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• #1177
I like my OR Ferrosi pants. They come in a few different leg lengths and they have a thigh pocket which isn't a bulky cargo style, but is big enough for a phone.
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• #1178
rookie error
Agreed.
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• #1180
Amazing feat!!
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• #1182
Those are actually the ones I meant to post. Dammit.
Very durable.
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• #1184
Spent the day doing the Stanage VS challenge. All the starred VS’s from the 1989 guide, 36 routes, 500m+. Absolutely spanked now!
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• #1185
Nice. Been glad to finally meet up with mates and wander around again.
Ilkley Moor yesterday with an old friend. Off to Hebden tomorrow to lead a walk for the MeetUp group.
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• #1186
Everyone at the crag was so psyched. Probably my best day climbing ever tbh.
Almost every route was notably good. So many bangers. So many cracks. Ahhhh. Rocks. -
• #1187
Some great views and perfect weather at Black Hill in the Peak District today.
3 Attachments
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• #1188
Ultralight is over. Back to kitchen sink carries!
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• #1189
Was never impressed with the ultralight phase. It also has many similarities to 100kg MAMILS buying superlight carbon bikes to save weight on climbs.
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• #1190
Ultralight never really took off in the mountaineering world. I mean sure, the lighter your pack the better but somehow shaving a few grams here and there has less meaning when you're also carrying a 50m length of rope and a full set of safety gear.
Always one eye on pack weight but never at the compromise of comfort or safety. Obviously generalising there...always going to be some weight weenies.
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• #1191
Cutting the handle in half on the toothbrush... 😏
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• #1192
Ditching your crampon bag and wondering why your super expensive lightweight pack tears to shreds in only a handful of uses.
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• #1193
🤣
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• #1194
Ha. I’ve got many friends who are militant about shaving weight off for alpine routes - cutting straps off packs, skinniest ropes possible, minimal racks with the lightest hardware. Managing to save a few kilos in pack weight definitely makes a difference when climbing, but the law of diminishing returns definitely applies.
Doesn’t appeal to me. I like having plenty food, water and warmth. But I don’t climb anywhere near as hard as my weight obsessed mental pals.
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• #1195
Bit of a boring question (perhaps) but having a new baby means it’s needed... Any opinions on the best 2 or so hour walks around Keswick? That’s about the max my wife and I can leave her in the care of grandparents!
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• #1196
If you got a car, you’ll get to the bottom of Cat Bells and get up, enjoy the view and get back within two hours.
Link for ref - you won’t have time to do the circular route I wouldn’t have thought.
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• #1197
Waking up with ice on my sleeping bag, near Plym Head.
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• #1198
Plonkers.
If they read how much more useful it is to shave weight off your boots rather than off your pack they'd be grinding the soles down!
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• #1199
I mean, these are folk with ascents of Freerider, the Colton-Mac, Eiger North Face etc.
And they definitely wear the lightest boots they can get away with. They were all wearing Scarpa Phatoms and other fancy euro looking things while the rest of us were still lugging around our Nepal Extremes (I doubt I’ll ever replace mine!).
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• #1200
I think I read that 10g shaved from your boots has x5 the benefit of 10g shaved from your pack.
Are these guys paying for their own kit? There's a big difference between what the few elite alpinists I know carry when working and when having fun. I.e if they're paying for it, they are much less worried about weight.
One guide I know is into retro gear. His general purpose ice axe is a thing of hand forged steel beauty.
I've been wearing the Terrex Snowpitch COLD.RDY boots over the Winter and very very impressed.
So much lighter than my old Meindl. Comfortable, light, decent rand.
Wouldn't test them with anything beyond easy scrambles, general hillwalking though