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Thursday, June 21, 2012

California

                                         I'm out in Truckee right now.  Its nice.

                                                                              Pete Cowan, Spencer Eusden and I went on a long run this morning along the pacific crest trail. The Reno Rodeo is currently taking place.  Sadly I was unprepared for the cowboy dress code in my crocs and shorts, and the pictures don't do it justice; however, it was a pretty sweet scene.

Before the bull riding a series of five your old kids rodeod some sheep.  You can see the sheep after they have bucked their riders off, there might be a kid riding in the background as well.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Impressions from the Critérium du Dauphiné


Greetings from Switzerland.
A couple days ago, my parents and I went to see the final stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné, which was ending near my town, just across the border in France. 

Here some highlights:

A special Europcar supporter

The "Groupe Maillot Jaune" w/ leader B. Wiggins

Hurtin...

The Mountain King (having a not so royal day...)

The Boss: Samuel "Samu" Sanchez

Vinokourov out of retirement

The "Gruppetto"

Scenes from the finish

Fitting right in... (I even got asked for my autograph)
Keep up the training. As the Germans say, cross-country skiers are made in the summer.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Jackson to opelousas and then on to beaumont- finally across the mississippi

1,108 miles so car. A short 70 mile day yesterday balanced out todays 136.5 miler. Wonderful stays in Jackson and Opelousas with Perry and Sarah. Rode the new bridge across the mississippi into new roads, a town that could use some stimulus. Continued my burger king trend on the last day of the cheap smoothie special. From there a long ride through sugar cane, rice and cotton growing on floodplains. 4 mile bridge crossing with no shoulders and a gnarly curb over the achalfalaya floodway. Jarring ride on louisiana side streets through opelousas.
Leaving opelousas chased by hippie dogs and a few big trucks. After a long ride on us 190 the road turned to us 12 and then texas 12 and then I 10. More rice fields, agriculture, oil fields then back to gulf fishing and resorts.
Perry and leps rescued house

Audubon bridge













Saturday, May 26, 2012

crust skiing

Today I went crust skiing at Rainbow Ridge with FXC (shout out to alum Peter Leonard!). Not your typical skiing destination because this isn't around Anchorage.

Not Bend Oregon, but still not a bad sight for the end of May.

Eternal sun: It is around 6am at this point.

Unfortunately it wasn't sunny. Here's a big cornice that some of us tried to hit as a wind lip.

EDIT: Couple more pictures from facebook, courtesy of Ian Wilkinson

a bowl


6:30 am and before the clouds rolled in: really not a bad sight


-Vanya

Sunday, May 20, 2012

AK Summer

I am back in Alaska where there is still an impressive amount of snow.  Yesterday I went hiking up a mountain that was still about two thirds covered in snow and this morning I went for a ski at Hatcher's Pass.  It was a little too mushy for good crust skiing, but it felt pretty cool to be back on skis in late May.


Thursday, May 10, 2012

End-of-the-year BBQ and Recognition

Last Friday the team got together to celebrate the end of the ski season, recognize the seniors, and hand out awards.  It was a mild evening in the quiet of the Greylock Quad, and the grill was kept busy for several hours to meet the appetites of 40 hungry skiers.  When it came time for Coaches Ed Grees (alpine) and Bud Fisher to hand out awards, summarize the season, and recognize the seniors there were as many big laughs as heartfelt speeches, with a smattering of tears on the side. . . .

BBQing in the Greylock Quad on a warm spring evening
the jokesters
Coach Fisher hands out academic awards
Coaches Grees (alpine) and Fisher hand out awards
Senior Erik Anderson
Senior Hannah Hausman
Senior Holly Whitney
Senior Dimitri Luthi
Dimitri receives a plaque and a trophy for the Ralph J. Townsend Award
The Team

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Chasing Winter

By the time the ski season ended this year I was, unsurprisingly, ready for winter to start. So it was with high spirits that I shipped off to the southern hemisphere, arriving at the beginning of their fall. I packed flannel, warm pants, and even some ski gear in anticipation of cold weather running. I did not, however, check the weather before I left for Buenos Aires. Suffice it to say I was not prepared for the 90 degree heat that greeted me when I walked off the plane. A month and a half later, temperatures dropped to more reasonable temperatures in the 80's, but I was suffering due to the fact that I didn't bring any shorts . It only made sense, then, to go searching for Winter in a place I was sure would have snow, Patagonia.
I set off on my trip with high expectations of solo hiking, and the chance to spend some quality time with myself. After two days alone, I learned, shockingly, that I am not a solitary creature. It was very lucky, then, that I met up with ski team alum Sarah Tory for a couple of days of hiking around Mount Fitz Roy. Almost all the hiking was accessible right from El Chalten, so Sarah, her partner Alex, and I ended up pitching our tents at "la casa de Jesus", where a local resident reenacts the Stone Soup story every night.
Mount Fitz Roy and some surrounding peaks


The hiking was spectacular, but we quickly learned that Patagonian weather is fickle, and cycles through a two hour sequence of sun, snow, sleet, and rain, with high winds throughout. The glacial lakes and jagged peaks, though, made the weather all worth it.
After three days, I decided to leave El Chalten, and head over to Chile to do a longer hike, the "W" in Torres del Paine. I felt a little sad about doing my first big run/hike without Phil, but since he had other plans, I had no option but to attempt it alone. I'll spare everyone all the details of the hiking, but here are some of the more impressive sights.

The beginning, right off of the catamaran.
Glaciar Grey
Paine Grande


It snowed 30 centimeters the second night



On the last morning, I got up before the sunrise and hiked to the base of Las Torres, arguably the most famous view in Patagonia. Thanks to some incredible luck, we had blue skies for the whole sunrise.

Some of the world's hardest climbing

I also got an unbelievable view of the sun rising through the valley. Sequentially:



Done.