Hueco Rock Ranch Opens and Giveaway Contest

Hueco Tanks (Alex Briseño 2012)

This Thursday is a big day and I want to help you and the American Alpine Club celebrate. When I heard the news initially, I didn’t care. I wasn’t focused on bouldering destinations. Yet, Hueco Tanks has taken my imagination.

As someone that has emphasized ice climbing and dreamed of first ascents in Alaska, climbing outside El Paso and staying at the Hueco Rock Ranch didn’t interest me. But living in the Mid-Atlantic for work — and enduring my first real Category-level hurricane — I’ve had to adapt to other kinds of climbing. And strangely, the appeal of rock destinations — including Hueco Tanks — has taken on a whole new realm of bright thoughts of opportunity, fun and exploration.

However, I wouldn’t have had my attention drawn to it so much these last few months if it hadn’t been for the AAC’s purchase of the Hueco Rock Ranch and all of the publicity around it. I’ve been lured in and I have learned more about Hueco Tanks’ natural features and how the destination got its name, about the preservation of the native art on the stone and the ranch’s founder and builder, Todd Skinner.

(Lauren Fan 2006)

Here’s the part to celebrate: This Thursday, November 1st, the Hueco Rock Ranch reopens for business under the management of the AAC. It will remain an inexpensive shelter for climbers for a long time to come. It will keep you off the ground , access to a shower and a place to share some beers and talk about the day’s work. I spoke with Trish Boomhower of the AAC staff and she says there has been a “TON” of work done on the house and additional work on the barn will be done soon too.

Now, here is the contest: It’s a raffle. Earlier this year, the AAC held a membership drive to celebrate the acquisition of the ranch. Everyone that joined that day received a commemorative tee shirt. If you already have your tee, great, but I am raffling off one “Hueco Rock Ranch / It Lives” (your size, courtesy of the AAC) to one of my followers on Facebook or Twitter. Followers on Facebook get two entries and Twitter followers get one — follow The Suburban Mountaineer on both and you’ll get three entries. Contest ends Monday, November 5th so enter now!

Click Here to Enter the Hueco Rock Ranch Tee Contest

Good luck, I’ll talk to you on Facebook and/or Twitter. Maybe we can meet at the ranch one day and talk about how we never thought we’d go bouldering.

Hero Climbers

Climbing outside the box (FullaT 2010)

The other morning I went to the American Alpine Club website, as I often do, to search for entries about a particular topic — in this case the Revelation Mountains in Alaska — through the American Alpine Journal. Before I got to that I clicked on the new Guide to Membership page about the booklets that are on their way to members’ mailboxes now. I was surprised and flattered to see myself on page five alongside Jim Davidson, Emily Harrington and several other reputable AAC members — all climbers I admire.

A couple days later, I received notes from a few fellow AAC members that saw me in the other mailing that arrived this week, which is soliciting contributions to the AAC and its Henry S. Hall, Jr. American Alpine Club Library. I appreciated the messages!

Mt. Shuksan (Derek Farmer 2011)

I have to admit, I think it is really neat to be part of these publications to promote the AAC. The neatest part isn’t even being labeled a member — there are far, far more accomplished and interesting climbers than me. Rather, it’s a thrill to be among theses other AAC members, like Bayard Russel, Mike Libecki, Abbey Smith, Jason McDonald, Conor Smyth, Chris Serenari, and Chris Kendzierski in addition to Jim and Emily. I probably sound like a groupie.

I write this blog because I am a fan of other climbers. The mountains are made more interesting because of what you accomplish there and the stories you come back to tell. So to be alongside these climbers and associated with the other members of the AAC, well, the honor is all mine!

On another subject, I just started reading Freedom Climbers by Bernadette McDonald for myself, at long last. I’ll also be catching up on Alpinist 38 and I just got the latest issue of Climbing  in the mail. A new mountaineering book collectors group that I recently joined just started meeting this past week too. Lot’s going on and I’m sure there will be more to share about climbing, mountain literature and finding escapes from the mundane parts of Peaklessburg.

If you enjoyed this brief update, please consider following the Suburban Mountaineer on Facebook or Twitter. I’ll cover a lot more about human accomplishment in the mountains later and share other information on the social networking sites. Happy reading and carpe climb ‘em!

Dragons Slayed and McDonald Awarded

Dreaming by h.koppdelaney (2008)

The American Alpine Club Benefit Dinner was held in Boston at the beginning of the month. It’s nice to have it on the east coast now and then. Edelweiss and I talked about attending, but we had a lot of excuses — top of the list was taking care of our new Wunderkind. So I am grateful to a few people associated with the AAC for helping me live vicariously once again from my cage in Peaklessburg.

The featured event of the evening was the celebration of the first ascent of Saser Kangri II (24,665ft./7,518m.), which was the second highest unclimbed peak in the world, located in the greater Himalaya of Northern India. The American team ascended the southwest face alpine style to establish The Old Breed (WI4 M3, 1700m), which as reported by Alpinist.com, ”[O]ne of the highest first ascents of a peak in alpine style in the history of mountaineering.”

Perhaps the most significant piece from the accomplishment was that another giant has fallen. It’s sad, in a way, to witness this transition from an age of romance and unknowns on the map to… something else. That something else involves new challenges, but they stem from a level of familiarity. Then again, I think most explorers — climbers included — think they were born too late. The giants are still giants, but they’ve all been tackled.

And this is why there is mountain literature to pass on the stories and see the world as it was perceived then or to put the new challenges in a proper light. In part, for this reason, Bernadette McDonald was given the AAC Literary Award at the dinner.

Freedom Climbers (Bryan Rafferty 2012)

Bernadette McDonald has written several books on mountaineering, including one recently to great acclaim. Freedom Climbers is about Polish alpinists that dominated high altitude climbing in the 1970s and 80s. It has received other significant awards, including at her native Banff Mountain Film & Book Festival, the Boardman Tasker in the United Kingdom and now at the AAC Benefit Dinner.

From all of these reports, McDonald’s work is both insightful and appears to strike the cord that appeals to both mountaineering experts and those that crave a good adventure story. However, she is also telling a story of a strong people that has often gone unrecognized; the Poles have faced great political and social adversity in the 20th Century and yet they excelled in the hills.

Bernadette McDonald having received the AAC Literary Award (Bryan Rafferty 2012)

Today, the Polish alpinists are continuing to work at their goal of climbing all of the 8,000 meter peaks in the Himalaya in winter — in fact, Artur Hajzer’s team just summitted Gasherbrum I last week! The leader of their alpine club set forth a mandate that they grab those first winter ascents for the good of national pride and for being a role model to their youth. The grand record of all 14 is out now, but the quest continues.

Thanks for dropping by again. If you enjoyed this post, please consider following the Suburban Mountaineer on Facebook or Twitter, if you haven’t already. Happy reading and carpe climb ‘em!

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