Conditions look good to climb next weekend. I would suggest Hall's Harbour, probably left if lots of people, or right if looking for some long and hard ice. How many are interested? Post a reply here if you are, so we can get a feel for numbers and experience. Spread the word, it is worth the day out.
The drill is this:
- meet at Steve-O-Reno's coffee shop on Brunswick Street in Halifax, one block north of Spring Garden, arriving when it opens at 8:00 a.m.. You can make alternate arrangements via email to me at mcveypc@gov.ns.ca and mcmac@hfx.eastlink.ca
- car pool from Steve-O-Reno's, leaving at 8:15 a.m. sharp. Please consider pitching in for gas if you can, but don't worry if you can't. Please email me if you can't possibly get there for 8:00 a.m..
- you will not be home before about 7:00 p.m., unless you make arrangements to come back earlier. We climb until dark, high tide, or total pump sets in.
- bring personal gear to stay warm in cold weather, plus water and food. It is cold and breezy on the Bay of Fundy, so don't be fooled by Halifax conditions. A face mask never hurts. Cotton kills, etc. (see Teth's post).
- if you have ice or general climbing gear, bring it. Climbers should bring or arrange to share a helmet, boots, ice picks, harness. No rock protection required. Long slings (10m +) won't go to waste, if you have them.
- good gloves are a must for climbing, and bring some warm fleeze mitts or gloves, in case your primary pair gets wet (water continues to flow well below zero).
- the weather looks good for the week, but if things go to rat flowers on the weekend (warm, wet weather), we may have to scratch or move the day to Saturday. Please watch this site for changes, which may arise up until Saturday evening.
As for the liability stuff, please note that Ice Days are not instructional courses, and CNS does not ensure or insure you in any way again harm. There are real risks in ice climbing (particularly from ice or rock fall), but we each do our best to keep each other safe as members of a climbing community. It is strictly a peer-safety, "no lifeguard in the tower" event.
The format is top-roping at known locations, with more experienced ice climbers setting up the anchors, demonstrating climbing and belaying. Everyone there that day take turns climbing on multiple top-ropes, with routes of different difficulty. Lead climbing is done by those that want to and believe they are up to the task. Complete novices are welcome to top-rope, but some knowledge of basic climbing hardware (ie harnesses, tie in) is necessary. Some areas require a rappel in or climb out (or walk around and early departure), but most are very accessible.
CNS owns ropes, helmets (three), crampons (two pairs) and ice axes (one pair). Individuals attending often have extra gear, and lend gear as needed (I have two extra harnesses and a spare helmet, for example). The CNS alpine crampons fit most rigid/steel shank hiking boots, and the step-ins many plastic ski boots and all plastic climbing boots. I believe MEC still rents plastics.
Hope to see you there! email me for more info, with questions, or to say you are coming, so we will know to look out for you.
Peter McVey (CNS Board Member and Ice Days Organizer)