Got out my Heron Pro and put together
my pack for Denali today: 3 ropes, 2 full racks, 8 liters of water,
and ankle weights. Sound to you like a savvy packing list for
heading out onto the Kahiltna Glacier for a month? Me neither. But
of course, packing for Denali begins long before the climb, with
plenty of training and prep beforehand. This season I'll be guiding
both Rainier Mountaineering Incorporated's (RMI) first-ever AlaskanAlpine Seminar and a Denali/McKinley Climb, so I'll have both heavy
and light packs on for over a month on the cliffs, couloirs, and
glaciers around this proud mountain. And while the ice season with
Adventure Spirit Rock+Ice+Alpine provided plenty of training for
those steep couloirs, I do need to stretch the legs, fill the lungs,
and condition the back a bit for Denali's notoriously beastly loads.
Having recently joined the Mammut team,
I'm looking forward to testing and reporting back on how the Heron
Pro goes at carrying those beastly loads. Even in the training
phase, as I try to fill it up with everything, the kitchen sink, and
the stove, I'm impressed by its seemingly insatiable maw. I'm also
liking the rotational carriage system on the waist-belt, tempering
sheer brawn with some degree of elegance in movement. I'll be out on
the glacier until early June, but I'm looking forward to delivering a
full report when I'm back down. In the meantime, wishing everyone a
strong start to the climbing season!
Hauling the Heron Pro in Vermont's Green Mountains |
1 comment:
"Tempering sheer brawn with some degree of elegance" sounds like a good description for Kel!
Post a Comment