i get by with a little help from my friends
great trip report and pics ! it was a privilege to travel with a great team of friends
many people go through life without experiencing anything like we see on trips like this
it seems easy to take life for granted sometimes ... experiences like this help us realize just how lucky we are
can't thank the team enough for allowing me to tag along on this trip, and for helping me climb out of that crevasse
might have climbed out on my own ... could have climbed down to the bottom, crossing to an edge, then up and out ... or via texas sling, crawling through snow bridges above ... but our best course of action seemed to make the most sense: sit tight, relax and wait for the team to set up a proper z-pulley rescue
had plenty of time to come up with alternate lyrics to "sitting on the dock of the bay" while i was hanging out in the crevasse:
sittin' in a crack in the ice ... watchin' the time roll away
sittin' in a crack in the ice ... waitin' my time
i left my friends up top there ... headed for china yeah
guess i could texas my way out ... or wait here for the z-pulley
looks like nothing's gonna change ... icy walls still look the same
should i drink this mini heiny keg ... or save it for summit day ?
tough to describe what went through my mind as i was falling into that crevasse ...
they say your life flashes before your eyes as you realize your time has come ...
the best-looking snow bridge looked rather grim, but i figured i'd try to skip across it, planning to sink my axe in once i crossed the crevasse
as soon as my crampon touched the snow bridge, it collapsed ... the earth seemed to fall away ... i plunged my axe in deep, hoping it would hold me, but a sinking feeling set in as i realized the snow resembled mashed potatoes ...
"falling! i'm going in!"
random thoughts flooded my mind all at once:
"how deep is this beast, anyway?"
"i hope this crevasse doesn't go all the way to China, because i left my passport in the car"
"i wonder if Giggy and Leaf have practiced the fine art of not stomping on a rope mate's head while wearing crampons, if i drag them in with me"
"does this frozen turd in my pants make my butt look big?"
i looked down into the crevasse as i broke through the snow bridge, hoping to gain some idea of how deep i'd go, but the snow bridge burst into a cloud and blurred my vision ... i tried to self arrest against the blue icy wall, hoping to arrest my fall before i disappeared forever ...
those few seconds really felt like slow motion ... when my fall stopped, i was wedged between blue icy walls, panting hard and fast, briefly testing the tautness of the rope to gain confidence that i wouldn't fall further
a quick look around my new temporary home helped me spot an icy "fin" ... i had to remove my backpack to reach it, and i was eager to climb onto it, feeling as if time was important somehow
i quickly girth hitched a runner to my harness and binered it to my pack, then let my pack slip off my shoulders, hanging below me, while i scrambled onto that icy fin
once i stopped panting, i let the team know i was alright, and we came up with our course of action: pull my pack out using Frodo's rope, which helped clear the lip above, then hang out until the team set up a proper z-pulley
our friend Guinness (who led our Rainier trip in 2005) has a good guide to setting up a z-pulley here:
http://www.highpeaksclimbing.com/Training/ZPulley.htm
the team was at least as calm setting up the z-pulley as i was playing crevasse victim ... they pulled off a textbook crevasse rescue, showing how worthwhile it was to practice ...
funny that Jason mentions Neighbor's Tecumseh report in this thread ... Giggy, Tmax and i first practiced crevasse rescue on Tecumseh's summit in 2005, joking that we'd earned our crevasse rescue certification from Tecumseh Mountaineering Academy
we could have saved time dealing with crevasse rescue, if i had emergency posthole gear with me:
http://outdoors.webshots.com/photo/2648056650099907974jvnhdP
Giggy summed up the Mont Blanc part of the trip well ... i'll post something about the rest of the trip soon, rock climbing in southern France and the Alps, and chillin' like a villain in Chamonix and Annecy
i added rock climbing pics to the Mont Blanc album here:
http://community.webshots.com/user/armtrips