Archive for the ‘Avalanche’ Category

Employee Gear Closet: John MacKinnon

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

I’m up next for the Employee Gear Closet. I spend a lot of time in the mountains on a variety of skis and here is my quiver from right to left: First up are the G3 Reverends. I know the telemark turn died in 1924, but I still enjoy dropping the knee at the ski area. Plus, I’ve got the Lord on my side in the Extremes with these solid boards. Next to them are my skinny little G3 Aces–good for long tours and ski mountaineering around CB and the Cascades.

GC_JM_skisUp next are my go-to BC boards. The Dynafit Manaslu is the perfect mid-winter ski touring ski for the CB backcountry. It is light, decently wide and with a small rocker and early rise up front, they make skiing breakable crust fun. What’s left…I got some approach skis for accessing backcountry ice climbing areas, an old pair of BD Havocs mounted with the G3 Targa Ascent for the Al Johnson Uphill/Downhill Telemark Race and a beat up pair of Fischer Superlights that work great for the Grand Traverse.

GC_JM_boots

AT Boots?  Check.  Tele Boots?  Check. Ice Boots? Check. New for me this year are the Black Diamond Push telemark boot. I like their even flex and 4 buckle support. My Scarpa Spirit 4s are my everyday work boot and I log over 100 days in them each season. For ice climbing and mountaineering I have been wearing La Sportiva Nepal Top Evos for the last 2 years. They are comfy right out of the box, and warm enough for me.

GC_JM_packs

I am also operating a small backpack museum in my closet for old, tattered but still lovable rucksacks. Each pack has its own story to tell and I can’t bear to get rid of any of them! The two climbing packs up front were both hand-made in North Conway, NH by local alpinists and I have logged many miles in the mountains with them on my back. I purchased the red Wild Things Ice Sack my senior year in high school and it is still going strong. The oriental rug is one of the few domestic things I own and it is one of my prized possessions. I bought it in an alley in Katmandu with my Dad about 10 years ago. That’s my gear closet/bedroom. Enjoy!

Johnny


First AIARE Level 2 Avalanche Course of season a success….

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

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Mid-December brought us our first AIARE Level 2 Avalanche Course of the season, as 12 folks from here locally in Crested Butte, Gunnison, and as far as the Colorado Front Range and Vail, gathered for a sold out course over 4 days.

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Course timing seemed perfect for learning how to analyze snow stability at a professional level, as the 10 days previous to the course, had brought us 2 seperate storms totalling almost 6 feet of snow in the Crested Butte backcountry. We were lucky enough to be blessed with some unseasonably mild and sunny weather for our course, perfect for spending time standing around in snowpits and analyzing snow grain formation and snowpack bonding characteristics.

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The main format of the Level 2 Avalanche Course is learning about practicing expert recording and observation standards (weather, snowpack, and avalanche)as they relate to avalanches and assessing snow stability. It is also the course where professional level decision-making buidls upone the Level 1 basic Decision-making framework, and students are introduced to assessing snow stability and how and what data to gather for helping in this process.

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The Level 2 Avalanche Course is the beginning step into the professional track of avalanche education and courses are ususally made up of guides, ski patrollers, and well-travelled and experienced recreational backcountry users looking to increase their knowledge base and improve upon their snow stability evaluation skills. It differs from the Level 1 ‘Foundation Course’ in that it is focused more on assessing stability and terrain choices based on field and remote data and how it all plays out in desicion-making, prior to entering avalanche terrain. Where as, the Level 1 Course tends to focus on desicion-making while in avalanche terrain.

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This year we had a great group of enthusiatic and experienced folks, and great sunny weather, and enjoyed some good ski tours, some good turns, and some great learning experiences and environements, as the ease of access and travel in the Crested Butte backcountry is an ideal place for avalanche education.

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Thanks all for your attention, enthusiasm, and desire to learn and imporve your avalanche decision making skills. Looking forward to seeing you all out in the mountains again, making some turns and staying safe

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 — Your Instructors,

Jayson Simons-Jones & Steve Banks


Avalanche Season is here…

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

 

Approaching the Maroon Cabin

Winter has made an abrupt arrival in Crested Butte, with back-to-back winter storms hitting us over the past 2 weeks, leaving us with 5 feet of fresh snow to start off December. With the sudden arrival of all this snow, we have also been brought our first cycle of avalanche danger, and perfectly in time for the beginning of our avalanche course season, bringing us a very real-life learning and educational situation of which to teach from and experience in the Crested Butte back-country.

Beacon practice below Gothic Mountain

The first weekend in December saw Crested Butte Mountain Guides running two separate AIARE Level 1 Avalanche Classes to full capacity; one an open enrollment course and the other a college specific course targeted at the local Western State College back-country community in Gunnison. And just in time, as the first storm of the season arrived on the third day, the field-touring day of the course, in which we were able to see the beginnings of our first avalanche cycle of the 09/10 season first hand.

Student snow pit practice

Then as another major winter storm slammed into Crested Butte again this past weekend we held two more AIARE Avalanche Courses, our super popular 1-day Avalanche Refresher Course & another sold-out Level 1 Hut Course in nearby Gothic, CO. Bluebird skies were overhead on Day 1 as we made our way to the hut on Friday, only to find ourselves breaking trail in nearly 2 feet of fresh snow and a raging blizzard on Sunday.

Psyched for a few pow turns

The local Maroon Cabin in Gothic, CO makes for an ideal retreat of which to learn the basics of avalanche education. Situated amidst some of the largest avalanche paths in Colorado, it is a state of the art, new age ‘hut’ with in-floor heat, electricity, running water (usually), and even wireless Internet of which to study weather and avalanche reports. All with the Elk Mountains just out the door, allowing for immediate immersion in the winter mountain environment from which to study snow stability, practice companion rescue, and plan and prep for the courses back-country tours.

Maroon Cabin

This week CBMG will be running our first AIARE Level 2 Avalanche Course of the season, and another completely sold out course. With some clear weather on the way we should have some excellent snowpack dynamics to study in the wake of the past two storms, and enjoyable weather of which to go touring and stand around in snow pits looking at snow grains and performing snow stability evaluations.

dinner

Also, NEW this year is our classroom space located in the conference room at the Grand Lodge hotel at the base of the ski resort in Mount Crested Butte, CO. Having run one course out of here already it is turning out to be a fairly ideal classroom with easy access to local trailheads, gear shops at the base of the resort, and lots of good coffee and restaurants in walking distance. As well as offering available lodging discounts just down the hall from your classroom, it is as easy as it gets for visiting folks to learn about avalanches in the place that AIARE (American Institute For Avalanche Research & Education) got it’s founding from.

Tour planning

Unfortunately, the beginnings of the winter and avalanche season, have also brought it’s first casualty of the season, when world-renowned Canadian ice climber, Guy Lacelle, was killed in a small avalanche this past weekend outside of Bozeman, MT in Hyalite Canyon, while taking part in their seasonal Ice Festival.  Our thoughts go out to his wife, friends, and family. Read more….

Steve Banks teaching to a full classroom

Here’s looking forward to a great season of classes, guided ski and climbing day, and safe back-country travels all around…..

Leaving the hut in high avalanche danger

—JSJ


In From The Storm…

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

CBMG Guide Mike Bromberg

Well, it’s here ! Crested Butte is getting pounded by our first big winter storm of the season, with 24″+ in the last 24 hours, with more in the high alpine, and more on the way!

Itching to get some backcountry powder turns in, a few of us guides decided to brave the winter burliness this morning and try and get some turns in, as well as get a handle on what is happening with avalanche conditions during our first natural avalanche cycle of the season.

CBMG Guide Steve Banks checking out some unusual cracking

What we found was a lot of new snow, with cold temps and gusty winds near treeline, creating very poor visibility and an incredibly touchy snowpack, as anything over 25 degrees seemed to be cracking and collapsing.

Steve & Mike breaking trail

The sheer amount of the new snow, coupled with our previous thin and weak snowcover, meant ski penetration was full depth, resulting in lots of leap frogging a downtrack between us, the occasional load of powder being too much for forward momentum, and a few great face shot worthy backcountry ski turns on the steeper slopes.

CBMG guide Ian Hatchett while Mike Bromberg looks on

Looking forward to letting the snowpack settle out a bit over the next few days, and then really being able to get after it.

—Jayson Simons-Jones (CBMG Owner / Guide)


AIARE Avalanche Level 1 Hut Course…

Friday, March 13th, 2009

too bad all instability signs can't be this obvious

The month of March kicked off at Crested Butte Mountain Guides with our third sold-out, and final AIARE Avalanche Level 1 Hut Course of the season.

students travelling in avalanche country

This 3-day backcountry immersion course is small (1:6 max ratio) and allows for maximum time in the winter envrionment with great ski touring and a world-reknown avalanche classroom right outside of the hut doors in the beautiful townsite of Gothic, CO. 

Learning beacons in the shadow of giants

 This course brought particpants from all over the country. With “High Crimes” best-selling author Michael Kodas coming all the way from the high mountain state of Connecticut, to a strong contingent of folks from the Colorado Front Range, Telluride, CO and someone from right here at home in the Gunnison Valley.

all learning has to fun, right?

The course started off with stormy weather and began at the tail end of our last major natural avalanche cycle, so the environment and conditions were prime for a great introduction into the avalanche education world, and for which students would have a good venue for learning decision-making skills in regards to travelling in avalanche terrain.

The crew...

Overall, it was an incredibly succesful course, with an enthusiastic and highly motivated group of people.  We were able to get in some good long field days travelling through the mountains and everyone got a strong experiential learning opportunity. There was opportunity for lots of hands-on moments and by the end of the course everyone had gained a solid understanding of tour planning, route selection, snowpack tests, companion rescue, terrain analysis, mountain weather, and of course….we had some great Crested Butte backcountry skiing !

ready & waiting

Thanks everyone for a great course…ski hard, stay safe, and have fun

—Jayson Simons-Jones (Instructor / Guide)