Posts Tagged ‘guide’

Moores Wall NC Rock Climbing

April 3rd, 2009 | Posted by: brandon

Moore’s Wall, located in Danbury NC, is often named the Gateway to the Mountains, as it is the closest cliff to eastern North Carolina. It boasts of 250 foot walls that host some of the best routes in North Carolina. On this trip, climbing on top rope, participants will have the opportunity to climb roofs, chimneys, cracks and everything in between, up to 200 feet off the ground, due to the versatile nature of the cliff. No experience is necessary.

Travel Information

Group will meet at Moores Wall Parking Lot at 9:00am. If clients are travelling from the Raleigh/Durham area, carpooling can be arranged. The trip will conclude at 6:00PM.

To sign up for this trip, or for more information, please fill out the following form.

New Hampshire Rock Climbing

March 29th, 2009 | Posted by: admin

New Hampshire is home to some of the best climbing in the country. The amount of climbing and the proximity of world-class climbing areas to each other, makes it the ideal place to spend a long weekend rock climbing.

Cannon Cliff contains the only real big wall climbing on the east coast. With spectacular routes that can take up to two days, most can be done in a half day and even alot of one or two pitch climbs. This area is extensive with lots of unexplored rock on both sides of the valley and some of the United States oldest rock climbs.

Cathedral is New Hampshire’s best trad climbing destinations. Here you can enjoy a wide variety of climbing.

The cliffs of Cathedral Ledge, Whitehorse Ledge, Cannon Cliff, and numerous others are home to hundreds of moderate routes that will thrill climbers of any experience level. Come join us on this New Hampshire Climbing Weekend!

Equipment/Misc. Items

All technical climbing equipment will be provided, including harnesses, shoes, and helmets.

Travel Information:

The closest town to our climbing areas is North Conway NH. If you are flying, Manchester NH is the airport that you should fly in to. Depending on where you are traveling from, carpooling may be available with guides and/or other clients.

Itinerary:

Thursday:

  • Meet at 10:00am in North Conway

Friday:

  • Climbing at Cathedral Ledge

Saturday:

  • Multipitch guided climbs at Cannon Cliff

Sunday:

  • Climbing at Whitehorse Ledge, Trip ending at approximately 5:00PM

For a climbing packing list, see the Forms and Resources section of our website.

To sign up for the trip, or for more information, please fill out the following form:

Lindsay Fixmer’s Red Rocks Trip Report

March 19th, 2009 | Posted by: brandon

Lindsay Fixmer, one of our guides, just returned from a personal climbing trip to Red Rock Canyon, NV. Here is her trip report!

I start all my trips, as I started this past excursion, with a tick list: the ‘must-do’s’ in line with my immediate goals keeping in consideration that the conditions are right: weather, mental and physical preparedness, partner’s agenda, etc.
Since my climbing partner, Karsten, and I are both in ‘training’ mode for AMGA courses and exams and with guiding at the forefront of our minds, our goals and focus reflect these intentions and drive.  We both set out to do as many long routes as our bodies could handle on the trip.  This means all-day routes involving tricky route finding and well over one hour skirts to and from the route: walk-offs, 4th and 5th class approaches, and looking at these from a guiding perspective: risk management and client care.

We found ourselves wearing down the Oak Creek, Pine Creek, and Black Velvet Canyon paths regularly with classic lines such as Nightcrawler to Hourglass Diversion, Community Pillar, Triassic Sands, Hot Fudge Thursday, and being blown off the descent of Black Orpheus with 60 to 70mph winds.  This trip proved to be one of the windiest and coldest Red Rock trips I’ve ever been on: one day Karsten and I (as well as the party above us) were literally blown off Levitation 29.  I will say this: it was probably excellent training for me to have to deal with frozen hands and feet: overcoming uncomfortable (to a certain extent), can only strengthen oneself.

What I really love about longer climbing trips (over 1 week) is the learning process one goes through: and it’s different on each trip because the set-up varies.  Whether in a new area, on new routes, with a different climbing partner, how physically and mentally fit you are, adverse weather conditions… all these factors add in to the equation of what you accomplish and learn in that time.  And the more trips you take, the different areas you see and climb at, and covering vast terrains, you hone your route finding skills, better adapt to changes, better prepare your day’s schedule, strengthen your climbing on-sighting ability, and improve your knowledge and efficiency in a difficult, demanding setting (which I think is imperative with regards to guiding).

The return from the trip is always the hardest part; especially when your climbing partner gets to stay!  Alas, all good things must come to end … right?  Or do they really need to?  I say, no.  This reasoning is why I’ll be back in Vegas at the end of March to get in four more long days of excellent climbing on the bullet sandstone (and not so bullet, depending on what route you choose) of Red Rocks.  Good thing flights to Vegas are cheap!  Forget the gambling, it’s time to rope up again.

Ascent Adventure Consultants: Bringing Adventure to Life!