DayTrip
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 13, 2013
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Been going through all my Winter crap the past week or two and got to wondering why I have a general mountaineering ice axe. Is that really the right tool for hiking in the Northeast with steep, icy trails in the trees for most hikes? I carry it pretty religiously and have used it on a few occasions. In only 1 case did I actually feel like I needed it - a particularly icy day on Whiteface on that "problem ledge" where I could not get up the shoulder high ledge without sticking the point in and hauling myself up (after removing my pack). If I didn't have it I would have turned around (and read in trail reports later that several people turned around there for that exact reason). It worked but I didn't feel it was ideal for what I was trying to do.
The only time I ever really think of using the axe is on steep terrain and it is rarely just a steep, snowy field. It's always flow ice and rocks and trees on a steep trail like Ammo, the Hancocks or similar terrain with high fall potential. You can't plant the spike in that stuff and you can't self arrest on it. Wouldn't an actual axe be more useful with a curved hand grip and guard so you could plant it in the ice, gaps in rocks or hook a tree root and get a secure hand hold while you're adjusting your feet? Out above tree line you could still self arrest with it if you had too.
It seems like a general mountaineering axe is the wrong tool for the job in the Whites. Anyone care to weigh in on that? I see more and more general mountaineering ice axes now on Winter hikers...almost always tied nicely to their packs and not in use. If I recall from past Winter posts it doesn't seem like many people here on VFTT carry one, wear a helmet in this type of terrain, etc.
The only time I ever really think of using the axe is on steep terrain and it is rarely just a steep, snowy field. It's always flow ice and rocks and trees on a steep trail like Ammo, the Hancocks or similar terrain with high fall potential. You can't plant the spike in that stuff and you can't self arrest on it. Wouldn't an actual axe be more useful with a curved hand grip and guard so you could plant it in the ice, gaps in rocks or hook a tree root and get a secure hand hold while you're adjusting your feet? Out above tree line you could still self arrest with it if you had too.
It seems like a general mountaineering axe is the wrong tool for the job in the Whites. Anyone care to weigh in on that? I see more and more general mountaineering ice axes now on Winter hikers...almost always tied nicely to their packs and not in use. If I recall from past Winter posts it doesn't seem like many people here on VFTT carry one, wear a helmet in this type of terrain, etc.