Did you know the Choss Boys are featured in the Oscar-winning documentary "Free Solo" with Alex Honnold directed by Nat Geo photographer and cinematographer Jimmy Chin ???
Here is some food for thought: Jimmy Chin framed Daniel leading the Salathe headwall in the foreground and Alex Honnold rappelling in the background for an entire 20 seconds. Possibly, Daniel looked cooler than Alex Honnold at this moment.
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With the recent popularity of our Thursday night training sessions at our local gym, Wallnuts, we thought we’d make them available here for everyone to check out. In this post, we'll show you our favourite core strength workout. It has been adopted from a book called Training for the New Alpinism by Scott Johnson & Steve House. These guys are some of the pioneers in training for climbing, a science that is still developing as climbing matures from a counter-culture pastime to an Olympic-level sport. |
Hamilton, Ontario
Identical brick houses flank the gridded metropolitan streets of Southern Ontario. The horizon is confined to a few blocks. After living in Hamilton for five months, I (Nick) felt an inkling of suffocation, so I booked a plane ticket home to Newfoundland on a whim, and took a deep breath… is salt-spray in the air?
Friday, 16 February, 2018
My dorso-ventral girth is doubled with the addition of my hiking pack, and its brain rises a full six inches above my own. Crouching like a spelunker, I attempt the low-ceilinged staircase and manage to ascend eight steps before my ski bag rams the door at the top. I curse. Letting go of the carrying straps, I pinch the far end of the bag and advance to the top step. Reaching up, I twist the knob, flooding the passageway with light. Through eight or nine convoluted maneuvers, I finally make my escape from the basement.
Three flights and thirteen hours later, my beaming parents collect me from the bottom of the ‘Arrivals’ escalator in YYT. Dad’s jocular efforts to heft my baggage from the conveyor metastasize into a comedy of errors, drawing chuckles from onlookers. A warm welcome indeed.
We were on a roll.
Bathing in the ice-cold rush of the Chilliwack River and breathing in the alpine air of the Bugaboos had done amazing things to our climbing psyche. Barely a week into our August 2017 outing to British Columbia, Nick and I (Erik) were high off ascents of Mt. Slesse and the Beckey-Chouinard route on South Howser Tower… and we were eager for more. In just a few days our trip would be over. Nick would start grad school; I would be continuing my own studies. But all that meant nothing if we could just fit in one more climb.
Thanks to our climbing friends Robert Jong and Andrew “Toba” Osnatch, we had seen images of the striking prow of Mt. Gimli’s South Ridge. It rises high among the peaks in Valhalla Provincial Park, a small alpine paradise in the splendid Kootenays of interior British Columbia. If an image is worth a thousand words, then an image of a featured mountain in the crystal alpine air of the Rockies is, to a climber, worth a thousand daydreams.
“My God… it’s beautiful… we should climb it… what’s the grade? Can I see the topo? Damn... look at it. What’s the approach like? What’s the recommended rack? How cold is it up there? Let’s go!!”
Monday, 21 August, 2017 - The Bugaboos
Fresh off our ascent of the glorious Northeast buttress of Mount Slesse, Erik, Toba, Jamie (another good friend from NL), and I (Nick) beelined it straight to Brisco, BC where we were eager to make the most of an auspicious alpine forecast at Bugaboo Provincial Park. For myself and Toba this was a return trip to the Bugaboos and we were ecstatic to get back to Applebee Dome campground during the best conditions of the year.
As luck would have it, we happened to time our arrival with a special astronomical event: a solar eclipse. We took it as a sign that the stars were aligning for our stint in the mountains.
Our ascent to Applebee dome coincided with the August 21 solar eclipse. At our latitude, the maximum coverage of the sun was around 85%.
Wednesday, 16 August, 2017 - Squamish Chief Campground
"It's no problem, we just have to make it to Chilliwack. I booked us two Greyhound tickets leaving Thursday at 10AM."
"Ok, so where's the Greyhound station?"
"Don't worry about it Erik... I'll just call Greyhound's customer service and ask them to have the bus pick us up in downtown Squamish. It's a 45 minute walk. Easy."
"Ok, so where's the Greyhound station?"
"Don't worry about it Erik... I'll just call Greyhound's customer service and ask them to have the bus pick us up in downtown Squamish. It's a 45 minute walk. Easy."
Friday, 18 August, 2017 - Highway 99
Turns out I (Nick) had a lesson to learn about Greyhound's customer service. A simple itinerary adjustment could have saved us 2h on the approach to Mount Slesse, but alas, Erik and I were dropped off in downtown Squamish by a friendly climber couple who were casually living the dream life in their sprinter van. We walked for 1h 45m along Highway 99 to arrive at the Greyhound terminal in North Garibaldi, Squamish. A customer service agent had assured me (I asked three times) there was no stop in downtown Squamish. Nevertheless, five minutes after our bus left the terminal, it pulled over in the heart of Squamish, 200m from where the sprinter van dropped us off. | Although Erik was a little miffed about the extra hike, I assuaged his mood with a story I had read on Marc-Andre Leclerc's blog. Just like us, he had packed up his bag, and left directly from work in Squamish to walk to the bus depot, ice axe and helmet clinking in rhythm to his steps. |
Soon enough, Erik and I forgot about our roadside trek. After all, we were finally on our way to Mount Slesse, the cynosure of our expedition, and nothing could stop us.
It all started with a slideshow. March 1, 2017: I (Erik) was sitting in a Rubbermaid chair in an audience of about forty people, staring at an image of Mt Slesse. The event was the Choss Boys' slideshow about their 2016 adventures, and climbers were packed like sardines in the mezzanine area of Wallnuts Climbing Gym in St. John's. Tales of climbing, camaraderie, and occasional badasserie abounded. At this point, though, it was going on close to an hour and quite frankly, my butt was getting sore. My eyes started to glaze over as I looked a butt-shot of Daniel climbing some butt-crack shaped crack somewhere in… was it Arizona? |
And then someone flipped the “On” switch in my brain. Under a title that read “What’s Next for the Choss Boys?” was a photo of the soaring North East Buttress of Mt. Slesse. The image was taken with impossible exactness, with every contrasting relief of the knife-blade North East Buttress etched in perfect detail. I shuddered in my Rubbermaid chair. The steep ridge led directly into a dark, ominous, black headwall of gneiss that towered above neighboring peaks. A plane had crashed into Mt. Slesse in the 1950s, exploding airplane fuselage and body parts all over the mountain, a history that added a sense of tacit foreboding. Nick said he was hoping to climb the peak next summer… “maybe.”
With that, the presentation was over, and a chapter was closed on the Choss Boys' epic adventures. Although I sensed a whole new chapter was just beginning…
With that, the presentation was over, and a chapter was closed on the Choss Boys' epic adventures. Although I sensed a whole new chapter was just beginning…
This post is all about mine and Nick’s climbing adventures in British Columbia during August of 2017. It’s our “prequel,” highlighting some of the planning, training, and preparations that went into our two-week-long tear through the alpine that resulted in successful ascents of two "50 classics," and three stunning mountain summits. So “Read More” and jump into another season of Choss Boys adventures - and stay tuned for three follow-up stories featuring each of the mountains we climbed.
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We are Daniel, David, Nick & Erik.
We climb rocks.
We come from St. John's, Newfoundland - the most Eastern city in North America. We are passionate about climbing, and want to share our adventures and misadventures with YOU.
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