Okay, Sunday it is. Let us meet as follows:
(1) at 8:30 a.m. at Steve-O-Renos Coffee Shop on Brunswick Street & Doyle, which is just north of Spring Garden, behind the central library, departing there a few minutes after; and
(2) at the Kearney Lake Road / Hwy 102 Junction, Tim Horton's, at 9:00 a.m., departing there a few minutes after.
This allows people to leave unnecessary cars at one of these locations. If you are picking people up elsewhere before then, and have room for more, please work out the timing in advance so you can be at one or both of these locations, to take more.
I have room for two more people, confortably, assuming Parker is riding shotgun in my vehicle. Sandrine, I can pick you up at your place, around 8:45 a.m., if this works for you?
Organization:
Anyone who does not have a vehicle, please post here, or email me at
mcmac@hfx.eastlink.ca, if you need a ride. You can also phone me at 453-6610, but keep in mind what time a traditional, nuclear family might go to bed at night (not necessarily the same time as a climber might).
Conan: can you please throw the CNS crampons, tool, and a couple of helmets in your truck, assuming it is okay for us to use this stuff? Crampons, especially the strap on ones, are most important. Long slings and ropes would be great as well.
Safety/Risk:
This is an "everyone is welcome, but it is for climbers" event. So, you should be able to put on a harness, tie in to a rope, adjust a helmet, as these are all necessary skills.
Everyone who attends is helpful, friendly, and willing to share experience and knowledge, in a pleasant manner, in my experience. Please come if you have climbed indoors, outside, but never on ice, and bring a friend, even if they just want to watch or give it a try.
However, this is just a group of climbers, going ice climbing and inviting along people interested. No organization is running this program, and there is no formal teaching or training going on. You are voluntarily assuming all risk by attending.
Ice climbing is inherently dangerous, like all climbing, but with sharp, pointy things in your hands and on your feet, and with the surface you are climbing on inherently unstable and prone to either make you slip and plunge to your death (if you are standing at the top), or break off and fall on you, while climbing, standing around or belaying.
Please bring a helmet, or borrow one when near the ice face. Please stay away from the top of the climbs, unless you are experienced with ice climbing, wearing crampons, and tied in to a safety line. Please watch for ice fall at all times, and call out any ice you knock off while climbing, by shouting either "ice" or "glace", as is your persuasion.
Let's get on some ice, folks. The clock is ticking on the season.