer for the Club forever to repay what I got from it - and that was before it was improved. Tami Knight and I laughing until tears at the expense of a poor executive member; he ravaged by the results of Mr. Mortimer’s tutelage that there is indeed a bottom of a Grand Marnier bottle and it can be reached if you apply yourself to the task all night. Chance meetings with famous climbing personalities - did you know it is physically impossible to maintain the attention of a woman in a bar while seated beside the way over six-foot tall, square-jawed Conrad Anker - neither did I but I know now. Conrad as it turns out, does not spend a great deal of his travel time in Winnipeg so short of the ACC there was not much chance I would cross his path or that of the Burgess twins, Chic Scott, Peter Fuhrman, Peter Croft, Karl Nagy, Ian McNaughtDavis, the members of the Japanese Alpine Club and many others. My time with the ACC has given me the rare opportunity to deal with questions of which dreams really are made. For example, confirming committee recommendations for the recipients of the Jen Higgins Award. Can you imagine a better feeling than helping, even in a small way, the aspirations of a young woman in realizing her expeditionary dream? I get to know that feeling. Every member of the ACC board, whether they think about it or not, photo by Maria Fiorentino gets that gift. And each evening of effort spent debating difficult questions, such as insuring that kids can go on Club climbs, is rewarded by reading about their successes and failures. I could go on and on but where else could you learn about mountain culture than from Bob Sanford? Writing from Geoff Powter and Dave Dornian? European history from Mike Mortimer? Two generations of contributions from the Roe family? Horticulture from Gerta Smythe? Would my life have been as much fun if I had not met the very entertaining ice climbing fanatic members of the Thunder Bay Section? Nope. All in all, it seems pretty simple to me. You have a skill. I could learn from it and the ACC could benefit from it. You should volunteer in whatever capacity you feel you can - you might surprise yourself in how far you can go and isn’t that really why you are a climber? You and I together will never keep everybody happy but, because it is better than complaining and because, even with my idiosyncrasies, I am a different person that when I started out, I know we will grow in someway together and the ACC will come with us. Not long after I took that fateful lesson from Tibor, I read in a British magazine what has remained my favourite climbing story. Its final paragraph is as applicable to my time with the ACC as it is to my life, so the final words go to Steve Ashton: At the end of the traverse we took the usual wet weather option and roped off from the broomstick sapling in a small meadow above the lower roof. Just in case the sapling pulled I abseiled in an upright position so the impact would be absorbed by crumpling leg bones instead of a crumpling spine. I didn’t want to end up paralyzed from the waist down. I suppose that’s what commitment is all about; stepping into the future, for better or worse, because there’s nowhere else to go. There’s no risk in that. You took the risk when you tied the knot. Fay Hut - at home in the mountains by Fern Hietkamp photo by Bruce Hardardt In July I had the opportunity to accompany a group of Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) executive and volunteers and Parks Canada staff to visit the Fay Hut site, south of the Valley of the Ten Peaks, above Prospectors Valley in Kootenay National Park. Fay Hut was built in 1927 as a base for climbing in the Valley of the Ten Peaks and it has the distinction of being the first hut built or operated by the ACC. As reported in the Fall 2003 Gazette, Fay Hut burned in the Tokumm Creek fire in Aug. 2003, one of many fires that burned through B.C. and Alberta forests that summer. The ACC is working with Parks Canada to rebuild the historic Fay Hut; the purpose of our visit was to locate a site. After the helicopter landed us below the towering peaks and glaciers, we crossed a rushing stream and walked tentatively into the blackened forest. We marvelled at the complete devastation - the forest soil full of ash and dry as dust, tree trunks hollowed out by fire and all that remains of the Fay Hut - a rectangular foundation in a small clearing. But then our eyes started to pick out the tiniest signs of life - a bit of fireweed here, some mushrooms there, a spot of meadow that the fire had leaped over as it raced through the forest. It was like landing on another planet; nothing seemed familiar although it was the same old Fay Hut site that we had visited many times before. Between the time of its construction in the 1920s until 1991, the Fay Hut was variously supported and maintained by the ACC and Kootenay National Park. After 1991, the hut was permanently handed over to the ACC, and National Executive and Rocky Mountain Section members poured a large amount of effort and funding into the hut to keep it in good condition. After walking through the area, the group identified an ideal site for rebuilding the Fay Hut, about 50 metres above and eight minutes past the old site, between the stream and a rock outcrop. Once the location was decided, Peter Fuhrmann and Carl Hannigan flagged the trail to the new hut site. Jonathan Rollins of the ACC’s Energy, Water and Waste Management Committee conducted an environmental impact assessment for the new hut location. Bev Bendell and Hans Fuhrer gave input on the aesthetics of hut views. Malcolm Talbot, chair of the ACC Huts Committee, reviewed design opportunities that the location provides and helicopter pilot Don McTighe picked out an appropriate helicopter landing area. Jeremy Zettel pulled out his surveying equipment to triangulate the coordinates for the new hut. In the midst of all the discussion and planning, Fay Hut Rebuilding Project manager Bruce Hardardt and Gerry Israelson, park warden and backcountry specialist for Lake Louise, Yoho and Kootenay region, discussed the design and approval process that would be required. After a few hours of work, Jon brought out a picnic lunch and Peter a bottle of his homemade wine to celebrate the occasion. Amazingly, we were starting to feel comfortable in this burned-out landscape. We could picture where the rebuilt Fay Hut would be, the walk to the outhouse, the trail to the peaks and the forest re-growing in time. You could say we started to feel right at home at the site of the new Fay Hut! Next steps in the Fay Hut Rebuilding Project It is anticipated that the Fay Hut will be designed and rebuilt within the year. A design committee is in place, with hut construction planned to take place over the winter of 20042005. A three to four week on-site building phase is planned to start mid July 2005. For more information, or if you would like to volunteer for the hut rebuilding as logistics coordinator, first-aid attendant, cook, construction and building professional or any other capacity, please contact Bruce Hardardt, project manager, at [email protected] The ACC National Office and Facilities Committee would like to extend a sincere thank you to all who have donated to the rebuilding of the Fay Hut to date. Further contributions are welcome and needed. To donate, please see the back cover of this Gazette. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 19 The history of Keene Farm Part II by David Gillespie The following is the second of a three-part history of the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) Montreal Section’s Keene Hut. Part one, which appeared in the Summer 2004 Gazette, detailed the history of the Styles Brook Valley, where the property is located, and the beginnings of the Montreal Section’s interest in acquiring the property. The purchase of the property To form a company, a board of directors composed of U.S. citizens was needed. The Keene Valley real estate agent agreed to sign the incorporation papers, but two more citizens were needed. While Gordon Weetman (Montreal Section chair at the time) went skiing at Tuckerman’s Ravine in New Hampshire with Bill Putnam of New Hampshire (a leading member of the American Alpine Club) and Fritz Weisner of Stowe Vermont (a famous German American climber who frequently climbed with Club members at Val David, Pocomoonshine, the Rockies and Shawangunks), Weetman broached the need for U.S. incorporating directors. They agreed to sign. He found Harland Carson, a lawyer in Elizabethtown, New York, to incorporate the Montreal Alpine Club Inc. (MAC Inc.) as the organization that would form a subsidiary company for the ACC’s Montreal Section. At the MAC’s first formal annual meeting in Montreal, the Section fired the U.S. directors and passed a bylaw naming the Montreal Section’s executive as directors. The Section then bought the farm in the name of MAC Inc. and Mr. Hickey, the real estate agent, sold insurance to the Section. Mrs. Howe, the former landowner, had a daughter who insisted on keeping the land below the road to put a house trailer on. She did agree, however, to let the ACC have a two-acre parcel of land going down to the brook for access. Montreal Section member Louise LaRivière purchased another little adjacent block upstream. The restoration of the property Section members were very busy on weekends for the next three years. The roof was repaired and the house, outside and inside, was fixed. The old field well was dug out, the valve discovered and water fed into the house below. Even at -25˚ C, the two wood stoves kept it warm and water which was not available from the field well (when it was frozen solid) came from ice in the stream that crosses the road at the corner of the property. Trails were marked on the rocky ridges up to Clements Pond in the back of the property, cross-country ski trails were picked out across Styles Brook and the trees overgrowing the meadow were vigorously attacked. Most summer weekends were spent cutting the grass – on five acres requiring maintenance - with only a single hand push lawnmower. Doug Urquhart, an active member from the very beginning of the land acquisition, generously bought and donated two more lawnmowers so that two mowers were in use at all times while he maintained or fixed the third one. Doug spent entire summers living on the property. He worked hard at many tasks and collected weekend dues as well for many years. The field had many large stones that often hampered camping sites. Many more weekends over the first five years were spent ridding the boulders by digging a hole beside each of them and then burying them hopefully into the hole - not always a successful task! The fall weekends were focused on cutting firewood manually by means of a large crosscut saw. Years of constant lawn mowing, boulder burying and manually cutting firewood took a toll on our members, so in 1971 a second-hand farm tractor with a new mowing implement, and a brand new chain saw were purchased. What a blessing! In 1973, a large 20 by 30 foot shelter was built to accommodate campers during inclement weather. Member Doug Sloan had a lawyer friend from Manhattan do further legal work to correct problems with the incorporation. The loans were quickly paid off and user fees made the Keene Farm self-financing. Since the early 1970s, members began staying overnight at the clubhouse over the cold days of late fall right through the early spring. The subsequent heavier usage meant further restoration to the house. This called for strengthening the century old beams, replacing the mouse infested furniture with wall-to-wall bunks, increasing the number of beds on the second floor and finally, repainting the entire interior of the house. Paul Gillespie and his wife Monique, Doug Urquhart, Boris Brumat and Jean Bourgain Financial Grants from the Alpine Club of Canada Through the generosity of many donors, the ACC has several funds in place to support a variety of mountaineering related projects and initiatives. The annual deadline for the receipt of grant applications is January 31st, and the announcement date for grants awarded is March 15th. The Environment Fund provides support for projects aimed at contributing to the protection and preservation of mountain and climbing environments, including the preservation of alpine flora and fauna in their natural habitat. The focus of the Fund is wilderness conservation rather than recreation enhancement, in recognition of the fact that wilderness is a rapidly diminishing and irreplaceable resource of great intrinsic value and that we must act quickly to save these areas. The Jen Higgins Fund promotes creative and energetic alpine related outdoor pursuits by young women age 25 and younger. These projects should demonstrate initiative, creativity, energy and resourcefulness with an emphasis on self-propelled wilderness travel, and provide value and interest to the community. For example, drawing attention to an environmental concern, exploring a new area, a first accent/traverse, recreating an historical event, involving research, or providing inspiration and role models for other women. The Helly Hansen Mountain Adventure Award was established to celebrate the human passion for alpine areas, and is intended to support worthwhile mountaineering and alpine related projects undertaken by Canadians that allow the passion for mountains to grow and flourish. That passion can be expressed in many forms – mountain exploration, recreation, culture, education, research and alpine access preservation. For complete information and application forms, visit our website: www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/funds/index.html If you do not have Internet access, you may request that the information and forms be mailed to you by calling the National Office at (403) 678-3200 ext. 108 20 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 photo by Karen McNeill along with other members spent much of the summer of 1974 doing the restorations. The work was finally completed in late Nov., just in time for winter use. At the Annual General Meeting (AGM) in the first week of Dec. 1974, it was decided that a committee be formed to look into the location and the building of a new clubhouse. It was felt that the present one was going to be too difficult and expensive to maintain especially when considering its age (over a century) and its ever increasing popularity. That same week, a verbal agreement was reached with the insurance broker to increase the house insurance coverage from $5,000 to $11,000 US. Disaster! The week following the AGM, an RCMP officer came knocking at the door of the Gillespie residence to announce the Keene Farm clubhouse had burned down. We were all in shock and disbelief, especially after spending an entire summer renovating. The officer told us it caught fire the day before (a weekend), on a very cold night when some urban Manhattanittes, unfamiliar with wood stoves and guests of an absent ACC member, went to bed with the stoves fully loaded and the dampers wide open. As is the classic case, the pipes overheated in the night. The guests raced to town to tell the fire department of the incident but it was too late when they arrived. Was there anything left of the house? What were we going to do? Would the insurance honour a verbal agreement from the week before? Paul Gillespie (my father) and I drove down that day to see what remained of the house following the fire, to talk with the fire chief and obtain his report and see the insurance broker. Part three of this story, describing the aftermath of the fire and the events of the many years following, will appear in the winter issue of the Gazette. Many thanks go to Gordon Weetman for his contribution to this article. AWARDS AWARDS AWARDS Get your award nominations in by the December 31 deadline for the exceptional ACC volunteers of 2004. Choose the appropriate award, ACC Service Award, Distinguished Service Award, ACC Leader Award, Silver Rope for Leadership Award. All the award criteria and nomination forms are on our website at: www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/awards/index.html or call the National Office at (403) 678-3200 x 108 and we can mail you the information. AWARDS AWARDS AWARDS Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 21 New rules for custodial groups in Canada`s mountain national parks Volunteers Required Effective - ACC Centennial Events April 1, 2004, custodial groups planning backcountry travel in avalanche terrain between October 15 and May 31 in Canada’s mountain national parks (Mount Revelstoke, Glacier, Yoho, Kootenay, Banff, Jasper and Waterton Lakes National Parks) must obtain a permit signed by the park superintendent. A ‘custodial group’ means an institutional group where at least one person is below the age of majority and that minor is not in the company of his/her parent. Institutional groups include but are not limited to school groups, Scout/Guide groups, church groups, cadet groups and community youth groups. Conditions of the permit stipulate that the custodial group retain the services of a certified mountain or ski guide, with a maximum group size of nine persons, not including guides. Permits will be issued following approval of a custodial group permit application. Permit applications must be submitted at least two weeks in advance of the proposed trip’s start date. A custodial group permit application form can be obtained from: ● Mountain park web sites ● Parks Canada information centres or administration offices ● Parks Canada’s office in Calgary, Alberta (#1550, 635-8th Ave. S.W.) ● Information on hiring a mountain or ski guide can be found on the web site of the Association of Canadian Mountain Guides at www.acmgguides.com During 2005/06 the Alpine Club of Canada (ACC) will celebrate its centennial. In recognition of this august occasion, the Club is scheduling a series of activities at both the national and section levels. The ACC has always relied on volunteers to run Club events and as we approach our centenary, we find that this need is as great as ever. Volunteers are needed to help us develop and run a variety of projects. Some positions require people to reside in the CalgaryBanff area, and other positions can be run from outside the immediate area. Several positions are skill-specific, while other tasks just require the desire to be involved in what will be a significant milestone in the life of the Club. For more information on volunteering in these areas: ● Volunteer Coordinator ● Public Relations ● Fundraising ● UIAA General Assembly ● Webmaster for Centennial Contact Mike Mortimer, Chair, ACC Centennial Committee at: [email protected] On behalf of The Alpine Club of Canada and The Association of Canadian Mountain Guides, we cordially invite you to join us for our annual fundraiser, 15th Annual Mountain Guides’ Ball Saturday, October 30, 2004, Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise Sharon Wood, a woman who has made great contributions to both the Canadian climbing community and her local Bow Valley community, will be the patron of this years Guides’ Ball. 1913 Climbers on Mt. Respendent. Courtesy of: Carole Harmon and the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. 22 Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 For details and ticket information visit our website: www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/support/guidesball.html or call the National Office (403) 678-3200 ext. 108. CLASSIFIED ADS Mountain Art Hot Links by Suzan Chamney There Limited Edition Prints by Glen Boles E-mail: [email protected] Visit: www.glenboles.com (403) 932-3702 is a mountain of information out there in cyber space just waiting to be shared. Whether you are interested in other mountaineering organizations, possible trip routes, ideas for cooking in the backcountry, places to purchase equipment or reference material, the choices are endless. Sometimes they are so endless that great websites get missed, so the Gazette has created this new Hot Links column focussing on alpine related sites. In each issue we will highlight websites, which we hope you will find of interest. ACC Custom Portering Services www.uiaa.ch The Union Internationale des Associations d’Alpinisme (UIAA) is the recognised Available for all huts summer and winter. If you are planning a backcountry hut trip and would like to have your food and equipment carried in, contact the Mountain Adventures Coordinator, Jon Rollins, for details at (403) 678-3200 ext. 112 or e-mail [email protected] international federation and the acknowledged expert on all international climbing and mountaineering matters. The UIAA promotes access for the freedom to enjoy climbing and mountain sports in a responsible way and with minimum impact to the environment. The UIAA helps to protect mountain areas and climbing sites from damaging developments and encourages development for local communities. NOTICES ACC Board of Directors Meeting The next ACC Board of Directors meeting will be held on Oct 30 and 31, 2004 at the Canadian Alpine Centre in Lake Louise. For more information contact the National Office. TNF Leadership Course Deadline The North Face winter leadership course application deadline is October 25, 2004. This course will focus on critical leadership issues for ski trips and traverses. This subsidized course costs $650 (+GST) and will be held at Golden Alpine Holidays, Vista Lodge January 8 to 15, 2005. For more details check our website at www.AlpineClubofCanada. ca/activities/leadership.html or call Jon Rollins at the National Office (403) 678-3200 x 112. CAJ Article Deadline The submission deadline for articles for the 2005 Canadian Alpine Journal is January 15, 2005. Please forward articles with contact information to the editor, Geoff Powter at [email protected] or fax: (403) 678-3224. Classified Ads Rates: $20.00 plus $1.00 per word +GST E-mail your ad to: [email protected] or mail to the address on page 3. www.acmg.ca The Association of Canadian Mountain Guides is a professional association of trained and certified mountain guides, hiking guides and climbing gym instructors. On their site you will find information on their Guide Certification Program as well as information for planning your next adventure. www.americanalpineclub.org The American Alpine Club is the leading national organization in the United States devoted to mountaineering, climbing and the multitude of issues facing climbers, with an emphasis on adventure, scientific research and education. www.bivouac.com The Canadian Mountain Encyclopaedia features searchable information on 500 mountain ranges, 7000 peaks, 2000 key passes, 1000 towns, 1500 roads and trails. Added to this infrastructure are 1000 trip reports and 3000 photo reports. The trip reports include a good number of explorations and major traverses, as well as accounts of first ascents and photographs. Share your favourite links with us and we will print them in this column! Send your suggestions to [email protected] National Office news by David Toole, President Since I’ve been hanging around the National Office recently acting as a volunteer supporting the staff, I’ve been asked to write a short article relating the news from the office. Josée Larochelle, Office Manager/Membership Coordinator, has returned from maternity leave and her workstation is festooned with pictures of her daughter Emilie Fay. She has also told us recently that we can expect a repeat as she is anticipating a further addition next year. Paula Zettel filled in for Josée over the past year, and did an excellent job. Audrey Wheeler, Director of Member Services is off at the end of September for her maternity leave and we don’t expect to see her for a while, but are looking forward to news of a new arrival in November. Nancy Hansen, Director of Mountaineering was in the office for a while in September preparing the Alpine Huts & Mountain Adventures brochure you received with this Gazette. She and her husband, Doug Fulford, will be back again in October and we expect to get Nancy on board again for a short while as there is always work to be done. Lawrence White, Director of Facilities has settled nicely into the slot Nancy left. We were fortunate to have Luther McLain with us over the summer as he was on summer vacation from his program at University. He did an excellent job in training Carole Perkins as Facilities Administration Manager. Ann Vanier, Front Desk Supervisor, is expected to return sometime in October after her maternity leave. Matt Boekel, Maintenance Staff has been with us helping Dan Verrall, Facilities Maintenance Manager, over the past two summers. He too is leaving as our busy summer period winds down. I’ve had a great time here helping out, and can report to you that we certainly have a great bunch of very dedicated people working for the Club. Alpine Club of Canada ● Gazette ● Fall 2004 23 Centennial Fund Campaign 2004 - 2006 Donors Come Through ACC members have responded very generously to our call for donations to help rebuild the Fay Hut. Our major donor has pledged $50,000 and at last count other donors had contributed another $47,770. Facilities Committee members and Parks Canada representatives have selected a new location just a short distance away from the old hut site, and construction could take place as early as next summer. Replacing the Fay Hut is a priotity, and the Facilities Committee has many other worthwhile centennial projects in the planning stage. As well, the Club’s Mountain Culture portfolio needs assistance to complete a major centennial initiative currently in progress: the digitization of all Canadian Alpine Journal articles and photos since 1907 in order to produce a computer-searchable DVD – it will be amazing! To date, donors have responded generously to our Facilities General request for funds, contributing more than $111,000 in donations and pledges — all from Canadian members. The donations are being directed to these categories: Fay Hut Mountain Culture Centennial Through the efforts of Bill Putnam, we have sent the same appeal to our U.S. members, and donations are beginning to arrive from south of the border. Other We are off to a great start in our three-year campaign to raise $1 million for facilities and Centennial projects. If you have already sent a donation, we thank you for your support. If you haven’t, we would love to help you reduce your 2004 tax bill! For more information visit: Canadian donors: www.AlpineClubofCanada.ca/centennial American donors: The Alpine Club of Canada is a Registered Charitable organization and will send you a gift receipt for tax purposes in January, 2005. Your donation will allow the Club to undertake projects like reconstruction of the Fay Hut that it could not fund from internal sources. The ACC Foundation is a US 501(c)(3) corporation, whose purposes mirror those of the Alpine Club of Canada. Donations sent to the Foundation will be put to work in the manner stipulated by the donor, and a US tax receipt will be issued in January, 2005. Please mail the completed form to: Please mail the completed form to: Alpine Club of Canada P.O. Box 8040 Canmore, AB Canada T1W 2T8 ❏ I would like to contribute to the Centennial Fund ACC Foundation 4260 Frank Neely Road Norcross, GA USA 30092 ❏ Please use my donation where it is most needed. ❏ Please use my donation to support the reconstruction of the Fay Hut. I will help YES! ❏ I would rather donate to another Alpine Club of Canada fund: ❏ Facilities projects ❏ Environment ❏ Mountain Culture ❏ Endowment ❏ Leadership Development ❏ Library Name: I prefer to donate by: ❏ I wish to remain anonymous Mailing / Street Address: City: ❏ Cheque enclosed Donation Amount: $______ ❏ MasterCard ❏ VISA . Credit Card # Province: Home Phone: Business Phone: Expiry Date: . / Postal Code: E-mail Address: charitable registration no. rr Signature: Thank you for your support of these worthwhile projects.
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