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		<title>Urban Packing At Gustav Swanson With The Cruise 26 SL</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 15:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3596</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve always appreciated a good backpack and was reminded of why when unseasonably warm winter weather got us thinking about spring early this year and prompted our 2 1/2 year old daughter and me to check out the City of Fort Collins&#8217; Gustav Swanson Natural Area. I&#8217;d heard they&#8217;d recently constructed a short trail on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3600" title="EricOdell_Gustav4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/EricOdell_Gustav4-225x300.jpg" alt="EricOdell Gustav4 225x300 Urban Packing At Gustav Swanson With The Cruise 26 SL" width="225" height="300" />I&#8217;ve always appreciated a good backpack and was reminded of why when unseasonably warm winter weather got us thinking about spring early this year and prompted our 2 1/2 year old daughter and me to check out the City of Fort Collins&#8217; Gustav Swanson Natural Area. I&#8217;d heard they&#8217;d recently constructed a short trail on this property along the Poudre River near Old Town. It turned out the trail, designed as a big lollipop loop trail off the main commuter trail, is perfect for a toddler to explore at her own pace on foot, stopping to watch insects on the path or step off the trail to climb on logs, throw rocks in the river and pick up sticks. Nice for me to easily be able to pack a picnic lunch in my <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=33682">Deuter Cruise 26SL</a> pack and give it an urban whirl.</p>
<p>Mainly I use this pack backcountry skiing &#8211; a women&#8217;s specific design, it fits so well and streamlined for poling and carrying all my gear. I particularly like the main storage compartment design as the zipper allows it to open as one large flap for finding everything from goggles to heavier gloves and easily storing and retrieving skins.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3598" title="EricOdell_Gustav2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/EricOdell_Gustav2-225x300.jpg" alt="EricOdell Gustav2 225x300 Urban Packing At Gustav Swanson With The Cruise 26 SL" width="225" height="300" />Equally comfortable it turns out for maneuvering a bike with a 36-pound toddler on front and allowing easy access numerous times, both enroute and once there, to retrieve such items as peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, goldfish, apple slices, tissues, water bottles, mittens, sunblock, hats, sunglasses, wipes, cell phone, &#8220;green bear&#8221; and a very elusive tiny box of raisins. It also was particularly handy for stashing all our treasures when we got caught up in picking up little pieces of trash spied by someone only 36&#8243; off the ground. In a different time of life I would have never even noticed Gustav Swanson Natural Area as I would have biked right past enroute to New Belgium Brewery&#8217;s tasting room. Similarly, I would never have needed my &#8220;ski pack&#8221; for such a simple use. Now, it&#8217;s the little things &#8211; the short trails, the close-by access to nature, the clean restroom, the tiny pieces of trash, and the plethora of rocks for throwing into the river that make our days complete. In both worlds, it turns out, a good pack is essential.</p>
<p>–Meegan Flenniken <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/272-507.php?title=Eric%20Odell%20and%20Meegan%20Flenniken">(Family Ambassador).</a></p>
<h2>Need a pack with versatility that holds everything!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Deuter Cruise 26 SL</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=33682">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.rockcreek.com/deuter-packs/cruise_26_SL_backpack_womens/14533.rc?utm_source=deuter&amp;utm_medium=buybutton&amp;utm_campaign=Cruise26SL">Rock Creek</a></li>
<li>Grab your own at <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-cruise-26-sl-backcpack-womens-1600cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>National Geographic, April 2012: K2 – Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/6ylkygvy1cI/national-geographic-april-2012-k2-danger-desire-savage-mountain</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 15:00:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Tomorrow Is Our Day Here at last was a morning that gave them hope: Monday, August 22, Camp IV, 7,950 meters. The gales were gone, the snow had quit, the sky ran blue and cloudless to the black edge of space. For most of July and half of August the six members of the International [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3555" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-2-300x217.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 2 300x217 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="217" /><strong>Tomorrow Is Our Day</strong></p>
<p>Here at last was a morning that gave them hope: Monday, August 22, Camp IV, 7,950 meters. The gales were gone, the snow had quit, the sky ran blue and cloudless to the black edge of space.</p>
<p>For most of July and half of August the six members of the International 2011 K2 North Pillar Expedition had been shuttling up and down the seldom attempted North Ridge of the world’s second highest peak. Theirs was the only party on the remote Chinese side of K2, the Karakoram Range giant that rises 8,611 meters (28,251 feet) on the China-Pakistan border. The mountaineers were climbing the ridge (as it is commonly referred to, even though “ridge” understates the steepness of the terrain) without bottled oxygen or high-altitude porters.</p>
<p>What the team lacked in numbers it made up for in experience. The two climbers from Kazakhstan—Maxut Zhumayev, 34, and Vassiliy Pivtsov, 36—were making their sixth and seventh attempts to summit K2, respectively. Dariusz Załuski, a 52-year-old Polish videographer, was a veteran of three attempts. Tommy Heinrich, a 49-year-old photographer from Argentina, had two K2 expeditions on his résumé but had also failed to summit.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3556" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-3-300x259.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 3 300x259 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="259" />Most notable was Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, a 40-year-old, dark-haired former nurse from Austria who was on her fourth trip to K2. If she succeeded this time, she would become the first woman in history to climb without supplemental oxygen all 14 of the world’s peaks that exceed the mystique-endowed height of 8,000 meters (26,247 feet). She was leading the expedition with her husband, Ralf Dujmovits, 49, who had already climbed all of the 8,000-meter peaks (all but one without bottled oxygen) and was the foremost high-altitude mountaineer in Germany. He had reached the top of K2 from the Pakistani side on his first try, in July 1994.</p>
<p>It had taken 42 days for the six climbers to establish several camps connected by thousands of feet of rope fixed across a route that included everything from vertical rock and ice to avalanche-raked slopes of chest-deep snow. They pushed themselves to break trail in heavy snow, haul gear, shovel out campsites, pitch tents, melt ice. Many times they relinquished their gains on the mountain, going down to sleep at the lower elevation of Advanced Base Camp, at 4,650 meters on the K2 North Glacier.</p>
<p>On August 16 they set out on what would be their first and only real chance for the summit. The snow that had been falling for much of the summer had started again. They reached Camp I, at the foot of the ridge, that day; avalanches roared and more than a foot of snow fell overnight. They waited there for a day, hoping the snow on the slopes above would come down before they continued their ascent.</p>
<p>On August 18 at 5:10 a.m. they decided to push ahead to Camp II. Every extra ounce was a burden; to save weight, Gerlinde left her journal in the tent. Two avalanches had already swept over their route up a long gully. Around 6:30 a.m. Ralf stopped. So precarious were the snow conditions he could no longer ignore his gut feelings.</p>
<p>“Gerlinde, I am going back,” he said.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3557" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-4-300x199.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 4 300x199 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="199" />Since the couple had been climbing together they had made a pact that neither would stand in the other’s way if one wanted to continue and the other did not. Barring injury or ill health, they were responsible for themselves. On Nepal’s Lhotse in 2006—just one of several examples—Gerlinde had climbed on alone for 20 minutes after Ralf had been deterred by fresh snow over the blue ice of the summit couloir, before she too turned back. She was, as he acknowledged, still brimming with wagnis—a German word meaning “daring.” Having never been to the top of K2, she was willing to take risks that Ralf, who had, was not. She coped with fear differently too. Where he relished how the sensation of fear in his stomach revealed the margins of his ability and compelled him to pay attention, Gerlinde strove to block out fear with the quiet calm that possessed her when she was absorbed in what she had to do. If she kept herself completely focused on the task at hand, she didn’t feel afraid.</p>
<p>But now, in the gully above Camp I, despite their agreement, despite knowing the delay might cost her a chance to reach the summit, Ralf begged his wife to come down with him. His composure deserted him. “Ralf was yelling that the route is very, very avalanche prone. He was shouting desperately,” Maxut said later in a video on his website, “and Gerlinde shouted in return that now is the moment when the fate of the climb will be decided. If we turn around today, on the 18th, we are not making the period of good weather.”</p>
<p>“I was really afraid I would never see her again,” Ralf explained later.<br />
In what was her most anguished moment of the climb so far, Gerlinde watched as Ralf distributed his group gear to the rest of the team and descended into the mist. And then, in what may be the premier example of her tenacity and will, she returned to the task at hand. “It’s not that I was indifferent to the risk,” she said afterward. “But my gut feeling was good.”</p>
<p>As Ralf had feared, the snow on the slope began to rip loose, three small slides in succession set off by Maxut, Vassiliy, and Gerlinde, who were out front breaking trail. The biggest hit Tommy, climbing almost 200 feet below; it knocked him upside down and stuffed his nose and mouth. Only the fixed rope, taut as a cello string, kept him from being flushed off the mountain. He was able to dig himself out, but the slide had refilled the broken trail, and eventually he too turned back.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3559" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-6" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-6-300x199.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 6 300x199 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="199" />So now they were four: Gerlinde, Vassiliy, Maxut, and Dariusz. The job of breaking trail was Sisyphean—worse really, because they couldn’t pretend they hadn’t volunteered for the punishment. Sweep the snow aside, crack the crust with your knee, compact what’s underneath, step up, slip back. Repeat and repeat and repeat. After 11 hours they set up a bivouac at Shoulder Depot Camp, below Camp II, and spent a miserable night crammed into a two-person tent. The following day they negotiated the most difficult sections of the ridge and reached Camp II, at 6,600 meters, where they changed into down suits. On Saturday, August 20, they slogged on to Camp III, arriving in the afternoon, exhausted, chilled to the bone. They drank coffee with honey and warmed their hands and feet over their gas stoves. All night the hoarfrosted tent walls snapped and shuddered in the wind.</p>
<p>They had been promised better weather by a satellite-phone forecast Ralf passed along over the radio from Advanced Base Camp. The break finally arrived on Sunday, August 21, lifting everyone’s spirits and helping to carry the team to Camp IV. They were now at nearly 8,000 meters, in the so-called death zone, where the body is unable to acclimatize to the oxygen-depleted air, cognition becomes impaired, and the simplest tasks can take forever. They spent the afternoon sharpening their crampons and melting snow. Toward evening they stood outside their tents, pitched in a notch of rock above an appalling void that plunged nearly two miles to the glacier below. Two thousand feet above lay the glistening white mantle of the summit, untouched since 2008, when 11 climbers died in one of the deadliest mountaineering episodes in the history of K2.</p>
<p>“There was a moment when we all started to get nervous, in a good way,” Gerlinde said later. “We touched each other’s hands and looked at each other in the eyes and said, ‘OK, tomorrow is our day.’”</p>
<p><strong>A Passion for Climbing</strong></p>
<p>K2 has a singular place in high-altitude mountaineering. Though 784 feet lower than Mount Everest, it has long been known as the mountaineer’s mountain. The sharp triangle of its silhouette and height above the surrounding terrain not only define the archetypal image of a mountain but, as a practical matter, also make K2 far more difficult and dangerous to climb. As of 2010 Everest had been summited 5,104 times; K2, just 302. Roughly one K2 climber has died for every four who’ve succeeded.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3560" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-7" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-7-300x220.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 7 300x220 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="220" />After the first attempts by British and Italian climbing teams in the early 1900s, American parties tackled K2 in 1938, 1939, and 1953. Charles Houston and Robert Bates titled their account of their 1953 expedition K2: The Savage Mountain. The characterization has been invoked so often over the years you’d think the moods of K2 reflected some personal antipathy toward mountaineers petitioning for its favor rather than the random dynamics of the physical world. In 1954 K2 was finally “conquered” by a large Italian expedition that put two men on the top via the now standard summit route on the Pakistani side of the mountain.</p>
<p>As for Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, the mountaineer’s mountain had made an indelible impression on her when she first glimpsed it from nearby Broad Peak in 1994 at age 23. “I was fascinated by its shape,” she said, “but I didn’t dare imagine myself ever climbing on it.”</p>
<p>Gerlinde, the fifth of six children, grew up in a Roman Catholic family in Spital am Pyhrn, a mountain village of about 2,200 people in central Austria. Her father, Manfred, worked in the local quarries; her mother, Rosamaria, was a cook in a youth hostel. Gerlinde idolized her big sister, Brigitte, ten years her senior. She was mad for sports: swimming, biking, skiing. There wasn’t much money in the house; Gerlinde didn’t see a movie in the cinema until she was 17.</p>
<p>She attended a school for sports, including ski training, where she discovered she was a good skier but not topflight. More upsetting was when supposedly close friends expressed resentment if she happened to do better in a race. The experience of early school rivalries soured her on competition and shaped her later reluctance to view herself as a contestant vying for records against other female mountaineers.</p>
<p>It was at church, not school, that her passion for climbing was awakened. In a country where most major mountains have crosses on top, it shouldn’t be surprising that Erich Tischler, the local Catholic priest, wore climbing knickers under his cassock and, if the weather was good, would shorten his Sunday sermon to hasten his flock to the hills. Gerlinde served as an altar girl, attending Mass with her boots in her rucksack. Father Tischler led her on her first hike, at age seven, and on her first technical roped ascent, of Sturzhahn Mountain when she was 13.</p>
<p>After her parents’ marriage ended in divorce in 1985, her relationship with her mother was strained. Gerlinde, then 14, moved out. She lived with her sister Brigitte and eventually followed her into the nursing profession. By 20 Gerlinde had a job at a hospital in Rottenmann, a small town about 15 miles from Spital am Pyhrn. She was happy, near her family, but independent. On weekends she skipped off to the local alps to climb. The appetite for adventure, which had always set her apart from her family, led her to the Karakoram Range in 1994. On Broad Peak in Pakistan she abandoned her bid for the summit as the weather worsened, then changed her mind, and finally reached the forepeak, some 20 meters lower than the 8,051-meter summit, which lay at the far end of a long ridge. (She would return to summit in 2007.) She was elated but, having seen the body of a climber who’d died on the mountain, was also perplexed. “It cannot be that happiness, joy, and death are so closely linked together,” she wrote in her journal.</p>
<p>Back home, Gerlinde saved money and cobbled together vacation days for trekking and climbing trips to Pakistan, China, Nepal, Peru. After her first expedition her father said, “OK, one is enough. You don’t have to do any more.” After the second he said, “Now you have two. That’s enough.”</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3561" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-8" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-8-205x300.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 8 205x300 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="205" height="300" />“His wish was to see me get married and have a family,” Gerlinde recalls. But she had known in her early 20s that children were not in her cards. She showed her father pictures and tried to explain the infusion of energy and happiness she felt in the mountains. There were risks of course, but nursing had taught her that death was part of life. And for perspective, she had only to look at the losses faced by Brigitte, who had already buried three husbands. Bad things could happen anytime, anywhere.</p>
<p>In 1998 Gerlinde climbed Cho Oyu, near the Nepal-China border, her first true 8,000-meter summit. Four years later, in 2002, she reached her third 8,000-meter summit, the top of 8,163-meter Manaslu in Nepal. In base camp she met Ralf Dujmovits, then 40 and at the peak of his celebrity, having starred in a live televised ascent of the north face of the Eiger in the Swiss Alps that was watched by millions of people. They got along like a pair of swans and broke trail together.</p>
<p>For more than 20 years women had been making inroads in the male domain of high-altitude mountaineering but were still frequently treated with condescension. In 2003, still acclimatized by an unsuccessful attempt on Kanchenjunga, Gerlinde flew to Pakistan to try the Diamir Face of the 8,126-meter Nanga Parbat. Above Camp II she found herself breaking trail in a single file with six male climbers from Kazakhstan and one from Spain. Her presence was not mentioned when the leader reported on the radio that seven climbers were heading up to Camp III. When she worked her way to the front of the line to take her turn breaking trail, she was nudged aside. Misguided chivalry? Arrogant disdain for her abilities? She wasn’t sure but went politely to the back of the line. When she had worked her way to the front again and one of the male climbers tried to wave her away a second time, she’d had enough. She took off, bulldozing her way up the unbroken slope without stopping. She plowed the path all the way to Camp III. The gob-smacked climbers in her wake nicknamed her “Cinderella Caterpillar” for the trail-breaking machine that had appeared in their midst.</p>
<p>She was the first Austrian woman to summit Nanga Parbat, the mountain known for the first ascent by the legendary Austrian climber Hermann Buhl in 1953. Her success on the 50th anniversary of Buhl’s audacious feat attracted notice in climbing magazines and gave her the impetus to make a profession out of her passion. Over the next two years she added Annapurna I, Gasherbrum I, Gasherbrum II, and Xixabangma Feng to her résumé. She now had climbed 8 of the 14 highest peaks. In January 2006 the German magazine Der Spiegel dubbed her “queen of the death zone.” The image of a haughty monarch reigning over life and death had little to do with the actual character of a sensitive, unselfish woman (in base camp on K2 Gerlinde tried to see if a pair of sunglasses would relieve the distress of a snow-blind sheep), but it did wonders for her lectures ticket sales, impressed sponsors, and secured her career as a professional mountaineer.<br />
That spring of 2006, after she too had turned back on Lhotse, she found Ralf waiting in their camp at 7,250 meters. It was an unusually warm night; as they lay in their sleeping bags outside the tent under the stars with a bed of clouds blanketing the earth below and bolts of distant lightning blazing on the face of Everest, Ralf asked Gerlinde to marry him.</p>
<p>“It was not your typical first three months of marriage,” Gerlinde says. The newlyweds spent the summer attempting various summits, together and separately. In May 2007, while Ralf guided an expedition to Manaslu, Gerlinde arranged to climb 8,167-meter Dhaulagiri I. She carefully placed her tent well left of the area where an avalanche had broken the neck of the famous female French mountaineer Chantal Mauduit in 1998. Close by were a pair of tents occupied by three Spanish climbers, who had invited Gerlinde in for coffee. At 9 a.m. on May 13, waiting for the winds to subside so she could start for Camp III, Gerlinde was lying in her tent, fully dressed except for her boots. There was a roar, and then a massive rush of snow devoured the camp, bowling her tent a hundred feet down the slope to the edge of a precipice.</p>
<p>“I couldn’t tell if I was up or down,” she says. “My feet were completely packed in, but I could move my arms a little bit. I tried to get to the little knife I keep on my harness. I was worried the snow would smother me. I was able to cut through the wall of the tent with my knife. There was about 30 centimeters [a foot] of loose snow on top of it, and I punched my hand out. After about an hour I was able to get out of the tent. I had no shoes, no sunglasses.”</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3562" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-9" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-9-300x218.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 9 300x218 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="218" />She looked for the tents of her Spanish friends. One climber’s solo tent was still intact, the other, with two climbers, was gone. Frantically she began to dig. An hour later, six feet down, she found it: Santiago Sagaste and Ricardo Valencia were inside, dead. All desire to do anything on Dhaulagiri but get down was gone. Later she poured out her feelings to Ralf. Why didn’t she notice that the weather had turned ominously warm? Why did she ignore the sign when the turquoise bracelet that was her good luck charm broke the day before?</p>
<p>Despite the brush with oblivion, she returned to Dhaulagiri the next year and summited it.</p>
<p>To the Savage Mountain</p>
<p>Just getting to K2 is an arduous journey in its own right, though far easier than it was when the first expeditions traveled for months to reach the peak. I had arranged to accompany the 2011 team to Advanced Base Camp. We all met in the ancient Silk Road city of Kashi, or Kashgar, in the far west of China, and then headed south on June 19 in three Toyota Land Cruisers followed by a truck overloaded with more than two tons of equipment in blue plastic barrels: tents, sleeping bags, stoves, parkas, ice screws, solar panels, batteries, computers, 9,000 feet of rope, 525 eggs, packages of freeze-dried pasta primavera, a bottle of Chivas Regal, a DVD of the movie Hall Pass.</p>
<p>The road skirted the western edge of the Taklimakan Desert and passed through farming towns lined with silver poplars and orchards irrigated by the brawny rivers draining the Kunlun Mountains to the south and the Pamirs to the west. After a night in the dimly lit Yecheng Electricity Hotel we drove over the Chiragsaldi Pass and crept through billows of dust at ten miles an hour until we reached a desolate truck stop called Mazar. In the morning we turned west onto the ragged road that follows the Yarkant River all the way to the Kyrgyz nomad village of Ilik, population 250. We unrolled our sleeping bags in the rug-lined living room of a mud-brick house that belonged to the local mullah. Most of the village turned out in the morning to help lash the expedition’s gear to a herd of camels, and by midday the caravan was heading into the valley of the Surukwat River: 40 camels, eight donkeys, six cows, a small flock of sheep slated for Kyrgyz cooking pots, a Uygur liaison officer named Iskander Abibullah, and six mountaineers in high-tech fabrics and “day for night” sunglasses.</p>
<p>Gerlinde and Ralf were thrilled to be approaching K2 from the north for the first time. The first night in camp Ralf brought out a composite portrait of the mountain made using satellite mapping data and photographs. Maxut studied the daunting details of the North Ridge, which had been first climbed by a Japanese party in 1982; he and Vassiliy had spent many weeks on the ridge in 2007, before bad weather and shortages of food and water forced them to retreat.</p>
<p>“Too soon you show us these,” Maxut said, only half joking. “Hard to sleep now. Where is vodka?”</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3563" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-10" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-10-300x221.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 10 300x221 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="221" />On the third day we crossed Aghil Pass, at 4,780 meters, and descended into the valley of the Shaksgam River, which rises from the glaciers below the Gasherbrum peaks. Giant terraces of mud-packed rock framed a broad, gray stone plain braided with half a dozen or more channels of silty water. The channels didn’t look too hard to cross, until you saw one of the mountain donkeys knocked off all four feet and whisked downstream like a plastic soda bottle. We crossed on the camels.</p>
<p>On the fifth morning, after an hour of walking, everyone suddenly stopped and stared up at the cloudless sky to the south as if flabbergasted by a UFO. There it was: K2, a colossus erupting out of the earth, its ice-draped walls shimmering in the morning sun like a mirage. It seemed unreal, and yet even from miles off its power was palpable. It was easy to understand the allure it held for mountaineers, no matter that its beauty was imbued with death and its frozen flanks were full of bones and buried bodies. And just as easy to understand why armchair mountaineers might shrink from the thing in dread, and wonder about the balance of reason and desire in those determined to climb it.</p>
<p>Gerlinde, who’d seen K2 many times from the south, sat down on a rock and gazed at the peak with what seemed a welter of emotion in her eyes.</p>
<p>Not wanting to intrude, I asked many weeks later what she’d been thinking about.<br />
“I was thinking, What can I expect this time? How will it be?”</p>
<p>Her K2 history was shadowed with hard memories. She had made three expeditions to the southern side—the last in 2010. On the trip, after a rockfall above Camp III turned Ralf back, Gerlinde joined forces with a close friend of theirs, Fredrik Ericsson, an extreme skier who was attempting ski descents of the world’s highest peaks. Carrying his skis in his pack, Fredrik set out with Gerlinde for the summit from Camp IV. At the base of the steep gully known as the Bottleneck he stopped to set a piton, and as he was hammering it, he lost his footing. He plunged past Gerlinde in an instant and was gone.</p>
<p>In shock, she climbed down as far as she could but found only a ski before the slope vanished into the misty void. Fredrik’s body was later spotted in the snow 3,000 feet below the Bottleneck. He was 35.</p>
<p>As had been the case with the tragedy on Dhaulagiri, Gerlinde wanted nothing to do with K2 after Fredrik’s death. Numb, sad, disillusioned with the price of the life she’d chosen, she went home. At the end of the year she and Ralf took a vacation in Thailand. For four weeks they lived by the sea. They ate fresh fish. They climbed on sea cliffs where falls ended in warm, green water.</p>
<p>People had always asked her why she kept going back to K2. For a long time she didn’t have an answer. But gradually she began to think it wasn’t the mountain’s fault that Fredrik had died. The loss was savage but not the mountain. “The mountain is the mountain, and we are the people who go there,” she says. Friends took a picture of beach stones arranged in the shape of a heart around a message they’d written with pebbles:</p>
<p>Gerlinde + Ralf K2 2011</p>
<p>She used a print of it for the cover of her packing list.</p>
<p><strong>One With the Universe</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3564" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-11" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-11-224x300.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 11 224x300 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="224" height="300" />Around 7 a.m., Monday, August 22, Gerlinde, Vassiliy, Maxut, and Dariusz set out from Camp IV for a place that was as much the culmination of a common dream as a crowning point of Earth. It was a cloudless day, the weather like a gift. They were climbing up a steep chute of ice, the so-called Japanese Couloir, the predominant feature high on the mountain’s north face. But with only a third of the oxygen at sea level, snow up to their chests in places, and stinging blasts of spindrift that forced them to stop and avert their faces, they made painfully slow progress. By 1 p.m. they had gained less than 180 meters.</p>
<p>Although they’d spent time above Camp IV in 2007, Vassiliy and Maxut were unfamiliar with the Japanese Couloir, and the way up was difficult to see. Gerlinde reached Ralf on the radio at Advanced Base Camp. Since turning back above Camp I, he had devoted himself to supporting the summit party, passing on weather forecasts, advice, and encouragement. Though miles away, he could see that the best place to cross the couloir was below the lip of a long, thin crevasse that ran the width of the slope, where the snow tended to be not as deep and the natural fracture in the slope would lessen the chance of the climbers triggering an avalanche. He helped guide them to the crevasse and watched as their figures, no bigger than commas on a page of paper, began edging across the couloir under a series of seracs—bulges of ice that protruded from the 45-degree slope like dormers from a roof. The seracs might protect them if avalanches swept down from above.</p>
<p>Nearing the rocky left edge, they turned to ascend directly up the slope until they came to a final serac at around 8,300 meters. They’d been climbing for 12 hours; they were 300 meters below the summit.</p>
<p>On the radio Ralf urged Gerlinde to return to Camp IV for the night now that they had broken the trail and knew the way.</p>
<p>“You cannot sleep there, you cannot relax,” he said.</p>
<p>“Ralf,” said Gerlinde, “we are here. We don’t want to go back.”</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3565" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-12-" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-12--300x127.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 12  300x127 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="127" />They had known when they set out that morning that their only chance for the summit might require a bivouac. The possibility had prompted Gerlinde to add the extra weight of a three-pound, two-person tent to her rucksack, as well as a pot and stove, and the same tacit understanding had prompted Dariusz, Maxut, and Vassiliy to tuck extra stove-gas canisters and food into their rucksacks. Days later Maxut tried to explain their state of mind to Tommy. “This was the limit,” he said, tracing a line on the ground with his boot, “and this was how far we went beyond it.” He put his boot half a yard beyond the line. “We completely passed the limit. I risked everything, even my family, my wife, my son, my daughter, everything.”</p>
<p>With the sun low in the west, they stopped in the lee of the last serac to prepare a site for the tiny tent. For an hour and 20 minutes they hacked at the ice, until they had a level platform four feet wide, five feet long. They anchored the tent with two ice screws and a pair of ice axes. By 8:15 they were all inside, sitting on their rucksacks, a stove hanging from the ceiling with a pot of melting snow. Gerlinde made some tomato soup. The temperature was minus 13 Fahrenheit. The plan was to rest until midnight, then resume the push for the prize, now so close.</p>
<p>At one in the morning Vassiliy, Maxut, and Gerlinde strapped on their crampons and by the light of their headlamps started up the steep grade above the tent. Dariusz was still inside getting ready. Gerlinde swung her arms in big circles, but she couldn’t feel her fingers, and she was having trouble unclipping from the rope. Maxut’s feet felt like blocks of ice. They retreated to the tent to try to get warm and wait for sunrise. Gerlinde shivered uncontrollably. It was hard to believe that eight weeks earlier they had all been sweltering in 100-degree temperatures in the Shaksgam Valley, and Maxut had been rubbing yogurt on his sunburned legs.</p>
<p>They set out again around 7 a.m. as another immaculate morning dawned. It was now or never. In her rucksack Gerlinde had spare batteries, extra mittens, toilet paper, a second pair of sunglasses, bandages, drops for snow blindness, cortisone, a syringe; for her main sponsor she also carried a flag with the name of an Austrian oil company. For herself, she had a tiny copper box containing a figure of the Buddha, which she planned to bury on the summit. Inside her suit she tucked the half liter of water she had managed to melt; in her pack it would freeze.</p>
<p>They worked their way up the slope toward a 130-meter ramp of snow that angled up to the summit ridge. They were still suffering from the cold but by 11 a.m. could see they would soon be in the sun. At 3 p.m. they reached the base of the ramp. For the first 20 meters they were exhilarated to discover they sank only to their shins. But soon the snow was chest deep. Where they had switched leads to break trail every 50 steps, they now had to switch every 10, with Maxut and Vassiliy taking extra turns. Oh my God, Gerlinde thought, it’s not possible that we’ve come so far up and will have to turn back.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3566" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-13" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-13-300x185.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 13 300x185 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="185" />Desperate for an easier way, they stopped climbing in single file at one point. From below, Ralf was astonished to see their track split into three lines as Gerlinde, Vassiliy, and Maxut searched for better footing. Ahead lay a band of snow-patched rocks tilted at 60 degrees. Steep as it was, it proved easier to negotiate. Climbing single file again, Gerlinde changed places with Vassiliy and sank only up to her knees. With a surge of energy and hope she clambered out of the ramp and onto the ridge, where the wind-packed snow was like a sidewalk. It was 4:35 p.m. She could see the summit dome.</p>
<p>“You can make it!” Ralf cried over the radio. “You can make it! But you are late! Take care!”</p>
<p>She sipped from her water bottle. Her throat was cracked; it hurt to swallow. It was too cold to sweat, but they were all getting dehydrated just from panting for air.</p>
<p>When Vassiliy caught up, he said she should go on to the summit, he would wait for Maxut. Like Gerlinde, he and Maxut stood on the brink of the only 8,000-meter summit they hadn’t climbed. He wanted to go to the top beside his partner but didn’t want people to think he couldn’t have gotten there as quickly as Gerlinde. “You have to say I waited for Maxut,” he told her.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course,” she said.</p>
<p>And then she walked the final steps to the apex of K2.</p>
<p>It was 6:18 p.m. She wanted to share the moment with Ralf, but when she opened the radio she couldn’t speak. There were mountains in every direction. Mountains she had climbed. Mountains that had stolen the lives of her friends and nearly claimed hers too. But never had she invested so much in a mountain as the one under her boots at last. Alone, with the world at her feet, she turned from one point of the compass to another.</p>
<p>“It was one of the most powerful experiences of my life,” she said later. “I felt as if I were one with the universe. It was so strange on one hand to be extremely exhausted and on the other to be getting so much energy from the view.”</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes later Maxut and Vassiliy arrived, shoulder to shoulder. Everyone embraced. Half an hour later Dariusz staggered up, his hands suffering from having taken his gloves off to change batteries on the video camera. It was 7 p.m. Their shadows reached far across the top of K2, as the pyramidal shadow of the mountain itself reached for miles to the east, and a beautiful golden light began to burnish the world. Dariusz filmed as Gerlinde tried to articulate what it meant to her to be there at that moment: “I’m so deeply filled to stand here now after so many tries, so many years.” She began to cry, then composed herself. “It was very, very hard, all the days now, and now it’s just amazing. I don’t find the right words.” She gestured to the sea of peaks in all directions. “You see all this—I think everybody can understand why we do this.”</p>
<p><strong>Stand With Us</strong></p>
<p>Ralf was up most of the night monitoring the descent. More than a third of all fatalities on K2 have happened on the way down. Around 8:30 p.m. he could see four tiny pinpricks of light moving down the ramp into the Japanese Couloir. As she descended in the dark, exhausted, Gerlinde found herself repeating a phrase that had been in her mind: Steh uns bei und beschütze uns. Stand with us and protect us.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3567" title="Nat-Geo-Pic-14" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Nat-Geo-Pic-14-300x201.jpg" alt="Nat Geo Pic 14 300x201 National Geographic, April 2012: K2   Danger and Desire On The Savage Mountain" width="300" height="201" />“We spoke many times on the descent,” said Gerlinde. “We asked each other again and again, ‘Is everything OK?’ It was just a very serious, very exacting climb. If there would have been just the cold, it would have been hard enough. But there was the steepness, the altitude, the wind during the night and the morning, and the psychological effects—we didn’t have any rope left to fix the route, and the terrain was very steep and exposed. Everybody had to take a very long time and be very careful how they moved.”</p>
<p>Two days later, when Gerlinde came down from Camp I, Ralf met her on the glacier. They held each other for a long time. At Camp I she had found the letter he had left for her in the hope that she would return—a four-foot-long missive written on toilet paper avowing his love and explaining his decision to turn back. “I don’t always want to be the person who holds you back…”</p>
<p>In base camp Gerlinde spoke by satellite phone to Fredrik’s father, Jan Olaf Ericsson, who wanted to know everything she had seen from the summit of the mountain where his son was buried. The president of Austria called to congratulate her. The prime minister of Kazakhstan congratulated Maxut and Vassiliy on Twitter. In the dining tent Gerlinde fell asleep over a plate of watermelon.</p>
<p>At the airport in Munich her whole family turned out to greet her. Her father cried when he hugged her, and for the first time he did not say she’d climbed enough mountains and should stop.</p>
<p>With hardly an ounce of fat to start with, she’d lost 17 pounds. At a ceremony in Bühl, Germany, Gerlinde was showered with bouquets and gifts, including a jeroboam of red Rhine wine labeled with a picture of her atop K2 with her arms over her head. “Normally you will not find me with my arms over my head,” she says. “It’s not that I felt like a queen, but that I wanted to hug the whole world.”</p>
<p>Her friend and fellow climber David Göttler had arrived in Bühl from Munich to help edit the video of the climb for the lectures she would give. He tried several different pieces of music for the crucial summit scene, but none worked as well as “Ára bátur” by the Icelandic band Sigur Rós. He arranged the pictures and footage so the chorus of angelic voices and symphonic strings and horns all came to a crescendo just as Gerlinde thrust her arms overhead at the summit. He showed it to Ralf, who was thrilled by how powerfully it conveyed the glory of Gerlinde’s triumph.</p>
<p>But when they showed it to Gerlinde, she frowned and shook her head.</p>
<p>“No, Ralf, it’s too much. I’m sorry, David. I think it’s too much.”</p>
<p>They protested, to no avail. Then David, who had attempted K2 with Gerlinde in 2009 and knew her well, began to rework the scene. The pictures were the same. The music was the same. But the effect was completely different. The flow of photographs that ended with the climactic picture of Gerlinde’s upraised arms had been altered so that the crescendo of the music did not proclaim the glory of one mountaineer that sundown hour on the summit of K2 but the great world she could see all around her, transfigured in golden light.</p>
<p>She smiled when she saw it.</p>
<p>–Chip Brown (<a href="http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2012/04/k2/brown-text">National Geographic / Author</a>).</p>
<p>–Tommy Heinrich (<a href="http://www.tommyheinrich.com/">Photography</a>)</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Reach New Heights with Deuter!</h2>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Tips &amp; Tricks: Cragging Packs</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/UWEqVMn3fpA/deuter-tips-tricks-cragging-packs</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/deuter-tips-tricks-cragging-packs#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 May 2012 15:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3537</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Spring and summer – bring on the climbing season! Deuter, while known for the Guide Series of packs, has a few other options that excel at cragging, sport climbing and beyond. We’ll look at the Spectro 38 and Speed Lite 30 here from a recent trip to Red Rocks. Generally speaking, a rope coil will [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3538" title="CraggingPic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/CraggingPic1-300x300.jpg" alt="CraggingPic1 300x300 Tips & Tricks: Cragging Packs" width="300" height="300" />Spring and summer – bring on the climbing season! Deuter, while known for the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/search.php?query=guide">Guide Series</a> of packs, has a few other options that excel at cragging, sport climbing and beyond. We’ll look at the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=119&amp;artnr=44841">Spectro 38</a> and <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=47041">Speed Lite 30</a> here from a recent trip to Red Rocks.</p>
<p>Generally speaking, a rope coil will go under the top lid – that easily distributes the weight of the rope and makes the carry easy. Some people prefer to put their coil in the on the front of the pack – say, in the pocket – but that tends to pull weight off the back.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3540" title="CraggingPic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/CraggingPic3-300x300.jpg" alt="CraggingPic3 300x300 Tips & Tricks: Cragging Packs" width="300" height="300" />Packing the rest of the pack, you’ll want things like your draws, trad gear and the like at the bottom so it doesn’t poke you and it’s easy to drop in. Things like your helmet can go on the outside, but slings, your harness and your layers should easily fit internally. Generally speaking, you pack the pack in the opposite way of how you rack up for a climb safely.</p>
<p>-    Helmet goes on first<br />
-    Harness gets put on<br />
-    Slings / gear gets arranged</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3541" title="CraggingPic4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/CraggingPic4-300x300.jpg" alt="CraggingPic4 300x300 Tips & Tricks: Cragging Packs" width="300" height="300" />Here’s the Spectro 38 in that mode. My partner is getting organized and almost ready to put on the helmet, harness and gear up. Another note of consideration (and this can be very personal) &#8211; water bottles work really well cragging. There are more opportunities to grab your water independently than reach down or wear a pack while belaying. While getting to the crag, by all means, fill up your <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/accessory-details.php?category=479&amp;id=2115">Streamer</a> and hike away! All the packs are made to hold them.</p>
<p>Packing your pack becomes a little personal. I like to keep my guidebook easy to grab. I’m using my Speed Lite 30 down in Red Rocks in this shot – gear at the bottom, helmet inside and rope coil getting ready to be put under the lid.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3542" title="CraggingPic5" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/CraggingPic5-300x300.jpg" alt="CraggingPic5 300x300 Tips & Tricks: Cragging Packs" width="300" height="300" />Other packs like the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=34432&amp;title=ACT%20Trail%2032">ACT Trail 32</a> and <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=34422">ACT Trail 28 SL</a> are great cragging packs as well. Light and fast climbers trend toward the packs used on this recent trip, but who’s to say that any pack won’t work well.</p>
<p>–Todd Walton.</p>
<h2></h2>
<h2></h2>
<h2></h2>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Ready to get out and explore?</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>ACT Trail 32 </strong>and the <strong>Speed Lite 30</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/index.php">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick up your own Act Trail 32 from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-act-trail-32-backpack-1950cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
<li>Grab your own Speed Lite 30 at <a href="http://www.tahoemountainsports.com/product/deuter-speed-lite-30-backpack">Tahoe Mountain Sports</a></li>
<li>Buy a Speed Lite 30 from <a href="http://www.backcountryedge.com/deuter-speed-lite-30.aspx?utm_source=deuter&amp;utm_medium=ptop">Backcountry Edge</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>My Very Own Snowshoes And My Comfy Kid Comfort II</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/pr0fSYv2xdM/snowshoes-comfy-kid-comfort-ii</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/snowshoes-comfy-kid-comfort-ii#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Apr 2012 14:00:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3522</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With Mt. Bachelor still enveloped by a powerful winter storm in early February, Mark decided instead to venture out to Swampy Lakes with Owen in tow. Located at 5,800 feet along the Cascades Lake Highway, the sno-park is still at a high enough elevation to get walloped with snow, but is spared the biting cold [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3528" title="Lisa_Mch_Pic4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Lisa_Mch_Pic4.jpg" alt="Lisa Mch Pic4 My Very Own Snowshoes And My Comfy Kid Comfort II" width="221" height="166" />With <a href="http://www.mtbachelor.com/winter/index.html">Mt. Bachelor</a> still enveloped by a powerful winter storm in early February, Mark decided instead to venture out to <a href="http://byways.org/explore/byways/2144/places/12160">Swampy Lakes</a> with Owen in tow.<strong></strong></p>
<p>Located at 5,800 feet along the <a href="http://www.gorp.com/weekend-guide/travel-ta-scenic-drives-bend-la-pine-oregon-sidwcmdev_052631.html">Cascades Lake Highway</a>, the sno-park is still at a high enough elevation to get walloped with snow, but is spared the biting cold winds that can make an otherwise good day on the ski hill miserable.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3525" title="Lisa_Mch_Pic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Lisa_Mch_Pic1.jpg" alt="Lisa Mch Pic1 My Very Own Snowshoes And My Comfy Kid Comfort II" width="221" height="166" />Mark had anticipated this trek all morning. He pictured Owen loving the stadium view over his shoulder as Owen rode in our <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20II">Deuter Kid Comfort II</a> Child Carrier and surveyed the snowy landscape around him. Owen, however, wasn’t about to go along with this plan.  As Mark strapped on his snowshoes in the parking lot, Owen — perched on the bumper and watching him with a discerning eye — shot him the, “uh, where are my snowshoes?” look.  It was the harbinger of a forest-rattling temper tantrum that was enough to send his poor dad packing before ever stepping foot on the trail.  A couple of weeks after “The Incident,” we bought Owen a pair of plastic, lightweight snowshoes and set out for Edison Sno-Park. With trails that zigzag across open terrain, over and around lava flows and through stands of lodge pole and ponderosa pine, Edison is a snowshoe paradise.  At the trailhead, Owen donned his own gear and began his awkward penguin-like march on the crusty snow. He beamed with pride even as his feet got tangled and he tumbled over himself. He was a big boy. He was doing it on his own.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3527" title="Lisa_Mch_Pic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Lisa_Mch_Pic3.jpg" alt="Lisa Mch Pic3 My Very Own Snowshoes And My Comfy Kid Comfort II" width="221" height="166" />After an hour of tromping around and scaling hills, Owen began to wear down. A mile or so out from where we started, we decided to turn back.</p>
<p>Only this time, when Mark asked Owen to crawl into his comfy <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20II">Kid Comfort II</a> Child Carrier, he happily obliged. The sun on his back and a smile on his face, Owen chatted with his dad all the way back to the car.</p>
<p>–Lisa Goodman (<a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/272-492.php?title=Lisa%20Goodman">Family Ambassador</a>).</p>
<h2>Get out and explore with your little one!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Kid Comfort II</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20II">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.ems.com/product/index.jsp?productId=10948256">Eastern Mountain Sports</a></li>
<li>Grab your own at <a href="http://www.summithut.com/products/kid-comfort-ii/">Summit Hut</a></li>
<li>Buy one from <a href="http://www.rockcreek.com/deuter-packs/kid_comfort_ii_carrier/25794.rc?utm_source=deuter&amp;utm_medium=buybutton&amp;utm_campaign=KidComfortII">Rock Creek</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>How To Raise A Hiker With The Kid Comfort II And The Deuter Kid’s Pack</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/cptBxUJt0zE/raise-hiker-kid-comfort-ii-deuter-kids-pack</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/raise-hiker-kid-comfort-ii-deuter-kids-pack#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2012 14:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3505</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Our family consists of the big kids and the babies. The big kids, Liam and Aoife, are six and eight. They are strong and athletic. They love to hike, and while there was a long period where they were both slung into backpacks on most Sunday afternoons, nowadays they both eagerly attack any trail we [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3508" title="CarolM_Hiker_pic2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/CarolM_Hiker_pic2-200x300.jpg" alt="CarolM Hiker pic2 200x300 How To Raise A Hiker With The Kid Comfort II And The Deuter Kids Pack" width="200" height="300" />Our family consists of the big kids and the babies. The big kids, Liam and Aoife, are six and eight. They are strong and athletic. They love to hike, and while there was a long period where they were both slung into backpacks on most Sunday afternoons, nowadays they both eagerly attack any trail we take them on with fantastic energy and enthusiasm.</p>
<p>When they do, they put together a little pack of things they might need on their hike, and being of an age where they understand what those needs might actually be, Greg and I regularly trust them to put together their own belongings before our weekend hikes.</p>
<p>And then there are the babies. There was a time, nearly a year ago, where one baby was newborn and the other had just learned to walk, and the category babies truly did suit Maeve and Fiona just fine. But now Maeve is 10 months and Fiona is two, and as she’s become a walking, talking little girl, my cheerful, go-with-the-flow Fiona is longing to change categories.</p>
<p>Despite her diminutive, 23-pound frame, she longs to be able to do the things her older brother and sister can do. I try to sculpt her world to provide her with as many opportunities as possible to feel grown up.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3507" title="CarolM_Hiker_pic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/CarolM_Hiker_pic1-200x300.jpg" alt="CarolM Hiker pic1 200x300 How To Raise A Hiker With The Kid Comfort II And The Deuter Kids Pack" width="200" height="300" />On our family hikes, Fiona is always still carried in a backpack (we use the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20II">Kid Comfort II</a>) More and more, though, she wants to walk. Greg and I find ourselves telling her that she can walk when we get to the bottom, almost home, because it’s hard to corral the older kids (and ourselves, I admit) to travel at her pace for long distances when we have ground we’d been planning to cover.</p>
<p>But it goes without saying that our goal is for her to be an enthusiastic hiker, and so I’ve been making a point of taking her on frequent, age-appropriate weekday hikes when the big kids are at school. We’ve had so much fun.</p>
<p>Fiona has her own, tiny pack that is just her size. The <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=124&amp;artnr=36019&amp;title=Kids">Deuter Kids pack</a> is a real, functional backpack that fits a tiny child. It makes her feel just as cool as the big kids, and she takes her packing seriously. When we headed out this morning she thoughtfully included a doll, two play silks, and a few books. Because who knows what you might need on a hike? I always let her put exactly what she wants in her pack. She won’t even attempt to put it on if it’s too heavy, so she self-regulates the weight. Sometimes, she even carries it empty. It doesn’t matter to me. I just see this adorable little girl feeling so proud and competent as she prepares for her hike.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3509" title="CarolM_Hiker_pic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/CarolM_Hiker_pic3-300x200.jpg" alt="CarolM Hiker pic3 300x200 How To Raise A Hiker With The Kid Comfort II And The Deuter Kids Pack" width="300" height="200" />Then we go out the back door and follow the trails that lead back from our yard into the hills. She leads the way. We rarely use what she packs, and we rarely walk for longer than 20 minutes. But this is a start, and this is Fiona becoming a big kid. Maeve’s pack is in our gear closet, ready to go. She’s just starting to pull to stand, and I have a delicious vision of my two “babies” this fall with their purple packs strapped on their backs, heading out the back door, feeling just as important and accomplished as Liam and Aoife.</p>
<p>Until then, she’ll watch from my back until she can follow in her sister’s footsteps. It’s all such fun.</p>
<p>–Carol McMurrich, (<a href="http://deuter.com/en_US/272-479.php?title=Carol%20McMurrich">Family Ambassador</a>).</p>
<h2>How do you get your kids excited to explor the outdoors?</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Deuter Kid&#8217;s Pack</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=124&amp;artnr=36019&amp;title=Kids">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-backpack-kids-700cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Kid Comfort II</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20II">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Buy one from <a href="http://www.summithut.com/products/kid-comfort-ii/">Summit Hut</a></li>
</ul>
<img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~4/cptBxUJt0zE" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Can Your Kid Go The Distance?</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/Jcb3XR5jYAs/kid-distance</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/kid-distance#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Apr 2012 14:00:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3494</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anyone who’s had kids was inevitably warned their lives would change irreversibly once the baby arrived. Yeah, we know. But that warning really rang true the first time you tried perch your kid precariously on a rock at 10,000 feet to change his diapers as wind gusts threatened to blow doo-doo right into your face. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3499" title="Aparna_GoDist_pic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Aparna_GoDist_pic1-300x225.jpg" alt="Aparna GoDist pic1 300x225 Can Your Kid Go The Distance?" width="300" height="225" />Anyone who’s had kids was inevitably warned their lives would change irreversibly once the baby arrived. Yeah, we know. But that warning really rang true the first time you tried perch your kid precariously on a rock at 10,000 feet to change his diapers as wind gusts threatened to blow doo-doo right into your face. Remember that?</p>
<p>There is a middle ground.</p>
<p><strong>Here are 10 tips for enjoying the outdoors with a tot in tow.</strong></p>
<p>1. Get used to the family tent: Spend the night in your backyard in a tent (I even got my son to help me stake it out).</p>
<p>2. Use the right kid carrier: Test out some kid carriers around town for comfort and fit before you commit to schlepping your kid in one up a mountain. We tried three different carriers before settling on the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511">Deuter Kid Comfort II</a>.</p>
<p>3. Don’t be ambitious: Plan your days for short hikes and plenty of time on either end. Learn from your kid as he stops for hours to admire a rock or a bug—at least he is living in the moment! So why can’t you?</p>
<p>4. Pack animals: And no, I’m not talking about you (as much as you might feel like a pack animal with a kid on your back). If you’re planning on a multi-day trek, rent pack llamas or pack goats, which can carry your gear while you heft your kid.</p>
<p>5. Toys and books are key: I like to end my hiking days sitting on a rock by a river admiring the sublime sunset. My son likes to end his days pushing dirt around in toy dump trucks and going to sleep to his favorite stories. So pack some books and toys, lest your sublime sunset turn into tent tantrums.</p>
<p>6. A cool water bottle helps with hydration: My husband and I use hydration packs. Boooooring! Find a cool water bottle in bright colors and emblazoned with your child’s favorite cartoon character to encourage him to hydrate.</p>
<p>7. Kids love company: Adults are useful when it comes to things like carrying you and feeding you and reading you books. But when it comes to throwing rocks in a river or playing with plastic dinosaurs, other kids are more fun. Make family time quality time by traveling in a pack with other families with kids.</p>
<p>8. Stay low: Alpine cirques are majestic, but depending on their altitude, can be dangerous to your child. Children are more susceptible to altitude-related illnesses, so if you can, stay under 10,000 feet.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3500" title="Aparna_GoDist_pic2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Aparna_GoDist_pic2-300x234.jpg" alt="Aparna GoDist pic2 300x234 Can Your Kid Go The Distance?" width="300" height="234" />9. Bring yummy snacks: I’m a picky eater in the front country, but when I backpack, food is fuel. Kids are as picky in the backcountry as they are at home, so pack some fun snacks like fruit leathers and animal crackers.</p>
<p>10. Pack an extra layer—your kid’s favorite costume: I don’t know about you, but “performance” layers on my kid do not necessarily improve his performance. The most technical fleece and down layers might keep him warm, but don’t help him hike any faster. But donning his Batman costume, my son suddenly transforms into a super hero, leaping from rock to rock and flying uphill with the aid of his grappling hook. It’s cheap and lightweight, so pack a costume if your kid is into that thing.</p>
<p>–Aparna Rajagopal-Durbin, (<a href="http://deuter.com/en_US/272-432.php?title=The%20Raja-Durbs">Family Ambassador</a><a href="http://deuter.com/en_US/272-491.php?title=Kodi%20Cage">)</a>.</p>
<h2>Every super hero needs to rest also!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Kid Comfort II</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.backcountryedge.com/deuter-kid-comfort-2-2011.aspx?utm_source=deuter&amp;utm_medium=ptop">Backcountry Edge</a></li>
<li>Grab your own at <a href="http://www.summithut.com/products/kid-comfort-ii/">Summit Hut</a></li>
<li>Buy one from <a href="http://www.rei.com/product/810852/deuter-kid-comfort-ii-child-carrier">REI</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/RZDo4AcnCKI/weather-high-camp-waiting-deuter-guide-45-full-gear</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/weather-high-camp-waiting-deuter-guide-45-full-gear#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2012 14:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3441</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We have been in Chalten (southern Patagonia) for 8 days now. Chalten is a little town, seemingly existing strictly to host trekkers and climbers and mountains surround the entire town. There is rock climbing in every direction minutes from where we camp. With a ten mile hike, you can find yourself on glaciers cowering below [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3448" title="Jesse_Wait_pic2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic2.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic2 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />We have been in <a href="http://www.elchalten.com/indexen.php">Chalten</a> (southern <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patagonia">Patagonia</a>) for 8 days now. Chalten is a little town, seemingly existing strictly to host trekkers and climbers and mountains surround the entire town. There is rock climbing in every direction minutes from where we camp. With a ten mile hike, you can find yourself on glaciers cowering below enormous white capped peaks, the most intimidating and awesome being <a href="http://www.summitpost.org/fitzroy/153622">Cerro Fitz Roy</a>.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;" align="center"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3449" title="Jesse_Wait_pic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic3.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic3 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />This is truly Patagonia. Every way you look is a postcard shot of wild mountains, glacier and rivers. The weather is serious and even when walking around town you often get knocked of your feet by winds that come from every direction. Fitz Roy is always visible (except when hidden by the clouds) popping its head over everything, seeming impossibly large.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;" align="center"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3450" title="Jesse_Wait_pic4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic4.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic4 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />The last 8 days has been a matter of preparation and now waiting.</span></strong></p>
<p><strong>Days 1-3:</strong> We spent talking to people and tuning our itinerary. We figured out what we wanted to climb, how to approach them, in what order to climb them, how to gear up for them, and how long each should take.  We also climbed some of the local sport routes, which are quite enjoyable and plenty difficult.</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3451" title="Jesse_Wait_pic5" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic5.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic5 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />Day 4:</strong> We hiked 10 miles to bring over 100 lbs of gear up in (filling all three of our <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=33599">Deuter Guide 45+ packs</a>) near the climb where we established a high camp. We left this gear there so that when we have a weather window we can quickly hike back in and all our gear is ready and waiting. We wanted to get pictures of the exact route but we didn’t get there in time so we headed back to town and agreed to go back in a few days to study the climb more and move the camp a bit higher.</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3452" title="Jesse_Wait_pic6" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic6.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic6 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />Day 5-6:</strong> We climbed around town starting at about 5pm when the rain and wind finally died down (I think we mentioned that its light till about 11:30pm).</p>
<p><strong>Day 7:</strong> We hiked back to the high camp and moved it a bit further up and closer to the base of the route. We left it at a well-known bivy site called “Piedra Negra” (Black Rock).</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3454" title="Jesse_Wait_pic8" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic8.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic8 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />We are now fully prepared for the first big climb of the trip: <a href="http://www.planetmountain.com/english/News/shownews1.lasso?l=2&amp;keyid=38897">Aguja Guillaumet</a>. All we need is a full day of light winds and rain and we’ll go for it!  The route we are planning, “Disfrute La Vida,” is a 1,300 ft vertical climb on the west face of Aguja Guillaumet.</p>
<p>We plan to sleep right at the base the night before and get started climbing as soon as we have daylight (approx. 5:30am). If all goes according to plan, we should summit the 13 pitch route before 6:30 pm which gives us more than 4 hours of daylight to rappel back down the route to our bivy site (we’ll probably be rappelling in the dark).</p>
<p><strong><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3455" title="Jesse_Wait_pic9" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic9.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic9 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="225" height="300" />Day 8:</strong> Still waiting for that elusive weather window, we decided to try putting up a first ascent on a crag we spotted from the road to our base camp.  We bushwhacked our way up to the wall through thorn bushes and picker weeds (kinda like having thumbtacks clinging to your pants and socks). The rock turned out to be a lot chossier (loose and crumbly) than it appeared from a distance but we picked out two routes we thought were solid enough.</p>
<p>After bailing on the first one due to excessive loose rock, Jesse led a very dirty crack with bushes and weeds growing out of it. Grunting and groaning his way up the crack, clearing our brush as he went, he finally topped it out naming the route “Dirty D-mouth” (we all live on Dartmouth Ave). By the end he was covered in dirt and moss, had swallowed a stick, cut up his hands and had a smile ear to ear.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3458" title="Jesse_Wait_pic12" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_Wait_pic12.jpg" alt="Jesse Wait pic12 Weather, High Camp And Waiting, With A Deuter Guide 45+ Full Of Gear!" width="300" height="225" />It is certainly frustrating waiting around town for the necessary weather window, but we remain very hopeful and are ready to go as soon as it comes. We have made lots of friends around town and already we can’t walk down the street without running into someone we know. Pretty much everyone here is extremely friendly which makes Chalten quite an enjoyable place to be. While we wait for the weather to clear, we plan to climb more of the local crags, go fishing, do some trekking, and perhaps climb a more moderate mountain involving some glacier travel. In the meantime, if anyone knows a weather dance or has some kind of climate controlling mechanism, we could use your help!</p>
<p>Thanks for reading.  Until next time…PEACE!</p>
<p><strong>(Total Vertical Climbed: 2,090 Feet / 637 Meters)</strong></p>
<p>–Jesse Spiegel (<a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/272-555.php?title=Jesse%20Spiegel">Outdoor Ambassador</a>), Jason &amp; Vaughn. For more about how these guys are climbing for a cause, check out, <a href="http://www.yourworldadventures.com/">Your World Adventures</a>.</p>
<h2>Functionality, Durability and Comfort define the Deuter Guide Series!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Guide 45+</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=118&amp;artnr=33599">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-guide-45-pack-2750cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
<li>Grab your own at <a href="http://www.summithut.com/products/guide-45/">Summit Hut</a></li>
<li>Buy one from <a href="http://www.moosejaw.com/moosejaw/shop/product_Deuter-Guide-45+-Backpack_10086975____?cm_mmc=P2P-_-Deuter-_-na-_-Deuter-Guide-45+-Backpack&amp;ad_id=Deuter">Moosejaw.com</a></li>
</ul>
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		<item>
		<title>Festive Butte Made More Festive With Deuter</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/YDsNRMoKX9I/festive-butte-festive-deuter</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/festive-butte-festive-deuter#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2012 14:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3478</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I’m a little gun-shy about saying we’re out of the woods, but it just may be the case. Not only have we successfully fled moist, grey Seattle; Chris may actually be on the mend! 10 months in a painful limbo and a looming anniversary of his accident (read= threat to job security), and we think [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3483" title="Booher_FesBute_pic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Booher_FesBute_pic1-224x300.jpg" alt="Booher FesBute pic1 224x300 Festive Butte Made More Festive With Deuter" width="224" height="300" />I’m a little gun-shy about saying we’re out of the woods, but it just may be the case. Not only have we successfully fled moist, grey Seattle; Chris may actually be on the mend! 10 months in a painful limbo and a looming anniversary of his accident (read= threat to job security), and we think the infection, misery, nausea, pain and uncertainty are fading into memory. THANK GOD. Ok, shall we reboot? What better place to convalesce than Paradise&#8230;</p>
<p>5 year-old Jackson and I rolled into Crested Butte to meet Chris and Conrad after a 4-day drive from the PNW with 7 minutes to spare before the start of the notorious Mardi Gras parade. The Mountain framed in day’s last light overlooked the throng of the thousand or so boisterous mix of locals, tourists and interlopers, all jockeying for Mardi Gras beads and candy and glimpses of Red Lady’s, past and present. Dicky in drag is always a highlight, and though we miss the sight of former mayor Alan launching through the Irwin Lodge Hoop of Fire, we are appeased by the joy and smiles of those who celebrate on a continual basis in our beloved ski town.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3485" title="Booher_FesBute_pic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Booher_FesBute_pic3-300x223.jpg" alt="Booher FesBute pic3 300x223 Festive Butte Made More Festive With Deuter" width="300" height="223" />A week ago it was hard to fathom this revelry, as well as the blazing blue skies and crisp white skyline of our 9,000-foot paradise. But driving East, slowly paralleling the Oregon Trail along I-84, passing Moroni (and a quick tribute to Utah’s quality snow at Brighton), and snaking along dinosaur skeletons buried deep in the Book Cliffs, we greeted Colorado with an exhale of homecoming. Despite our kids’ late night bronchial battles, riverine nasal drip and roller coaster fevers, we are glad to be sleeping and playing at altitude.</p>
<p>Two weeks seems like an eternal vacation for most, including us, but we still feel hard pressed to “get it all done” here. CB has so much to offer, and depending on the weather, there is a new sense of urgency with each shift in the jet stream.</p>
<p>To carry us through the fray of weather swings and the activity merry-go-round is our trusty gear, without which, we would be left whining, unprepared, and covetous. Our Deuter Packs have been at our beckon call all trip long. The <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36501&amp;title=Kid%20Comfort%20I">Kid Comfort I</a> and <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=125&amp;artnr=36511">Kid Comfort II</a> tote kids around town, up the sled run or up to the base of the ski lift (that hike in ski boots for a toddler or youngster are enough to drive us all directly to lodge hot cocoa, ne’er to see the slopes).</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3487" title="Booher_FesBute_pic5" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Booher_FesBute_pic5-300x225.jpg" alt="Booher FesBute pic5 300x225 Festive Butte Made More Festive With Deuter" width="300" height="225" />It’s amazing how much gear you can pack into, and lash on the outside of, those Kid Comforts. The <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=123&amp;artnr=32200">Trans Alpine 25</a> is my favorite long haul mountain biking pack, but winter offers it the chance to be a glorified diaper and snack bag. While the designers may not have intended such banal use for a tech pack, I’m happy to say it’s perfectly suited to kid-support use as well as long days on the trail. The <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=117&amp;artnr=33682&amp;title=Cruise%2026%20SL">Cruise 26 SL</a> continues to be my go-to pack for ski touring. It fits all the necessities handily, and I love the way it also carries all my un-necessities.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3486" title="Booher_FesBute_pic4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Booher_FesBute_pic4-225x300.jpg" alt="Booher FesBute pic4 225x300 Festive Butte Made More Festive With Deuter" width="225" height="300" />My only beef is with the hydration system is that while I use the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/accessory-details.php?artnr=32941&amp;category=479&amp;title=Streamer%20">Streamer 3.0</a> bladder during summer rides, I’ve interchanged it with the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/accessory-details.php?artnr=32931&amp;category=479&amp;title=Streamer">Streamer 2.0</a> for winter use. My favorite connection point at the base of the hose of the 3.0 allows the tube of the system to be removed without water draining out- a brilliantly easy way to refill the bladder without having to remove the whole setup from your pack. This is particularly an issue in a winter setup because the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/accessory-details.php?artnr=32941&amp;category=479&amp;title=Streamer%20">Streamer Tube Insulator</a> gets in the way of easily removing the hose from the pack. Next thing you know, you’ve got the whole pack under the faucet and you’re risking soaking all the contents.</p>
<p>But alas, a fortnight has come and gone. In counting down the hours till our departure, I can say with a more relaxed confidence that we actually crammed a lot in, <em>and</em> managed to occasionally chill out. Victory! Until we (hopefully) do it all over again next year.</p>
<p>And now Jackson and I are preparing for the marathon drive home. He’s got a case full of DVD’s and stories on tape, and I’ve got Keith Richard’s autobiography. Likely, I’ll plug in once I hit the dark interstate heading past Boise, but till then I get to relish my amazing adventure in the Rockies. It never disappoints and always creates memories. And as we drive down valley, hopefully some wisdom will seep in through the high altitude dry cracks in my face and hands. Paradise will always be here; it’s what we put into it that we take away.</p>
<p>–Ellie Booher, (<a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/272-417.php?title=Ellie%20Pryor%20Booher">Family Ambassador</a>).</p>
<h2>Escape your daily grind with Deuter!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Ellie&#8217;s Go To Packs</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/index.php">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick up your own Kid Comfort II from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-kid-comfort-ii">Backcountry.com</a></li>
<li>Grab your own Trans Alpine 25 at <a href="http://www.tahoemountainsports.com/product/deuter-transalpine-25-backpack/deuter">Tahoe Mountain Sports</a></li>
<li>Buy a Cruise 26 SL from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-cruise-26-sl-backcpack-womens-1600cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche &amp; El Frey</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/N9UICu7CXeQ/aircontact-pro-7015-fully-loaded-adventures-bariloche-el-frey</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/aircontact-pro-7015-fully-loaded-adventures-bariloche-el-frey#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Mar 2012 14:00:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3409</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We arrived in Bariloche on Sunday the 22nd after a rough 800 mile, 20 hour bus ride. While riding the bus we had two very rude guys sitting behind us blasting Argentinean rap throughout the night. Coupled with a very cute undisciplined little girl main lining liters of coca cola while climbing and jumping all [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3411" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic1" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic1.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic1 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="187" height="140" />We arrived in <a href="http://www.welcomeargentina.com/bariloche/index_i.html">Bariloche</a> on Sunday the 22nd after a rough 800 mile, 20 hour bus ride. While riding the bus we had two very rude guys sitting behind us blasting Argentinean rap throughout the night. Coupled with a very cute undisciplined little girl main lining liters of coca cola while climbing and jumping all over the place, we got very little rest. Eventually Jason and Jesse got upset and asked the guys to quiet down. They did not oblige.</p>
<p><img class="size-full wp-image-3412 alignleft" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic2" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic2.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic2 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="263" height="197" /></p>
<p>We finally arrived in beautiful Bariloche, AR, which is in the middle of lake country in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patagonia">Patagonia</a>. It’s very similar to Scotland with a northern California climate.  We met up with our wonderful friend from Boulder, Trinity Ludwig and her friends Sara, and Shelley. They are on their own adventure walking the length of South America over the next year. (check out their blog at <a href="http://www.eathikesleephike.blogspot.com/">www.eathikesleephike.blogspot.com</a>). We had vino, listened to Argentine folk music, went dancing, and took a 2AM moonlight skinny dip in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuel_Huapi_Lake">Lake Nahuel Huapi</a>, a huge beautiful lake. This got us labeled the crazy Americans, YES!</p>
<p>The next day we said hasta luego to Trin and friends. That evening we had dinner with Mike Stencil, a nephew of one of Jesse’s Dad’s friends. Mikes a North American and climbing guide who’s been living in Bariloche for 11 years. He provided us with all sorts of advice and information on the area and made us a delicious traditional Argentino BBQ dinner in his indoor brick oven paired with, of course, an Argentinean Malbec!</p>
<p><img class="size-full wp-image-3413 alignleft" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic3" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic3.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic3 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="258" height="193" /></p>
<p>The next day, we headed out early for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerro_Catedral">Cerro Catedral</a>, the entry town to access <a href="http://www.refugiofrey.com/">El Frey</a>. We were ready to cut our teeth on our first Patagonian rock climbs! After a 4 hour 7 mile hike with our Deuter packs stuffed at 80 lbs full of food, fuel, climbing, and camping gear, we arrived in Refugio El Frey. Our Deuter packs performed fantastically and made the task of hauling all that gear much more manageable. Thanks Deuter, your <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=120&amp;artnr=33847&amp;title=Aircontact%20PRO%2070%20%252B%2015">Aircontact PRO 70+15</a> packs are brilliant! El Frey is an amazing place, surrounded by spectacular granite pillars just itching to be climbed!</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3414" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic4" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic4.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic4 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="300" height="225" />We quickly set up camp and jumped on a short climb before we lost the sun. Afterwards, we hung out in camp and took in the scenery as we cooked dinner and went to bed early.</p>
<p>We spent 4 days climbing and rounding out our big wall techniques in preparation for the big boys down in the <a href="http://www.walkopedia.net/walks/display-walk.asp?WalkID=615">Fitz Roy massif</a> area near Chalten. We got some great climbs in on some beautiful granite We first climbed “Sin Fuentes Weber” and “Diedro de Jim”, 2 classics in the area that gave us a taste of what was to come the next day we climbed El Abuelo, via the Naca Naca Crunch Crunch route. What a gorgeous tower, similar to Utah desert towers, the climb was long and amazing, with some serious problem solving included. Jesse lead a very difficult, long, overhanging pitch with a long runout (runout=no protection).</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3415" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic5" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic5.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic5 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="194" height="260" />Jay finished the climb with a terrific and scary off-width (very wide crack) with almost no protection that lead into a big awkward roof hand crack, scary, fun! That night we learned our time would be cut short by an incoming high pressure system bringing with it rain and infamous Patagonian winds. With this new info we decided to move up our schedule and climb a rarely touched route on La Principal, the biggest tower in Frey. It was an epic, ridiculous adventure.</p>
<p>From the base you are looking up at this towering castle. All around you are mountains as far as the eye can see. The first pitch went smoothly. The second pitch is where it got tough. We spent an hour route finding which was hard <img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3416" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic6" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic6.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic6 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="199" height="265" />because the route is climbed so rarely that everything was dirty and moss covered. We finally agreed on the line and went. Jesse lead it. Starting with an unprotectable face climb (we piled bags and ropes below in case Jesse fell) that turns into a difficult crack.</p>
<p>The third pitch, lead by Vaughn was just as unclear. It was an awesome finger hand traverse over a roof. It was supposed to be a 5.10A pitch but was more like 5.11D (considerably more difficult than 5.10). After about 50 feet we realized we were probably off route as the 5.11D turned a corner and became a 30-foot unprotectable face climb. Vaughn decided to down climb pulling his protection as he came. After reassessing we decided the route might go another way up an arête. Jesse <img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3417" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic7" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic7.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic7 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="240" height="180" />attempted the lead protected only with a couple old pitons. In the end he reached the same unprotectable face that Vaughn had met with and was forced to bail. Eventually, we ran out of time as the wind picked up, the sun started to fade, and clouds started to form, we had to go down.</p>
<p>We had some adventures in rappelling as the winds picked up to about 40-60 mph. Every time we tossed the ropes, they got tangled in the cracks/fissures. The last rap put Jesse’s rope into a crack 100 <img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3418" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic8" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic8.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic8 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="300" height="225" />feet deep in the mountain. He had to disrobe to fit in the crack and rappel into the pitch black abyss to dislodge the rope and retrieve the gear he had dropped in the process. We made it back to the tents by 9:30 for some dry pasta, and trip planning. After a night of 60-80 mph winds that nearly destroyed our tent, we packed up at 6am and hiked back to the bus to Bariloche.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3421" title="Jesse_ElFrey_pic11" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Jesse_ElFrey_pic11.jpg" alt="Jesse ElFrey pic11 Aircontact PRO 70+15 Fully Loaded For Adventures In Bariloche & El Frey" width="247" height="185" />I’m writing this blog now after we have finally showered, done our first load of laundry, and bought bus tickets to <a href="http://www.elchalten.com/indexen.php">El Chalten</a>, so we can go climb the big boys! For all concerned, our health is good. Jason’s toes are doing fine, Jesse lost a toenail 2 nights ago, and Vaughn has one about to go. To and on a high note, BBQ tonight at the hostel, then Saturday night in Bariloche!  Now I need a siesta. Til’ next time, CIAO!</p>
<p>–Jesse Spiegel (<a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/272-555.php?title=Jesse%20Spiegel">Outdoor Ambassador</a>), Jason &amp; Vaughn. For more about how these guys are climbing for a cause, check out, <a href="http://www.yourworldadventures.com/">Your World Adventures</a>.</p>
<h2>Be prepared for your next big adventure!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Aircontact PRO 70+15</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=120&amp;artnr=33847&amp;title=Aircontact%20PRO%2070%20%252B%2015">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.backcountry.com/deuter-aircontact-pro-7015-backpack-4271-5186cu-in?CMP_ID=PM_VL0354">Backcountry.com</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Keeping The Family Running And Hydrated In The Texas Desert With Deuter</title>
		<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DeuterUsa/~3/1dRXzAYl4lw/keeping-family-running-hydrated-texas-desert-deuter</link>
		<comments>http://blog.deuterusa.com/blog-posts/keeping-family-running-hydrated-texas-desert-deuter#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Mar 2012 14:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Justin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Deuter USA Blog Posts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.deuterusa.com/?p=3375</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Let me start by explaining we live in Austin, Texas, a part of the world with limited altitude, where the winter Texans and snowbirds flock for the &#8220;temperate climate.&#8221; This equates to a low propensity for a snow adventure, which is a big bummer for my husband and me. We hit the road every chance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3377" title="Kodi_Start" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Kodi_Start-225x300.jpg" alt="Kodi Start 225x300 Keeping The Family Running And Hydrated In The Texas Desert With Deuter" width="225" height="300" />Let me start by explaining we live in Austin, Texas, a part of the world with limited altitude, where the winter Texans and snowbirds flock for the &#8220;temperate climate.&#8221; This equates to a low propensity for a snow adventure, which is a big bummer for my husband and me.</p>
<p>We hit the road every chance we get, but more of that in a future post. These last few months have been filled with running, running, and more running. It is too hot to run here in the summer, so our running season is through the winter.</p>
<p>A few girlfriends and I have been training for a 13-mile (half marathon) trail run, and while I love my running partners, my new best friends are the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=123&amp;artnr=32159">Deuter Hydro Lite 2.0</a>, the <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/accessory-details.php?category=479&amp;id=2115">streamer water bladder</a> that fits inside, and the Deuter Pulse One water bottle belt pack.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3378" title="Kodi_Run" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Kodi_Run-225x300.jpg" alt="Kodi Run 225x300 Keeping The Family Running And Hydrated In The Texas Desert With Deuter" width="225" height="300" />These carried my snacks, water, extra clothes, and sunscreen without any trouble. They are lightweight and fit great, and there was no chaffing. The water bladder is easy to fill up, and seal off, the water tastes great, and I had no problems with the bladder leaking.</p>
<p>Best of all, was that as I trained for my half, my 6-year-old daughter trained for her first 5K. Her race came a few weeks after mine, and instead of running in balmy 75-degree weather like I did, her day dawned rainy, cold and grey.</p>
<p>Did I mention it rained the whole night prior? So it was sloppy! We could have easily crawled back in bed and slept a few more hours, but off we went to run and abuse our water bottle belt pack again!</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3379" title="Kodi_Finish" src="http://blog.deuterusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Kodi_Finish-225x300.jpg" alt="Kodi Finish 225x300 Keeping The Family Running And Hydrated In The Texas Desert With Deuter" width="225" height="300" />She powered along stoked by a little a Mama Mia soundtrack and energy blocks that, to a 6-year-old seem just like candy.</p>
<p>I always have to remember as I ask my kiddos to rise to physical challenges that I need to keep it fun and keeping it fun means staying light hearted, open minded, hydrated and fueled with plenty of fun calories.</p>
<p><a href="http://deuter.com/">Deuter</a> helps me keep all the essentials handy to keep my munchkins and me going strong and playing hard. Must say it was a really fun morning sharing something I love with someone I love.</p>
<p>–Kodi Cage Sisson, (<a href="http://deuter.com/en_US/272-491.php?title=Kodi%20Cage">Family Ambassador)</a>.</p>
<h2>Make sure you and your little ones stay hydrated!</h2>
<ul>
<li>Learn all about the <strong>Hydro Lite 2.0</strong> at <a href="http://www.deuter.com/en_US/backpack-details.php?category=123&amp;artnr=32159">Deuter.com</a></li>
<li>Pick one up from <a href="http://www.rockcreek.com/deuter-packs/hydro-lite-20-hydration-pack/15140.rc?utm_source=deuter&amp;utm_medium=buybutton&amp;utm_campaign=deuter">Rock Creek</a></li>
<li>Grab your own at <a href="http://www.summithut.com/products/hydro-lite-20-w2l-res/">Summit Hut</a></li>
<li>Buy one from <a href="http://www.rockymountaintrail.com/Deuter/Hydro_Lite_2.0/32159/detail/">Rocky Mountain Trail</a></li>
</ul>
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