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Thread: Heaps 06-19-12 *Added Video*
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06-26-2012, 09:30 AM #1
Heaps 06-19-12 *Added Video*
A group of 6 of us did Heaps on June 19th. It felt like 6 people were 2 too many. The canyon would be much faster with only 4. None of us had ever done it before. A couple in our group were new to canyoneering. Water was very cold and water levels appeared to be down significantly from the trip reports in mid May. No beached whales
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Post Thanks / Like - 1 LikesSlot Machine liked this post
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06-26-2012 09:30 AM # ADS
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06-26-2012, 10:42 AM #2
Nice report, Rob
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06-26-2012, 01:01 PM #3
Good job managing a difficult situation. Did you perhaps consider Heaps is not the best canyon for noobs? Not everyone is as resilient as Bo, aka Mr. Heaps.
T
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06-26-2012, 01:52 PM #4
Glad everyone made it out safe. Great pictures. Thanks for sharing.
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06-26-2012, 02:01 PM #5
Wooo! Really nice TR dude! Our group has had it's eye on this but I don't think we are ready yet. Looks still a bit over our heads. Next year for sure though. I'm really glad your buddy is ok and kudos to the team for helping him out when he needed it. Also, what a great story, well told on your part. I actually browsed the pictures before I read it and thought those footprints were a bears. Maybe a mountain lion then? Crazy stuff....
Hey I had a question then, so I see you used the fiddlesticks anchor system and I have been following the fiddlesticks thread and all that. But my understanding is that it was better used to just ghost a canyon and loses some effectiveness on developed trade runs like this. Can you comment on how it worked for you and what your opinion is of it? Why not just use a figure 8 knot with a biner or a stone knot and have the last guy rap double stranded after cleaning it up? I guess I should just try it out a couple times so i can see the benefit. I understand having two people rapping at the same time speeds things up, but this is the first TR I've seen where people have used this system under a time constraint, so I could benefit from your knowledge.Your safety is not my responsibility.
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06-26-2012, 02:23 PM #6Originally Posted by Deathcricket
It is a useful tool, but has margin of error, so be safe.
Rob
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Post Thanks / Like - 1 LikesDeathcricket liked this post
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06-26-2012, 02:42 PM #7
Yeah I didnt word that correctly, I meant having 2 people rap simultaneously with the "other" systems vs everyone having to rap singles under time constraints with fiddlesticks. But yeah I definitely agree you just wrap the big loop around a tree or something and ghost a canyon, that would be pretty awesome. And not having a rope pull get stuck, etc, etc. Anyways, first TR I have seen people use these, very neat, thanks.
Your safety is not my responsibility.
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06-26-2012, 04:11 PM #8
Great TR! Looks like you had a lot of fun. Also like the use of the fiddlestick.
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06-26-2012, 08:54 PM #9
Awesome trip. Love the character pictures with the fog of canyoneering.
Ken
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06-27-2012, 10:12 AM #10
AWESOME!! Way to go Rob!
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06-27-2012, 01:26 PM #11
I added a video to the primary post
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Post Thanks / Like - 1 LikesDeathcricket liked this post
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06-28-2012, 01:59 PM #12
The pics are great, but the edited video really makes for an awesome report! You handled a difficult situation well, but I wonder, were you prepared if you had to spend another night before exiting the canyon?
You just don't know how fast things can go wrong!
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06-29-2012, 08:54 AM #13
Fine
We would have been fine to spend another night. By the end of the night no one was in imminent danger and we had enough supplies to bivouac for another. Since Rob got heat exhaustion and was throwing up for the next couple of days, and I was recovering from the hypothermia it would not have been fun but doable. Rob could have started another fire, even though the fire ban was on, we had food and a water filter and changes of clothing (that needed dried).
The problems of the canyon did not stem from bringing new people along in fact the inexperienced did great in the canyon. The major problem was I did not realize my drysuit was leaking through the top and I did not notice I was getting hypothermia until it had progressed further than I had thought. Luckily even though I was badly cramping and crying (for who knows what reason) I still had enough sense about me to know what I was capable of and what I was not. The team did a great job in getting us all safely out of the canyon.
Experiencing hypothermia first-hand was better than all the lectures I have heard and read about all my life. It was definitely one of those learning experiences that should make it much easier to detect in myself and others on future adventures.
Shaylin
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06-29-2012, 09:35 AM #14Originally Posted by ratagonia
Originally Posted by heliski2
Rob
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06-29-2012, 11:12 AM #15
Good judgment is developed by experience. Experience is developed, of course, by bad judgment.
It did not sound like the drysuit was 'compromised' as much as it was mis-used.
One of the skills useful in Heaps is "taking care of oneself (and the rest of the group) in a continuously cold and wet environment". This is a hard skill to develop as not many canyons offer the scale of coldness that Heaps does. It sounds like Shaylin was not strong on this issue. Very glad everything turned out just fine.
Tom
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06-29-2012, 12:13 PM #16
Yes you are correct. I wanted to try out the drysuit but it may not have been the place to give its maiden voyage with none others in the group ever having worn one. Not the first EPIC adventure in my life nor probably the last, but high on the learning scale none-the-less.
Shaylin
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06-29-2012, 12:48 PM #17
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06-29-2012, 03:25 PM #18
Not to be negative nancy but. Just with my limited experience, Typically when i take people out to do canyons we avoid horse play, jumps, and other accident prone activities in canyons as remote as heaps, or for that matter any canyon. Something as minor as a sprained ankle can mean major problems. It looks like you guys had a great time and had a lot of fun but i tend to be more on the side of caution when it comes to being so remote. Good trip report, the video really helps bring the canyon alive.
IT ALWAYS LOOKS HIGHER FROM THE TOP!!!!
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