Archive for January, 2011

CRAMPON TIPS FROM DANE BURNS

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

If you are an alpine climber and haven’t checked out Dane Burns blog it’s well worth the time. I always learn something, and when I saw the recent post about crampon fitting I wanted to know more. Dane Burns is a long time climber with a passion for snow and ice climbing and the equipment that makes it possible. Here Dane shares his thoughts on how Pro Mountain Sports can help.

When I go shopping for climbing gear these days it is easy to totally ignore many of the retail stores in the Seattle area.

The knowledge base and customer service of the big guys in town is generally zip. A 10% dividend and a 100% refund on your purchase doesn’t mean much if the sales person sold you the wrong piece of gear for your intended purpose and you find that out your first time out.

That 100% satisfaction guarantee doesn’t mean much when you are hours from a trail head or worse yet, in the middle of a climb.

It isn’t a issue of money. It is an issue of time. Most of us don’t get to spend that much time in the mountains anyway. Having a trip spoilt by the wrong gear can be really disappointing.

I really like alpine and ice climbing. The best thing you can do to improve and be more comfortable while climbing on ice is have the proper boots required, a great fit for your foot and just as important the right crampons, fit perfectly. I have been playing at it a long time, but with the multitude of new boots and new crampons available no way anyone out side the industry can keep up with them all. Long gone are the days of one choice in boots and maybe two crampons suitable for climbing hard ice.

Both boots and crampons get more specialized every season.

I like to pinch my pennies. I don’t like buyer’s remorse and like even less making a silly mistake purchasing expensive gear. Both of which I have done more than once.

There are a few guys and gals in the climbing industry that I’ll ask for advice. All of them have long and successful alpine climbing careers. Few of them work in retail. Jim Nelson at Pro Mountain Sports is one guy who’s advice I take to heart every time. Jim’s knowledge is based on hard won experience and wanting the best gear for his own adventures. Adventures as good, and as difficult, as it gets. Trips where success or failure could turn on his own choices in gear.

Classic example of that kind knowledge and decision making is the many different styles of crampons PMS carries in inventory. Not every crampon is suitable for every climb or for every boot. You ( or I ) really need someone to help us through the boot fitting process and then the crampon available to fit that boot. The bigger stores don’t offer that kind of service and Internet sales are likely to miss the mark by a mile as get any where close.

The last step in customer service for boots and crampons is having a place indoors at the store to test both the boots and the crampons strapped on for fit. Plywood in this case instead of hard ice. Same results though. I’ve spent literally hours fitting my own crampons. The crew at PMS will first fit your boots, then suggest the crampons that best fit your choice in boots and finally will hand fit those crampons as required, generally while you wait.

Trust me the drive to PMS is worth the time and effort. In the long run you’ll be way ahead in your own climbing using properly fit gear. The time and effort involved in getting it right the first time is priceless. If you want that kind of service to be available and more importantly, stay available, you need to support your local retailers with the willingness and knowledge base.

Dane Burns

Cold Thistle Blog

NEW CASSIN & CAMP ICE TOOLS

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Riccardo Cassin dominated the 20th century with his big mountain conquests. From the Cassin Ridge on Denali to the first ascent of Gasherbrum IV in the Karakoram. Cassin was standing on top of the world. Starting in 1947 as a way for him to have the highest grade lightweight gear of his own design. Cassin turned to the company that had been making climbing equipment since 1889 CAMP. It was a match made in heaven and the marriage was made official in 1997 with CAMP’s purchase of Cassin.

Cassin X - All Mountain

Available for DEMO at Pro Mountain Sports

It is here. The new Cassin X-All Mountain Tool. After three years of research and development in close cooperation with our athletes, we are proud to release a tool that incorporates the many aspects of the CAMP Awax climbers have come to love while improving on other elements along the way. The Awax was well known for its ability to generate solid sticks from a single soft swing. This was a marvel of engineering as the Awax was also the lightest technical ice tool on the market. The solid sticks were the result of a perfectly balanced head and aggressive pick. The pick was probably the most notable part of the Awax. Its aggressive beak, thin profile and optimized tooth configuration were a refreshing alternative to the blunt picks found on many new ‘mixed tools’ that seemed to climb rock fine, but either bounced off or broke ice especially on lower angle or brittle ice routes.

The All Mountain Tool incorporates our new All Mountain Pick, a near replica of the Awax pick optimized for the new X-series shafts which feature a slightly different curve pattern. With the All Mountain Pick, the All Mountain Tool has a very similar swing to the Awax, penetrates ice just as well, grips rock with equal aplomb, but then goes further with a system of interchangeable grip and head components that ultimately give the All Mountain Tool its name.

Ian Osteyee, one of the leading ice climbers in the Adirondacks and Erik Weihenmayer’s personal guide, was integral to the development of the All Mountain Tool. He entered the project with the belief that a single tool could truly handle all of the various ways we use ice axes on big alpine routes. At that point, the closest thing he had found was the CAMP Awax, but it was still lacking in certain ways. He found he had to optimize the handle with grip tape and some manipulations with a router to get the comfort he was looking for. He also had to jimmy with aftermarket pommel attachments to create a second pommel for leashless climbing. One thing he never had to futz with, though, was the pick. When Ian saw the modular systems of the Cassin X-Dry, X-Ice and X-Alp tools, he likened it to the Holy Grail. When he realized the head components (pick and hammer/adze) were separate, he knew this was a winning combination if the pick could be optimized for performance equal to the Awax. That was the last part of our development and after much early-season field testing, we have succeeded.

To Awax lovers, we can say sincerely that the new X-All Mountain Tool from Cassin is the new Awax. For ice climbers who have experienced the frustrations of pick bounce, ice bashing and shoulder fatigue common with the more aggressive ‘mixed tools’ now so popular on the market, we encourage you to swing the new All Mountain Tool. The Awax was routinely the favorite at ice festivals featuring demo tools from all the major brands. Its modest design and optimized pick angle created a tool that truly climbed all angles of ice with exceptional performance. In this way, it created many converts and took on a cult-like identity. With the new interchangeable grips, and the separate head components, the All Mountain Tool goes one step beyond to produce an axe that not only climbs all angles of ice with consistent grace, but can be modified quickly and easily for leashless configurations, dry-tooling, even lower angle glacier routes.

In Ian’s words, “No longer will you have to change tools and get used to your alpine tool’s swing, or get caught in an unexpected tricky, technical situation with your non-technical tools. The All Mountain Tool can handle everything you throw at it.”

Features

- Optimized pick angle and tooth configuration climbs all angles of ice and rock.

- Interchangeable head components make switching between an adze and hammer or replacing picks simple and affordable.

- Interchangeable grips come in three varieties for leashless, leashed and alpine or snow climbing. They all bolt onto the shaft with one screw and because of their dual density molded construction, they dampen vibrations and insulate remarkably well.

- The spike is large enough to grip on low angle glacier ice and has a hole large enough to clip a carabiner for use with lanyards.

- The All Mountain Tool is ultimately a combination of the best elements from the Cassin X-Dry, X-Ice and X-Alp tools (aggressive shaft curve, hammer head, double-pommel grip, large spike) with an upgrade to the All Mountain Pick that optimizes the tool for Awax-like performance.

Available for DEMO at Pro Mountain Sports

CAMP AlpAx Special

The AlpAx is a great technical tool for the advanced alpinist. The shaft features our patented Hand Rest® system that quickly adapts the tool to the terrain. For general mountaineering, the lower shaft is smooth and straight so that it plunges easily into snow. When steep ice is encountered, slide the red hand grip up and swing out the hand rest for vertical climbing. The AlpAx Special is unique that it can be changed quickly and easily while climbing as necessary.

WOOL FROM MONTBELL

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Mid-Weight Zip Neck

For 10+ years Pro Mountain Sports has been touting the benefits of wool. Over those years we have seen people turn their nose up at it to now burying their nose in it. Why?? Well, like all great things what goes around comes around. Users are finally seeing, feeling and smelling how nice Merino Wool is.

Light-Weight Round Neck

What is it that make it do what it does??

Unlike synthetic fibers wool absorbs and truly wicks sweat and moisture. Keeping you drier. When you are dry you are warm when it is cold and cool when it is hot.

Wool also has some great antibacterial properties too. The little beasties that make all your plastic long underwear stink up a storm hate living on wool. No stinky bacteria means no stinky outdoor adventures.

But will it shrink??

Not much. You can wash Montbell Merino wool just like you wash your favorite pair of jeans. Put it in the washer add some mild detergent and go. It is best to dry flat. It will only shrink 5% if at all. Unlike that sweater your grandma gave you when you were 8.

Montbell’s wool comes in three weights.

Light Weight 130 g/M 92% Super Merino Wool

Mid Weight 185 g/M 100% Super Merino Wool

Expedition Weight 300 g/M 85% Super Merino 15% Nylon (Interior is 100% Super Merino wool)