In February I did my first Portland Mountain Rescue Mission, rescuing a skier who dislocated his hip in a fall down Little Sandy Canyon (it was not a little fall!). With tough terrain and snow conditions it took us about 11 hours to move him 2.5 miles, almost the entire mission was during the night so that was a pretty challenging first mission.
I also got some winter pitches in, the highlights being a barely-there onsight of Moondance and a send of Latest Rage, my first 5.12b! LR was one of those climbs that feels impossibly sustained, then you figger it out and it flows like buttah...March was spent trading skin with the hateful crimps of Crossfire. It's one of those long endurance routes with cruxes up high that are really hard to focus on when your tying in. I got pretty tired of climbing Karate Crack cuz of that one.
Crossfire
I also started a really poor paying landscaping job which I did for about a month, waiting for other opportunities to arise.
April was a good month as well, I sent Majestic Pigeon, a pretty good new line up in Aggro Gully that has great pockets to a roof pulling crux, and I also sent Vision. Vision is so far my favorite 5.12b, with great movement, a dominant position on top of the hill, and pumpy moves all the way to the anchor. I managed to fall on the last move twice, once upside down and once on a send go!
I also had time to get a quick solo up Cooper Spur. It felt really special to be on the North side of Hood with no one else but me to enjoy a sunrise and some rockin tunes. The mountain was good to me with solid conditions, a little ice step, and nothing falling down.
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Topping Out! |
I also vanquished 5 Easy Pieces, walking down on a hot early summer day and sending it as a warm up, I think I drove back knowing something good was coming up.
In May I moved out of my place, got ready to switch to a guiding job on Mount Shasta, and got on the send train!
I sent my first 5.12c, the Quickening in Aggro Gully. It suited me really well and felt as tough as my 12b sends, with an overhung low crux leading to some sustained face climbing. As usual I fell on the last hard moves a few times before reeling it in on a nice cool evening.
Dreamin' Made it all the way to the second roof |
Here is a picture of me after sending Chain Reaction a few days later, maybe my favorite climbing achievement. I'd just come off a near flash of Dreamin' (now my favorite 5.12a in the park!) and had no expectations. I had fallen halfway up the route on a tough move going around the corner numerous times, but surprised myself by barely grabbing it and at that point I was pretty sure I had it in me to finish the rig! The next day out I sent Crack Babies in full on alpine conditions and almost got bitten by a rattlesnake stashing my stick clip.
I curtailed my cragging for a little bit to start working for SWS Mountain Guides, based in Mount Shasta. I am extremely excited to work with a group of great guides and pick up some awesome skills. Shasta is a pretty sweet mountain for honing my skills and getting my lungs used to altitude.
Sunrise on Shasta |
Damnation Crack, one of the best 5.9s I have climbed! |
I met a really cool partner also named John and we accidently got on the wrong multipitch and I climbed all of Freedom's Just Another Word without falling. I'd love to go back to the 5.12b arete pitch one day but other things beckon.
John on Freedom's |
The last week in June was definitely an eye-opener for me. On Thursday I was guiding on Shasta when my boss got his leg taken out by this huge chunk of ice. Our awesome guides got him in a chopper in 3.5 hours though, it felt great to use a bunch of skills successfully that we had been practicing for.
Ouch! |
Another too-good-to-be-true-Central-Oregon-sunset |
Staging area at the McNeil Shelter |