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Inside Alex Honnold’s Tricked-Out New Adventure Van

Back in 2014, pro climber Alex Honnold gave us a tour of the 2002 Ford Econoline E150 he used as his mobile base camp. That van served him...

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Wednesday, October 23, 2019

A 9-Year-Old Climbed El Capitan

Over four days and three nights in mid-September, Pearl Johnson, age 9, climbed the Triple Direct route on El Capitan, earning her the title as the youngest person to ascend the 3,000-foot formation. Pearl climbed with her mother, Janet, and a family friend, Nick Sullens, of Yosemite Search and Rescue. Pearl’s dad, Philip, a law enforcement ranger in the park, met them at the top. 

“Someone asked me if I was nervous, and I said ‘No,’” Janet said after. “I knew I was comfortable up there. I’ve climbed a lot with Pearl. I knew what she was capable of.”

Pearl, however, was nervous, according to Sullens. “A lot of time was spent overcoming her fear,” Sullens said. “I was impressed with her wanting to keep going. If it were me at nine, I would have wanted to be out of there. Sometimes she would say, ‘I want this to be over, this is really scary.’ I would offer to bail and be down in two hours, and she would say she wanted to be there. She had a desire to pursue the goal. She wanted to climb that mountain.”

Little girls have been having a banner year in Yosemite this season. In June, 10-year-old Selah Schneiter climbed the Nose on El Capitan with her father Mike and his friend Mark Regier, making her the then-youngest person in the world to climb the granite monolith. The story went viral, and Selah appeared on ESPN, The Today Show and ABC News

Pearl also wanted to climb The Nose, but it was crowded, so they switched to the less-popular but equally long Triple Direct route, which parallels the Nose before joining it for the upper third of the climb. Unlike Selah, Pearl did not lead or clean any of the pitches on the route. She used ascenders to climb the static rope that the team used to haul their equipment. 

el capitan
(Photo: Janet Johnson)

Janet and Philip, both longtime Yosemite locals, have decades of climbing experience under their belts. And so Pearl’s earliest memories are of climbing, which she picked up when she learned to walk. Her biggest climbs before El Cap include Cathedral Peak in Tuolumne Meadows at age 6, the 15-pitch Royal Arches route at age 7, and Snake Dike on Half Dome at age 8. 

Pearl has seen Free Solo, and knows Alex Honnold, who stayed next door to the Johnsons during filming. 

“One of my favorite parts of Free Solo was when Alex encountered the guys in the pink bunny suits,” Pearl said. “I climbed it in tights covered with cats and donuts.” 

Pearl summited El Cap on September 16, in the midst of a hailstorm and plummeting temperatures. “I ran to the big juniper tree for cover while Nick and my mom were hauling up the bags one at a time,” she said. “The top was scary. We were in a cloud, and my fingers were purple.”

The hail turned to rain, soaking the team. But Pearl’s dad was building a fire. She knew that soon she would be comfortable again—the worry would pass, just as it had on the wall.  



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North America's Best Ski Routes Are Disappearing

When Cody Townsend set out to ski British Columbia’s 8,927-foot Joffre Peak—part of the Fifty, his project to descend the iconic lines collected in the 2010 book Fifty Classic Ski Descents in North America—he thought he might miss the window of skiability. It was late February of this year, and the unusually thin snowpack and low visibility turned him around on his first attempt. But three days later, Townsend succeeded, sidestepping and jump-turning down the line, despite crummy snow (“Holy shit, this skiing is gonna suuuuck,” he tells his cameraman) and an emergency helicopter rescue for a skier on a neighboring couloir (“Dude, dude, somebody just fell down Central”). 

Townsend didn’t know how small his skiing window on Joffre had been. In May, a massive landslide, caused by melting permafrost, ripped off the entire face he had skied. “As it stands now,” he says, “I have the last descent on Joffre, because half the mountain fell off. We watched two of the three lines off that peak disappear forever.”

The Fifty started out as a personal challenge. In January, the 36-year-old California native launched the project, which he anticipated would take place over three winters. He started a video series, with an episode about each of the peaks. He didn’t realize how much the quest to tick off lines was going to be a race against receding glaciers and a potential eulogy for the ski routes themselves. He didn’t think he was signing up to record last descents.

Last winter, Townsend ticked off 20 of the lines and released 16 episodes. The biggest surprise, he says in the second season of the Fifty video series—which launched this month—has been how quickly the snow is changing. Melting glaciers, landslides caused by warming, and variable snowpacks forced him to change his routes. “This book, which is supposed to be this permanent book and stand a test of time,” he says, “instead feels really temporary. It’s a strange and really, really sad thing.”

Conveying what’s happening in the high country has always been a part of mountain athletes’ jobs. As long as skiers and climbers have been sponsored, they’ve been responsible for returning with trip reports from the roof of the world. Now they’re also on the front lines of change—they have the skills and ability to get into fragile places where even glaciologists rely only on lidar and satellite technology and aerial photos. The IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate, which came out in September, painted a dire picture of the future of high-mountain ice. Small-scale glaciers are predicted to lose 80 percent of their current ice mass by 2100. Moving at a glacial pace isn’t an adage that works anymore.  

So much of the discussion around climate change happens in the theoretical space of models and what-ifs. Overlaying that science with story, with the eyewitness narrative of a dude just trying to shralp, gives a more complete picture without being preachy or wonky.

When Townsend looks at climbing a peak like Joffre, he does a dissection of the mountain, studying weather conditions, glacial creep, and snow status before he goes. He’ll scour Google Earth, dig through old trip reports, and poll local skiers for details and yearly photos. But he’s found that those historical records don’t line up with the present.

Take Mount Baker, Washington. Preparing to ski the Watson Traverse in May, Townsend and videographer Bjarne Salen had looked at a friend’s five-year-old photos and picked a seemingly mellow line. But when they arrived, they found that the glacier was broken up and riddled with crevasses. “Bjarne and I skied on a rope the whole way down, because there were giant crevasses and seracs peeling off,” he told me. “It was the scariest 25-degree slope I’ve ever skied in my life. I came away from that being like, At this pace, this line is going to be unskiable in ten years, tops.”

In the overwhelming quickening of global climate impacts, it can feel like nothing moves the needle on change, in the outdoor world least of all. As Ethan Linck pointed out in what has become a seminal essay, “Your Stoke Won’t Save Us,” published in High Country News in May 2018, it’s not enough to rip big lines. “Stoke,” Linck wrote, “seems like a shaky bet for effecting the dramatic change necessary to halt accelerating ecological collapse.” 

The thing that does feel valuable, I think, is connecting the dots between the field of science and being out in the field itself. Because of climate change, there’s a fundamental shift happening in how we can access places and how we’re going to do so in the future. A last descent is both a hard stop and a story about the impermanence of the places that stoke us up the most.



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5 Apps to Help You Save for Your Next Adventure

Saving for a trip is often made to sound easy: skip a latte every week, and before you know it, you’re halfway to Patagonia. But anyone who’s tried to squirrel away more than a few bucks here and there knows it takes a lot more discipline to accumulate significant reserves. 

That’s bad news for those of us (read: everyone) who don’t have time to toil away at Excel spreadsheets, or who get anxiety from just looking at our bank accounts. Luckily there are tools that do the hard work for you. For the past few years, I’ve used a combination of savings, investment, and budgeting apps to put aside thousands of dollars to pay off my student loans, quit my job to write freelance full time, and fund a life of adventure. 

My obsession started when I stumbled upon the Qapital app in late 2016, after emptying all but a few hundred bucks from my bank account to pay off a student loan. The timing couldn’t have been worse: I’d recently booked a trip to Cuba, where you need cash for everything—I couldn’t put expenses on a credit card and pay it off with the next paycheck. Qapital, which transfers money into a separate account based on parameters you set, held me accountable toward spending less than usual on everyday treats, so I’d have money for on-the-ground purchases. In conjunction with freelancing on the side of my full-time editorial job, closely monitoring my savings goals, and cutting back on splurges, the app helped me put aside more than $10,000 in less than a year.

From then on, I was hooked. I now have a set of apps that helps me cut down on frivolous purchases, earn cash back on necessities, and track my spending. 

Qapital

Saving apps
(Photo: Courtesy Qapital)

Qapital is the easiest set-it-and-forget-it savings app I use. It transfers money into an external account based on rules you create yourself, which can be as simple as “round up to the nearest $1” every time you swipe a credit card or as elaborate as putting aside $5 toward a donation to charity whenever you splurge on Starbucks. To make the stakes even higher, sync it up with the app IFTTT (If This, Then That),  which uses real-life cause and effect scenarios to deposit a set amount to your Qapital account every time a specific action occurs.  I use IFTTT to put aside $1 every time President Trump tweets, which has funded more than one taco-infused adventure to Mexico City. It’s $3 per month for Qapital’s basic savings model (additional features, like investment and checking account services, cost up to $12), and IFTTT is free.

Trim

Saving apps
(Photo: Courtesy Trim)

If you have a cell phone, internet, or cable bill, odds are you’re overpaying for it due to fine-print exceptions like reimbursements for periodic lapses in service.  Trim’s bots renegotiate your bills and monitor your internet provider for outages you might not have been aware of, then request refunds on your behalf. The bots log into your accounts and contact customer-service reps posing as you to lower monthly fees and request discounts and refunds. I regularly save about $5 to $20 per month using Trim on my Comcast internet bill alone, even with the app’s 25 percent commission. Trim will also identify all of your recurring monthly subscriptions, so you can see how $5 here and $15 there adds up over a month or year. You can ask the app to cancel some of these services on your behalf, saving you time, cutting down on your excess spending, and helping you funnel that money directly into savings for travel.

Service

Saving apps
(Photo: Courtesy Service)

This app trolls your inbox for flight information and automatically requests refunds or mileage points when you experience a significant delay or cancellation. It will also check for compensation from the previous year’s flights upon sign up, so you can get cash back even before booking another trip. This is especially useful if you’ve taken a flight from the European Union recently. EU regulations mandate that airlines pay customers up to around $660 for delays and cancellations. On a work trip earlier this year, I got stuck in Stockholm for an extra day because of a late flight. Within a couple weeks, Delta sent me a check for $675, which I immediately dropped into my savings. Service takes 30 percent of what they save you, but it's well worth it.

Drop

Saving apps
(Photo: Courtesy Drop)

Most of us earn cash back or miles on credit cards for everyday purchases. Drop works similarly, giving users points for every dollar spent at certain stores (such as Trader Joe’s or Whole Foods) on top of the normal rewards that you receive from your credit-card company. It’s basically free money that can be redeemed for gift cards, like $100 at American Airlines or $25 at Whole Foods. Points add up slowly if you only accumulate them from daily spending, so browse Drop’s special offers for bonus points on purchases like online shopping, trials with Hulu or Barkbox, and promos for a wine subscription. You save more money by not spending it, of course, but if you’re going to shop anyway, it’s worth checking for deals before making a big purchase. In a little over a year, I’ve accumulated about $235 in Drop points. 

Trail Wallet

Saving apps
(Photo: Courtesy Voyage Travel Apps)

Small purchases during a trip add up fast—especially if you fall into the exchange-rate trap, where everything seems cheap compared with prices back home. That’s why I use Trail Wallet, which records every dollar you spend for a trip, from the moment you book the first flight or Airbnb to the car ride home from the airport. It allows you to log transactions in any currency and converts them to U.S. dollars, offers day-to-day real-time spending reports, and calculates your daily average as you go. Set a daily or overall budget, appoint caps for standard categories like food and lodging, or pick one of your own choosing (I spend too much on coffee). The free version allows for 25 transactions per trip, but I recommend paying the $5 fee for full access. This app helped me stay $200 under budget on a recent trip to Japan by putting my small buys into perspective. Skipping a souvenir here and there allowed me guilt-free splurges on more expensive meals and higher-quality gifts toward the end of my trip.



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What It Takes to Hike the Grand Canyon

In 2016, writer Kevin Fedarko and photographer Pete McBride set out to thru-hike the Grand Canyon. Into the Canyon chronicles their attempt and sheds light on the threats currently surrounding the national park.



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How to Do a Handstand

Inversions might seem intimidating at first, if not downright impossible, but a handstand is an achievable goal for any active person with the right mindset, says Heidi Kristoffer, a New York City–based yoga instructor. All it takes is a few weeks of dedicated daily practice, according to Kristoffer. 

A handstand is a lot more than a neat party trick. Not only does it work upper-body and core strength, it also trains balance, body awareness, deep breathing, focus, and discipline—skills that are transferable to every mountain sport and outdoor activity, as well as daily life. “You have to be in the present to balance on your hands. You can’t be thinking or worrying about something else,” Kristoffer says. “Handstand pose grounds your breath, helps you clear your head, and forces you into the moment.”

Kristoffer recommends the exercises below to help build the necessary strength and confidence to finally add the move to your repertoire. “Handstands come down to fear for most people,” she says. “Step one is to get comfortable being upside down on your arms, then you can progress to balancing on your hands and eventually perfect your form.”

If it takes a little longer than anticipated, don’t give up. “When you’re practicing, it’s easy to get frustrated, but just remember, your body has been in the other direction your whole life,” says Kristoffer. “Take a breath, give yourself time to learn this completely new skill, and approach it with levity.”

First, it’s important that you’re injury-free and healthy. Handstands place stress on the wrists and shoulders and require adequate mobility in the lower back and hamstrings. If you have any pain in these areas, hold off until you’re back in action. A good warm-up is essential to injury prevention. Begin with a yoga session or your favorite moves to loosen up and open your shoulders and activate your arm, core, and back muscles. 

As you work toward the real deal, start with the first three moves of this exercise progression, and continue until you find them easy and comfortable before moving on to practicing a handstand pose with a wall. Move at your own pace, and remember, consistent practice is key. 

“L” Handstand at Wall

yoga
(Photo: Hayden Carpenter)

What it does: Builds arm and core strength, helps you get comfortable upside down on your arms, and encourages proper hand, wrist, elbow, and shoulder alignment.

How to do it: Stand with your back to a wall. Bending forward at the waist, position your hands on the floor in front of you exactly shoulder width apart. Your hands should be a leg length away from the wall. (To determine the correct distance from the wall, sit on the ground facing it with straight legs. Inch forward until your feet touch the wall. Then place your hands at your hips to mark the distance. This is where your hands should eventually be placed, which ensures your hips will be eventually be directly in line with your arms and torso.) 

Spread your fingers and press your palms flat on the ground. Walk your feet up the wall until your legs are parallel to the floor—this will center your hips over your body. Be mindful that your hands, wrists, elbows, and shoulders are all in line on each side. Hold the pose for 20 seconds to a minute or as long as you can maintain good form. As soon as you start to shake or lose proper form, walk your feet back down the wall and rest. Make the exercise harder by aiming one leg at a time toward the ceiling.

“Arm alignment is really important so that your shoulder and back muscles don’t go into overdrive,” says Kristoffer. “People new to handstand often make the mistake of placing their hands too wide, because it feels like a better base to balance on, but in doing so, you’re crushing your shoulder muscles and rhomboids and risk injuring yourself.”

Volume: Five to seven repetitions. If you cannot hold the position for 30 seconds at a time, break it down into shorter durations, such as three ten-second holds with a short rest between each, until you build up the endurance.

If this position feels too challenging, take a few weeks to work on your general arm, back, and core strength or hamstring, shoulder, or hip mobility, then try again to reassess. 

Wall Kick-Ups

yoga
(Photo: Hayden Carpenter)

What they do: Continue to build arm and core strength as you practice entering a handstand without the risk of flipping over backwards.

How to do them: From a standing forward bend, place your palms flat on the ground, shoulder width apart, roughly six or more inches away from a wall. Check to ensure your arms form a straight line. Raise one leg in the air, then hop with the other to launch your feet straight overhead. Lightly tap the wall with your heel, then return your feet to the ground for one repetition. Repeat, and switch the hopping leg every set.

Volume: Three to four sets of ten reps

Crane (Crow) Pose

yoga
(Photo: Hayden Carpenter)

What it does: Trains balance on your hands, while continuing to improve body awareness and arm and core strength.

How to do it: Squat with your feet a few inches apart and your palms pressed flat on the floor, directly below your shoulders. Position your knees just wider than your hips, and press them into your upper arms as high you can. Stand up on your toes, and lean forward to place the weight of your torso on your upper arms (through your knees). Continue leaning forward until your feet leave the ground. Find your balance, and hold for 20 seconds to a minute or as long as you can. Slowly tip back into a squat to get out of the pose.

It’s OK to keep your elbows bent and focus only on balance, but to perfect your form, work toward straightening your arms.

Volume: Five to seven reps 

Handstand with Wall

yoga
(Photo: Hayden Carpenter)

What it does: Allows you to practice a handstand without the fear of flipping over backwards. 

How to do it: Start this as you would for wall kick-ups. From a standing forward bend, place your palms flat on the ground, shoulder width apart, one to two feet away from a wall. Check to ensure your arms form a straight line. Raise one leg in the air, then hop with the other to push your legs overhead, but try not to touch the wall. Find your center point of balance, and hold there for as long as you can. 

If you feel like you’re going to fall backwards, slowly bend one of your legs and use the wall for support. You might need to use the wall frequently when you first start, but attempt to use it less and less until you’re comfortable without it.

Volume: Practice daily until you’re comfortable without the wall. 

Handstand

yoga
(Photo: Hayden Carpenter)

What it does: Improves upper-body and core strength, balance, body awareness, deep breathing, and focus.

How to do it: Get in the position for a standing forward bend. Plant your palms firmly on ground, exactly shoulder width apart so that your hands, wrists, elbows, and shoulders are all aligned. Spread out your fingers to create a stable base. Raise one leg in the air, then take progressively larger hops with the other to eventually position your hips directly over your shoulders. “If you take a leap that’s slightly enthusiastic, your fingertips can act as your brake,” says Kristoffer. “Really press into those fingertips so you don’t feel like you’re going to tip over backwards.”

Keep your legs split, and use microadjustments to find a central balance point. Once settled, slowly bring your legs together until they’re both overhead and pointing toward the sky. Think of a handstand as stacking your body upside down, then moving toward midline. Move slowly, and breathe. Jerky movements are more difficult to control if you begin leaning too far in one direction and can cause you to overcorrect.

Volume: Practice daily.

Helpful Tips

  • Practice on a padded or soft surface, like a grassy lawn or the mats at a climbing gym or fitness center.
  • Have a friend spot or catch or hold your legs as you practice.
  • Do not attempt a headstand. While it might seem easier—and you see photos of it all over Instagram—the risk of injury is high. “I’m adamantly opposed to headstands for beginners,” says Kristoffer. “If you cannot do a handstand with control, you should not be doing a headstand, because you’ll mistakenly put your full body weight onto your cervical spine, which is really dangerous.”
  • Find and practice a safe way to bail out of handstand if you lose balance. “Once you know how to properly fall, the fear goes away,” says Kristoffer, who teaches popular workshops about falling safely. “Everybody is going to have a different escape route” based on flexibility and comfort levels, she adds. Some people can do a full back bend, whereas others prefer to cartwheel out. Whatever your plan, it will certainly help your head game if you practice.


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This Is the New Golden Age of American Cycling

For the first time in my life, it feels great to be wrong. 

This summer, I wrote a Washington Post piece about the dearth of talent in American cycling and the Walton Family Foundation’s plan to develop young riders as a response to it. 

While the Waltons’ efforts are still positive news, the premise that the article was built on—that American cycling needs resuscitation—was faulty. 

I watched the UCI Road World Championships in September with my mouth agape as my flawed image of American cycling leaped off its gurney, ripped the IVs from its arms, and went sprinting, open-backed gown flapping in the wind, out of the hospital. In its wake, it left nothing but a string of rainbow jerseys and one journalist trying to fit her cycling shoe in her mouth. 

Pro cycling in the U.S. is very much alive and kicking ass.  

Exhibit A? Chloé Dygert, just 22, attacking the elite women’s time trial with such ferocity that I was jumping on my couch, à la Tom Cruise, as I watched. She won the event by the widest margin in history.

Exhibit B? Quinn Simmons, who is 18, winning the junior men’s road race at the world championships, riding away from the pack with 30 kilometers to go. His teammate, Magnus Sheffield, won the sprint for the bronze.

Exhibits C through H? Ian Garrison, 21, and Brandon McNulty, 21, taking second and third, respectively, in the under-23 individual time trial; Megan Jastrab, 17, winning the women’s junior road race (we all still remember when she took the women’s field sprint at age 15—on junior gears—at the 2017 Redlands Classic, right?); and Zoe Ta-Perez, 17, Lawson Craddock, 27, and Coryn Rivera, 27, all cruising to top-ten finishes in the junior women’s time trial, the men’s time trial, and the women’s road race, respectively. By the end of the week, America led the gold-medal count at worlds and was second in total medals only to the Netherlands.

Exhibits beyond the road-world champs: Kate Courtney, 23, becoming the first American in 17 years to win the overall cross-country title for the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup earlier in September; at the same event, teammates Chloe Woodruff, 32, and Lea Davison, 36, finishing 9th and 14th, respectively, in the final race of the season; our mixed-relay team, winning silver at the mountain-bike world championships; and Tokyo 2020 favorite Ashton Lambie, 28—who only started racing on the velodrome in 2016—breaking his own world record in the individual time trial on the track in September. 


I’ve been thinking about how I got things so wrong. My mistake, I now realize, was looking to the men’s UCI WorldTour peloton as an indicator of American success. I am old, which means I came up in the cycling era of Lance, when the pro tours were, for so many Americans, what cycling was all about. That’s changing.

Today, cycling is streaming cyclocross at your desk and hoping your boss doesn’t notice. It’s refreshing your live tracker as ultra-endurance racer Leal Wilcox crushes the Navad 1,000 bikepacking race across Switzerland. It’s road-tripping to Snowshoe, West Virginia, to take selfies with Lea Davison at the UCI World Cup. It’s following your favorite Dirty Kanza riders on Instagram. It’s taking a last, desperate mid-thirties’ stab at a pro-racing career by signing up for the Zwift Academy. Oh, and maybe if you have time, you might turn on Le Tour for a stage or two. 

Cycling is widening its funnel, and that’s a good thing for development. The more participants we have in our sport, the more robust our talent pool. But that’s hardly the only reason that Americans are cleaning up on the world stage. 

When I asked elite-development coaches what we did ten years ago that led to this past year’s success, I heard about a number of factors. “There’s not any one person who can take credit for the success we saw at world championships,” says Nicola Cranmer, founder and general manager of the Sho-Air Twenty20 women’s pro team and Twenty20 junior teams. Cranmer has worked in young-athlete development in the U.S. for 15 years. “True development begins at the grass roots, not only the coaches, the clubs, and teams that support junior athletes, but the race promoters, too.”

Although many folks likely deserve a small amount of credit, one organization was resoundingly echoed by all my sources as being crucial to this moment’s success. It, too, began at the grassroots level: the National Interscholastic Cycling Association (NICA). 

NICA started in 1998, when Matt Fritzinger, a math teacher at Berkeley High School in California, tried to form a road-cycling team. “But all the kids showed up with mountain bikes,” says Steve Matous, current president of the group. Now NICA has 22,000 members in 27 states participating in middle and high school level mountain-bike races. 

What NICA has done extraordinarily well is bring both racers and nonracers into the sport, says Tim Johnson, a former professional road, mountain-bike, and cyclocross athlete who now heads up fundraising for USA Cycling’s foundation. He adds, “They’re introducing both the sport and the activity of biking all at once.” While some of the kids entering the program will go on to be the next Kate Courtney (a NICA grad, along with under-23 national champion Christopher Blevins and several pro roadies, including Megan Jastrab), most of them will grow up to simply be adults who love cycling. Johnson says that’s the genius of NICA: we need those cycling enthusiasts to fund teams and sponsor races for both elites and weekend warriors. 

NICA is giving high school bike racing a structure that lasts. “Ten years ago, if there was a high school team, it was usually run by one dad with a fast kid, and when that kid went to college, the team kind of died,” says Chad Cheeney, cofounder of Durango Devo, a program for young mountain bikers in Durango, Colorado. And NICA provides actual training on how to coach—it’s no longer just one or two parents trying to figure it out as they go.  

But NICA alone doesn’t fully explain our recent results, especially on the women’s side of the sport, where there’s particular momentum.


It’s been well-documented that women perform better in everything from academia to science to politics when they have female role models. Technically, we’ve had icons, like the dominant Connie Carpenter-Phinney and tough-as-nails Juli Furtado, to look up to for decades. But the women racing today had an abundance of heroes on which to affix their gaze: three-time Olympic gold medalist Kristin Armstrong, Alison Powers, investment banker turned WorldTour racer Evelyn Stevens, Mara Abbott, and mountain biker Georgia Gould. Even better, athletes like Gould and former pro road racer Kathryn Bertine fought hard for wage equality—Bertine made the documentary Half the Road on the topic—in an effort to make pro cycling a viable career choice for women.

And of course, these young women have each other, says Powers, who is now retired and owns her own coaching business. “When one person has success, it’s really motivating. When Evelyn Stevens got a medal at worlds, it was like, If she can do it, I can do it,” says Powers. “Now we have Kate Courtney, and all the American women are raising their game because they see that she can do it.” 

Armstrong, who now coaches Chloé Dygert, offers another reason why the American women are suddenly so on top of their game: the generation before them is breaking down the institutional sexism of male-dominated coaching. “I frequently get asked by other female cyclists to review their training programs. I often scratch my head and ask, Why aren’t they being pushed to their capabilities? Female athletes are capable of so much more,” Armstrong says. She gives a nod to Jim Miller, her own coach, who now also coaches Courtney. “After working with me, he’s like, I know what women can take,” she says. Plus, athletes like herself and Powers have become coaches in retirement, meaning young female athletes can now be coached by someone who has also navigated women’s pro cycling. Perhaps even more important, we’re beginning to actually study women in sports science, which, believe it or not, is relatively new. Armstrong points to Stacy Sims, who has devoted her career to both calling out inequalities in research and fixing them by doing her own studies. Because of Sims, for example, we now know how to adapt training plans to capitalize on women’s hormone cycles.


But perhaps what makes all this success for American cyclists even more remarkable is that it’s happened despite a shortage of resources for young cyclists. For one, there just isn’t enough money to go around, particularly in women’s racing. Here’s a factoid that will blow your mind: Armstrong spent 18 months trying to finance a wind-tunnel trip for Dygert. (Aerodynamics are crucial to the individual time trial, where there is obviously no drafting.) “I joked about putting a GoFundMe out there,” Armstrong says, because she couldn’t get a single sponsor to pick up the bill, which would have been about $10,000. In the end, they did without, trying to perfect Dygert’s position as best they could in a velodrome. (Red Bull will now likely pick up the tab. But, Armstrong says, “What about the athletes who aren’t lucky enough to be sponsored by someone like Red Bull?”) 

There are other structural problems with our development programs, too, for both women and men. In Europe, track racing is a key tool for developing both strong and tactical young riders. In the U.S., track racing is only an option if you live near one of our country’s 26 velodromes. Meanwhile, there are 23 tracks in the UK alone.

And there just aren’t enough high-level races here in the U.S. to compete in, says Twenty20 coach Nicola Cranmer. The Chrono Kristin Armstrong time-trial event, for example, is the only UCI-recognized time trial in the U.S. And the best junior and under-23 racing is still happening abroad. “We just don’t have much junior racing in the U.S.,” says Jeff Pierce, USA Cycling’s director of athletics for road and track. Sure, there are races, but “there are small fields, and the competition isn’t very high.” 

In 2013, USA Cycling announced its plan to build a permanent training hub for young American riders in Sittard-Geleen, a town in the Netherlands. But while that center may be giving some of our young male racers a much needed chance compete across the pond with support from the organization, Armstrong feels like opportunities are still too sparse for women. “The USAC will take a group of younger [women] riders for a couple weeks at a time to race in Europe,” she says. But beyond that, Armstrong says, the riders can mostly expect to get European racing experience from their trade teams.  

In the context of all these challenges, the results we’ve seen this year are truly spectacular. And there’s so much more promise on the horizon with the 2020 Olympics. According to a spokesperson for USA Cycling, we could have as many as four women in the Olympic road race and two in the time trial. On the men’s side, we’ll likely have two shots at medals in the road race and the time trial. There may be as many as seven women and five men headed to compete on the track. Currently, we may even get to send three women mountain bikers to Tokyo, though of course, this is all subject to how racing over the next few months plays out. 

And I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out one last latent variable that’s been favorable to pro cycling in the U.S.: the dog that dogged cycling for so long—Lance Armstrong—is becoming less and less relevant every year. 

Today’s young stars missed the truly bad behavior (and, let’s face it, the glory days) of the Postal Service era. However, thanks to Armstrong throwing the sport under the bus in his 2013 interview with Oprah, riders who came right after him were stuck with the perception that the entire sport was tainted by doping. Former professional road cyclist Phil Gaimon says that after Lance’s career blew apart, so, too, did sponsorship dollars. “[Before], there was a strong scene domestically, with big-budget teams like Toyota United, something like 15 men’s teams, and probably 100 jobs,” he says. Now there are only a handful of teams, he says, and it’s difficult to make a living wage.

“As a millennial coming up in the sport of cycling [during that time], there was an unwritten playbook built by our predecessors,” says Lucas Euser, who quit pro cycling in 2016. He says that he, and other racers around his age, wanted to race clean, but the American public wasn’t ready to trust. “We were a sort of lost generation of cycling,” he adds. 

These days, Lance’s barking is just background noise. And cycling interest in the U.S. has broadened way beyond pro road racing: even pro tour teams like EF Education First–Drapac are filling out their schedules with gravel grinds and the occasional just-for-fun fondo. “The new crop of Gen Z talent gets to write their own playbook,” says Euser. 

And the babies of the seventies and eighties are helping them. They’re building teams and coaching athletes. They’re putting on new kinds of events and fundraising for USA Cycling. In pushing forward this new era of American cycling, the lost generation has found its calling. And that’s a good thing for every cycling fan in America—and a great thing for every kid with a bike and a dream.



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Why Southern California's Wildfires Are Inevitable

A fast-moving wildfire in Los Angeles produced dramatic footage on Monday, as it grew from one acre to 30 in under an hour. Some experts think the fire is likely a preview of the dangerous conditions Southern California will face later this week, as a heat wave combines with katabatic winds. Here’s why those conditions make wildfires inevitable. 

What Are the Santa Ana Winds? 

As the Great Basin—a high-altitude desert that spans parts of Nevada, Utah, Idaho, and Oregon—begins to cool in the fall, that dense, heavy air seeks out the path of least resistance as it invariably flows downhill. Additionally, the winds around high-pressure systems in the Northern Hemisphere blow clockwise. So when a high-pressure system forms over a cooling Great Basin, it forces that air to blow toward Los Angeles from the northeast. 

Air flowing from the high desert down to sea level is subsiding, which means that as air loses altitude, it is compressed. Compressing air causes it to warm. “If you take a piece of air located only mile above your head, and brought it down to your feet, it would wind up 30 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than when it started,” explains Robert Fovell, a professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the University of California at Los Angeles, on the school’s website. “You don’t need to change the altitude of air very much to alter its temperature significantly.” Much of the Great Basin is around a mile higher in elevation than L.A. 

Moreover, several large mountain ranges lie between Nevada and Los Angeles. As the already warming air flows over those mountains, it is further compressed, so it blows even faster and raises the temperature. The Los Angeles Basin is framed by the Tehachapi and San Gabriel mountain ranges, which border the urban conurbation to its north and east, the directions the winds are coming from. So as the Santa Ana winds enter the basin, they experience one last compression event before accelerating down the southwestern slopes of those mountains into populated areas. 

But along with the speed and temperature of the Santa Ana winds that makes them so conducive to wildfire, they’re also so dry that they’re capable of actually sucking moisture out of vegetation. This occurs not only because the Great Basin is a desert but also due to all the aforementioned compression. The Santa Ana winds start dry, then get even drier as compression causes them to heat up. Their relative humidity is often under 10 percent by the time they reach L.A. 

“Relatively dry air is thirsty air, and takes moisture from wherever it can, including your skin and plant life,” writes Fovell. “Increase its speed, and very dry air can desiccate vegetation very quickly.”

Is Climate Change a Factor? 

When the Santa Ana winds are blowing, the Los Angeles area experiences high temperatures, extremely low humidity, and high wind speeds. The sources of fuel that drive wildfires are made more prone to combustion, and the winds rapidly spread embers over long distances, spreading any fire that does start and making it harder to fight. 

Thankfully, Santa Ana winds blow during the fall, at the beginning of Southern California’s rainy season, although that’s changing. Since 1970, California’s fire season has grown by 78 days and is close to becoming year-round. Rains that used to come in the fall would mitigate the risks created by the Santa Ana winds, but now those winds find still dry fuel that’s been baking in the hot sun all summer long. Extreme winter-weather events—now more common in the area—exacerbate the problem by creating an explosive growth in grasses and brush, which then die and dry out throughout the summer. 

While researchers predict that climate change will shift Santa Ana wind events to later months in coming years, the expanding fire season that’s also being caused by climate change seems likely to ensure that those later winds will still find dry fuel sources. And a University of California study found that climate change causes and will continue to cause Santa Ana winds to have even lower relative humidity

How Do These Fires Start?

Twenty-five million people live between San Diego and Ventura, California, along with all the attendant infrastructure such a massive, concentrated population requires. Southern California’s electrical grid doesn’t appear to be as problematic as that in the northern part of the state, but the local electricity provider is still considering turning power off for up to 500,000 people this week, in an effort to avoid accidental fires as lines blow in the powerful winds. 

In addition to power lines, accidental fires can be caused by almost innumerable factors. Vehicle traffic, homeless encampments, trash disposal, smokers, and campfires have all been blamed for massive fires in recent years. And the heightened amount of publicity wildfires receive even appears to attract arsonists. 

With so many people living in what is effectively a tinderbox, it’s inevitable that fires will ignite. Weather conditions like those the region is experiencing this week amplify the odds that blazes will spread out of control. 

Could Controlled Burns Help? 

It’s popular in regressive political circles to criticize California’s government for failing to take steps to adequately mitigate fuel loads

While it’s true that controlled burns and mechanical thinning are effective tools for reducing wildfire risk and severity, they are also incredibly laborious to implement. Both the burns and the thinning need to be carried out largely by hand and conducted during the ever shortening rainy season, when the risks of a burn or mechanical equipment starting a fire or allowing one to get out of control are minimized. Because brush grows back quickly, especially in California’s current cycle of large winter storms, those fuel-mitigation activities need to be repeated regularly. That used to be once every ten years. In today’s environment? Who knows. 

Adding to the headaches involved with fuel removals are the amount of homes that have been built in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), which is basically any developed area with natural beauty. If you saw the videos from Monday’s fire in the Pacific Palisades, those homes’ proximity to the chaparral that’s catching on fire is a textbook example of the WUI.

Fire spreads incredibly quickly on steep, brush-covered hillsides, creating something of a catch-22 for fire-management officials. Burning brush on the steep hillsides below those multimillion-dollar homes could reduce the risk those homeowners face, but it also puts multimillion-dollar homes at risk of an accident caused by the controlled burns. And it exposes residents to potentially harmful smoke inhalation. Plus, those burns would need to be repeated at least once every ten years.

An area the size of Maryland is in need of fuel mitigation in California right now. Neither the state nor the federal government has the resources to do that, and even if they declared an emergency and somehow managed to figure it out this winter, the process would need to be repeated in a decade on what will likely then be an even larger area.

If all this sounds like bad news, that’s because it is. In California, 5.1 million homes are at risk from wildfires exacerbated by climate change. That’s 120 times more homes than are at risk from sea-level rise in the state. There’s no easy answer to this and no solution on the horizon. Is your home at risk? Use this mapping tool to find out



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Acknowledge what is here in Wisconsin and help maintain those natural resources and opportunities  https://ift.tt/2MIJiF5

Wisconsin is known as a destination location to gather numerous wild things, whether it be flora or fauna.  Sometimes so designated by ranking; other times simply by numbers and enthusiasm with which people come here to spear lake sturgeon, shoot deer, flush ruffed grouse, train dogs, view prairie chickens and enjoy the autumn scenery.

All too often some take these resources for granted; or worse, believe it to be theirs alone.

But there’s more to do than admire and walk away. We must inform the biologists and politicians that we mostly like what we have. Thank them, too, or offer suggestions for minor changes.

Keep in mind, too, that seasons, bag limits and possession limits are set using scientific data, as well as social and tourist data, with science usually being front and center, carrying most weight.

We appreciate other states making accommodations for nonresidents and those guys should appreciate Wisconsin doing the same.

Because we lead or share the lead in the nation in many outdoors recreation categories, it is important to not short-change funding and protection for Wisconsin’s outdoors.

Let’s keep Wisconsin Wisconsin.

Categories: Wisconsin – Jerry Davis

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Taking advantage of Great Lakes country grouse numbers and hunting opportunities  https://ift.tt/2pcjCHI

When it comes to ruffed grouse numbers, ignore the trends and just go hunting. Even on down years there are plenty of birds to be had for hunters willing to put on the miles.

When it comes to ruffs, the whisper numbers for overall populations always spread through the upland crowd like juicy gossip. If the numbers are up from the previous year, the general mood seems pretty good. If they drop, then the opposite happens.

What I’ve found as someone who’ll hunt regardless of how many birds are supposed to be on the landscape is that it really doesn’t matter. This year I’ve heard plenty of hunters say the grouse numbers are down and what they imply is that hunting isn’t really worth it.

My limited time in the woods targeting ruffs has led me to believe that it is, indeed, worth it. It always is, if I’m being honest. I rarely shoot limits of grouse, so heading out with the expectation that Luna and I might get a few flushes and perhaps a bird or two for dinner is good enough. What I find, and what I found last weekend, is that this is possible in the worst years.

Even when the grouse cycle has bottomed, West Nile Virus has hit the birds and whatever else has conspired to wipe the grouse slate clean, it seems that enough miles behind a good dog will result in those ever-so-sweet flushes. And anyone who upland hunts knows it takes flushes to fill the game bag. It’s a simple equation, really.

More to the point, not hunting because it might not be easy is a strange excuse. Hunting isn’t supposed to be easy, and when we work hard to make it that way, we dilute the benefits of the experience.

All of this is a long-winded way of saying that if you like to grouse hunt, you should go. There are birds out there to be had, and the hunting is only going to improve as the temperatures, and the leaves, drop. And if what I’ve seen so far indicates anything, even though there aren’t supposed to be as many ruffs in the north country as in certain years past, there are still plenty of them just waiting to get flushed.

Categories: Bloggers on Hunting, How To’s, Hunting, Tony Peterson

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Is Everest Taller Than We Think? https://ift.tt/2N7WTof

After 2 years of surveying efforts, Nepal — and China — will announce the new official height of the world’s tallest mountain.

Mount Everest is 29,029 feet (8,848 m) tall — that has a nice ring to it. But what if it’s even taller? The mountain, which sits in the Himalayas in Nepal bordering Tibet, has shifted over the past decade. For years, Nepali officials at the Land Reform Ministry and Survey Department have been working to find out for sure how tall the mountain stands.

Is it possible the mountain has shifted? Of course. Mt. Everest lies on the Indian tectonic plate, which shifts a few millimeters every year. The direction in which the plate shifts, however, is dynamic and varies each year.

Nepal Will No Longer Allow Plastic on Everest
Nepal Will No Longer Allow Plastic on Everest

Nepal recently wrapped up its 45-day Everest Cleaning Campaign. But trash removal on the world's highest mountain is going to take a lot more effort. Read more…

The department conducted four different methods of geological surveys, reported the Kathmandu Post: precise leveling, trigonometric leveling, gravity survey, and GNSS survey.

During Chinese President Xi Jinping’s recent trip to Nepal, both countries signed an agreement that they would announce the new height together. “Mount Sagarmatha/Zhumulangma is an eternal symbol of the friendship between Nepal and China,” read the joint statement.

What’s the Official Height Now?

The true height today recognized by Nepal is 8,848 m, but that measurement was taken in 1954. In 1975, China measured the mountain as 8,848.13 m. Then in 1999, an American mountaineer from the Boston Museum of Science used GPS to declare Mt. Everest a new height of 8,850 m.

In 2005, China remeasured and declared a height of 8,844.43 m. Since then, the country of Nepal has been on a mission to measure the current height of the peak on their own.

Mt. Everest/Sagarmatha’s official new height will be announced later this week.

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Hikers Find Human Skeleton in Sierra Nevadas https://ift.tt/32I82Ts

Tyler Hofer and his hiking partner had planned to summit California’s Mount Williamson that afternoon — not to discover a body.

On October 7, two climbers happened to venture off-route during their ascent of Mount Williamson, a 14,374-foot peak in California’s eastern Sierras. As they were heading up the mountain, they caught a glimpse of a skull in a boulder field. A human skull.

They decided to investigate and discovered a full set of human remains buried beneath some boulders. The hikers also found remnants of shoes and a belt.

“It wasn’t in a position of distress or curled up,” Hofer told the Associated Press. “It was definitely a burial because it was very strategically covered with rocks.” The skeleton apparently lay face up with its arms crossed.

The discovery of the remains led to a full investigation by the Inyo County Sheriff’s Department, who successfully airlifted out the skeleton. They plan to run a DNA test for identification.

“This is a huge mystery to us,” said Carma Roper, the Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman. This week, the Inyo County Sheriff’s Office released information on the mystery remains. So far, they haven’t found any possible matches in missing persons or search-and-rescue records.

According to the county sheriff’s office, the body — possibly a climber or a hiker — could have been there for decades.

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