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McKinley Raising Price on Climing Permits

Climbing Mount McKinley will get more expensive next year, as the National Park Service increases expedition permits in an effort to better fund search and rescue missions on the mountain. The NPS will charge $50 more per permit for climbers under age 24, pushing the total cost to $250, and will charge older climbers $350. Permits were first introduced for $150 in 1995, then jumped to $200 in 2005. The service is looking to offset search-and-rescue costs, including safety education for climbers, a program that some estimates indicate have cut deaths on the mountain in half. Stagnant permit income has created in a 13 percent budget gap under current prices. Park officials introduced the age-graded pricing structure to keep McKinley accessible for young climbers. At 20,320 feet, McKinley is the highest peak in North America.

Patagonia Pic of the Week

“Marko Prezelj climbing at 23,000′ on the west face of Makalu. This was one of two attempts he and I made on our expedition in spring 2011, and this day we reached the highest point of the trip. A brilliant warm day at extreme altitude climbing steep ice runnels – one I’ll never forget!” STEVE HOUSE

Find the Wallpaper here: Patagonia.

Teva Launches the ReForge Multisport Shoe

Teva has been on a tear. Some of their competitors might choose to say terror. We are sorry to loose Simple but are optimistic that Teva will continue to up their game and be our shoe of choice as the seasons progress. We appreciate the multi sport functionality of most of their shoes and the waterability of the rest.

They have been pumping out new shoes all spring and we add another shoe to our – hope to test soon list. These launch in January 2012 and they look awesome.

More than half of Teva’s spring 2012 collection is comprised of new styles that appeal to active and adventurous consumers while staying true to Teva’s commitment to water, which continues to define the brand’s DNA.

The soon to be issued new style is the ReForge ion-mask™ and is beinc called by Teva the next evolution of the classic hiker. The moment you exit a watery environment, water drains through the midsole’s Drain Frame channels and the ion-mask-treated upper shrugs off water droplets. Unlike membrane waterproofing technologies, ion-mask is not a physical barrier to water, rather, it is an invisible nano-coating that makes the fabric totally hydrophobic. Being only nanometers thin, ion-mask does not add any weight and does not wash out or wear off with use.

The ReForge will be available on Teva in January 2012 and will sell for $130.

Teva Mush Frio


Teva has a new shoe this summer and I can’t wait to get my hands on it. The men’s Mush Frio Slip Canvas and Mush Frio Lace Canvas come in brown, grey and black hues accented with pops of orange, red, blue and yellow, feature ultra-light synthetic and canvas uppers with collapsible heels.

These shoes look awesome and they look for traveling, camping, journeying to a backcountry hut or anytime you want to lighten your load. I love light shoes and seek them out with tons of effort. No need here to have a baller watch the size of a iPhone or a pair of heavy shoes. I find them both useless.

The women’s styles are $45, and $50 for the men’s, which, compared to other weight loss solutions, is a steal. They are available now at retailers worldwide and on Teva.

Patagonia Sale: 30% Off Discount + Free Shipping


Like a grill full of tasty treats it’s time to get fired up for our 30% Off Sale. Visit your local Patagonia store or click over to Patagonia.com today to get your pick of the season, while the days are still long and your appetite’s strong.

Picture of the week – Grey Rock River

“This photo was taken on our hike at Grey Rock. We left pretty early and there was a lot of fog…I thought it made for a nice photo on the river.” – Brianne

Thanks to www.briannejanaephotography.com for the photo.

Andy B
twitter.com/outsideallday

Towers of Ennedi sneak peak

HT Vertical Carnival Dispatches for the sneak peak.

Some of the sickest scenery I’ve ever seen.

Andy B
outsideallday.com

A Training Program is Born – Summit Strength

A Training Program is Born
By Craig Demartino
March 09, 2011
Reposted from: http://www.demartinophoto.blogspot.com

Since November I’ve been at it with Brad Jackson in the gym. Every day when I waltz in, Brad has my workout written out on the board, I soak it up, then get to work. Brad is a climber, and since that is my chosen sport as well, he knows my weaknesses as well as I do. He also knows very well how to train those weaknesses, and turn them into things I can use in the real world. It took me a bit to get used to the idea that weights could in fact be my friend, but I am a believer now. Over the the past months and weeks, I’ve felt my body change, not in huge steps, but in small clicks upward, so that when I’m hanging from a crimp, far up on the side of a perfect rock, I feel strong, and like my body can give me more then it has in the past. I would love to say I’m a genetically gifted athlete, that would be a lie. I have a slight advantage with my reach, I have a positive ape index which means I can reach holds far away, but I’m also missing a leg, have a fused back, and a jacked up neck, so lets face it…

I have to work for it if I want it.

That’s where Brad and the new Summit Strength come in. Under the roof of Emergent Fitness in Ft. Collins, he marries the old of climbing with the new of weights, diet and conditioning to make a stronger more durable athlete.

For me it translates to a better strength and fitness base for when I head outside, which as the weather turns warmer by the day, is all I can think of. Check out Brad at www.emerfit.com and watch for Summit Strength to change the way outdoor athletes take on the natural world.

More info on Craig at: www.arcteryx.com/Athlete.aspx?EN/CraigDeMartino and http://demartinophoto.blogspot.com

More info on Summit Strength at Emergent Fitness at: www.emerfit.com

Andy B
outsideallday.com

Ueli Steck speed solo Eiger record

Wow!

Andy B
outsideallday.com

Training 101

I’ve been a climber/dirtbag for 20 years now, and in those years, I have yet to train. I know what your thinking.

Man, he must either really like to climb and that’s his training, or he doesn’t care how he climbs just so he’s climbing. Both are accurate, I’ve never been the textbook dirtbag climber.

For instance, I actually have a job; I’ve been a photographer for 24 years and for most that would go against the dirtbag credo. Of course my job allows a great deal of flexibility on my part since I make my own schedule and live in a state where the climbing is as close as a five minute drive from my house. Oh yeah, I have a house too, and a family.

Weird…

All that to say I’ve never really seen the point in training, I climb a lot, and that’s always been what I do, it trains me for, well, climbing?! What else would I do? Enter my friend Andy.

One day, quite innocent enough, Andy mentioned his trainer was an old friend of mine. Now keep in mind, Andy works out at a CrossFit gym called Emergent Fitness, not a place I would frequent. I mean, don’t they pick up truck tires and drag them around behind themselves with chains?

No thanks.

I was sure he was mistaken; until he told me it was my old friend and climbing partner Brad.

Brad and I meet and we reconnect about the days climbing together in WY and CO. Before I know it, he casually mentions I should start training with him. Again, see tire sentence above, and I decline. But here is the thing about Brad, he is a really good climber, I mean like world class. And you don’t get that good at something without being really driven. He has this knack of being able to turn that drive on anything, including his one legged climbing friend. The next thing I know, I’m signing on to train with Brad two days a week, and I’m as shocked as the next guy.

The first two weeks, and I’m fairly sure Brad is trying to break me in half. I can’t bend down to pick up my belay device should it fall, and my whole body feels like I have the bird flu. Both Andy and Brad just laugh.

My climbing goes from being pretty descent to being really bad, since most of the time I’m to tired to care about holding into the holds. Brad has me doing weights and something called Hit Strips, which are holds on a 45-degree wall, which you run weighted laps up and down.

As Brad says, “ you already have endurance, we want power, if you don’t have power, you won’t need to endure anything.” Well said, but all that means is IM getting an ass kicking. By the third week, I’m actually beginning to feel good. I’ve upped my weight in a few things, and the hit strips are getting better. I still haven’t seen a climbing change, but I’m hopeful. Now in week four, I head into the gym after a rest day, another strange and foreign concept for me. I mean what do you DO on a rest day???

After warming up, I send a project I failed on two weeks before, and after four hours of climbing, I’m not really that tired.

Hmmmm, where is that tire and chain?

Craig DeMartino
outsideallday.com

Is this a Craig DeMartino sighting?

Is this Craig on the Emerfit system board? Why yes it is. Craig is now officially training with Brad at Emerfit during his off season.

I’m glad to have him…

Andy B
outsideallday.com

Indoor ice climbing

Love it!

Andy B
outsideallday.com

Patagonia Europe

When I travel I love to go to a great store and pickup something nice. I have a great Lamy pen from the UW bookstore outside Seattle. A Black Diamond backpack I picked up after meetings in Boise. Magazines from most every city I have traveled to. So we present some watering holes in Europe to grab a jacket before heading out. Or a place to grab a fresh pair of socks enroute. Enjoy.

Patagonia Dublin



Patagonia Milano

Patagonia Prague

Patagonia Munich

Patagonia Zurich

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