Posts Tagged ‘ouray’

Skylight photoshoot with Andrew Burr

Friday, February 5th, 2010
Jason Nelson, Skylight WI5, Camp Bird Road, Ouray, CO

Jason Nelson, Skylight WI5, Camp Bird Road, Ouray, CO

We love the Ouray Ice Festival!  It’s a fun two weeks of socializing, climbing, eating, drinking, breathing… OK, I’ll leave it at that.  This year I was fortunate enough to go out on a couple photo shoots with photographer Andrew Burr (http://www.andrewburr.com/).  I’ve been photographed by Andy before, and I’ve always been pleased with the results.  He’s competent and fun to be around.

Our first stop was Skylight (WI5) at the Skylight area on Camp Bird Rd.  I teamed up with Caroline George, another talented ice climber. Andrew hiked around to the top (read post-holing) while Caroline and I warmed up on an easy dry-tooling route.

I overheard some chatter from other climbers at the base of the route that the second pitch of Skylight was “not in” and that someone had just backed off of it a day or two before.  Sometimes this kind of talk will persuade me not to do a particular climb, but I’ve learned not to rely so heavily on such “facts” (read opinions) over the years.  I could see that there was ice in the chimney, and that was all I needed to know.

I got first lead, and up into the chimney I went.  I started laughing, it was all chandelier ice with a heavy flow of water running over it.  If I wasn’t getting my picture taken, there would have been no way I would have bothered with such nonsense.  Fortunately, I had my Outdoor Research, Mentor Jacket which is Gore-Tex, as it was the most colorful one for the photo-shoot.  I tighten up my cuffs and collar, and up I went.  I was only about ten feet into the climb but I was pretty soaked, mostly just on the outside thanks to the Gore-Tex.  I was very happy to have Gore-Tex gloves on as well.  There was plenty of hydrating to be done on the climb, all I had to do was open my mouth.

Skylight is a good example of how ice climbing ratings really don’t say much about a climb.  It is given an WI5 rating which normally means extended sections of vertical ice.  That’s all well and good, but there are few places on the climb where you can just lean on the wall behind you and get a no hands rest.  That same comforting back wall also restricts your swings into nothing more than a tap at times and getting through the constrictions can be awkward at best.  Regardless of grades, it’s a classic climb and although a little claustrophobic, it’s a must do for anyone.  But consider wearing Gore-Tex or some other waterproof fabric.

Andrew also got some great shots of Caroline and they are on her blog (http://carolinegeorge.blogspot.com/2010/02/andrew-burr-eye-candy.html)

You can click on the below images to see larger versions.  These are some of my favorites of what Andrew shot on this climb. Photos are the copyright of Andrew Burr (http://www.andrewburr.com/).

Mt. Sneffels with Mom

Monday, August 24th, 2009

My Mom and I climbed Mt. Sneffels (14,158′) through rain and hail and threatening storms.  We went up the South Buttress which is a little more interesting and exposed than the normal route.  She only had one day to acclimate which isn’t much being from sea level.

Gravity’s Rainbow

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Gravity takes over

Gravity’s Rainbow was one of the few classic climbs that I hadn’t yet done in the Ouray area.  Whenever the sun comes out, the climb instantly falls down, so you have to wait for a period of bad weather to climb this route. It’s been snowy for several days now.  I drove up to check it out last night and it looked well formed.  The parts I could see anyway.  Under all those snowy bits, the ice is total junk and just falls apart.  You end up swinging your pick into the rock most of the time.<.p>

Gravity's Rainbow

For those wondering… yes Gravity’s Rainbow is climbable, but it is very thin, there’s lots of crappy ice, and lots of crust covered rock.  Protection is occansional, and you’re forced to put ice screws in the places they tell you not to in the “How to Ice Climb” book.   My ice tool picks are now flattened stubs, and I’ll probably have to get most of my ice screws resharpened too.  It does however make for an adventure.

gravity's Rainbow pics

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