Monday, December 6, 2021

McMurdo Hut - Early Season Ski Touring

Heading out to McMurdo this year, it was either going to be all time deep pow or absolutely horrendous due to a recent rain event up to 2200m days before. What we encountered were some of the most challenging and terrible backcountry conditions I have ever skied, a disastrously messy hummus explosion and we almost ended up spending a night in the car in Kicking Horse Canyon. Despite the struggles, we had an excellent weekend with our new friends, ate lots of gourmet cheese and got to escape reality for a few days.
"10/10 would recommend"
Deceptive pillows - look fluffy, all crust

Monday, November 22, 2021

Southwest Utah Mountain Biking - St. George, Hurricane and Virgin

Utah is famous for its epic slick rock, mesa-top mountain bike trails and desert towers. When we started planning a riding trip to Utah this fall everyone assumed we were heading to Moab, the winter mountain bike mecca for Canadians looking to escape the snow. Most people had never heard of St. George, and were surprised to hear that it neighbours the town of Virgin, home to Red Bull Rampage. Southern Utah is a mountain bike destination in it's own right and is worth a visit for those looking for fun, technical desert riding.
Riding rock slabs on Gooseberry Mesa

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

One Day in Zion National Park - Angel's Landing and the Narrows

A November trip to Southwest Utah was an excellent getaway from shoulder season in Canada. Although our trip was focused on mountain biking, Zion National Park made a perfect day trip from our basecamp in Hurricane and gave us a change of pace from big days in the saddle. We only had one day to explore the park so we decided to ignore the conventional advice of one hike per day and tackled the two most popular hikes in the park, Angel's Landing and the Narrows, in one tiring push. If we had more time, we would have loved to check out the West Rim Trail and some of the canyoning routes but those will have to wait for next visit.
Happy hikers

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Northover Ridge

Taking it all in from Northover Ridge
Distance: 33km
Elevation: ~1400m
Time: 14hrs (over 3 days)

Peter, Kristina, Kyle and I hiked Northover Ridge as a 3 day backpacking trip this past weekend. We completed the 33km loop in the counter-clockwise direction, camping at Three Isle Lake and Aster Lake. It was a beautiful fall weekend in the Rockies, complete with yellow larches, blue skies and a skiff of snow on the peaks. We were pretty lucky to be able to do this trail so late in the season and were rewarded with endless mountain views, surprising warm weather and very few people on the trail. As a result, we took LOTS of pictures.

Monday, September 27, 2021

Whistler's Four Corners

If you search for the Four Corners of Whistler on Trailforks, you will find a 100km, 5000m elevation ride that hits the "four corners" of Whistler (north, south, east and west). The route includes a sample of the many amazing black and double black trails in the Whistler valley network; Lord of the Squirrels, Zanarchy/Gargamel, Dark Crystal and Ride Don't Slide. To do it properly, you need to pedal it all in a day, which would take some serious fitness! Good timing is also important as Lord of the Squirrels is only open for a short window every year based on snow and the trail builders ask that you do not ride Dark Crystal when it is wet.
Pedaling up Blackcomb to ride our 4th corner - Dark Crystal

Monday, September 13, 2021

Return to Waterton Part 2: Carthew-Alderson Hike

Distance: 20km
Elevation: 997m
One way hike 
(requires shuttle or car drop at Cameron Lake)
Morning coffee on the Cameron Lake dock
The Carthew-Alderson trail is a one-way hike from Cameron Lake back to the Waterton Townsite. This is probably my favourite day hike because of the constantly changing vistas, multiple alpine lakes and opportunities for small detours to summit Mt. Carthew or its small subpeak. I also love that you get all of your elevation out of the way at the beginning of the day, and spend the majority of the hike in the alpine with a long descent to Waterton. You do need to arrange transportation to the trailhead at Cameron Lake. Since we only had one vehicle, we booked a shuttle with Tamarack the night before. Sunday morning we hopped on the bus then hiked back to our car.

Return to Waterton Part 1: Crypt Lake Hike

Distance: 20.5km 
(with ferry to and from Trailhead)
Elevation: 935m
The classic cave section of Crypt Lake Hike
The main tourist season in Waterton ends after Labour Day. If the weather holds, you can access the stunning park without the crowds for a narrow time window before the seasonal employees return home for the winter. The camping reservation system also ends the week after Labour Day so we showed up Thursday night and found a perfect campsite next to the river and a cook-shelter. Waterton is notoriously windy and a sheltered site is a must. Even early in September it gets cold at night so having access to the cook shelter's wood stove (bring your own wood) was a bonus and a great place to meet other campers who joined us around the stove to cook and swap stories.