Author Topic: Outdoor Recreation  (Read 3970 times)

Body-by-Guinness

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Outdoor Recreation
« on: February 28, 2024, 09:25:20 AM »
Looked for a germane topic to file this under, but found none. As such we’ll start off with this interesting examination of deaths in national parks:

https://www.backpacker.com/survival/deaths-in-national-parks/

Body-by-Guinness

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Outdoor Rescues by Activity
« Reply #1 on: February 29, 2024, 07:31:41 PM »
Something of an ad for an off grid satellite rescue device, but an interesting breakdown of outdoor rescues by activity.

https://www.backpacker.com/news-and-events/garmin-inreach-data-2023/

Body-by-Guinness

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Reducing Landowner Exposure to Lawsuits
« Reply #2 on: March 04, 2024, 05:38:55 PM »
An issue landowners that allow recreational access to their lands face are lawsuits when people are injured on it. This piece looks at efforts to minimize those risks:

https://gearjunkie.com/climbing/colorado-recreation-land-access-bill

Body-by-Guinness

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21,000 Ft. Motorcycle Altitude Record Set
« Reply #3 on: March 13, 2024, 04:36:51 AM »
Those of us that have done a lot of riding can imagine how hairy this could be: 21K ft enduro ride on a single jug Yamaha:

https://gearjunkie.com/motors/adv-motorcycle-altitude-world-record

DougMacG

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Re: 21,000 Ft. Motorcycle Altitude Record Set
« Reply #4 on: March 13, 2024, 06:54:58 AM »
Those of us that have done a lot of riding can imagine how hairy this could be: 21K ft enduro ride on a single jug Yamaha:

https://gearjunkie.com/motors/adv-motorcycle-altitude-world-record

My house in the mountains of Colorado (built in 1880) is at 10200 ft  (highest city in North America) a cold climate so I put in a high efficiency furnace to help get a handle on the heating costs. I had a working furnace fully installed with all the duct work and air supply piping done, and I needed to get back home, but I thought I better just test it once before leaving. Didn't work. Couldn't breathe. Only a heating guy working in that altitude would know you need more than twice the volume of air coming in for the combustion to work at that altitude.

As my daughter deduced in her childhood, if the trees can't breathe above tree line, doesn't that tell us something (about where humans shouldn't ski)?

I can't imagine a motorcycle engine running properly at 21000 ft.

Also, if the driver loses his breath, that's a long way to fall.

The peaks around Leadville are 14k. Highest I've ever been is 13k, a slight hike up from the highest lift is exhausting and skiing down above everything is exhilarating! I can't imagine 21k and I don't plan to try it!
https://www.summitconcierge.com/breckenridge-ski-resort/imperial-express-superchair-breckenridge-colorado-ski-resort_id-203.html

Body-by-Guinness

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$3/Mile
« Reply #5 on: March 23, 2024, 03:55:00 PM »
Need, ah, some slow cash? Apply to walk this new 1,600 mile trail from Carson City NV to Canada, with two awardees provide $5K if they complete the hike:

Nevada’s Capital Will Pay You $5,000 to Hike the Pacific Crest Trail
Backpacker Magazine - backpacker.com / by Adam Roy / Mar 19, 2024 at 6:29 PM
Nevada’s Capital Will Pay You $5,000 to Hike the Pacific Crest Trail
When Jeff Potter arrived in Carson City, Nevada near the end of the ’90s, he noted an absence: His new home was ringed by low-slung mountains at the eastern edge of the towering Sierra Nevada and its sweeping Lake Tahoe, but there was no real way to get to them without a car.

A California native drawn toward Tahoe for its labyrinth of mountain-bike trails, Potter and his pals grew tired of mounting their rides to roof and hitch racks just to go somewhere else. So Potter, who would eventually earn the name “The Trail Steward of Carson City,” started scheming with Muscle Powered, an organization that had long been promoting non-vehicular infrastructure there: How might he build trails that connected this place where he loved to live to the mighty mountains and endless routes he loved to ride?

A quarter-century and 9.8 miles of single-track later, Potter’s dream is now a navigable trail. Finished last fall just before snow swept into the region, the Capital to Tahoe Trail makes it possible to hike, pedal, or horseback ride nearly from Nevada’s sandstone capitol building to the Tahoe Rim Trail (TRT) and its country-spanning connector, the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT). In fact, Carson City is looking to pay two hikers $5,000 each to do exactly that come the Summer of 2025: walk from the capitol to Canada and tell the tale. (The application window closes May 31, 2024.) At just over 1,600 miles, that’s a little more than $3 per mile.

“Our downtown sits in the middle of all of our trails,” says Lydia Beck, the Visit Carson City marketing manager who hatched the plan to sponsor thru-hikes late in 2022. “And people have no idea that Carson City has a beautiful stretch of the east side of Lake Tahoe. We’re trying to bring awareness to our proximity.”

Carson City will likely never become a “trail town” for long-distance hikes of the PCT or TRT, since the resources and revelry of South Lake Tahoe are much closer to those trails. (And the PCT, for its part, trends westward from Lake Tahoe.) But the small city’s geography and position along the base of the beautiful Carson Range, with other peaks to every side, make it a prime hub for exploration in all directions. Peter Doenges—the 77-year-old retired computer graphics pathfinder who stepped into Potter’s former role at Muscle Powered as Trails Coordinator in 2019—sees “Cap to Tahoe,” as he calls it, as a crucial part of that plan.

“We’re constantly stirring the pot based on prior public processes that approved all these trail routes—and then going about building them,” says Doenges. “There are so many people in this town who believed in this trail, of getting us integrated into this larger system.”

Indeed, the Capital to Tahoe Trail is simply the latest phase of a larger plan that Potter helped to initiate when he first partnered with Muscle Powered. They built Ash to Kings Trail, linking two roads that cut through canyons, from 2012 until 2015, even earning an award from American Trails. Back then, Potter was already fantasizing about how the next trail would reach Lake Tahoe. “That’s another 10 miles of trail we hope to build,” he told Adventure Sports Journal in 2016. “This isn’t just about recreation. It’s about providing connectivity to our community.”

That community responded in kind. Construction began in 2020, and Muscle Powered recruited a professional, mechanized trail builder at one point, as the path rose nearly 2,000 feet and cut through thick brush. Doenges remains verklempt by dozens of volunteers who arrived to work on hand crews as well as the surgeon who gifted the trail a permanent easement so that nearly a mile of it would not be so dastardly steep. Potter, who no longer lives in Carson City, even did the “final flagging”—a last survey to make sure the trail is properly aligned. The very day after the final two remote miles were finished, Doenges saw tire tracks and boot prints cutting across the path.

But as far as anyone knows, no one has yet to take the Capital to Tahoe Trail west, hit the PCT, and head north to Canada. That is where the contest comes in. Rather than hold a lottery of submissions, Visit Carson City intends to vet each application and choose two people they think can go the distance—and, of course, share the story along the way. As of mid-March, they’ve only received a dozen applications.

If it goes well this time, however, they may even continue the program for hikers in years to come. “We’re not ruling that out,” says Beck. “We’re very excited.”

The post Nevada’s Capital Will Pay You $5,000 to Hike the Pacific Crest Trail appeared first on Backpacker.

https://www.backpacker.com/news-and-events/news/carson-city-nevada-pay-hikers-5000-pacific-crest-trail/


Body-by-Guinness

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Going Scentless?
« Reply #6 on: March 27, 2024, 01:57:47 PM »
Don’t know if there are any hunters here and, if there are, if they’d drop $550 on this gizmo, but according to the tester it works:

https://gearjunkie.com/outdoor/hunt-fish/ozonics-hr500-review

Hmm, wonder if it works for gym bags? If so I got a couple nominees….

Body-by-Guinness

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2 Adult Males Attached by Mountain Lion in CA
« Reply #7 on: March 28, 2024, 02:55:34 PM »
For those still in the People’s Republic of California, particularly its northern climes, pay heed. It’s worth noting these gents decided not to go armed to avoid being hassled by game wardens and such. One hopes CA’s onerous gun rules and regs weren’t what caused these gents to go into the woods unprepared:

https://www.backpacker.com/news-and-events/news/fatal-mountain-lion-attack-california/

Body-by-Guinness

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Krazy Kayakers
« Reply #8 on: April 03, 2024, 05:23:29 PM »
I’ve done my share of stuff many would call crazy while out of doors, underground, in a canoe, or backpacking, and have always meant to find a kayak to play with, but these folks are truly hardcore:

https://gearjunkie.com/boats-water/hallelujah-short-film

Body-by-Guinness

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PFAs and Outdoor Gear
« Reply #9 on: April 18, 2024, 04:14:39 AM »
I’ve mixed feelings here as I don’t have a handle on the science. On the one hand I’m all for removing toxic chemicals that easily cross-contaminate proximate gear from my closet and packs. On the other, greens get so deep into maybes on a regular basis that then informs bad decision making—witness the decision to wrap UK low income apartment building in a green, insulating material … that proved to be anything but fireproof resulting in numerous folks including children going up in smoke in service to Mother Gaia or whatever—that I’m hesitant to take this as gospel.

However, if your outdoor gear is like mine and jumps from pack to pack as needed, perhaps this is worth tracking:

https://gearjunkie.com/news/pfas-outdoor-gear-pfc-ykk-zippers

Body-by-Guinness

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Poaching Antlers
« Reply #10 on: April 18, 2024, 04:26:41 AM »
I’ve spent my share of time stomping about the underbrush in national parks around cave bearing country and have bumped into my share of miscreants from illegal campers (who generally trash the place) to still and meth cooking sites (slowly back away and yes, I’m armed and sometimes have a very protective pooch with me) to ginseng, morel, or other wild food hunters. With that said, I’ve never encountered antler shed hunters & didn’t know it was a problem.

These fellows had the book thrown at them. I have no problem with that:

https://gearjunkie.com/outdoor/hunt-fish/wyoming-shed-antler-poacher-charged

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Outdoor Recreation
« Reply #11 on: April 19, 2024, 06:04:39 PM »
 :-o :-o :-o

Body-by-Guinness

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Cartel Crops and Outdoor Recreation
« Reply #12 on: May 21, 2024, 01:33:43 PM »
I’m a caver; we call the act of trotting about areas geologically likely to have cave seeking cave entrances “ridgewalking.” One ridgewalking need you have to sort out involves looking at any soot shown around a cave entrance to determine if it’s paleo-soot created by Native American use of the cave entry as a shelter, or if the soot was caused by a moonshiner, or worse yet a meth lab, meaning it’s time to back away slowly and look for punji stakes.

Well it gets worse, as noted here:

Cartel Crops Infest Public Lands, and They’re as Dangerous as You Think
GearJunkie.com - Outdoor Gear Reviews / by Will Brendza / May 21, 2024 at 2:23 PM
(Photo/John Nores)

There are a lot of reasons why you don’t want to stumble upon an illegal cannabis grow operation, according to John Nores, a retired lieutenant with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW).

Poisonous fumes could be in the air. You could get shot. You could even be mauled by trained attack dogs or get caught in booby traps.

And in reality, the chances of you happening onto such an operation are probably higher than you think — especially if you spend much time exploring public lands like national and state forests and parks.

Nores helped found CDFW’s Marijuana Enforcement Team (MET) to find and break up these cannabis grows hidden deep in America’s public lands. He told GearJunkie that almost a quarter of the cannabis sold on the U.S. black market is grown domestically, on public land. These grow operations are hidden in remote areas in the backcountry, where outdoor enthusiasts recreate. And there are thousands of them out there.

“It is mind-blowing how dangerous these groups are, both on public and private land,” Nores told GearJunkie. He claims he’s had firefights with cartel members, been exposed to illegal neurotoxic chemicals, and had to medevac partners who’ve been seriously injured while breaking these operations up.

“You’ve got to realize you’re dealing with very violent people. They will hurt you or kill you at the drop of a hat if they need to. We’ve seen it.”


(Photo/John Nores)
Beyond the immediate threat to visitors are insidious, longer-term dangers. These groups illegally divert water, pollute with banned pesticides and fertilizers, poach animals, and sometimes even intimidate locals.

Mourad Gabriel is the Trespass Cultivation Ecology, Safety and Reclamation Program Manager for the U.S. Forest Service Law Enforcement and Investigations branch. He collects data on the environmental impacts these sites leave behind. In his career so far, he told GearJunkie he’s visited over 500 trespass grows. On average, he says they’ll have between 2,000 and 5,000 plants growing, sometimes much more.

“Nobody wants to go camping, hiking, hunting, fishing, or biking and stumble across [a trespass grow],” Gabriel said. But in California alone, “we have over 3,000 cultivation sites on federal public lands.”

And that’s just what they know of. While authorities use satellite imagery to find these grows on public lands, it’s often hikers, anglers, hunters, and backpackers who wander across them.


Nores’ book, “Hidden War,” is currently in its second printing. He no longer lives in California but is still very involved with public speaking and with Fish and Wildlife MET training. Last October, he spoke to Congress in Washington, D.C., to update lawmakers on how this issue is evolving.

Marijuana Enforcement Team: Cannabis on Public Land

Nores has always been passionate about the outdoors. When he joined the CDFW, he thought he’d be checking hunting licenses and keeping tabs on fish populations. Instead, he co-founded a tactical unit dedicated to hunting California’s proliferating illegal trespass cannabis grows — on National Forests, BLM, and other public lands.

The Marijuana Enforcement Team was the first of its kind in the country. Nores had seen firsthand how dangerous these sites were and their severe and irreversible impacts on the environment.

EPA-banned toxic pesticides and fertilizers were poisoning streams. Growers were illegally diverting water. Garbage and human waste littered the areas. And they poached protected animals.


A poached mountain lion at one of the illegal grow sites; (photo/John Nores)
He saw a need for specially trained officers to pursue these multiplying illegal operations like a SWAT team for the great outdoors. So he helped found MET and spent the rest of his career fighting what he’d later call a “Hidden War.”

What Does an Illegal Grow Op Look Like?

“More and more states are having a problem [and] there’s more threats to people recreating in the outdoors,” Nores told GearJunkie. So, how can you recognize an illegal grow operation if you see one?

Nores said it’s pretty obvious — even if you can’t see the cannabis plants.

“You’re going to see a real messy, messy operation,” he said. Water trucks will occupy the property. A doughboy pool, or some other reservoir will have pipes and water lines feeding into hoop houses or outdoor growing areas.

“Then you’ll sometimes see 55-gallon drums, unmarked, that are usually full of some very toxic chemical. And everything from gasoline tanks to big generators, because they need power.”

People Are the Biggest Threat

First and foremost, Nores said that the people working at an illegal trespass grow are the biggest threat to outdoor enthusiasts.

“People that end up stumbling upon those groups, if they’re interdicted, they sometimes disappear,” Nores said, referencing the Netflix documentary series Murder Mountain. “California has had a lot of missing persons.”

Gabriel backed that up. He said that armed cultivators might suspect that a hunter, angler, hiker, or backpacker is there to steal their crops or report their trespass grow to the authorities. He said sometimes these are million-plus-dollar operations, and the people protecting them can’t afford to jeopardize that.

This issue isn’t limited to the Golden State, either. In 2018, federal agents removed over 71,000 plants spread over 38 acres in the San Isabel National Forest in Colorado. Also in Colorado, in 2020, law enforcement busted a 16,000-plant grow op near Rifle that spread over a mixture of private and public land.

Nores said Michigan, Oklahoma, Maine, and Oregon have all started seeing more instances of this as well.

“The people running the grow are legitimately part of the illegal enterprise and often using human trafficked, indentured servitude individuals to work on it,” Nores said.

Environmental Toxins, Booby Traps, Attack Dogs

Illegal cartel cannabis grows on public lands
(Photo/John Nores)
By their nature, illegal cannabis grows on public land don’t follow EPA guidelines. They often use extremely dangerous, highly toxic pesticides and fertilizers that wreak havoc on the environment. Some of them, like carbofuran insecticides, are neurotoxic to humans.

“A couple tablespoons of that will kill a mile of creek,” Nores said. “If you see signs of a lot of dead things in any water source, do not try to purify that water.”

A typical backpacking or outdoor water filter will not keep those substances out of your water.

Gabriel added that, in his experience, illegal grow sites typically have gallons and gallons of these toxic pesticides present. Rarely are those stored properly.


Pungee pit booby trap at an illegal grow; (photo/John Nores)
On top of all that, some grow operations Nores broke up on public land also had Vietnam-era pungee pits and other booby traps. And more often, the cartels have started to bring in attack dogs to protect their areas as well, he said.

What to Do If You Find an Illegal Grow on Public Land

Gabriel didn’t mince his words when asked what someone should do if they find an illegal grow on public land. Whether it’s an active illegal grow site — or one that’s been abandoned — he advises to keep your distance and get out of there as fast as possible. Don’t touch things, don’t take pictures, and don’t dilly-dally.

But he added some good advice on how to get out of there.

“If you see a grow and the wind is at your face, you need to get the wind at your back,” Nores said. Some illegal grows use smoke aromas to apply neurotoxic pesticides, which can be lethal to breathe even from a distance.


Contaminated cannabis plants with toxic pesticides; (photo/John Nores)
When you feel you’re far enough away, mark the area with a GPS pin on your map, or make a mental note of where you are. Then, follow your route back out.

“You’re going to want to get out the way you came in safely … don’t run and scatter, use some field crafts, sneak out a little bit,” Nores said. “Then, you’re going to want to report it when you get out of there.”

He recommends contacting the county sheriffs or law enforcement branch of USFS to report the cannabis grow. The more detailed you can be concerning where you saw the grow, and what you saw, the better.

Raid & Reclamation

After a cannabis grow operation on public land has been reported, a team like the MET raids it. They break it up and make arrests. Then, cleanup and reclamation begins. This is the most important part of the process because, as Gabriel points out, these sites are still extremely dangerous even when inactive. The toxic chemicals are often still present, leaking into streams and contaminating ecosystems.

Gabriel adds that reclamation prevents these grow sites from reestablishing. If they only clean up a site partially, the chances that the cartel will return and start over are much higher.

“If [we] disrupt the site at a 50 or 60% level, there is a 30 to 45% chance they will re-establish that site,” he said. “You have to remove a site between 95 to 98%, and then you’re going to have less than 1% reestablishment rate.“

The ‘Green Line’

Illegal cartel cannabis grows on public lands
Humboldt Redwoods State Park; (photo/Tjflex2 via Flickr Creative Commons)
Nores doesn’t want to deter people from enjoying nature and public lands; he wants to prepare them.

“Don’t don’t be paranoid. Don’t be afraid to go in the woods. Knowledge is power. Have the tools to deal with the problem. You need to just be on the lookout and have some situational awareness,” Nores said.

Plus, the public using public lands multiplies the eyes and ears of Forest Service rangers and Fish and Wildlife wardens.

“There’s just thousands of hikers, hunters, anglers, outdoor recreational backpackers playing in public lands, and we’re all part of the same Green Line,” Nores said.

The second printing of Nores’ book, “Hidden War,” is available on Amazon. Follow him on Instagram, @johnnores.

vaporwear vape hydration pack
Everything You Need to Know About Weed Laws on Public Land

Can you smoke weed in a National Park or on public lands? While the legal status of cannabis might differ from state to state, the federal policy on it is the same across the board. Read more…

The post Cartel Crops Infest Public Lands, and They’re as Dangerous as You Think appeared first on GearJunkie.

https://gearjunkie.com/outdoor/cartel-drugs-grow-ops-public-land

Body-by-Guinness

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Sherpa Breaks Own Record w/ 30th Ascent of Everest
« Reply #13 on: May 22, 2024, 04:42:31 PM »
And his second one this month. Dude’s got a serious set of stones:

https://gearjunkie.com/climbing/mountaineering/new-mount-everest-summits-record

Body-by-Guinness

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Everest Cornice Collapse
« Reply #14 on: May 23, 2024, 03:22:30 PM »
By happenstance, I started off as a climber, spending most of my time on the granite an hour north of Madison, WI found at a place called Devil’s Lake. When I moved down to the flatlands around Champaign, IL, there wasn’t much rock to climb up so I took up with some cavers and began climbing down instead.

Caving was a revelation, project caving, at least, as opposed to recreational caving. As a project caver there was a goal: collect data, draw maps, survey biota, etc. Climbers just get to the top, usually of something umpteen others have also topped, reach around to pat their own back, before starting down the rock face. Cavers are often the first into a section of cave and are establishing the baselines various disciplines will then use to tie their science to space and time.

Anhoo, check out all these climbers, trotting on down the Everest assembly line, relying on the lines and ladders sherpas and far better climbers of which the sherpas are a subset of provided, getting to the top, planting the flag, patting their back, checking whatever ego box that drove them to tread the nylon and aluminum highway laid down by sherpas, quaffing the O2 others humped up there for them, and then heading down until … the unexpected occurs, unsupported climbing skills are needed lest the ego parade stall in front of the fallen cornice.

Scary stuff, the attraction to which I no longer get as if it isn’t adding to a body of knowledge it no longer feels worth doing. Check out the post-collapse pic of the ~28,000 ft. traffic jam:

Terrifying Footage of Mount Everest Cornice Accident Aftermath
GearJunkie.com - Outdoor Gear Reviews / by Angela Benavides / May 23, 2024 at 2:51 PM
(Photo/Vinayak Malla)

IFMGA guide Vinayak Malla summited Mount Everest at 6 a.m. on the morning of May 21, the busiest summit day, with Elite Exped clients. On their way back, they videoed just after the snow cornice couldn’t stand the weight of hundreds of climbers and gave in, dragging a number of people into the void.

This article was originally published on ExplorersWeb.

The video doesn’t show the actual collapse but its aftermath. Still, the footage is mind-blowing for its clarity and for depicting the mad sight of an overcrowded summit ridge. Dozens of climbers inch across a narrow snow arete, which couldn’t bear the weight and eventually crumbled. The image above shows a climber desperately trying to lift himself back to safety after the collapse.

“The Everest summit ridge felt different than my previous experiences on the mountain,” Malla said. “There was soft snow, many cornices, and rocky sections covered in snow. Even the weather station was half buried in snow.”

Climbers jam the narrow snow ridge to step on the summit of Everest
Dozens of climbers shuffle along meters from the summit of Everest; (photo/screenshot from video by Vanayak Malla)
Sudden Disaster on Mount Everest

“After summiting, we crossed the Hillary Step. Traffic was moving slowly. Then suddenly, a cornice collapsed a few meters ahead of us,” Malla recalled. He and his clients were on another section of that cornice, which happened not to give way.

Malla’s video shows the broken cornice section and climbers clinging to the fixed ropes and desperately trying to lift themselves back to safe ground.

View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Vinayak jaya malla (@malla.mountaineer)

“As the cornice collapsed, four climbers nearly perished yet were clipped onto the rope and self-rescued,” Malla wrote. “Sadly, two climbers are still missing.”

Then Malla recounts how he saved the situation — and perhaps many lives. “We tried to traverse, but it was impossible due to the traffic on the fixed line. Many climbers were stuck in traffic, and oxygen was running low. I was able to start breaking a new route for the descending traffic to begin moving slowly once again.”

The situation resembles other mountain accidents where a broken rope leaves climbers trapped behind. Something similar occurred on Broad Peak in 2021 when the fixed rope on a ridge broke, stranding Russian climber Nastya Runova and, a little later, Korean Kim HongBin.

Above them, over a dozen climbers waited, not skilled enough to progress across that section without ropes. Several suffered from frostbite. Runova was rescued, but Kim died.

However, the numbers on Everest’s summit ridge on May 21 were larger than on any other mountain.

https://gearjunkie.com/climbing/mount-everest-cornice-accident-aftermath-video

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Outdoor Recreation
« Reply #15 on: May 25, 2024, 09:00:31 AM »
 :-o :-o :-o

ccp

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Endorphins
« Reply #16 on: May 26, 2024, 09:50:00 AM »
https://www.chemspider.com/Chemical-Structure.5611.html

Endorphins play a major role in the body's inhibitory response to pain. Research has demonstrated that meditation by trained individuals can be used to trigger endorphin release.[39][failed verification] Laughter may also stimulate endorphin production and elevate one's pain threshold.[40]

Endorphin production can be triggered by vigorous aerobic exercise. The release of β-endorphin has been postulated to contribute to the phenomenon known as "runner's high".[41][42] However, several studies have supported the hypothesis that the runner's high is due to the release of endocannabinoids rather than that of endorphins.[43] Endorphins may contribute to the positive effect of exercise on anxiety and depression.[44] The same phenomenon may also play a role in exercise addiction. Regular intense exercise may cause the brain to downregulate the production of endorphins in periods of rest to maintain homeostasis, causing a person to exercise more intensely in order to receive the same feeling.[45]
« Last Edit: May 27, 2024, 05:26:51 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Body-by-Guinness

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Blind Climber Bags a 5.10
« Reply #17 on: May 28, 2024, 02:44:45 PM »
Though I tend to disdain climbers as more ego based then engaging in any sort of practical pursuit, getting up a 5.10 blind would take a serious set of stones. Several lead falls? No thanks….

Blind Climber Completes Historic Trad Ascent on Devils Tower
GearJunkie.com - Outdoor Gear Reviews / by Seiji Ishii / May 28, 2024 at 4:01 PM
(Photo/Montane)

“El Matador” is a 5.10d classic endurance stemming route on Devils Tower. Many trad climbers find it challenging, but imagine if you headed up without using your eyes. British climber Jesse Dufton did just that last week, recording the first blind trad lead on the iconic formation.

Dufton led all the hard pitches, placing his own gear, and he took several leader falls on his way to the summit. Placing the optimal piece of gear, correctly sized and secure, is hard enough with vision. Astonishingly, Dufton does this “in the dark.”

Jesse Dufton Climbing History

Dufton has retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative disease that has rendered him completely blind. Dufton was born with only 20% central vision, no peripheral vision, and several blind spots. The genetic condition progressively broke down his retinas’ cells, and by age 20, Dufton could no longer read. By 30, his vision was limited to only light perception with a 1-2% field of view.

Dufton has been a climber his whole life and has progressed despite losing sight. He trains for World Cup events and leads on gear. And throughout, he has had a great partner.

His wife and sight guide, Molly, supports him on climbs, verbally relaying information and “lending her eyes,” as Dufton calls it. She aids in route finding, foot and hand placements, and gear choices. But Dufton is leading, and Molly cannot always see him. Once Jesse Dufton crosses this threshold, he climbs blind without assistance.

Blind climber Jesse Dufton and sight guide and wife Molly.
Jesse Dufton and wife and sight guide, Molly; (photo/Montane)
Dufton gained notoriety in the climbing world partially through a multi-award-winning documentary titled Climbing Blind, which covered his attempt to become the first blind person to make a “non-sight” lead of Old Man of Hoy, an iconic sea stack in Scotland.

The same filmmaker who created Climbing Blind, Alastair Lee, documented Dufton’s ascent on Devils Tower.

‘El Matador’ on Devils Tower

Blind climber Jesse Dufton on "El Matador" 10d on Devils Tower
Blind climber Jesse Dufton leading up ‘El Matador’ 5.10d on Devils Tower, Wyo.; (photo/Montane)
“El Matador” is five pitches and 250 feet tall and was first aid climbed by the iconic Fred Becky and partner Eric Bjornstad in 1967. Free climbing it as Dufton did requires formidable endurance and pain tolerance, and loose blocks and rocks up high demand attention to ensure safety. Most climbers do the first two pitches and bail to avoid this danger.

Dufton would have none of this, and he completed the entire route in partnership with his wife. “El Matador is, without question, the hardest trad route I’ve attempted to date. Nothing I’ve done so far is quite like it; the stem box is unrelenting. I don’t know how long I was in there, but it felt like an eternity.”

Local guide Zach Lentsch of Wyoming Mountain Guides added, “Single-handedly the most impressive feat in climbing I’ve witnessed.”

Filmmaker Lee said it was “some of the most frightening and compelling footage I have ever captured. I cannot imagine how hard that must have been without the use of your eyes; leader falls on your own gear are scary at the best of times. What an absolute lesson in guts and tenacity that was.”

Dufton, Molly, and filmmaker Lee on the summit of Devils Tower
Molly, Dufton, and Lee on the summit of Devils Tower; (photo/Montane)
Finally, itinerant climber and frequent GearJunkie and ExplorersWeb contributor Sam Anderson commented, “Climbing El Matador is a full sensory demand. It’s longer and more technical than it looks, and there are decisions I don’t know how a non-sighted person could make. What’s hardest to wrap my brain around about Jesse’s ascent is how he would have decided when to transfer from stemming to jamming — if you get starfished below the top out ledge, you’re hosed!”

Find out more about Jesse Dufton at his website, and make sure to catch the documentary about this incredible achievement during the upcoming Brit Rock Film Tour.

https://gearjunkie.com/climbing/blind-climber-first-trad-ascent-devils-tower

Body-by-Guinness

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Gent Survives Grizzly Attack
« Reply #18 on: June 14, 2024, 10:29:56 AM »
Grizzly bites can of bear spray, it explodes, bear unasses the area:

https://gearjunkie.com/outdoor/grizzly-bear-attack-survivor-shayne-patrick
« Last Edit: June 14, 2024, 10:32:07 AM by Body-by-Guinness »

ccp

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Appalachian Trial
« Reply #19 on: June 23, 2024, 09:30:48 AM »
I have a nephew who walked this 2,100 mile trek.

now one can do virtually from the comfort of your reclining chair:

https://www.lonelyplanet.com/news/virtually-hike-the-appalachian-trail



Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Appalachian Trial
« Reply #20 on: June 23, 2024, 02:54:04 PM »
I have a nephew who walked this 2,100 mile trek.

now one can do virtually from the comfort of your reclining chair:

https://www.lonelyplanet.com/news/virtually-hike-the-appalachian-trail

He walked past my home, then. I’m about ¼ mile off it & the pooch and I d day hikes there regularly.

Body-by-Guinness

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Robotic Hiking Pants?
« Reply #21 on: July 30, 2024, 06:25:10 PM »
Not sure this is the right place for this, but the $5K pants shown here are said to help with hiking, particularly uphill. At that price, what’s the likelihood someone gets their pants stolen and we have to come up with a term for it like troujacking or something?

Voice-Activated Power Pants: These $5,000 Arc’teryx Pants Help You Hike
Skip's robotic pants enhance hiking
•GearJunkie.com - Outdoor Gear Reviews / by Will Brendza / Jul 30, 2024 at 6:29 PM
(Photo/Arc'teryx)

The e-bike craze is reaching a fever pitch. People of all ages use them to get outside and stay active, no matter their skill or fitness level. Now, we’re seeing the rise of e-hike equipment. It was only a matter of time.

Case in point: Arc’teryx and wearable robotics startup Skip have teamed up to design and bring to market what the brands hail as the world’s first pair of fully functioning electronic hiking pants. MO/GO — short for “Mountain Goat” — uses an exoskeleton, attaching to the wearer’s legs via a special pair of Arc’teryx Gamma pants.

When a person slips into a pair of the MO/GO pants and takes off on the trail, the pants add electronic assist to power them forward more like a, well, mountain goat. The brands designed this device specifically for anyone who loves hiking but suffers from mobility challenges due to aging, fatigue, or injury.

MO/GO Arc'Teryx Skip e-hike exoskeleton hiking pants
(Photo/Arc’teryx)
MO/GO is the latest technology from the world of exoskeletons, which have existed for a surprisingly long time. The first versions were engineered in the 1960s to help people lift heavy objects. They’ve since spilled over into the world of outdoor equipment.

GearJunkie reviewed the Dnsys x1 exoskeleton and found it to be helpful for traversing steep terrain. We also covered the Hypershell Exoskeleton when its Kickstarter hit $1 million.

Exoskeleton tech might be a headscratcher to some. But it could help a lot of people access the great outdoors who otherwise wouldn’t be able to.

“You’re always in control, but [MO/GO’s] e-assist is there to give you a boost when you need it — making whatever you’re doing more effortless, comfortable, and fun,” Arc’teryx told GearJunkie. “Think of it like an e-bike for walking.”

And, like most e-bikes, MO/GO also comes with a hefty price tag. This pair of pants will cost you $5,000. However, the brands are offering early adopters $500 off.

“[It’s] a brand new innovation — part soft garment, part tough outdoor gear,” said the brand. “Part sophisticated computer, part mighty motor system.”

Mo/Go: Arc’teryx Pants, Skip Exoskeleton Technology

The Skip-engineered robotic motor snaps onto or off of the Arc’teryx Gamma pants and weighs less than 2 pounds per leg. If you don’t need to use them, you can remove the motors and just wear the pants. Adjustable carbon fiber cuffs hug the wearer’s legs inside the pants, transferring energy from the motors to their legs.

The motors are dual function: They offer more power for climbing and absorb impact on a person’s joints. According to Skip, MO/GO provides the wearer with 40% more power on the way up, gently supports the knees on the way down, and makes you feel 30 pounds lighter when you’re on the move.

MO/GO Arc'Teryx Skip e-hike exoskeleton hiking pants
(Photo/Arc’teryx)
The MO/GO doesn’t just boost your muscles, though. The computer module actually predicts your movement and adjusts its assistance accordingly. If you’re walking up something steep or strolling down a sidewalk, it understands what kind of movement you’re making and how to assist in a way that feels the most natural.

And how do you adjust the level of assist? This is probably the coolest feature: You talk to your pants. Simply say “more assist” or “less assist” as you’re hiking, and the MO/GO motors will automatically adjust.

Designing E-Pants: Skip x Arc’teryx

The founders of Skip, Ana Roumiantseva and Katherine Zealand, saw firsthand how mobility challenges can impact people’s mental health, well-being, and general quality of life. Their wearable robotics company Skip began as a project at Google X and became its own brand in 2023.

The two entrepreneurs approached Arc’teryx with the idea of a collaboration in 2020. Four years later, the design is finally hitting the market — as part of an entirely new product category for Arc’teryx called “Movewear.”

But how does one start designing a pair of futuristic motorized e-hiking pants? Arc’teryx and Skip started by talking to potential users. They interviewed hundreds of people, asking what their primary movement needs and pain points were when it came to hiking.

MO/GO Arc'Teryx Skip e-hike exoskeleton hiking pants
(Photo/Arc’teryx)
“We often heard that people could walk on flat ground okay, but struggled with hills, or got knee pain going down stairs,” Arc’teryx and Skip said. “This drove our decision to focus specifically on knee devices.”

Some exoskeletons primarily provide hip stability and movement assistance. MO/GO, by contrast, employs a battery-operated motor on the knee, connected to a suite of sensors and a computer module. Skip said the decision to focus on knee mobility is very unusual in this space — largely because it’s more challenging to design.

“But we found that this was the highest-intensity need, so we prioritized it in our product development process,” the brand said.

The Arc’teryx Gamma pants are fitted to integrate Skip’s leg supports and motors seamlessly. You probably wouldn’t notice someone wearing a pair of these on the trail unless you stopped and stared — which is another bonus. Many exoskeletons, including the Dnsys x1 GearJunkie reviewed, look like mechanical hip braces you wear over your pants. The MO/GO is much a sleeker design and far less obvious.

Early Adopter Discount & Demo Opportunities

As mentioned, the MO/GO is a premium robotic hiking and apparel product with a premium price tag. Right now, it is listed as having an MSRP of $5,000. If you become one of the early adopters and preorder a MO/GO through Skip before they ship in late 2025, you’ll get $500 off that price.

MO/GO Arc'Teryx Skip
(Photo/Arc’teryx)
If you are interested in the MO/GO exoskeleton pants but can’t afford to preorder one sight unseen, the brand does offer demos. As of this writing, if you live in Arizona, Colorado, Utah, or British Columbia, Canada, you can rent a MO/GO demo for $80 per day. More locations across the western U.S. are “coming soon.”

Test the MO/GO out. Get a feel for the movement assist. It might just be exactly what you need to get back on the trail.

“Arc’teryx believes the mountains make us better,” the brand said. “We’re excited to see how the MO/GO can support people in getting back to doing what they love.”

https://gearjunkie.com/apparel/arcteryx-skip-mogo-exoskeleton-pants