Date: 4th March 2011
February was a tough month to be an ice climber in Canmore, especially compared to 2010. In fact, the whole year has seemed colder and nastier than 2010 by a fair amount, especially February, when we normally expect things to warm up. In 2010 I remember walking into climbs and working out in the back yard wearing nothing on m upper body but a T-shirt regularly. That means the high temp for the day was often above freezing. Getting in and out of the Ghost wasn’t too bad in general, but this year it’s been routinely impassable without chains and multiple vehicles to yank the stuck one out. We rely on chinooks in Alberta to melt out the snow, and we haven’t been getting them. The snowbank beside my driveway is head-high, which tells me it’s been a really snowy, cold winter without any good chinooks. I’ve cancelled or just not even planned to go out on more days of ice climbing this year than I can ever remember; I’ll climb down to about -20 or so, but below that it just stops being all that much fun. The highs have often been -20 this year; I shot a TV show in -35 to -25 temps, it was frigid silliness where the crux was just staying functional.
Posted in: Blog
I find this blog kind a funny. Everything is so different elsewhere.
If I look average temperatures of my climbing days this season, it would go close to -20 celsius. Highest has been close to 0 but the lowest almost -35.
If I would have temperature limit for climbing and it would be about -15, I probably would have climbed only a day or two.
Only temperature limit we have here is the "lead limit". If it goes below -20, we estimate the ice at least twice, before we climb and are extremely careful. In the coldest days we climb only on top rope.
ps. Here the average temp. in February was below -18 C and this winters record is over -40.
Greetings from Finland.
About layering and the removal of such layers: When a person is dressed warm and then enters a warm building, the clothing can come off immediately. You're actually insulating yourself FROM the heat if you leave your layers on. It's fun to watch how often people get that wrong.
Greetings from Peru
Finland Anon: Where do you live in Finland? Sounds cold!
Anon Peru: Yes.
Anon Finland–also a big difference between going ice climbing at -25 and guiding/teaching/posing at -20. I've done big linkups near -30, not much fun really, but doable, but working below -15 is different.
Nice blog Will! This being my 17th year in row climbing in Feb and March in the Canmore area this is the coldest I can remember. The last 5 guiding and this year the layering thing has been a bit of a struggle with these temps! Learning everyday this year! Finally some warm temps yesterday and today! Wow- what a relief!
all interesting. here in japan (greetings from) this winter has been one looong very cold stint (hovering around -25, -32wc) a very warm patch (up to +4ish, climbing ice in a t-shirt) then two cold plunges with a normalish (-10) bit in between. right now is a brief normalish period with a cold plunge expected again in a few days.
good freeze-thaw, but the snow that heads each cold patch has clogged lots of approaches and/or made things dangerous in some places.
anyhow, its been a good time to experiment with layers (also been camping out nearly the time, 20+ nights in tents so far, ranging from sharing a VE25 to alone in a highlight – now theres an experiment in layering).
half of it long hauls in too, limiting gear that can be carried.
what ive found to work has been 2 baselayers (vest under a full length with hood) and give or take a windshirt for moving, then a thin synthetic layer for super cold or brief stops, then a lightweight down layer for longer stops (belays, mornings, cooking, even sleeping in).
legs have been softshell bibs (that mid riff covering has been vital) over a thin base.
a big key has been swapping gloves and keeping wrists warm with thumb loops also in the synthetic layer.
and having a pair of down mitts handy for belays – keeping hands warm seems a first defense against creeping cold invasion, along with the obvious dexterity.
the cotton approach layer is really interesting, for day stuff where you can let it freeze in your pack and not worry about the weight.
will definitely have a try next trip.
the concept of soaking up sweat, mopping it off then dumping the lot is really interesting.
been experimenting a bit with similar ideas allpied to sleeping systems – vapor barriers inside sleeping bags, ventilation etc.
still a lot to play about with there – and only takes 1L of water hitting the boil to change the moisture situation and change everything.
sorry for the rant – finally back to decent coffee after a week on instant….
I've been ice climbing in the Rockies for the past 4 years (Dec, Jan, Feb, Feb) and spent the whole month here this time. It's stinkin' cold this year! No trips to the Ghost and waist deep postholing seemed to be a common theme. I donned my recently aquired happy pants with a big grin when the temps dropped below -30. Helped avoid the "Frozen Stupids", a condition where at very cold temperatures, you stand there with a stupid look on your face, unable to grasp the concept that movement=warmth. But I've got my layering system down to an art now. Two thin merino layers under my softshell on the approach, add a thick merino layer with thumbloops, and fleece, under the insulated softshell when I get to the base. Down jacket, and happy pants if needed. Thick merino balaclava is my latest weapon against the cold. And it makes me look like a ninja. I can get away with softshells and down in the Rockies but at home on the Wet Coast, it's full goretex and primaloft. Climbing ice in the rain, well…I take what I can get. Wish I could have stayed and climbed for another month…the "have to go to work" thing cuts into my climbing time. Must fix this…
Hi Will. I also live and ice climb in Finland and the anonymous chap is clearly just hard, because I agree that below -20 it just really isn't any fun. We had a really cold spell in February, but here around Helsinki, -25 is very cold. Up north and inland, obviously it gets colder. My reflections on climbing at -25 here: http://lightfromthenorth.blogspot.com/2010/01/things-that-we-forgot-when-it-was-warm.html
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