Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Tour der Vertikalen Nächte mit Thomas Tivadar

Hast Du schon mal in der Vertikalen hoch über festem Boden geträumt?
Auf der "Tour der Vertikalen Nächte" von Mountain Equipment, bergfreunde.de und Gore-Tex kann das für Dich Wirklichkeit werden.
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Lerne von Bigwall-Experten Tom Tivadar, wie man eine Portaledge in der Senkrechten aufbaut und das Hänge-Biwak zum gemütlichen Nachtlager wird.
Dabei kannst Du die aktuellen Schlafsäcke von Mountain Equipment testen.
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Hier wird biwakiert:

08.03.12 Bad Tölz, DAV Kletterzentrum Oberbayern Süd
09.03.12 Frankenthal, DAV Kletterzentrum Pfalz Rock
10.03.12 Korb, Active Garden
17.03.12 Kirchheim (bei München), High-East
19.03.12 Kelkheim, Sportpark Kelkheim
20.03.12 Frechen, Chimpanzodrome
21.03.12 Wetzlar, DAV Kletterzentrum
22.03.12 Leverkusen, A-Werk Kletterhalle Absturz
23.03.12 Ahlen, Big Wall Kletterzentrum Ahlen
24.03.12 Kassel, Vertical World
25.03.12 Jena, rocks.Kletterhalle
26.03.12 Chemnitz, Onside Klettersport
27.03.12 Coburg, DAV Kletterzentrum
30.03.12 Dornbirn, K1 Kletterhalle Dornbirn
31.03.12 Ravensburg, Kletterbox DAV Ravensburg
19.04.12 Offenburg, DAV Kletterzentrum
20.04.12 Darmstadt, DAV Kletterzentrum (ohne Übernachtung)
21.04.12 Berlin, T-Hall Berlin
22.04.12 Lappersdorf, DAV Kletterzentrum Regensburg


Alle Tourdaten mit Adressen und weiteren Infos findest Du
auch unter
www.bergfreunde.de/vertikalenaechte

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Felicity's Solo Antarctic Crossing

Fresh back from her successful expedition to become the first Woman to make a solo crossing of the Antarctic continent, Felicity Aston shared her experiences last night at 'The Deck' above the National Theatre in London.


Main expedition sponsors Kaspersky Lab put on a great evening and we joined media, family, friends to hear Felicity recount the highs and lows of her two month journey, offering a remarkable insight into the exceptional psychological challenges that the isolation of such a long solo journey presents.

It took 59 days for Felicity to ski from the Ross ice shelf to the South Pole and then on to Hercules Inlet on Antarctica’s Ronne ice shelf. Here’s a link to a recent BBC news interview clip http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-16879161 we’ll keep you posted on upcoming talks. I highly recommend you go along to hear all about it first hand if you can.



Trail Gear Guide

The Trail Magazine Annual Gear Guide hit the shelves yesterday. We recieved plenty of mentions including our Xero 550 which features in 'Best Kit for Wild Camping' article. 



Make sure you head out and grab a copy this month. Theres also a preview of the guide below running on Issuu

Friday, 17 February 2012

Long term product development and short lived ice

Just thought I would post a few pictures from last weekend. We are busy working on our Winter 2013 product line just now, and with the cold spell of weather forecast to end, it was a great opportunity to head out in search of some all-too rare Lakeland ice and also put a new GORE-TEX technology through its paces. You wont be hearing much about this for a while yet, suffice to say we are getting very excited about Winter 2013...its only 18 months away!

You can read more about this trip on the climberandrunner blog. Thanks to Dan and Alec for a good day out, and special thanks to Alec for being the only one with a working camera!

Whats so special about the Black & Blue Jacket? You'll have to wait.....
Climbing on Percys Passage III 4, The Old Man of Coniston, Lake District
For those of you who are interested, heres a breakdown of my winter clothing gear.

G2 Pants: essential winter legwear and easier to move around in than salopettes. I wear thermal leggings under these in cold conditions. Have climbed in very little else for the past 3 winter seasons.

LS Groundup Tee: A nice lightweight baselayer / tee.

Shroud Jacket: my favourite fleece. Light, versatile, close fitting and has a hood.

Compressor Vest: Sadly not currently in our range, but i never leave home in winter without it.

Fitzroy Jacket: Another winter essential. Belays, coffee stops, just feeling cold. Stays in the pack and goes on over everthing when needed.

Gloves: Super Alpine Gloves for the sharp-end and Randonnee gloves. A nice warm beanie and powerstretch balaclava as a spare completes the accessories.


OP Pad Magazine Awards

Just had the news in from Rob our agent in Benelux that we scooped a Bronze award at last nights Annual OP Magazine Awards in the catergory of 'Sleeping bags and Mats' with our Titan 450 Sleeping bag.

Rob collecting the award - 4th from the left

The Titan 450

Designed to appeal to backpackers and mountaineers who appreciate the solid value and reliability our core bags provide, the Titan 450 offers improved thermal efficiency and more warmth for less weight and bulk.
A new anatomically profiled shell has been matched to our previously patented EXL® technology to give a bag that mirrors the profile of your body more closely without being restrictive. It uniquely provides
a bag designed to fit as well as your favourite clothing with a corresponding improvement in performance to match.



The Titan 450 is a bag that will warm up faster, retain heat better and for longer. In short it will more effectively do what any sleeping bag should, keep you warm and comfortable. The Titan 450 is filled with some of the best Duck Down we can find. Our pure 85/15 duck down not only gives fantastic loft with a minimum fill power of 625 but it remains resilient after compression and is ecologically and ethically sound. It is sourced through our ground breaking Down Codex project, the industry’s first complete audit of the down supply chain. In conjunction with the IDFL and our suppliers we ensure that all down is sourced with no live plucking or harvesting, high standards of animal welfare and solvent free processing. It has been independently verified that there is no live plucking or force feeding and that all birds are slaughtered humanely after living freely outdoors. Our duck down is a natural by-product of birds reared for egg production. As a consequence the down comes from birds that live for longer, producing better, more resilient down, even than that which comes from young geese. For the first time you can sleep with guaranteed piece of mind as well as in comfort.

Technically the Titan 450 is engineered using box wall baffles, ensuring the down is stable and can loft more effectively without unnecessary weight whilst the shell incorporates a revised anatomical hood. Ergonomically formed and with an integrated HALO baffle to reduce heat loss from the head, it is comfortable in a wide range of conditions with and without the use of the adjustable drawcord cinch. Used inconjunction with the offset 3-dimensional neck collar and these bags can be taken to the very limits of their performance offset.Check out more information on our Titan Range of bags here

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Andy hits Canada

ME Pro partner Andy Turner has just touched down at Calgary Airport, Canada with photographer and friend of the brand Lukasz Warzecha for a 3 week ice climbing and photoshoot trip.


We'll have updates from the guys over the coming weeks, however you can also keep up to date with all the latest at Andys Blog and Lukasz Blog too.

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

BMC International Meet - Video

Thanks to Simon and Justin from Reeltime Adventure for mailing me this short film shot during the recent BMC International Meet at Glenmore Lodge, Scotland.

Keep your eyes peeled for Nick and for those of you with really good eye sight Andy Turner in action at the beginning during Nick Coltons introduction.


Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Golden Piton Award for Dave

Congratulations to ME Pro partner Dave MacLeod on winning The Golden Piton Award 2012 for Traditional Climbing with The Long Hope Route Direct (E11/5.14a R/X) St Johns Head, Orkney, Scotland.



You can read more information about the 10th Annual Climbing Magazine Golden Piton Awards here   

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Whitedot Team: Testing concept skis in Chamonix backcountry

Latest post from Mark Perkins of Whitedot Skis 

"Having returned to a very cold and powder laden Chamonix I had a very enviable task ahead of me - go and test Whitedot's concept carbon skis!

The aim of these initial testing days was to see how the lightweight composite versions of the production skis performed and how the materials interacted between the mountain and the skier.


First off, the conditions needed assessing. There was a lot of fresh snow and the temperatures had dropped, but in the back of my mind was a reminder that it was raining in Chamonix town when I left the previous week. Clearly, an ice layer would be hidden somewhere below the light cold powder, and this was backed up by the avalanche level which was set at 4 out of 5. Caution would be needed and choice of aspect and route essential.

After some thought, I focused on the varied terrain of the north facing pitches below the 'Mont Blanc chain' above Chamonix town. The access lift, Plan d'Aiguille, is found directly out of the town centre (1050m) and delivers you to 2350m. Although not a set of serious routes (Pres du Rocher and Combe des Glaciers), they lie on 30-40 degree pitches with both open powder fields and deep forests. Moreover, with the amount of snow lying on the valley floor, over 2 metres in places, it was a great opportunity to 'ski hard' for the full length of the route. But ultimately, it is also an area where 'you have to know your way around', i.e. fresh tracks aplenty!


The weight of the ski plays a huge part of how a ski performs, e.g. how a ski cuts through chopped powder. In this case the lightweight version did take some adjustment but reassuringly it still felt like the production model. And there was obvious benefits such as up-weighting of the ski was far easier and less tiring, meaning I could ski for longer on a single pitch.


The carbon/aramid/flax combination is completely new to ski manufacturer and our main concern was that the organic dampening material, flax, would not combine well with carbon/aramid. But the skis behaved remarkably similarly to the production model - so 'well done' to our design team and bring on more testing!


Thanks again to ME for their clothing support to Whitedot test team."

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Timing is everything

Having spent most of last week looking out of the office window at the fantastic cold clear weather I was very keen on getting out on the weekend. On Friday I watched in horror (mild concern) as the forecasters pronounced that a band of rain and snow would propagate westwards on Saturday and thought I'd better get out early to dodge the inclement weather.

I picked Andy up at 7.30 and we drove out to the Roaches. It was cold and clear, the tops of the Roaches were glowing golden in sun as we got near and it was obviously going to be a fantastic morning.



I took this picture a couple of weeks before on another early mission. Cold, still, sun rising: a perfect place to be.



Brrr. Walking in to the Tetris boulder at the Clouds was chilly, -4.5 according to the car with a very cold breeze. Warming up took ages, mainly focusing on the delicate balance of chilling hands on rock then warming them in the pockets. Just the right mix is required to get them functioning and not just going solid with cold half way up the problems.
Eventually I was warm enough to start climbing but Andy never quite got going, claiming a harsh training session the day before had ruined him. Hmmm.


Andy attempting to use a piece of rubber to warm up. He failed. Nice boots though..



I worked up to a high point on Hard Arete, actually feeling good on the previously very hard feeling start but not quite getting the body position right on the throw to the good left hand higher up. Pleased though to be making progress. Anything 7A ish not on a slab has always been impossible before and I am definately getting somewhere..

I then had a few goes on the lip traverse of Trust, apparently called Thrust, which was absolutely the perfect problem to climb in such conditions. Rarely will slopers feel as good as they did that morning. After some deeply ungraceful udging I turned the lip and made it to the top..

Having got up something we hastily called it a day and walked back to the car. Ah, the joy of an early start, a mint day and a problem climbed. To cap it all the snow/sleet/rain started about an hour after I got home. Result!


Happy on the velcro slopers of Thrust

Long Hope Night at the RGS - Tomorrow Night

This is your last minute reminder that Dave, Andy and Paul are presenting the story of the Long Hope route at the Royal Geographical Society in London tomorrow night. 


The latest exciting news is that Dale Templar, the Producer of the BBC's Human Planet series, will be our host for what promises to be a fantastic evening of speaking and film. 
If you live in the London area don't miss this rare opportunity to see Dave MacLeod in town and hear first hand the truly remarkable story of the hardest sea cliff climb in the world.
Tickets are still available; you can reserve them here or buy them on the door tomorrow night.
Dave gives us more information below...

"On February 8th, myself, Andy Turner and filmmaker Paul Diffley will be speaking at the Royal Geographical Society in London about the Longhope route. Mountain Equipment, Gore-Tex products and Cotswold Outdoor have helped us arrange an evening of entertainment at the RGS to share with you what was pretty memorable adventure for us, both in terms of the climbers involved in attempting to climb this cliff over 40 years, and in documenting it on film.


Myself and Andy will be speaking about our experiences in preparing and attempting the first free ascent of the original Longhope Route as well as some of the history behind climbing on the cliff, and then we’ll present The Long Hope film made by Paul Diffley. In particular I’ll talk about some of the psychology behind taking on a three-year sporting ambition to open a new route at world class difficulty like this, how I’ve learned to be comfortable with the dangers involved, and some of the hurdles that you just couldn’t plan for along the way. Andy will be speaking about how his winter mountaineering adventures in Scotland, the Alps and Norway were about as good preparation as you could get for this type of adventure, yet still not enough to avoid some knee trembling moments on a 1400 foot loose, bird infested sea-cliff.
We’ll have a bar and plenty of time to meet up and talk about adventures on cliffs during the evening or ask questions. We’ll also have some signed copies of the Long Hope DVD and various other films and books we’ve made. Doors open at 6pm to start 7pm. It should be a great night!
Tickets and full details are available in my shop right here. It’s going to be a busy show so it would be a very good plan to get your ticket early."

Friday, 3 February 2012

Cotswold Winter Courses



I’ve been meaning to write a blog for about 3 weeks now but any spare time at all has been in fairly short supply here at ME! Below is a very belated summary of what's been going on.

Whilst others had already been working hard out at the Outdoor Retailer Show in the US things only got really busy for me with our winter courses for Cotswold Staff up in Scotland. Run in conjunction with Gore at Plas Y Brenin’s winter base, Alltshellach, these provide the chance for the lucky 60 to use our kit in the conditions it was designed for, get further training on our products and, crucially, to further their own skills. Over two three day programmes we ran walking, mountaineering and climbing courses dependent on the participants previous experience. This makes it an equally amazing opportunity whether you are taking your first steps in crampons or have already climbed to a high standard and want to be stretched further. This lead to the usual mixture of wide eyes, big grins and ultimately exhaustion as people made full use of some of the best guides and instructors around.



Accompanying the staff with their PYB instructor each day were members of the ME and Gore team as well as ME Pro Partners Andy Turner, Stu McAleese and Dave MacLeod. This meant that there was near continuous input on technical skills, avalanche awareness, kit design, fabrics, looking cool in the mountains and how to climb grade XI….. depending on who you were with on a given day. Most days were spent in either Glen Coe or on Ben Nevis in conditions that took in the whole spectrum of Scottish winter weather. This suited us perfectly as almost anything works on blue sky days. The combination of storm force winds, snow, hail, lashing rain and even, very briefly, sun gave everyone concerned cause to be grateful for the design of their kit and the fabrics it was made from.

Full days out were very, very closely [I managed a whole cup of tea and a shower one day!] followed by product sessions where we discussed the kit we make and peoples experiences having actually used it. The aim is that the staff present will not only be personally more knowledgeable but also able to feedback what they’ve learnt to their colleagues back in store. This will hopefully mean that when you’re next in Cotswold you can get good, relevant advice from someone with first hand experience whether it be ME kit your interested in or a pair of winter boots and crampons.

The always substantial [half a chicken anyone?!] and excellent dinners were then followed by a further lecture on avalanche awareness or, on the later nights, a talk by Andy Turner and Dave MacLeod. All were excellent and the observant will have noticed the sneak preview of Dave’s winter project that has just become the amazing looking Castle in the Sky.



After all this the bar didn’t see much attention as most simply shuffled their kit in the drying room and collapsed into bed before another early start. Many thanks to all those who took part with so much enthusiasm, the feedback has been amazing and made the 16 hour days seem even more worthwhile than normal! Generally I’d have gone home for some sleep after all that excitement but a flight to ISPO in Munich the next morning put paid to that. After a week of busy trade show action and a little too much pork and beer I’ve finally made it home to Kendal. Nearly 3 weeks away and I've come back to frozen taps….. time to find my tools and a head torch, fight the exhaustion and go to search for some Lakes ice before the thaw!

Rich B.

Dave's latest testpiece.....a belayers view.

By Ruth Taylor
 
“I’m quite nervous about this route, Ruth.”

Hmmmm, not necessarily the words you expect to be coming out of Dave Macleod’s mouth before he launches upwards, but out they came. I was standing at the bottom of Druim Shionnach in Glen Shiel beneath a HUUUGE roof. I’m sure when Dave, Andy and I set off that morning I was chief photographer and Andy was going to be belaying and potentially having a blast on the “project”. But here I was lashed into a belay, Andy was away up the top of the crag to abseil into photographers position and Dave was getting ready to lead off, with the words….

“I’m not sure how this is going to go. I might get involved in a mighty battle with the roof, or I might just shout Take.” Closely followed by….“I apologize now for falling on your head on this start.”

Getting psyched for the battle.

What???? This is Dave Macleod – he’s not going to fall off I secretly thought to myself. However, as he teetered up the groove above without a lot of gear and some less than solid rock – fully decked out with pointy sharp things I did have a few moments of doubt and wished I was a little bit further away from said pointy spikey things!
Once at the top of the groove the next step was to pull out onto a slab, steadily done and now Dave wasn’t very easy to see, I could just hear a series of phrases….

“The roof is getting bigger the closer I get to it!”

“I’ll just back this peg up and then it’s a bit of a sketchy 10ft”

“Right, just going to do the sketchy moves..”

“It’s like being back on The Long Hope, I’m hooking into bird shit!”

Dave was by now safely ensconced directly under the massive 6m roof. From where I was standing, this looked like an impossible task, fully horizontal and nothing that looked like decent hooks to get your tools into.

The evening before Dave had been talking about his visit the previous week to work on the route. He talked about aiding across the roof, on some cams, bulldogs, a pecker and a completely downward pointing knifeblade peg. The cams being about the only decent gear of the lot!


Holey Moley that's steep!!

He had also described the moves he’d need to make – figure of fours!! Now as far as I know Scottish mixed trad climbing and figure of fours is not normal! Plenty of fig fours and all that on sport mixed stuff – but above dodgy knifeblades???

Anyway with all that information whirling around in my head I stood there – getting slowly colder as Dave prepared himself. He’d gone and got the cams in by reaching out from an undercut/can opener off his axe and then scuttled back across to the resting spot under the left end of the roof. Andy by this point had appeared over the lip of the roof and had eyes out on stalks looking at the roof.

“OK, I’m going to give it a go”

Dave then set off purposefully, along to the take off point, got the undercut/can opener reached out and placed the next pick into the crack somehow and so began the battle.
Clipping some other gear and inching out into the roof the only option was to cut loose.

“Oh my god, that pick isn’t in right…..it’s going to rip any second”

All Andy and I could do at this point was to shout encouragement and keep a watchful eye on the belaying! Luckily the axe didn’t rip and he made it to the next placement which was a little bit more secure. After clipping the next runner, all manner of whacky moves broke loose.
Footless-ness, followed by 2 figure of fours in a row saw Dave reach his picks around the apex on the roof. The downside to this was the tiny tenuous hooks they were placed in with the last bit of gear being the aforementioned downward pointing knifeblade. A fall from here would be a VERY bad idea.
I think all of our hearts were in our mouths, although none more so than Dave’s I’m sure. If Andy and I could have pushed Dave up through mental power alone we’d have been doing a pretty good job!
With final careful, careful moves Dave disappeared around the roof, and found himself a restful spot and some more gear. Phew!!

“I’m going to stand here for a few minutes Ruth.”

The crag - looking wintery.
I can’t say I was surprised!

You might think that that was it, all over. You would be quite wrong. Dave had decided to finish the pitch at the top of the crag, although splitting it into 2 would have been possible. But with no second he forged on upwards, after a bit of rope jiggery pokery – you get a bit too much rope drag around a roof that big to continue without pulling the rope through.


Not sure I've got enough layers on!

Andy by now had come down to the bottom as Dave made painstaking progress up to the finish. A very lonely lead and one without much gear – typically he’d taken a minimal rack and used a lot of it on the pitch up to and around the roof. Andy was describing the terrain on the upper part of the crag, not many decent cracks and lots of small rounded flakes – sounded gripping!

Sometime later we heard a jubilant shout from somewhere up above – route finished!!

A little later still Dave reappeared at the lip of the roof abseiling down to get the gear back – getting it out from under the roof looked almost as hard as getting it in, in the first place!

Once we were all back on the ground it was time to head back to the valley and enjoy a bit of sunshine on the way…
A hugely inspiring day out – I really can’t believe anyone can look so composed whilst hanging off one axe under a huge roof with no footholds. Wow!!

Oh and for those wondering about conditions, check out the crag picture – all pretty white and wintery – not much chance of rime and snow on the underside of the roof!!
 
Dave and Andy looking happy with the days work - in their matching outfits!! 


Thursday, 2 February 2012

Backcountry Skiing in the North Cascades


Yesterday I headed out with Craig & Woody from our US distributors to sample some of the backcountry skiing in the North Cascades.


We also met up with a couple of the local snow patrol guys from the nearby Stevens Pass resort plus local blogger Andy Dappen who looks after the Website Wenatchee Outdoors


Craig also took the opportunity to sample some of next winters ski specific salopettes, the new Kamchatka Saloepettes seen here in a rather dashing blue.


We left the relative hustle of Stevens Pass and headed up Skyline Peak before ascending to Tye Peak, with views South towards Mount Stewart. Absolutely stunning!




Full trip reports can be found at www.climberandrunner.wordpress.com and also www.wenatcheeoutdoors.org

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Nick Bullock: BMC Winter Meet Round up

Head over to Nick's Blog here for his full report from the BMC Winter Meet 

Guy and Nick accessing the next move photo Bayard Russell 


Nick on the 2nd Pitch of Guerdon Grooves photo Bayard Russell