Dave Watson Story on GearJunkie.com

October 26th, 2009 by graham

More coverage rolling through on Dave Watson’s incredible turns on K2 this summer, with a story from GearJunkie.com.  Stephen’s story on Dave fills in a little more of the descriptive detail… the conditions, the difficulty, the exposure, along with more photos:

In August on K2, as the sun rose over the Karakoram Range, Watson and his team worked upward on the face. They kicked steps and adjusted oxygen masks. Watson had a ski pole in one hand, its handle outfitted with an ice ax blade for grip.

The group climbed for hours, pushing past 27,400 feet. No one had yet made the top of K2 in 2009. By noon, Watson and his team were realizing they might not see the summit either.

Chest-deep snow made progress similar to “swimming uphill,” Watson said.

At 2:30pm, encrusted with ice and exhausted, Watson looked down the mountain to see a climbing partner put a gloved hand to his throat, slicing it sideways in signal…

For the rest of the story, click over and keep reading at Gear Junkie.com, and check out the photo gallery from K2 as well.

Dave Watson on K2

October 15th, 2009 by graham

It’s fall in Seattle, with gray skies and rain pouring down this week… snow won’t be far behind. Checking through the news recently, we caught this newscast from Minnesota reporting on Karhu athlete Dave Watson’s ski tracks on K2 this summer.

Here’s a link to the article as well, and make sure to visit Dave’s new site with photos and stories: www.k2tracks.com.

Turning the Corner – Waves and Winter

September 16th, 2009 by graham

We’ve turned the corner. That crisp feel is in the air, the wet chill early in the morning and evening. Daytime 70s are diving into the mid-30s in the mountains at night, and the frost is getting heavier. Feeling winter on the way? The first magazine issues are out for the season, films are making the opening rounds in another month or so, it’s all just around the corner. Here’s a little fall feel from Brian Mohr to drive those dreams in the meantime…

Waves and Winter
by Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson

Our thoughts often go to the deepest, fluffiest powder days when we watch the tops of breaking waves get blown back to sea by a strong offshore breeze. Maybe the wind reminds us of Old Man Winter’s legendary howl and roar. Or perhaps surfing among these waves – floating in that fluid ocean as the spray of peeling waves rains on our heads – gives us the same feelings we have when gliding in a snowstorm down a powder-coated mountainside.

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Ultimately, it is the simple beauty witnessed on both occasions that makes the connection for us. Be it the the wind-blown spray of breaking waves or the billowing clouds of snow behind the descending skier/rider, there is something undeniably surreal and powerful and spectacular going on here…

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Here’s to a fun fall surf season…and an snowy winter ahead!

Brian and Emily
Moretown, VT
www.EmberPhoto.com

The Freeheel Life Trailer

August 19th, 2009 by graham

Former Karhu athlete Josh Madsen (now editor of Telemark Skier Magazine) just posted up a trailer for the new ski movie that he put together over the last season. Titled “The Freeheel Life,” the movie showcases great turns, awesome pow and some of Madsen’s take on freeheel culture and travels. You’ll see Karhu athlete JT Robinson getting inverted a couple times in the trailer, along with a full cast of talented rippers. Oh, and kudos to the guy who takes a header at 00:46 into the trailer… if you’re going to throw it, might as well throw it hard!

Skiing Elbert

August 17th, 2009 by graham

From the depths of the Himalaya with Dave Watson, Karhu friend Brian Mohr switches gears for some more summer turns in the Rockies…

Skiing Elbert
by Brian Mohr/EmberPhoto

It’s been over a month now since we climbed and skied Colorado’s highest 14er, Mount Elbert, a peak Emily and I hadn’t skied since the late 90s when we still lived in Colorado. Elbert’s north facing drainage is a classic and relatively straight-forward descent, and it tends to hold a long, skiable line well into July. So back in late June, while traveling the scenic route from the Front Range to a wedding in Paonia, we couldn’t resist the idea of skiing Elbert again. Driving through Leadville at sunrise, we scouted Elbert’s north side from a distance. It appeared that there was just barely enough snow to string together a solid descent from the very summit, down along the summit ridge, and over into the depths of the mountain’s north facing drainage.

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With sneakers on our feet and our skis on our backs, we cruised up the mountain via the well-worn trail that climbs away from Half Moon Creek, and by late morning, we were on the summit. We figured we had at least an hour to spare before thunderstorms would become a threat, so we soaked up the clear views across the heart of Colorado’s mountain country.

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A sandwich and then a few passing rain drops had us swapping sneakers for ski boots, and for the next thirty minutes, we savored what would turn out to be our last ski descent of the season. Incredibly, the snow burned out along only one 50m stretch below the summit ridge, and we were able to ski a beautiful line nearly to treeline.

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Think snow.

-Brian

Dave Watson – back to K2

August 14th, 2009 by graham

If you were following WhereWillYouSki.com last summer, you’ll remember Karhu ambassador Dave Watson’s posts from Broad Peak and K2 as part of the K2 Tall Mountain Expedition (posts here). The draw of the Himalaya tugged hard on Dave again, and he went back this summer for another shot at skiing the peak. The trip is drawing to a close, and we’ll have more detail from Dave shortly, but here’s an excerpt of his latest update from EverestNews.com:

Hello all, The expedition is over. The team is in Skardu after the trek out over the Gondogoro La. George, Dave and Ali are sorting and repacking gear in the summer heat. Overall the expedition was very successful, all survived without serious injury.

This summer no one reached the summit of K2. Dave made it the highest on the mountain during the Aug 4 summit push. He and Mingma Sherpa fixed the bottleneck (finished by 9:30am), Louis R (Canada) led the traverse and Dave took over breaking trail with Vassily (Kazakh) belaying. The snow was chest deep, unconsolidated sugar. The slope angle was 45+ and progress was slowed to 20m per hour. At 2:30pm the choice was made to descend. The climbers started down from above the bottleneck with a height of 8350-8400 reached.

Dave downclimbed the rock step below the serac into the bottleneck. While clipped into the rope he took off his crampons and overboots, put on the skis, changed his frozen gloves, loaded the pack, adjusted the length of the ski poles, then dropped in.

He skied the bottleneck to the shoulder and then down to Camp4. The team slept another night at camp4. It was a difficult night with 1 sleeping bag for 3 climbers and super cold temps at nearly 8000m.

In the morning Dave skied to camp3 while George and Ali downclimbed and rapelled. They all decended (rappel/downclimb) the Black Pyramid together to camp2. The team packed up camp and rapelled the House Chimney. Dave then skied from the base of the Chimney down to ABC while George and Ali downclimbed. The team was in Base Camp that
afternoon.

While in base camp, the team regularly talked with Austrian speed climber Christian Stangl, who is a friend of Hans Kammerlander.

Was this the first descent of the bottleneck? Is there proof otherwise?

To read the rest of Dave’s updates, visit EverestNews.com and scroll down to the earlier posts. We at Karhu would like to say how proud we are of Dave’s accomplishments, and to have him safe and sound after such an incredible adventure!

Monday stoke

August 10th, 2009 by graham

The airwaves have been too quiet recently. Blame it on the heat wave that roared through the Pacific Northwest, whose 100+ temps made it hard to think about summer activities, much less winter fun. Thankfully it’s passed now, with moderate mixed weather more reminescent of fall. With the first rainfall in a long time coming today and tomorrow, it’s time for some Monday stoke with one of the summer trailers that just dropped.

Sweetgrass Productions – Signatures

Sweetgrass is coming off last year’s Hand Cut film, and looking good with Signatures. Karhu athletes JT Robinson and Lorenzo Worster traveled to Japan to film with Sweetgrass this winter, and the result looks amazing. Don’t miss out when Signatures comes through your mountain town this fall!

Scufoneda 2009 Video

July 14th, 2009 by graham

Karhu athlete JT Robinson sent us a video to check out this morning from his trip to Italy for the Scufoneda Polartec Meeting, a telemark festival and ski competition. JT took 2nd place in the comp, but spent a lot of the festival freeriding around with the camera crew from a British sports show that was featuring the event. Watch for his green Team 100s and the checkered jacket ripping around the slopes. Nice big slow-mo turn for the finish of the segment, too!

Extra Deep

July 6th, 2009 by graham

From Seattle to Boston, the summer heat wave is in effect, forcing us to log miles on the road and trails in the cooler weather of dawn or dusk. Time for a flashback to cool down…

Extra Deep
by Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson / EmberPhoto.com

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We spent some great time with the next generation of powder hounds this past winter in Vermont, including the snow-loving offspring of Tangie and Terry Barbour, head of Vermont’s Mad River Glen Ski School. Considering the Barbour family’s legendary enthusiasm for skiing, no matter what the weather or snow conditions, it’s no surprise that 7 year old Turner (in the white helmet/red jacket) and 11 year old Carson (black helmet) have become some of our favorite ski partners.  If there is one thing that became clear this season, it was this: skiing powder with kids that know how to ski powder is incredibly fun…unforgettably fun. They seem to love it more than any of us.  And when it’s waist deep for us, it’s over their heads…  More than anything, when the powder turns to edgable ice, breakable crust or a patchwork of dirty corn, grass and moss, their enthusiasm remains unparalleled.

We can all learn something from these Barbour kids…  They’ve got a younger sister, too.  And they just let her off the leash. So stay tuned.

- Brian and Emily

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Kootenay Cold Smoke Festival Video

June 17th, 2009 by graham

If you’ve never been to the Kootenay Cold Smoke Festival, you’re missing out. Calling powderhounds of every kind, Cold Smoke is a four-day celebration of skiing with a strong focus on the backcountry. From the backcountry gear demos to the rando-race, four days of skills clinics, inbounds events, bountiful Whitewater backcountry (reason enough!), and apres-ski parties, Cold Smoke brings a little something of everything. The good folks behind Cold Smoke just sent over their video wrap-up from 2009’s event, and the dates are set for next year. So if you still haven’t made it out to the Kootenays, marks your calendar for next year’s festival on March 5-7, 2010.

Kootenay ColdSmoke Powder Fest 09 from ARC’TERYX on Vimeo.