I'm looking for an ice ax training class. Any suggestions for a class in the near future? thanks.
Ice axes have three sharp points, any of which can injure or kill you.I've been watching youtube videos and I really wonder about the effectiveness of this piece of equipment to arrest falls without impaling oneself! One video guy said he has practiced with the device with over 1000 falls/slides - something I suspect would be necessary for effective use.
Good suggestion. In fact I would go so far as to say skip the course and go with a friend to a good spot and just practice, bringing along a copy of the aforementioned passage. An instructor can coach you and tell you you're doing it wrong but so can a friend who's watching and working on the technique themselves. Plus it is nice to have someone hold your legs while you get ready for the on your back, head-first slide which is a little unnerving. Maybe save the $$ and use it towards something like an advanced crampon technique workshop. Unless taking a course is mandatory???Beth, while waiting to take a course, see if you can pick up a copy of 'Mountaineering - The Freedom of the Hills'. Wonderful source of information regarding all sorts of hiking and climbing information, including a very usesful section section on use of ice axes with some nice drawings to illustrate what is being described in the text.
Alan
I'm looking for an ice ax training class. Any suggestions for a class in the near future? thanks.
I don't mean to thread drift since Beth has reiterated the desire to take a course. I've taken a 5 day mountaineering course as well and the points the guides made I could easily point out as I walked back upslope watching other people work on self-arrest, but it certainly helped having read Freedom... cover to cover beforehand. Self-arrest is not rocket science. If you're in head first on your stomach and you have no clue what you're doing (read: haven't spent 30 min reading Freedom or looked it up on youtube) and throw your axe in front of yourself instead of off to the side, it's faaaairly easy to spot and critique. Finer points (like flexed arms at < 90 degrees, close to the core) also become intuitive after just a few iterations. There is an assumed base-level of knowledge, you're not starting with nothing--I hope. You're not learning it from a friend, you're taking the initiative and learning it yourself--just getting critique from a friend.Beth, I took a mountaineering class years ago in NZ. Learning to use an ice axe was one of the first things we did. It does take practice, but after a few tries, you should be able to fling yourself down a slope and stop yourself fairly readily. The trick is to do it before you get going too fast, which happens quickly, and keep your feet up, so you don't catch a crampon and cartwheel down the hill. Easier said than done, but not impossibly hard.
However, I disagree with the "learn it from a friend" approach recommended above. That assumes he/she actually knows what they are doing and how would you know that if you know nothing to start with?
Components of instruction include use of crampons, use of the ice axe, glissading, self-arrest, ice climbing, snow climbing, snow & ice anchors, avalanche awareness and an ascent of Mt. Washington.
Ice axes have three sharp points, any of which can injure or kill you.
On the other hand, an axe can be used to cut steps (often neglected these days...) or be used to stabilize you on steep terrain. And if you do fall, it is the best tool short of a rope for stopping your fall.
Doug
I took the AMC course. At the time it was called "Winter Mountain Skills II" and involved going up into Tuckerman Ravine and learning how to self-arrest (as well as crampon technique and other goodies). Instruction as well as practicum: after being taught how to recover from each type of fall, we would throw ourselves down a snow slope in each orientation combination of head & feet first, prone & supine, and attempt arrest from that position using what we'd just learned. Each position requires a different move. It was very educational and a lot of fun, too. It included meals and lodging at Pinkham. It was a good course.
Looks like this may be the current version, I recommend calling and asking about the details:
http://activities.outdoors.org/search/index.cfm/action/details/id/63985
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