percious
Well-known member
Friday I managed to sneak out of work at 2:30, and after picking up my forgotten helmet in manchester, ct I was on my way. I met Guy(Giggy) in Framingham, and we headed north together. I was glad he was driving, we hit some nasty traffic, and I had a hard week. No medicine better than hard mountain climbing.
Soon we found ourselves at Lyon's Hostel in Twin Mountain, with a room with eau-deux-ammonia. Oh well, it was a clean place to sleep! We went over to the common kitchen area, and slowly but surely everyone there admitted to being VFTT undercover agents. I forgot all the names, but Stu was especially pleasant to share conversation, and I was given an excellent meatball by UNFROZENCAVEMAN. I futher discussed the next days plans with BigEarl. Jeff arrived and we discussed optoins for the next day before finally heading off to bed for 5 hours and 45 minutes of sleep.
Everyone worked like clockwork in the morning, and we were ready to depart from Pinkam notch at 6:39. Our plan was to head up to the ravines, and see if there was anything safe enough to climb.
Jeff set out a break-neck pace, bare-sneakering his way to Harvard cabin. We climbed 1500 feet, and 2 miles in less than 3/4 of a mile, arriving at the avalanche conditions sign in good spirits under sunny skies. To my delight I saw the ranger walking over with a whole handful of green signs, and no red. With low avalanche conditions for the entire of Huntington Ravine, we would have our choice of climbs.
(cont.)
Soon we found ourselves at Lyon's Hostel in Twin Mountain, with a room with eau-deux-ammonia. Oh well, it was a clean place to sleep! We went over to the common kitchen area, and slowly but surely everyone there admitted to being VFTT undercover agents. I forgot all the names, but Stu was especially pleasant to share conversation, and I was given an excellent meatball by UNFROZENCAVEMAN. I futher discussed the next days plans with BigEarl. Jeff arrived and we discussed optoins for the next day before finally heading off to bed for 5 hours and 45 minutes of sleep.
Everyone worked like clockwork in the morning, and we were ready to depart from Pinkam notch at 6:39. Our plan was to head up to the ravines, and see if there was anything safe enough to climb.
Jeff set out a break-neck pace, bare-sneakering his way to Harvard cabin. We climbed 1500 feet, and 2 miles in less than 3/4 of a mile, arriving at the avalanche conditions sign in good spirits under sunny skies. To my delight I saw the ranger walking over with a whole handful of green signs, and no red. With low avalanche conditions for the entire of Huntington Ravine, we would have our choice of climbs.
(cont.)
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