Saturday, July 28, 2012

Memorial Day :: Remembering


My grandfather Rolland Victor Phend, shown in a 1983 photo with his WWI portrait, enlisted in the United States Army on September 19, 1917 as a substitute for a man who had been drafted. He was very proud of the fact that he had enlisted rather than waiting to be drafted. Grandpa was sent overseas shortly after his basic training and served in France with Company C, 309th Engineers. By the time he was discharged on June 19, 1919 he had achieved the rank of Sergeant. Grandpa suffered from the affects of gas poisoning for the remainder of his life, astounding physician's who said he wouldn't live beyond the age of 30 - he passed away on June 18, 1991 just one day before his 98th birthday!

Stories about Grandpa:
  • Two Fellows Home From Camp Taylor
  • Vic Phend Writes From France
  • Grandpa Vic :: a Biography
  • Grandpa Vic and Some Grandkids
  • Grandpa's Candy
Grandpa is buried at South Park Cemetery in Whitley County, Indiana next to his parents and two brothers.

My Grandfather is just one of the many ancestors and relatives who have served their country in the military. The post, The Veterans in my Family, briefly describes my ancestors and their siblings who served during nearly all of the wars in which the United States was involved.

Last year I went through my genealogy database in an attempt to find all relatives that had served in the U. S. military, these are the ones that I know of, I'm sure there are others.
  • War of 1812 and the Civil War
  • Spanish American War and World War I
  • World War II, Korea, and Vietnam
This past Friday, I took my Mother to visit the graves of family members buried in Whitley County, leaving little bouquets along the way. She tires easily, so after taking her back home, I continued my cemetery tour into neighboring Kosciusko County visiting the grave sites of ancestors on my Dad's side of the family. We really couldn't have asked for a nicer day with a cloudless blue sky and temperatures in the upper 70s. It was a perfect day!

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Acadia :: Schoodic Point

Sunday, September 16th - -On the eastern side of Mount Desert Island in Acadia National Park is a popular little inlet known as Thunder Hole. A small cavern below the surface of the water creates a sound similar to thunder when the 'right' waves crash against the rocks. The day that we stopped by to see Thunder Hole, there was no action - the sea was rather calm and the waves were merely lapping the shore.



However, I found a spot out on Schoodic Point that was just as exciting as Thunder Hole. Maybe more so. And it was far less crowded. There wasn't quite the roar of thunder but there were some pretty loud crashes when the 'big ones' hit.






Much like the action of a tsunami, the water would pull away from the shore...





Gain momentum, and crash into the granite walls...





and momentarily fill up the little inlet.








I thought this man was more than a little irresponsible to let his son get so close to the edge. One really big wave and he could have been swept over the edge.





I moved around toward where the man and boy had been, but a little further away from the edge.





Thanks to the capabilities of zoom lenses, I grabbed this shot of a wave smashing into the side of the cliff. It was awesome. And so much fun watching these waves...


Sunday, July 22, 2012

Researching Mount Rainier's Glaciers

Everyday, climbers inquire about thinly covered crevasses, glacier conditions, or that “bergschrund” on top of the Emmons. And we’re here to share what we know about the Emmons, Kautz, Tahoma and other major glaciers on Mount Rainier. But we also wanted to let you know that the NPS is actively monitoring these glaciers in an effort to better understand how the climate is affecting them and how these glaciers are affecting the mountain and the surrounding areas. This is important stuff when you consider that Mount Rainier’s glaciers are a primary water source for many Washingtonians, while at the same time a potential geological threat to communities in the floodplains downstream.

Basic Science Recap:
Glaciers are permanent sheets of flowing ice that erode mountain slopes, carve valleys, and affect the geography of the park. Rainier’s glaciers have an “accumulation zone” (where more snow gathers than melts) and an “ablation zone” (where more snow melts than accumulates). The most recent detailed measurements (1913 to 1994) on Mount Rainier indicate that the combined glacial area has receded by a 1/5th, and that the total volume of glacier mass has decreased by 25%.

The Nisqually and Emmons are part of a long-term monitoring program making them the most scientifically prodded glaciers in the park. The current study is a cooperative venture between Mount Rainier and North Cascades National Parks and includes field measurements of snow depth, snow density, and snow/ice melt. It includes an annual series of terrestrial, aerial and satellite images. To better understand what's going on, researchers place “ablation sticks” (PVC poles) at various elevations and locations on the Emmons, Ingraham and Nisqually Glaciers. In the spring, researchers us a steam drill to sink these stakes into the winter snowpack until they reach the glacier ice. Then throughout the season, researchers measure the snow accumulation and more importantly, the rate of snow melt. This allows them to calculate the net balance of the overall snow and icepack. The graph below shows the results gathered since 2003. As you can see, the overall mass balance of the ice is decreasing.

So why are we sharing this geeky science information? Well, we like it, but also because climbers have been noting the PVC poles buried on the glacier and have asked, “What’s the plastic pipe all about?” Those PVC poles are the measuring sticks. If you keep your eyes peeled on your next summit attempt, you may note one or two of them on the Muir Snowfield, Nisqually, Emmons, or Ingraham Glaciers. If you do see them, please do not disturb or remove them.


For more information on the glacier monitoring being conducted by North Cascades National Park, check their website. And if you’re interested in the historical Mount Rainier glacier studies referenced above, check out the “Glacier and Glacier Changes” homepage on the Mount Rainier website.

Photo contributed and graph by North Cascades researcher Jeanne Wenger.

Friday, July 20, 2012

The Classic Piolet, "Chouinard-Frost"












"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."



Antoine de Saint-Exupery

French writer (1900 - 1944)



A bit about crampons first:



"The whirlwind Oscar Eckenstein (1859 - 1921) broke into this rather quiet environment in the early 20th century.. An engineer, brilliant mountaineer, argumentative and a loner, he published two articles in the Ostereich Alpenzeitung, on the 20th. July 1908 and the 5th. June 1909, detailing the results of his research on the manufacture of crampons, their systematic use and the incredible feats they could perform. In fig.9 illustrates his designs. Eckenstein’s real innovation and its importance doesn’t just lie in the technical perfection of the crampons but rather in the spirit of courage and innovation with which he defined their use..... his major contribution has been that of a moral nature. This ultimately consists in the faith that mountaineers laid in his inventions: nobody dared before him, but afterwards everybody trusted crampons. (Manual d’Alpinisme du C.A.F. 1934)



Our hero bought his plans to the blacksmith at Courmayeur, Henry Grivel – who, even though he was doubtful, made the crampons for the “English gentleman”, who had the undoubtedly had the advantage of being able to pay. Success was immediate, so much so that on the 30th. of June 1912 a competition for “cramponneurs”, between guides and porters, was organized on the Brenva glacier."



More here:

http://www.alpinist.com/doc/web12f/wfeature-eckenstein



But prior toa discussion on the classic piolet, its partner the crampon deserves credit. The design efforts really should have no differences. Less can be more.



Previous Bruno Schullmade a compelling case for the classic axe here:

http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//12/case-for-classic-axe-by-bruno-schull.html



Some greatinfo on the true "classic ice axe"here:



http://elpioletdemadera.blogspot.com//03/blog-post.htmlr










There is more than one classic Piolet!





photo courtesy of elpioletdemadera.blogspot.com/





These days the majority of my own efforts involve a pair of Nomics. But I am fully aware a classic axe is a better tool for moderate mountaineering. Often just the kind of climbs I really like to do.



What follows is a historical account (and hopefully a living history) on the production models of the now classic Chouinard Piolet.



On to the topic of this story.











By several accounts1970was the "magic" year. Terros (Peck/MacInnes' Terrodactyl) and the Piolet (Chouinard's Piolet)were introduced to the public. But that may not be totally accurate. The "magic years"came slowly over the prior40 or so from 1970. Chouinard rightly givesthem credit in his "Climbing Ice" tome.



Forgive me if I ponder and then questiona Californian writing about the history of alpine ice climbing now..... let alone in the 60s and 70's.



Yvon Chouinard tells of having the Charlet factory make him a 55cm curved pick axe at some point duringthe Fall/Winter of 1966. His (YC) and Tom Frost's alpine hammer and rigid crampons were introduced commercially in '67 according to the catalog and the Piolet in '69. So my guess is it took awhile for the Charlet factory to come around. Might be a reason Interalp made the Chouinard Piolet for GPIW. (Great Pacific Iron Works) . Bet there is an interestingstory there.



Doug Robinson sez:

" the catalogdate of introduction of the Piolet is listed as 1969. And by October of that year Yvon delivered to me on the edge of the Palisade Glacier the hickory-handled 70 cm one (and that hand-forged Alpine Hammer) that we put to good use on the V-Notch the next day.......He was very intent on letting me know in no uncertain terms about Scottish primogeniture of the droop. Others listening agreed. May have even said that YC had come through Scotland to take in their development. "



Robinson's recollection was even Chouinard gave credit of his "curve" to the Scots. And that actual production started in '69 on the Piolet. The thought process months prior to the summer of '66.



The ChouinardPiolet became commercially available in the fall of '69 at least in limited quantitiesand was gone forever world wide by late fall of 1978.



From the beginning of production the Piolethada classic curve on the blade and asingle set of teeth at the blade's tip. The 1972 and 1973 catalog/supplement shows teeth only at the tip.



The spring 1974 Great Pacific Ironworks new catalog shows a new set ofteeth by the shaft as well as the original set at the tip. The 1974 news catalog tells ustheextra set of teeth have been added on the pick next to the shaft for climbing waterfalls. This is restatedin the 1975 catalog.



Bit moretrivia for you ;)



"Chouinard and Frost first used hickory wood handles on their tools, but changed to laminated Bamboo in 1972 as it was believed to be lighter, stronger and provided a warmer, better grip than other materials. It was soon superseded by other materials, but the beauty of those early ice axes and tools have endured."



"The Rexilon shaft on Chouinard ice axes was made of a laminate ofbeech ("faggio" in Italian). It was originally used for pole-vaulting poles in the days before fiberglass composites. CAMP used this before bamboo but both were available for a while."



I remember seeing the Piolet in ash (Euro only), hickory, bamboo and Rexilon. By '78/'79 the wood and laminate shafts were no longer imported into the USA. You couldn't buy a wood handled Chouinard piolet in Chamonix by the fall of '78. The hand forged head was now being attached to a synthetic shaft. Although I have seen all of the wood handle materials never seen a ash tool available in the USA. Although I had alater dbl toothed piolet with a hickory handle that I bought in England.



So what is the dealwith the axes only marked CHOUINARD and not CHOUINARD-FROST? At closer inspection it is obvious that the Chouinard-Frost stamp is a two part stamp. Can anyone tell me why the tools were marked with one or both names?



"Frost left the partnership in '75 and shortly after that all the axes were marked CHOUINARD only. '78 catalog clearly shows the new logo on the newest synthetic shafted piolet and the Zero."



Doug Robinson again:



"I think the very earliest Piolets were stamped only CHOUINARD. Then FROST was added. Rumor around the Diamond-C shop was that it was at the insistence of Tom's then-wife, Dorene. That could account for the double stamp, btw. The modest Frost would never have suggested such a thing himself. I always thought it was particularly ironic for his name to show up only on the axes, because of all the hardware that went out of there the axe was mostly YCs design, with the least input from Frost. No question, of course, that the later 70s Piolets, after YC bought out Tom, were stamped only CHOUINARD.



The famous "Diamond-C" mark was on everything else. That too seemed at times ironic. Like on the Stoppers, which Frost and I designed together (and I got to name), with very little input from Yvon, who was partial to Hexes."



I have a couple of old 55s. One in hickory that is a later production axe by the dbl set of teeth in the pick and 3 rivets in the shaft. My earlier 55cm bamboo piolet has one set of teeth and 2 rivets in the shaft and only the Chouinard logo.



Obvious the stamp on all my tools is a two part CHOUINARD...FROST stamping with close inspection. If the production started and ended with a "CHOUINARD" only stamp, it would more easily fit what I see on the tools I have.



The first fiberglass/aluminum shafted tools?



Doug Robinson again:

"Chouinard himself was very active in making the first fiberglass shafts for the Piolet. Driven to it I assume just by breakage. The glass was laid up on an aluminum blank that gave the shape. He was very proud of the used pizza oven he had just installed in the shop to cook the resin. I could see that he liked the technical challenge of getting it all to work. I was writing for a new magazine, a start up called Outside, and did a review."



The first of those axes (fiberglass/aluminum shafts) had hand forged and finished heads fromPremanas on the GPIW fiberglass/aluminum shafts.



I was buying what ever Chouinard came out with new for ice climbing. I had wrongfully assumed each new version would offer some advantage and increase either my abilities or safety on ice.



The early fiberglassZeros in the '78 catalog (that might well have been bamboo painted)turned out to be some what lacking on hard Canadian water fall ice compared to the original bamboo model.



Less than a season into using the new carbon versions I was begging to re-buy my old set of shorter bamboo 50cm Zeros. They also had a shorter spike and came in 50s instead of the 55. It made a difference as did the balance. Most importantly the bambooversions placed with less effortimo.



from Don Lauria:

"Once when conversing with Yvon I asked what he recommended as the ideal shaft length for an ice axe. His answer of 50-60 cm seemed a little short to me so I asked, Why so short? His answer, If 55cm doesn't reach the snow then the slope doesn't warrant using an axe."



Dates of Production?



If youfollow the past catalogs for a historicalreference to dategear, you'll find that sometimes Chouinard and the later GPIWcatalogswere not as up to date as one might have hoped. It could be a long time long time before actual delivery to the retailers. In the '70s it was common in the climbing/outdoorcommunity to use their catalog'sadvertising for a new productpriorto a public release. And soem times it was never released in that form or in very small numbers! Chouinard became notorious about that sort of thing.



Muchof this info came from public conversations on Supertopo. There is atrue wealth of historical info. More here:



http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/382806/Classic-Ice-Primer-Chouinard-Catalog-1968



http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.php?topic_id=762638



http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/1191047/Assistance-Needed-Identifying-Old-Chouinard-Frost-Piolet



A short photo essay ofthe Chouinard-Frost axe:



This is a mid production laminated bamboo model. Two rivets head to handle, single set of teeth and the double stamp of "Chouinard Frost". Between 1970 and Spring 1975 time frame. I bought my first shown lower in the photos in 1973. I suspect this one to be of a similar vintage.










The set ofpictures beloware of a 2nd gen (two sets of teeth and 3 rivets in the head/handle and a hickory shaft. By the single stamp of "Chouinard" we know it was one of the last production runs. After Frost left GPIW in '75. So this one was made between Summer of '75 and summer of '78.


















The bottom axe below was one of the last bamboo tools to come from Camp. Head is the same as a Chouinard Zero but other than the Camp markings unmarked. I bought it in the sell bin at Snell's, Chamonixin Sept of 1978.









2nd gen Zero below with the "new"fiberglass shaft with a forged Camp head, Chouinard designed Zero









Don Lauria photo












1st American production shaft witha machine cut and welded head, 1980

Likely the head was cut and welded by SMC in the PNW.






This axe was offered by SMC within months (1980) of Chouinard/GPIW showing it in their catalog with a fiberglass/aluminum handle.It is also a current SMC Himalayan and no question in my mind, the carbon/fiberglassChouinard Zero in a past life. Look closeratwhat follows.











1980 GPIW catalog description of the Zero









The 1980 Zero axe, machine cut and welded with a aluminum/fiberglass shaft.









This onehas an aluminum ferrule and spike. Not a plastic ferrule as listed. The standard Piolet had a aluminum ferrule as well. Adze on both is flat as a pancake, not cupped as suggested.The drop on the pick is the same exact angle as the original 1973 versions. There is no more curve on any Zero (wood or composite shaft)with a fixed pickthan the original standard axes.





and yet another vesrion of the Chouinard Zero from the same time frame






Bottom axe is a Piolet bamboo clone cut as a Zero. The other two are bamboo as well, one new and the other well used.





The '78 catalog shows what I believe are painted bamboo Zeros as carbon fiber and the first carbon fiber piolets with Interalp hand forged heads. But again the ferrules are different than the bamboo production models in that '78 catalog. So I could easilybe mistaken on the "paint job".



Europe got ash,hickory, Rexilon and bamboo Chouinard tools. The Chouinard-Frost logo changed to Chouinard sometime shortlyafter '75 and Frost leaving GPIW. Long before '78 if the catalog typical publish date and when the gear was available was any indication. Catalogs were always months if not years behind current production and availability.



Rexilon is notlaminated ash or hickory from my understanding. Rexilon is not a synthetic but a simple wood laminate. Grivel also used Rexilon for some of their early technical axes from the same time frame, mid '70s. '75 perchance? Below is a mid '70s Rexilon axe.



FWIW I asked the Grivel factory to date this axe's production and were unable past "the mid '70s". Looks a lot like the Chouinard Zero from late '77/'78. Makes one wonder which came first. The short (50/45cm) steeply curved axes were all the rage with the European/English ice climbers in Chamonix by 1977/78. Snowdon Moldings, Charlet Moser, Grivel and Simond all offered a version. If any one has a short Grivel or any of the early short wood versions similar to what is pictured I would be interested in purchasing it.



Simond's Chacal would change ice tools again for ever shortly. More on that below.



















The last Chouinard "copy"?


Interalp/Camp did make a McKinley axe that was similar to the Chouinard Piolet for REI as early as 1980. Close examination shows there are a lot of differences. They had a positive clearance pick, a slightly curved/cupped adze and a ash or Rexilon shaft. 1980 REI catalog shows ash shafted axes. Same big profile Chouinard spike though.





REI McKinley



Rexilon shafted REI McKinley








I have kept my original bamboo and a early, 2 rivet handle duplicate that is in like new, and unused condition. I just never liked the thicker bladed dbl tooth tools. Then or now. Totally different feel and look for me from the earliest Piolets. That and the fact that most every late axeI have seen has a slightly bent pick from the hand forging. Looking at the pick straight on almost all bend slightly to the right. ( right hand forgers) The thicker bladed dbl tooth picks even more so.



New, '73 vintage













Old, with well worn and rewelded/hammer forged teeth and pick end










Fun that so many of us used these tools as our first technical tool. I hada 75cm Stubia previous that was unsuitable for steep water ice. And of course long enough to be less handy. I climbed my first frozen water ice with the Chouinard Piolet pictured in 1973.








A few years later I appreciated the added security and ease of placementon water ice with a Zero axe mated with a Terrodactyl. Later yet I used a Zero axe and a Chacal for pure water ice routes till the spring of '82. The thingI find the most amazing is the wooden handled Piolets were only available for a very short amount of time, between late 1969 and summer of1978. Under 9 years all told.


I cracked the shaft on my original bamboo piolet on a Canadian waterfall back in winter of '76/'77 and then relegated it to guiding for the next decade until I just couldn't justify it any more by late '80s.

Buy the '74/'75 winter season I was using a multitude of new and never ending stream of ice tools. Each and every one modified in some manner to heightentheir performance. The search for the one "best" ice tool still continues.





Crack is the small black line bottom right of the tang.
















The classic Chouinard Piolet spike






2nd gen Rexilon Piolet

























By the mid'80s only the older guides would know what my tool was. And clients were questioning my choice of equipment, "climbing with a "wooden" axe" ;-) I was able to rewelded the tip several times early on to keep the axe working i the field. I did a terrible job last year bringing it back to "new". Just haven't gotten around to redoing it yet. Way more work than I remember.



Teh questions behind :

www.bradleyalpinist.com



I think much of the important info on the Chouinard Piolet from the Bradley web site is misinformed at best.Let me detail why Ithink that. I would also be pleased if anyone can dispute my comments and would offer first hand evidence of more accurate details. I am only looking to document the truth, nothing more.



My comments are highlighted.



from: http://www.bradleyalpinist.com/cart/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=28



RE: Chouinard-Frost Piolet

"Somewhere long about 1969, Yvon Chouinard and Tom Frost, of Chouinard Equipment in Ventura, California, commissioned the Codega brothers to build an axe to their specifications. This axe, called the Chouinard-Frost Piolet, featured a hand forged, ground and polished chrome-nickle steel head and a hickory shaft, and has since been a mountaineering equipment classic in the both the US and in the Alps. By printing time of Chouinard Equipment's first catalog in 1972, the Chouinard Piolet shown on page 34 had a new laminated bamboo shaft design, dubbed to be lighter weight and just as strong as the hickory shafted original.



Over the next 7 years, the Chouinard Piolet went through a few other design changes, including a revised marking on the head, omitting "Frost" from "Chouinard-Frost". This change was first seen in the 1978 catalog, even though Tom Frost had left the company years earlier, in 1975."



Chouinard catalogs were long known to retailers for being late to the retail market with many items discontinued or unavailable by the time the catalog made it to print and to the dealers. By 1978 the wooden handle Chouinard axes of any type were no longer available in Europe or by then easily available in the USA. And by the fall of '78 even Snell's in Chamonix had the Camp bamboo Chouinard clones on sale, what few they did have. Mind you these were "newest" three rivet, dbl tooth heads but with no Chouinard marking. In 1978 The last of the US imported axes had a 3 rivet head, dbl teethand only Chouinard stamped on them.

The 1978 Great Pacific Iron Works catalog (formerly Chouinard Co. their 3rd catalog) is a interesting mix of the newest carbon fiber Piolet with a hand forged head and "fake" carbon fiber Zeros with bamboo shafts painted to resemble carbon fiber. Clearly a transition time for Chouinard piolets. The Carbon fiber axes were available by the winter of '79. I bought both a carbon fiber piolet and a Zero axe that winter. Found the early carbon fiber lacking on hard Canadian ice and went back to a bamboo Zero axe, now then, in '79, extremely hard to find.




Doug Robinson commented on his original Piolet from '69as being a Rexilon handled version not hickory.



"Other designs of the Piolet included a version with two sections of teeth or notches(double-toothed) on the drooped and curved pick. In other modifications, the shaft material changed again, first to a laminated hickory, then laminated ash for a short time, and eventually a synthetic called Rexilon in 1975, after the UIAA began to raise concerns with the integrity of "wooden" axe shafts. All wooden shafted variations of the Chouinard's Piolet were made by C.A.M.P., but the axe model was phased out of production after 1978."



I've notseen laminated hickory or laminated ash Chouinard Piolets. No record of either in any Chouinard or GPIW printed material. (3 catalogs and one major update flyer) But I trust Doug Robinson's comment on what handle materials wereused. The reasoning behind that end of productionwas the new UIAA guidelines for shaft strength. Imagine my surprise with two of us showing up for the late alpine ice season thinking we'd buy new tools at Snell's! Plan "B" wasn't all that attractive.

My partner bought a Rexilon marked shaft Piolet in either Spokane or Seattle the 1st half of the winter of '75/'76. Ilike the added weight pf the Rexilon compared to the bamboo piolet.. And I have owned a number of both hickory and bamboo piolets since.




The Codega brothers offered virtually the same ice axe (same head, with bamboo or hickory hafts)in Europe, sans the Chouinard marking (although markings still included "Interalp", "CAMP" and "Made in Premana" which are all also found on the "Chouinard-Frost: and "Chouinard" stamped versions..



"In the early 80's, the REI Coop contracted with with C.A.M.P., having this same axe design originated by Chouinard, stamped with the REI logo. These axes were offered in REI's original Seattle store through the mid 1980's."



Close but I don't think that is accurate. The CAMP McKinley was offered in the '80 catalog and maybe even earlier but while a CAMP axe it was not a clone of the original Chouinard Piolet design.



Slightly off topic but worth repeating after finding the info again.

I mentioned the first Chacal? (widely acknowledged as the first reverse curved blade)



THE very first Chacel was Gordon Smith's and the design didn't become commercially available until '79. Simond gave samples to all the climbers attending the International Resemblance in Chamonix in '79.



From the "Ice Primer" on Super Topothread linked above:

A must readbtw ifthis sort of historical trivia interest you.



"In 1978 I got hold of THE prototype Chacal from Luger Simond - He was going to make a straight drooped pick but I held the shaft of the axe while he cut holes in an ordinary curved pick blank reversed. Then he cut teeth and changed the angle of the end of the pick to make a point to penetrate the ice and lo, the first reversed banana pick. Worked brilliantly!!

Gordon Smith"















The "classic axe" today?







There are "walking axes" and there are "ice axes" . The "ice axe" is designed to climb steep ice and cut steps. It gets hard to identify the pretenders here for me some times because of the advertising hype.




Here is a short list and likely not every tool that will fulfill the role as a "classic" axe. It is a multifunctional tool. More than most of the gear we take climbing today. Pays to remember the Chouinard Piolet and it ilk climbed a lot of steep ice bitd. And still can. If your choice in an axe won't, easily, it is more likely a "walking" axe.




"Where there is snow, one can go!"










Only two of the several classic axes from Grivel












Blue Ice...and a new "classic axe"








SMC has obviously been at it a while now






Petzl's offering





It is no accident that the functional design and anglesare so similar over the past 40+ years.Virtually the same pick angle and length today as the original Chouinard Piolet.






















Remember the rule of steel.







and.....







"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."