We are the Mountain People.
Where some see rock, we see lines. Where some see peaks, we see possibility. Where some see rain lashed ridgelines or impenetrable fog, we see an opportunity to challenge our skills.
MAZAMA BULLETIN
Volume 105
Number 4
July/August 2023
CONTENTS
FEATURES
Around, and Around, and Around, p. 10
Press that Button: Reflections on a Rescue, p. 17
A Splendid Plan B: The Alpine Lakes High Route, p. 20
(Re)introducing the Mazama Library, p. 23
COLUMNS
Mazama Membership, p. 5
Executive Director’s Message, p. 6
Interim Executive Director’s Message, p. 7
President’s Message, p. 8
May Membership Drive Recap, p. 8
Glaciated Peak Society
Logo Design Contest Winner, p. 9
Successful Climbers, p. 13
Upcoming Courses, Activities, & Events, p. 14
What’s Happening Around the Mazamas?, p. 15
Mazama Classics, p. 16
Book Reviews, p. 24, 25
Saying Goodbye, p. 26
Board of Directors Minutes, p. 28
Members of the Glaciated Peak Society, p. 31
Colophon, p. 39
IN THIS ISSUE
The training, discipline, and teamwork I’ve found among the mountains—and as a member of the Mazamas myself—are a powerful reminder that we are all interconnected, and that nature is the ultimate teacher..." p. 6
Sammy was trying to climb down a steep rock face when he fell. He hit his chin on a ledge and tumbled several times before coming to a stop in the snow..."
p. 17
It was the most memorable sunset I have ever witnessed. Perched on the edge of the idyllic Tank Lakes plateau, circled by peaks in every direction, we watched the sky for more than an hour go through the most exquisite transition, slow and subtle, from orange to red to purple to mauve..." p. 20
MAZAMA VALUES
RESPECT
We believe in the inherent value of our fellow Mazamas, of our volunteers, and of members of the community. An open, trusting, and inclusive environment is essential to promoting our mission and values.
SAFETY
We believe safety is our primary responsibility in all education and outdoor activities. Training, risk management, and incident reporting are critical supporting elements.
EDUCATION
We believe training, experience, and skills development are fundamental to preparedness, enjoyment, and safety in the mountains. Studying, seeking, and sharing knowledge leads to an increased understanding of mountain environments.
VOLUNTEERISM
We believe volunteers are the driving force in everything we do. Teamwork, collaboration, and generosity of spirit are the essence of who we are.
COMMUNITY
We believe camaraderie, friendship, and fun are integral to everything we do. We welcome the participation of all people and collaborate with those who share our goals.
COMPETENCE
We believe all leaders, committee members, staff, volunteers, and participants should possess the knowledge, skills, abilities, and judgment required of their roles.
CREDIBILITY
We believe we are trusted by the community in mountaineering matters. We are relied upon for information based on best practices and experience.
STEWARDSHIP
We believe in conserving the mountain environment. We protect our history and archives and sustain a healthy organization.
MAZAMA MEMBERSHIP
APRIL Membership Report
NEW MEMBERS: 10
Alastair Cox
Mark Goering
Zachary Hayes
Brett Laudeman
Dmitry Medvedev
REINSTATEMENTS: 6
DECEASED: 0
MEMBERSHIP ON APRIL 30:
2,698 (2022); 2,710 (2023)
Juliana Person
Colleen Rawson
Mark Santa Maria
Michael Shymanski
Riley Thomas
MAY Membership Report
NEW MEMBERS: 188
Mikhail Alkaev
Pavel Alkaev
Rita Allotey
Bashar Al-Rawi
Ashlin Aronin
Chelsea Ashcraft
Jeevitha Babu
Ben Bagnall
Marissa Barlow
Bridget Barnett
Zachary Barton
Catherine Bean
Antonio Bezerra
Laura Bien
Ben Bird
Joshua Bitter
Zack Boisselle
Alexandra Boris
John Botts
Joshua Bowley
Willa Brenowitz
Neal Bridgnell
Charles Brown
Silke Brunning
Stefan Butterbrodt
Brent Bybee
John Catena
Steven Cheswick
Michael Cheung
Jennifer Ching
Max Ciotti
Gerald Clark
Olivia Cohn
Phillip Crumpacker
Frederick Cruz
Merche Cuevas Trol
Jessie Cunningham
Kapil Dave
Luke Davis
Edward Decker
Hannah Dinell
Nick Dolja
Maxwell Douglas
Karen Downs
Rory Driscoll
Ken Ensroth
Dennis Falcione
Michael Figlewicz
Tyler Fitch
Melissa Frazier
Nathan Friese
Eleni Gerding
Erik Gerding
Maelle Gery
Vince Gonor
Moso Gosnell
Laura Graham
David Gross
Gabriel Guzman
Gary Hahn
M. George Hansen
Gina Harley
Michael Harley
Stacey Harney
Mat Harris
Larae Hartenfeld
Jessica Hastings
Chris Hedeen
Stephen Hemminger
Rocio Herrera
Brian Hoffman
Michael Honsa
Mikaila Horan
Grayson Hughbanks
Matt Hutchinson
Courtney Ianello
Raju Jha
Jared Johnsen
Austin Johnson
Kim Johnson
Barbie Kerr
Anna Kolodziejski
Pawel Lasiecki
Thuy Le
Aidan Lee
Steven Lester
Linda Lewis
Megan Lien
Margery Linza
Daniel Lotspeich
Bo An Lu
Carl Lucchese
Austin Macpherson
Archana Mandava
Jade Marcus
Addy Martinez
Erin McConville
Margaret McCue
Evan McDowell
Christina McManigal
John Meadows
Colin Miletich
James Miller
Rachel Miller
Hariank Mistry
Diana Moosman
Mina Mostafavifar
Celia Mueller
Noriyuki Murakami
Brooke Murphy
Will Nash
Veronika Newgard
Tad Nicol
Victoria Nochera
Charlie Owen
Brent Owens
Laura Hecht
Cole Parnell
Nathanael Parra
Dhaval Patel
Gordon Pearlman
Sasank Peri
Karthik Periagaram
Julian Person
Steven Peterson
Marta Petteni
Khanh Pham
Emily Platt
Donica Polce
Tisha Posey
John Powers
Yaadhav Raaj
Ariana Ramirez
Dan Rehmann
Andrew Richards
Kelly Riley
Sarah Risser
Allison Rivet
REINSTATEMENTS: 21
DECEASED: 0
MEMBERSHIP ON MAY 31: 2,722 (2022); 2,903 (2023)
Megan Robinson
Barbara Sack
Kiana Saluni
Jennifer Sampson
Michael Schulte
Mark Settle
Kira Smith
Emmet Smith
Frank Squeglia
Aaron Stahr
Sequoia Steadman
Max Steele
Johnny Stoehr
Shannon Suehr
Shiran Sukumar
Brenda Sutton
Andrew Swalko
David Swanlund
John Swetnam
Lisa Taulbee
Sampson Taylor
Emily Telford-Marx
Seymour the Adventure Cat
Shawn Thomas
Nikki Thompson
Kevin Thrakulchavee
Yukiko Toyoda
Lisa Troutman
Kenneth Umenthum
Mira Valova
Jenica Villamor
Ben Volinski
Zachary Warres
Adrianne Wesol
Daniel West
Carmella West
Phyllis Whittington
Collin Wilde
Jules Williams
Steven Williams
Mesa Willis
Tiana Won
Liz Wood
Cameron Wright
Charlotte Wylde
Christian Yost
Kepei Yu
Jordan Zanmiller
Farzane Zokaee
Mallory D Zunino
Editor's note: Due to the elimination of the glaciated peak membership requirement, we will no longer be publishing the names of qualifying peaks with new members.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE
by Rebekah Phillips, Mazama Executive DirectorIam deeply humbled and honored to be joining the Mazamas as your executive director, and wish to thank you, our supporters, for your warm welcome, as well as the Mazama Board of Directors, interim executive director, and staff for facilitating such a smooth and focused transition during this exciting time.
Throughout my 20 years in nonprofit leadership, accessibility and advocacy have been the guiding principles behind increasing both engagement and revenues. On the marketing end, I’m often responsible for developing the strategies that bring folks through an organization’s door for the very first time. If I do my job right, that initial experience generates a spark that then keeps a person coming back for more. As a fundraiser, I’m a fierce champion of our mission and values, always striving to keep members, volunteers, and donors inspired and empowered by our programming and impact. In any nonprofit, acquisition means nothing without retention, and I’m eager to roll up my sleeves on both sides here.
After so many years in the performing arts, joining the Mazamas has the distinct feeling of coming home. A lifelong Oregonian (and a rather chestthumping one at that), my passion for the outdoors was stoked at an early age. I was lucky enough to have elementary school teachers who valued the natural sciences, and we often learned them in the field. Our classrooms ventured to the Redwoods, where we learned to identify nettles, salmonberries, and banana slugs. We explored the Lava Beds, where, led by “Captain Jack” Kintpuash, the Modoc used their knowledge of the tricky terrain to resist their white oppressors. We watched reel-to-reel footage of Mount St. Helens’ massive eruption while our teachers reminded us that we’d been born among its ashes, and as we learned about lahars, pumice, and obsidian in the shadows of Crater Lake, our young imaginations contemplated what must have been the terrible, relative magnitude of Mt. Mazama’s eruption nearly 8,000 years prior.
These sorts of lessons were also received at home. As a family of six, we camped, hiked, and fished everywhere from Harris Beach to Yellowstone, often spending seemingly endless hours waiting for my dad—an avid nature photographer—to catch up with the rest of the family after stopping to carefully capture the perfect waterfall, tiger lily, or sunset on film. Needless to say, most summer weekends were spent chasing a view, hiking switchback after switchback, and exploring wildernesses from Castle Crags all the way up to the North Cascades. The training, discipline, and teamwork I’ve found among the mountains—and as a member of the Mazamas myself— are a powerful reminder that we are all interconnected, and that nature is the ultimate teacher.
As you are all aware, the extensive history of the Mazamas has endowed the organization with considerable influence in the present-day field of responsible recreation. I applaud the membership for taking the important step of revising the bylaws to maintain our standing as leaders while positioning the organization for critical growth. Big change often comes with the discomfort of uncertainty, but so, too, does it come with opportunities for learning; as your executive director, I am deeply committed to staying curious and working together to meet the challenges of the future.
Perhaps what excites me most is how our mission to inspire everyone to love and protect the mountains provides so much room for creativity. In making a difference for generations to come, we have many strengths to leverage: our legacy as advocates and stewards; our distinguished role as expert outdoor educators; and, of
course, our members, who, with their vast and varied skills, knowledge, and passions, form a mighty corps of ambassadors for the wildlands and spaces we celebrate.
For nearly 130 years, the Mazamas have flourished by staying true to the values of stewardship, collaboration, and sustainability, but we know that America's outdoor spaces have been shaped by systemic racism, economic inequality, and the erasure of Indigenous history. The Route Ahead depends on forging spaces of belonging in which all of us feel meaningfully represented. Now more than ever our parks, peaks, and public lands are calling on us to dismantle barriers, create positive experiences for others, and bridge cultural, economic, and political divides. The work is exciting, but let’s be clear—it will be work. Lucky for us, the work of a Mazama comes with plenty of play.
Drop me a line anytime—and let’s get out there together!
INTERIM EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE
by Kaleen Deatherage, Interim Executive DirectorWhen I began my service as your interim executive director, I couldn’t have predicted that I would get to work alongside all of you for more than 18 months. Often interim assignments don’t last that long, but the truth is we haven’t been simply managing the gap between permanent executive directors. We’ve been engaged in a change management process to help the Mazamas position itself for growth, fiscal sustainability, and a vibrant future as our region’s premier climbing, hiking, and conservation-focused nonprofit.
And in the past year and a half, we’ve made a lot of progress. The purpose of the external assessment of the Mazamas that we carried out in November of 2021 was to identify broad organizational strengths and challenges and provide recommendations to help position the Mazamas for an effective and sustainable leadership model going forward. We utilized the findings from the assessment to direct our efforts and help prepare the organization for an executive search and leadership transition.
Since December 2021, we’ve made considerable headway—particularly with respect to rebuilding our team and resetting the Mazamas in readiness for a new executive director; strengthening our financial position, remodeling our budgeting template, and incorporating a full costing of programs and activities; passing new updated bylaws to address membership standards and incorporate modern governance policies in line with the State of Oregon; redefining the roles of the board, staff, and committees; and implementing a new well-defined and proactive approach to communications to help support and maintain a positive and cohesive Mazama community with an engaged membership.
As your new executive director begins her tenure supported by a high-functioning and engaged staff and Board of Directors, the Mazamas is well positioned to: define strategic direction; begin exploring new programs and activities that can generate more revenue; build an effective development committee and a fundraising plan with agreed upon priorities that have the full engagement of the board; restructure the membership and purpose
of the Nominating Committee taking a strategic and multi-year approach to building the composition of the board; and continue to address issues of equity and inclusion at the Mazamas.
Rebekah Phillips comes to the Mazamas after standing out among the candidates in a very comprehensive and competitive hiring process. The Search Committee was comprised of board members, past board members, and Mazama members at large. They began by creating an ideal candidate profile that expressed the characteristics, skills, and experience we felt would best help the Mazamas to meet this moment in our organization’s lifecycle. A very broad net was cast to attract candidates, utilizing both our internal network and looking extensively in the wider nonprofit community in Oregon and the northwest. The interview process was comprised of three phases, the first two with the Search Committee, and a final in-person interview with the full board and then the staff, conducted over two hours at the Mazama Mountaineering Center. Our two finalists were asked to make a 25-minute oral presentation to the board about their fit for the role of Mazama Executive Director, their understanding of the nonprofit sector in Oregon, and how they would begin their tenure with the Mazamas based on their present understanding of our needs.
I’m delighted to see Rebekah Phillips become your next executive director. I believe she has the passion and energy to work alongside all of you to create a vibrant future that sustains and advances the Mazama mission of climbing, hiking, and preserving our precious mountains and scenic outdoor spaces. Rebekah is
well grounded in nonprofit processes, i.e., fundraising, fiscal management, marketing and communications, program delivery, human resources, and compliance. Rebekah has worked extensively with volunteers throughout her career and has a keen understanding of the important role volunteers play in an organization like ours, where a great deal of our program delivery is led by the committed efforts of volunteer committees. She is excited to get started, and I think you are going to love working with her.
So, what are my next steps? I won’t disappear from the scene quite yet. I’ll be around, in a more limited capacity, to support Rebekah’s onboarding over the next month. I am also likely to help bring a few projects we have underway to completion. Namely, working with the board and the Lodge Committee to finalize our new operational model, assisting with the capital campaign for the lodge and our exhibit at the Oregon Historical Society this winter, and possibly some short-term grant writing work and completion of our financial restructuring efforts. Formally here in the bulletin, I want to say thank you. Thank you for the chance to work with you, for trusting me to lead the organization through some substantial changes, and for your willingness to think together about how to define a path to a vibrant future with new members and renewed energy. As one of those new members, I’m enthusiastic about the route ahead. See you on the trail!
PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE
by Greg Scott, Mazama PresidentAt the end of 2022, the board identified seven priorities for 2023. The first of these priorities was to hire a new-full time executive director by May. I am happy to report an offer was accepted by our new executive director on May 30 and by the time you read this, Rebekah Phillips will have started in that role.
Second, we set out to address our budgeting process. Our treasurer, Liz Crowe, worked with Kaleen Deatherage to revise our budget template. We also approved a budget for 2023 that is budget neutral. We still have work to do in our budgeting process this year, including clearer communication with committees, but we now have tools to better establish our budget.
Third, we set goals around our lodge including creating a sustainable operations plan, assessing the profitability of the lodge, and launching a capital campaign. We tested one of those models this winter, with a volunteer operations plan. While successful, members of the board, led by Chris Jaworski and Charles Barker, continue to work with the Lodge Committee to identify a long-term operational plan. The capital campaign will launch this summer, and we are hopeful we can raise the money we need to meet the memberships’ expectations around the future use of the lodge.
Fourth, we committed to exploring how to develop revenue with the anticipated loss of revenue from our climbing program, and the lodge being closed. Many of our programs saw an increase in price. We are working on developing a pricing policy that will help us more consistently assess the value of our programming and make sure it is consistent and keeping our programming available to anyone who wants to access it.
Fifth, we committed to better communication. This has manifested in more direct communication with some of our committees. But many of you have probably noticed the impact our Communications Coordinator Gina Binole has had keeping our social media channels running. We are still identifying better ways to communicate and I acknowledge this is still an area of growth for the board. I know that our new executive director will be extremely helpful with this area of focus.
Sixth, anticipating the passage of the bylaws, we recognized we needed to update our Nominating Committee and board governance policies. Claire Tenscher is
taking the lead on this, and by the end of the summer we should know how our next election will operate and the board will have better tools to identify where we can strengthen our depth.
Our last area of focus was around access. We specifically adopted and implemented new policies making climbs free to members, and hikes free to anyone. Aimee Filimoehala, Bob Breivogel, and Chris Jaworski have been taking the lead on communicating with the USFS about the new Mt. Hood permit program. Even though I only mentioned a few by name, this board is extremely active and working hard this year. I want to acknowledge the great work all of them have been doing to accomplish these goals and to lead us into the next phase of our history.
MAY MEMBERSHIP DRIVE RECAP
Our May 2023 membership drive was a success. Between May 1 and May 31, we added 188 new and renewing members to the rolls, a 683 percent increase over the new and renewing members added in May of 2022.
Of the 188 members added, the vast majority (143) were full dues-paying members, followed by these membership categories in decreasing order: students, spouses of members, 60 years of age plus five years of membership, members who reside outside of Oregon or Washington, and youth. As of the end of May 2023, we've
added a total of 549 new members for the year, helping to close the gap between full-paying members (49.4 percent) and reduced-paying members (50.5 percent). At the end of the current reporting period, May 2023, our total membership stands at 2,903 members, the highest its been since 2021.
GLACIATED PEAK SOCIETY LOGO DESIGN CONTEST WINNER
by Mathew Brock, Mazama Library and Historical Collections ManagerThe Mazamas are excited to announce that Marta Petteni has won the Glaciated Peak Society (GPS) logo design contest. Marta first heard about the Mazamas when she moved to the United States in 2018, but it was only after her husband joined that she learned more and decided to join earlier this year. In addition to mountaineering, Marta enjoys hiking, skiing, backpacking, and kayaking. She finds inspiration in the women in her family, her social network, and her community; “They are some of the most caring people, strong mountaineers, and incredible visionaries I know. I am grateful and honored to have them in my life.”
Marta's favorite book is All We Can Save by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K. Wilkinson (editors). The book is a collection of stories, essays, and poetry that highlights marginalized voices within climate change activism, science, and policy. “It’s all about hope,” says Marta. When not exploring the Pacific Northwest or her native Italian Alps, she dreams of traveling to Nepal and Patagonia. Her advice to fellow explorers is, “Know and plan before you go, enjoy safely, and explore respectfully.”
Marta’s love of travel and climate change activism carries over into her work. She is an Italian licensed architect and graphic designer specializing in working with underserved communities and in post-disaster and emergency scenarios. Her design experience spans Italy, Poland, Barcelona, Ecuador, Fiji, and the U.S.
Her favorite projects involve working with communities to create products and processes that are more inclusive, equitable, accessible, and therefore able to better respond to communities' needs.
When approaching a new graphic design project, Marta begins by asking questions. What is the key message of this product? Who is the audience? What is the inspiration and core concept? How can this be accessible yet meaningful and unique? She then begins brainstorming, diagramming, and creating options on paper through multiple media including hand-sketching, collaging, watercolors, and 3D folding techniques. Once she’s happy with the result, she switches to a computer and uses graphic design software to create digital designs. "Software are only vehicles to translate ideas - you need to have an idea and work it out first" Marta says. In
finding inspiration for the GPS logo she looked to nature. She says of her design, “my love for the mountain is reflected in this simple but compelling design inspired by the local peaks and the official Mazama logo shapes—a circle for the sky and a triangle for the peak—with the addition of blue-ice color and an ice axe to emphasize the mission of the Glaciated Peak Society.”
AROUND, AND A ROUND , AND AROUN
by Ali GrayOregon and Washington offer no shortage of amazing backpacking routes. One fun option is to get up close and personal with some of our volcanoes. Circumnavigating a giant mountain (or series of mountains) is a great way to get to know an area in-depth and from different perspectives.
My partner Andy and I have completed three of the region's circumnavs: the Timberline Trail around Mt. Hood, the Loowit Trail around Mount St. Helens, and the Three Sisters plus Broken Top Loop. Each of these trails offers a unique experience with an abundance of highlights, along with some challenges. Here's a rundown of our trips:
TIMBERLINE TRAIL
■ Date hiked: mid-July 2018 (pre-Muddy Fork blowdowns)
■ Days: 3 days, 2 nights
■ Distance: 42 miles
■ Elevation gain: roughly 10,000 feet
■ Access point: Timberline Lodge
■ Direction: clockwise
■ Challenge: moderate to difficult
■ Most difficult aspects: a few creek crossings, namely Eliot Creek; lack of shade on the north side
■ Water access: plenty
■ Permit: self-serve at the trailhead
■ Popular day hikes: Ramona Falls, Paradise Park, McNeil Point, Cooper Spur, Mt. Hood summit
DThe Timberline Trail is perhaps the easiest of these three routes, with plenty of water and campsite options, decent shade coverage (except on the north side), and straightforward routefinding. The trail rewards hikers with numerous wildflowers throughout (and lots of huckleberries if you time it right) and brings you closer to lesser-visited areas of our home mountain. While a few of the creek crossings can be a bit tricky, namely Eliot Creek on the north side, most don't pose too much of a problem. The trail racks up the most elevation gain of the three, but the ups and downs make it less noticeable. Keep in mind that on mid-summer weekends the trail gets busy, especially on the PCT section and around the popular day hiking areas. That said, it's still easy to find a secluded campsite with a spectacular view. The Timberline Trail is a great option for intermediate and experienced backpackers alike seeking a memorable experience.
Preceding page, clockwise from top: Heading up along the McNeil Point portion of the Timberline Trail; camp in Newton Canyon along the Timberline Trail; Andy and Ali after finishing the Timberline Trail (photo by unknown).
This page, clockwise from top: At the top of Windy Pass looking down at the Plains of Abraham on the Loowit Trail; downed trees from the 1980 eruption along the Loowit Trail; in the blast zone on the Loowit Trail. All photos by Ali Gray unless noted.
LOOWIT TRAIL
■ Date hiked: mid-June 2019
■ Days: 3 days, 2 nights
■ Distance: 29 miles
■ Elevation gain: roughly 6,500 feet
■ Access point: June Lake
■ Direction: clockwise
■ Challenge: very difficult
■ Most difficult aspects: crossing the blast zone; minimal water and shade; using fixed ropes to enter/exit a few ravines; some exposure in places
■ Water access: minimal, especially later in the summer
■ Permit: self-serve at the trailhead
■ Popular day hikes: Windy Pass, Loowit Falls, Ape Canyon, Johnston Ridge Observatory, Mount St. Helens summit
The Loowit Trail is the most technical and challenging of the three trails featured here, with narrow and exposed sections, barely any shade, fixed ropes, strategic water carries, minimal signage, and ten miles where you can't camp in the blast zone. That said, the trail is incredible, offering up-close views of the otherworldly landscape surrounding our region's most active volcano. It's amazing to see the remains of trees snapped like toothpicks along the trail, juxtaposed with the recovering vegetation and increasing wildlife in the blast zone. Life truly is remarkable. We saw few people on our hike, which started in thin snow on the south side of the mountain and continued on with pleasant temperatures and more water access than later in the summer. The trail leads to areas that are ambitious to get to on a day hike, such as the green meadows of blasted trees on the west side of the mountain and the stark (and stunning) Plains of Abraham on the east. Sore feet from rocky terrain aside, the Loowit Trail stands out as one of my very favorites.
continued on next page
This
Circumnavs, continued from previous page
THREE SISTERS PLUS BROKEN TOP LOOP
■ Date hiked: mid-July 2020 (pre-permits)
■ Days: 5 days, 4 nights
■ Distance: 57 miles
■ Elevation gain: roughly 8,500 feet
■ Access point: Tam McArthur Rim Trailhead
■ Direction: counter-clockwise
■ Permit: Central Cascades Wilderness Permit
■ Challenge: difficult
■ Most difficult aspects: blowdowns near Pole Creek; minimal shade throughout; small scrambles near No Name Lake; mosquitoes on the PCT section
■ Water access: moderate, some places with plenty, others with less
■ Popular day hikes: Moraine Lake, Green Lakes, South Sister summit, No Name Lake, Obsidian area
The Three Sisters Loop and Broken Top Loop are often hiked individually, but we opted to complete them together—highly recommended if you have the time. This is probably an even better option now that the area is permitted, as doing them as part of one trip makes exploring this amazing area logistically easier. While it's the longest of the three circumnavigations here, the trail itself offers less elevation gain and fewer creek crossings than the Timberline Trail and less technical hiking than the Loowit Trail (with the exception of a few spots around No Name Lake on Broken Top). Bring a wide-brimmed hat for the sun and some DEET for the mosquitos, and this route will offer an unforgettable experience. Seeing the Three Sisters from all sides while following the trail through old burn areas, stunning meadows and plains, black sands, lava flows, the sought-after Obsidian area, and past clear lakes perfect for a dip after a long day, this trail has it all. The spectacular beauty of the Broken Top add-on is well worth the extra day's food carry—the views along this trail are some of the best I've seen. This loop is perfect for backpackers with a bit of experience wanting to try a longer trail, or who simply want to enjoy a few days out in a remarkable place.
Ali Gray is a skier at heart, but loves doing pretty much anything in the outdoors. Hiking, backpacking, climbing, camping, paddleboarding, photography—you name it. The mountains are her happy place, and snow (and cats) are her happy things. She is a professional web designer and has been a Mazama since 2015. A Google Drive folder of maps and GPX tracks to accompany this article can be found at tinyurl.com/ali-circumnav.
REQUEST FOR BULLETIN SUBMISSIONS
Alex Honnold may be able to do it solo, but we can’t!
You are the Mazamas. Your stories, your adventures, and your knowledge define the organization. The Bulletin should represent that. With your help, we can produce a better product for you. The Publications team is a talented group of writers, editors, and you-can-do-it! cheerleaders willing to help you transform your knowledge and narratives into feature content to be shared with your fellow Mazamas. What will we publish? Just about anything of interest to the organization: tips and tricks, stories of trips taken, reporting on Mazama events, profiles of people, poetry, news from the climbing world, and on and on.
There are two ways that you can get your ideas into print. The first is to tip off our crack team of writers about your idea and let us do all the heavy lifting. The second is to share with us a draft of your contribution, and we can help polish it up. Our staff includes experienced editors capable of working with you to craft top-notch writing.
Pitch us your ideas by emailing publications@mazamas.org
SAYING GOODBYE
THOMAS F. HORNBEIN
NOVEMBER 6, 1930–MAY 6, 2023
“What you discover in the mountains is life changing,” mountaineer Tom Hornbein once stated when asked what advice he would give to climbers. What Hornbein did on Mt. Everest in 1963 changed more than a life; it “ushered in the modern era of mountaineering,” according to a recent statement issued by the American Alpine Club.
Hornbein, who died in early May at his home in Estes Park, Colorado, was a member of the first American expedition to climb Mt. Everest. During that adventure, he and a few fellow climbers departed from the main group to become the first to ascend the world’s highest peak via the perilous West Ridge. He then told the death-defying story in Everest: The West Ridge (1965).
Hornbein was born in St. Louis in 1930. At summer camp in Colorado, he fell in love with the outdoors. He earned a bachelor’s degree in geology at Boulder (1952) and a medical degree from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis (1956). An anesthesiologist, he then studied the effects of high altitude on breathing while on the faculty at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle from 1963 to 2002. He continued climbing and in 2018, The Mountaineers honored him with their Lifetime Achievement Award.
LLOYD WEISENSEE
NOVEMBER 6, 1930–MAY 6, 2023
Lloyd joined the Mazamas in 1968. He earned his Guardian Peak Award in 1971 and his Sixteen Major Northwest Peaks Award in 1992. He was a lifelong member of the Oregon State Bar, the Portland City Club, and the Mazamas, and was a passionate cyclist and triathlete.
MAGGIE BEAGLE
2009–MAY 27, 2023
For the past eight years, Maggie served as the Chief Morale Officer and High Commissioner for Tail Wagging here at the Mazama Mountaineering Center. She could often be found greeting visitors to the Mazama Library or wandering in search of pets, ear scratches, belly rubs, and the occasional treat. When not fulfilling her official duties, Maggie enjoyed hiking, running on the beach, napping in the sun (or under our librarian's desk), and chasing squirrels out of her garden. She will be greatly missed by all that knew her.
UPCOMING COURSES, ACTIVITIES, & EVENTS
SUNDAY SKILL BUILDERS
■ Class dates:
□ July 9—Sport Climbing Anchors 101
□ July 23—Advanced Anchors
□ Aug 13—Rappelling 101
□ Aug 27—Advanced Rappel Tricks
■ Application Opens: Rolling
■ Prerequisites: See website for details. Ready to improve your alpine skills?
We're excited to let you know about the latest Mazama class series: the Sunday Skill-builder Clinics, new for 2023. These clinics are convenient, consistent, handson, bite-sized, and inexpensive, with rotating (and repeating) topics.
Here’s the scoop:
■ Clinics are on the second and fourth Sunday of the month
■ Second Sunday will usually be more beginner/intermediate topics
■ Fourth Sunday will usually be more intermediate/advanced topics
■ Registration opens one month before the class date
■ Clinics are about three hours and usually from 6 to 9 p.m.
■ Location will usually be the Mazama Mountaineering Center
■ Maximum class size is usually about 25 students
■ Cost: $25 for Mazama members, $35 for nonmembers
Class coordinators: John Godino (alpinesavvy.com) and Andy Nuttbrock
MAZAMA TRAIL TENDING
Dates: July 20–22, 2023
Location: Mazama Trail
Each year the Mazamas repair and maintain our namesake trail on the north side of Mt. Hood. This work doesn’t happen without a crew of eager volunteers and you can come up for 1, 2, or all 3 days. Dry camping is available at the trailhead parking lot for tents and small RVs if you want to stay over. Tasks will include cutting logs, trimming brush, tread repair and clearing drain dips. No experience necessary, all tools provided. Sign up on the Mazama calendar. Leader: Richard Pope 503-860-8789
SAN JUAN OUTING
Dates: September 11–18, 2023
Cost: $1,089 for members; $1,239 for nonmembers
Join the Mazamas for a seven-day outing in the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado where we will enjoy daily B- or C-level hikes. Our first day will take us to Mesa Verde National Park where we will hike among the famous Anasazi ruins. We then drive along the Million Dollar Highway, recognized as one of the most scenic drives in the country, through the Victorian-era preserved mining towns of Silverton and Ouray, the latter dubbed the “Switzerland of America.” We will also visit the upscale nearby town of Telluride where we will enjoy more fabulous hiking.
RAPPEL FOR PURPOSE!
George Cummings is celebrating his 87th year by rappelling 530 feet off Big Pink (the U.S. Bank Tower), the tallest building in downtown Portland. He is also celebrating the 129th anniversary of the Mazamas in July by supporting its future as a leading outdoor organization in the Pacific Northwest. But he needs your help to raise at least $2,000 by July 7 to secure a place on the rappel. George will donate the cost of the rappel ($1,000), so whatever you donate will directly benefit the Mazamas.
tinyurl.com/GeorgeBigPink
WHAT’S HAPPENING AROUND THE MAZAMAS?
FAMILIES MOUNTAINEERING 101
■ Finished up its course in May with a Smith Rock climb.
■ This year's class consisted of 25 students (parents and children) and a lot of supportive alumni volunteers.
■ This year’s course encountered many scheduling conflicts with the overbooking of the MMC and Mazama Lodge.
■ Planned an info night for June and expects registration will happen this summer for the new course to start in September.
■ Casey Ferguson and Richard Hall are the coordinators for 2023–2024
■ Requests members with significant experience with anchors, belaying, rappeling, and fixed lines, such as AR grads and climb leaders, to assist next year.
ADVANCED ROCK:
■ Completed the 2023 course in May with all students graduating, including some new to the Mazamas.
■ Added a high-angle rescue scenario this year.
■ Planning to continue periodic practice sessions through 2023 and beyond.
■ Exploring the possibility of adding new mini-courses or skill builders for summer and fall.
NORDIC
■ Lindsey Addison is the new chair.
■ Outlining events for 2024 ski school.
INTERMEDIATE CLIMBING SCHOOL
■ For 2023–2024, Jessica Minifie and Toby Contreras are co-class coordinators, Ann Marie Caplan is student coordinator, and Melinda Hugo is committee chair.
■ Working on admissions for the next class.
CLIMBING:
■ Guy Wettstein has replaced Trey Schutrumpf as chair and continues to serve as secretary.
■ Busy helping climb leaders put up many climbs for the season and bringing those into compliance with the new bylaw changes.
■ Wish to remind climb leaders to stay updated with their certifications.
EXPEDITION:
■ Awarded Bob Wilson grants for expeditions to Arrigetch Peaks, Nahanni Lotus Flower Tower, and Stikine Ice Cap.
■ Desperately looking for new members to help the committee with activities beyond evaluating grants.
■ Laetitia Pascal is reaching out to staff about partnering with an organization to do some stewardship at Horsethief Butte.
FIRST AID
■ Worked on policies and procedures for rescheduling WFA students who were unable to complete a course.
■ Completed a several months-long project on psychological first aid and incorporated it into the June course.
RESEARCH
■ Due to organizational changes, the committee is unfunded for the current year and has not awarded any grants.
PUBLICATIONS:
■ Asks members and committees to submit reports and stories on their activities and initiatives.
■ New member: Jen Travers.
BASIC CLIMBING EDUCATION PROGRAM:
■ Added a new Assistant Coordinator/Chair to shadow the current chair for a year and step into the role the following season.
■ Preparing for the 2024 season by reviewing policies, incorporating lessons learned, reviewing student and leader feedback, and working to streamline scheduling in order to prevent conflicts.
■ New members: Lily Cox-Skall (Marketing Coordinator), Ali Koch, and David Gross.
■ Working with Trail Trips to forecast the need for CPR offerings.
■ Working on the WFA/ MFA schedule for the upcoming season to meet the needs of the Climb Committee and interested ICS students.
■ Assisted Base Medical with annual background checks on WFA instructors.
■ Exploring the hazards our members may encounter in the field when administering help to people using Fentanyl, an extremely potent drug.
MAZAMA CLASSICS
Whether you are new to the Northwest, a seasoned backcountry traveler, a longtime Portland resident who’s ready to start exploring, or somewhere in between, we can connect you to the hiking, climbing, and skiing adventures you seek.
■ Climb a mountain
■ Go rock climbing
■ Hike or backpack
■ Backcountry ski or snowshoe
■ Discover canyoneering
■ Meet interesting people
■ Learn new outdoor skills
■ Check out our library
■ Stay at our mountain lodge
■ See a presentation
■ Discover new places
■ Trek in a foreign country
■ Join an outing or expedition
■ Fix a trail
■
We lead a wide variety of year-round activities including hikes, picnics, and cultural excursions. Share years of happy Mazama memories with our group. All ages are welcome to join the fun.
■ On Tuesday, July 4, Dick and Jane Miller will be holding a summer picnic at their home. Classics and other Mazamas are welcome to attend. The event is free but attendees are asked to bring a salad, main dish, or dessert to share. Dick and Jane will provide plates, cups, utensils, napkins, and water.
□ The event begins at noon with food at 1 p.m.
□ Address: 17745 SW Cooper Mountain Drive, Beaverton, OR 97007
□ Please follow signs from SW 175th Avenue to the parking area. Park and bring your food to the dining area.
CONTACTING THE CLASSICS
Contact the Classics Chair, Gordon Fulks at classics@mazamas.org.
SUPPORT THE CLASSICS
The Classics Committee needs a volunteer to put more content in our column on a quarterly basis. We want to document past Classics events and make sure that our postings to the web are current and complete. More generally, there is always work to be done on the committee. Our meetings are the fourth Monday of every other month at 11 a.m. on Zoom. Email classics@mazamas.org and tell us how you can help.
CLASSICS COMMITTEE MEETING
Keep an eye on the Mazama calendar for our next meeting.
For members with 25 years of membership, or for those who prefer to travel at a more leisurely pace.
PRESS THAT BUTTON: REFLECTIONS ON A RESCUE
by Forest Brook Menke-ThielmanWe had climbed 3,700 feet over eight miles in the blistering sun, postholing in the heatwavesoftened snow past our knees, even up to our chests. In the waning hours of a mid-May evening, we were four tired and discouraged men setting up camp on the banks of Colchuck Lake. Our lofty goal had been to summit Colchuck, Dragontail, Little Annapurna, and Prusik peaks. With obvious evidence of recent avalanches all around us, we were reluctantly scaling back to three peaks…or two. Or maybe we'd dig an avalanche pit in the morning and reconsider. But it was already pretty obvious: there would be no climbing this weekend. After setting up our snow platforms and tents, we broke out our packed spirits and began sipping whiskey. As the sun dipped out of sight and the alpenglow began to fade, two hikers stumbled into our camp.
“Hey, how are you guys doing?” we asked. “Not so good,” said one. “I fell down a twenty-foot cliff,” said the other, who seemed to be struggling to stand. I took a closer look, and noticed skin missing from the second’s face alongside recently congealed blood. “Oh my god! Your face is [messed] up!” I shouted instinctively. We asked if they wanted medical care; three of us had WFR (Wilderness First Responder) training, and one of us WFA (Wilderness First Aid). The two men—the injured Sammy and his friend Benny—looked relieved to find help, and quickly accepted.
We swapped names and shook hands, and I noticed Sam’s skin felt alarmingly cold. We sat Sam down on a foam sleeping pad and began assessing his injuries, and they recounted their story. The two had entered the Enchantments from the other side of Aasgard Pass, camped a night, then crossed over the pass earlier in the day. As the snow softened in the heat and they began to posthole, they looked for an alternate path to descend toward Colchuck Lake. Sammy was trying to climb down a steep rock face when he fell. He hit his chin on a ledge and tumbled several times before coming to a stop in the snow. He
wasn’t sure if he had hit his head or spine, but he had instinctively covered his head as he tumbled. When he later pointed out the cliff he fell from, it looked to me that twenty feet was a pretty conservative estimate. From the cliff to our campsite, he had been part walking, part crawling through the snow.
We went to work. Alex and I checked his injuries: heavy bruises on both knees, as well as active bleeding, and a very swollen ankle, but no obvious lifethreatening trauma. I noted that his skin was alarmingly cold. While Alex began to bandage him up and dole out some pain
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Rescue, continued from previous page
meds, I grabbed a down jacket for our patient. Ryan contacted his dad through his Garmin InReach satellite communicator, and had him relay information to the Chelan County Sheriff, and Thomas took everyone’s bottles down to the lake to pump water.
At the time we still thought self-extraction was possible; Sammy, likely full of adrenaline, was adamant that he and Benny needed to hike out that evening. We then performed a focused spine assessment, and determined to the best of our ability that Sammy had not injured his spine, and we could release spinal precautions. He was impressed with our backcountry medical skills and asked us how we knew this stuff; we recommended both the Mazama MFA (Mountain First Aid) and NOLS (National Outdoor Leadership School) WFA and WFR.
Now he was bandaged and his ankle supported, but our patient was still shivering, despite the pad and down jacket. We’d asked him to get into dry clothes, but he hadn’t done so. As the daylight faded, we also realized our guests did not have proper headlamps. I told them that they were adults, and could do as they wished, but that Sammy was cold and in danger of hypothermia. To boot, he likely had a broken ankle or knee, and was struggling to weight his leg. Without headlamps in the dark, through more soft snow, and difficult navigational terrain over miles, including a closed road and a couple of raging rivers to cross, it was simply unrealistic for them to hike out that night. The consequences seemed high— there was a real possibility that Sammy would succumb to the cold. I made an impassioned plea, almost tearfully: “If you guys were our best friends, we wouldn’t let you leave tonight.”
They looked at each other briefly, perhaps for the first time realizing the gravity of the situation, and agreed. After firmly directing Sammy to shed his wet clothes and get into some dry ones of my own, Thomas poured boiling water into a bottle for a heat pack, got him on top of two pads, and into a warm bag. “Your job is to get warm,” I told him. Benny and I dug
out a snow platform and set up their tent. As Alex and Thomas continued to check in with Sammy and Benny, I assumed the role of backcountry cook, boiling water, lining up freeze-dried meals, and passing them out. Ryan continued to relay information to the sheriff through his dad, this time communicating clearly that this was a rescue scenario, though not an emergency, as we had stabilized our patient. Thus, a morning rescue was in order, and as far as we understood, was underway.
The next morning we slept in and awoke with the sun baking our tents. I checked in with our guests, who had enjoyed a solid night of sleep, but Sammy definitely could no longer walk on his ankle. He apologized for bleeding into the long underwear that I had lent him, and said his bandage felt tight. When he exposed his ankle, it was badly swollen, and it was clear that we had to rebandage his injuries.
Afterwards, we spent a while speculating on how a rescue team might extract Sam with a litter. Then we watched rockfall and avalanches, thanking our lucky stars we weren’t climbing. One of the slides was so loud we all looked into the sky expecting to see a low-flying plane.
Another avalanche came off a cliff northwest of Colchuck Peak, blocks of ice and snow the size of trucks tumbling down the face, clacking together with deep, resonant tones. I remembered that the bodies of two climbers still lay on the slopes below Colchuck, under the debris of a February avalanche—conditions had not yet been safe enough to recover them. We talked about the joys of not climbing, and shared our observations with a few passing backcountry skiers.
After an hour or two, one of us asked Ryan when we could expect the rescue, since he had been communicating with the outside world. He asked his dad via text, and after a moment he uttered, “Oh no. They’re waiting for us to press the SOS button.” The sheriff needed a definitive signal from us to engage.
We were, briefly, stunned. The four of us, each with backcountry medical training and the technology to summon help, had managed to skip the step needed to initiate the rescue: calling 911 or pressing the SOS button on a satellite device. How? Thinking back, we initially thought that Sammy and Benny might self-extract; then thought we might hike out with them in the morning. We later made the assumption that the sheriff was mounting a rescue, based on the limited text conversation relayed via Ryan’s dad. Without direct communication, it’s easy to misunderstand the expectations.
This speaks to another cause. Engaging emergency services feels like a big step, especially when the severity is uncertain. Texting them via Ryan’s dad was a way of hedging, but it set a course leading to the misunderstanding. What we knew but didn’t fully appreciate is that SOS, or 911, initiates contact, not rescue. It allows emergency personnel to collect information and make an assessment, and then advise, or give directions and instructions; rescue is just one of their options. Wilderness responders will tell you: If something appears to be an emergency, trust yourself and don’t hesitate—press that button. If it turns out the case of appendicitis was just gas, or you discover you were next to the trail all along,
you’ll have the luxury to feel embarrassed later.
I had been involved in three previous backcountry emergencies. In one, a friend swung a hatchet into his leg while chopping wood on the first night of a fourday North Cascades backpacking trip. I had just taken a WFR class, and was able to irrigate the wound, get some Steri-Strips on it, and bandage it quickly. He healed in the field, continued on the trip, and never needed professional medical attention; almost 20 years later, he barely has a scar.
The second situation was more grim. We were four rough miles into a bachelor party hiking trip, exhausted from carrying packs bulging absurdly with party supplies, when one companion sliced his second toe with a hatchet, straight through his croc sandals. The bone was severed and the toe hung by a sliver of skin, blood pulsing out with his heartbeat. After stopping the bleeding and bandaging the foot, it took eight of us several hours to get our 6 foot, 7 ince, 280–pound friend back to the car, four at a time taking five-minute shifts lifting a limb to our shoulders.
In the last incident, a participant on a Mazama climb became badly sunburned, then sat in the snow for too long at camp, and ended up with both heat exhaustion and hypothermia. We stabilized them for the night, and thankfully all walked out the next day.
None of these cases had called for a rescue, as we were able to self-extract or mitigate in the field. So it was a new experience for me when we finally did press SOS on one of the satellite communicators. (We had Garmin InReach; SPOT, Zoleo, and other sat devices will be similar.) Once you lift the cover and depress the button, the unit beeps loudly for 20 seconds (you have to keep holding the button), giving you a message on the display that says you are contacting emergency services and that it is only for emergency use. Within minutes you’ll get a response—for
Garmin, from the International Emergency Response Coordination Center. They asked a few quick questions on the nature of the emergency and connected us with local search and rescue. We soon received a message from Deputy Mike McLeod of the Chelan County sheriff’s office: “Can you give me an update for the weather up there. And if the patient can be moved at all. There is an LZ [landing zone] about 450 yards to the north of you…we should be able to reach the LZ by 14:00…What is the patient’s condition?”
It was 11:40 a.m. We had been sitting
When the helicopter came it nearly blew my hat off; I had never been so close to one landing. The Chelan County Sheriff officer asked only two questions: “Where is he, and what happened?” I pointed Sammy out, and told him we suspected a broken ankle. “Okay, I’ll need one of you to help me get him in the back.” We helped Sammy hobble to the chopper, handing his bag to the officer. “How often do you come up here?” I asked. He shot me a glance of both gloom and resignation. “We come up here A LOT.” I mentioned the avalanches and said that we had abandoned our hopes of climbing. “Thank you for that,” he said with sincerity.
around for hours waiting for a rescue that wasn’t coming, and now that one actually was, we had just over two hours to secure Sammy’s ankle for travel and get him about half a kilometer away. We got to work packing up Sammy’s things while Alex and I used Benny’s foam pad to fashion a boot to immobilize his ankle. His bruising had worsened overnight, but he could move his knees, so we knew they weren’t broken. He told us that with support, he thought he could hobble there. We gave him trekking poles, supporting him physically every now and then, with one of us in front and one behind in case he became unsteady, allowing him to slide over the snow on his rump when it was easier than walking, guiding him along the easiest path to the wooden helipad. He winced in pain here and there, but his determination was fierce. We got there an hour early, and relaxed.
When the chopper lifted off, we couldn’t help but howl with excitement. Sammy gave us a thumbs up from inside, having donned the headset given to him by the pilot. We watched the bird fly away over the peaks of the Enchantments, bound for the hospital in either Leavenworth or Wenatchee. With only the hike out ahead of us, we now faced the many emotions held at bay by the emergency—but disappointment was not one of them. We may not have reached the summit of a single peak, but we had successfully orchestrated a helicopter rescue, made two new friends, and maybe, just maybe, saved a life.
Forest is a Mazama member in the Leadership Development program. A public educator by trade, he enjoys teaching others, creating art, skiing, climbing, bike touring, running, and all things outdoors. He is an armchair activist and political enthusiast. Fellow Mazama members Thomas Veeman, Alex Aguilar, and Ryan Zubieta, who helped edit this article, assisted in the rescue. They are still in contact with Benny and Sammy, who may need surgery to repair a torn lisfranc ligament; they are otherwise happy, healthy, and approve of the writing of this article.
A SPLENDID PLAN B: THE ALPINE LAKES HIGH ROUTE
by Jen TraversIt was the most memorable sunset I have ever witnessed. Perched on the edge of the idyllic Tank Lakes plateau, circled by peaks in every direction, we watched the sky for more than an hour go through the most exquisite transition, slow and subtle, from orange to red to purple to mauve. It has been my standard for judging all sunsets since.
August 2015. Mazama pals Seeger Fischer and Kurt Hiland were my partners. The original plan was a circumnavigation of Mt. Adams, but a nearby fire filled the skies with heavy smoke. Time to make plan B. The air quality maps indicated that the west side of the Washington Cascades would be clear, so we focused on that area. I found an online trip report of the Tank Lakes, with its tantalizing granite terrain, and shared it with my team. They were equally enthused and we decided to check out this alpine wonderland.
We wanted a loop hike, so we chose the Alpine Lakes High Route (originally delineated in Beckey’s Cascade Alpine Guide #1). Our plan was to start at West Fork Foss trailhead to head up into the high country, and exit via Necklace Valley. The two trailheads are only 2.5 miles apart on the same road, so we brought a bike for shuttling and stashed it in the woods near the exit point. As we were finalizing our supplies and gear at the trailhead, I became concerned about my pack weight. I began to cull items, including the one-pound box of
instant cheesecake. Kurt kindly offered to carry it. We may also have ridiculed Seeger’s foam roller. I recall thinking it was quite a bulky thing to carry when I saw him secure it to his pack, but I did not understand its value at the time. By the end of the trip we were making use of it every evening and considered it an ingenious lightweight luxury.
Solitude was one of our primary objectives, and we had the good fortune of flexible schedules. Our start time was late afternoon on a Sunday, and the weekend hordes were exiting as we hiked up West
Fork Foss Creek. The first few miles were a steady trudge up through deep forest, and then we began to pass the first of 17 lakes we would see on our trip. We made our way along the shores of Copper Lake and Trout Lake to Little Heart Lake for the first night's camp. We were now alone in the wilderness and would not see anyone for the next three days.
We started early on the second day, and the scenery continued to get better as we gained the high country. We climbed up past the gorgeous aquamarine waters of Big Heart Lake, passed over a ridge high above Angeline Lake and then stopped to swim at a pretty unnamed pond above Chetwoot Lake. There was no longer a trail, only occasional cairns. We used map, compass, and a handheld GPS device to navigate. We turned eastward
on the rugged traverse section of the loop, traveling on granite boulder fields and through heather meadows towards Iron Cap Mountain. The views opened up as the trees diminished, and we found ourselves surrounded by the sea of mountains that is the Washington Cascades.
We camped at Iron Cap Lake on night two. Calling it a lake is generous. It was just a small tarn at the northern base of the summit block, with a remnant snowfield still lingering in the most shaded corner. The shore was covered with dusty granite boulders, and we each pitched our tents on the flattest slabs we could find. Kurt chose a precarious perch on a rock jutting out over the outflow stream, tumbling down to Otter Lake and the valley below. We broke out the cheesecake for this evening at the apex of our route.
We awoke to the smell of smoke. Emerging from our tents, we saw a sickening miasma in the eastern sky, and watched it slowly creep over the rim of Iron Cap and down into our little glacial basin. Very disconcerting. We had no idea how close this fire might be. Packing up slowly, we debated whether to continue on the loop or return the way we came. Within two hours, the westerly winds picked up, and the smoke started to dissipate. Since we were at the halfway point, we decided to continue on. We scrambled up to the northern rim of Iron Cap and dropped our packs to head up the final ridge to the summit—a nice respite to negotiate the chunky granite talus without a heavy pack. Views were still murky, but we spied continued on next page
the Tank Lakes basin to the east, our next destination. It looked so close, but it took us five hours to cover the sinuous five miles to get there, the most physically taxing section of our trip. After some confusing route finding, pushing through brush, and following cairns through boulder field after boulder field, we arrived.
We set up our tents on a promontory above one of the lakes. The Tank Lakes are surrounded by some excellent mountaineering objectives. We spent time trying to identify all the peaks around us including Summit Chief, Overcoat and Chimney to the south, Daniel and Hinman to the east, and Iron Cap to the west. Then the show began. The Pacific breeze had blown most of the smoke eastward throughout the day, but some haze remained, and this likely contributed to the
dazzling color changes we enjoyed during that special sunset.
On day four, we slowly wandered around the Tank Lakes Basin, then reluctantly scrambled down toward Necklace Valley. After four miles of downclimbing, we enjoyed putting our boots on a real trail, and began to make good time past the little jeweled lakes of the Necklace Valley. We began to encounter people again, and made our last night camp at Jade Lake.
I recall being particularly sad and hesitant to leave the wilderness and return to reality. The morning march out
through the forested Necklace Valley felt interminable, and we arrived in Seattle just in time for those awesome traffic jams! We blasted the tunes and allowed our minds to continue wandering in the high country.
Five days, four nights, 29 miles, 8,000 feet of elevation gain.
(RE)INTRODUCING THE MAZAMA LIBRARY
by Mathew Brock, Mazama Library and Historical Collections ManagerFor the past 109 years, the Mazamas have operated a library. What started in 1914 with a handful of books has grown over the years into a collection of over 4,600 titles across the circulating and special collections. The collections in the Mazama Library strive to answer three essential questions: how to do it, where to do it, and who's done it, respectively.
The “how to do it” section (Dewey 795–796) focuses on the technical guidebooks. It details free climbing, top roping, cross-country skiing, and rope technique, to name just a few. The “where to do it” section (900s) focuses on the guidebooks for climbing and hiking areas worldwide.
While our collections are global in scope, they are not exhaustive. And since the Mazama Library is based in Portland, our guidebooks skew to the Pacific Northwest, and the collections are heavily focused on California, Oregon, and Washington. The last section is biographies, or the “who's done it” section. Here you'll find biographies of well-known climbers, hikers, walkers, and outdoor enthusiasts.
The public side of the library also contains our noncirculating collections of outdoor and historical journals and periodicals. You'll find complete runs of the (British) Alpine Journal, American Alpine Journal, Canadian Alpine Journal, Mazama Annuals, and many more. The library subscribes to leading outdoor magazines like Outside, Climbing, Alpinist, and National Geographic, as well as publications
from our partner organizations like the (Seattle) Mountaineers, Mounmtaineering Club of Alaska, (Salem) Chemeketans, and more.
The noncirculating rare books collection contains many one-of-a-kind books of historical significance. Given the diminishing number of specialized mountaineering libraries in the United States, the Mazama Library holds, in some cases, the only copy of a particular book in the United States. In addition to oneof-a-kind books, the rare book collection also houses our extensive collection of autographed works, including several unique annotated volumes of regional historical significance.
Rounding out the library's collection is our growing collection of reference books. These are dedicated, noncirculating copies of the library's most-used technical books
and guidebooks. The reference collection ensures that even if the book you are looking for is checked out, we'll have a reference copy for you to look at onsite. The library also has a used bookshelf where you can find $1 books; proceeds help support the library by funding new additions to the collection.
The library's catalog is available online at www.mazamas.org/library. There you can search the collection and put books on hold. The Mazama Library is open Tuesday–Thursday from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. We hope to expand our open hours as activities and events return to the Mazama Mountaineering Center following the COVID-19 shutdown. Please keep an eye out for extended hours in the future.
Until then, remember—it's yours to use!
BOOK REVIEW
Turn Around Time
by David Guterson by Claire TenscherIn this lovely volume, described as “a walking poem for the Pacific Northwest,” David Guterson uses the phrase “turn around time” in its literal sense—the time at which you must head back to the trailhead regardless of your intended objective— and as a metaphor for aging. Following this, content ranges from the only poetic reference to moleskin I’ve ever read to dense reflections on aging. There are instantly recognizable trail memories and reflections on life. As befits both subjects, Guterson’s writing is infused with humor.
The reader is often reminded of the commonalities we share as outdoors-users, from Guterson’s description of his fellow hiker’s “nasal celebration of Hank Williams Sr. delivered into the abyss” to quick breakfasts (“suck down your tea, then, tuck in your gruel you and I must move”), and mentions of cairns that document their builders’ wrong choice of path.
Physically, Turn Around Time would look great on a shelf if you wanted to buy it; it is also available from local public libraries. The care that Mountaineers Books put into the publication is clear. The drawings that accompany the text often highlight its subtext: skulls sketched in boulder fields and mazes in forests.
Don’t let the prologue fool you, the rest of the book is composed of poems, some of which are fairly dense with nonobvious meaning. It should not be a quick read, for which I blame the tardiness of this review. At times, I found myself re-reading passages to try to understand their intent and meaning. By and large, this is not an issue—pushing through one poem I would land on the next and dance through it. Giving yourself enough time to soak into the words is crucial to enjoying Turn Around Time. There is a joy to the memories in these pages and a familiarity to me as someone who has hiked in the Northwest. I recommend a read.
“In other words, we have to start toward home, though it’s not the end of the hike for us…”
WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?
■ Hikers who love poetry
■ People who want to read perhaps the only poem that compares sternum straps to tumplines
BOOK REVIEW
Extraordinary Oregon!
by Matt Reeder by Silja TobinThe first time I entered the Mazama Mountaineering Center was only three months after I moved to Portland. Eager to learn more about hikes in the area and meet people to adventure with, I attended an event hosted by the Adventurous Young Mazamas where member Matt Reeder spoke about his new book, PDX Hiking 365.
Fast forward five years and PDX Hiking 365 is a staple in my hike planning, rarely making its way back onto the bookshelf, and Matt Reeder is now a close friend. I anxiously awaited the release of Matt’s newest book: Extraordinary Oregon! 125 Fantastic Hikes across the state of Oregon.
Matt started writing this book during the early days of the pandemic, and over the last two years, he drove over 20,000 miles to come up with this comprehensive list of the best, most extraordinary hikes in our beautiful state. He hiked over 1500 miles in Oregon alone. To be included, all hikes must be easy to access and navigate, and also must be doable in one day.
I am a big fan of the way Extraordinary Oregon! is organized. There are numerous ways to dive in when trip planning, either by starting with the map of the entire state; starting with the region you’re interested in and narrowing it down using the charts at the beginning of each chapter that note the distance and elevation gain of each hike; or using the detailed index.
Each hike starts with a helpful quick reference guide— distance, elevation gain, trailhead elevation, trail high point, season (that the trail is accessible), best time of year, and what pass (if any) is needed. One notable addition to this book is a land acknowledgment for each hike, letting the reader know whose traditional lands the hikes take place on. This is followed by driving directions to the trailhead, along with drive time from the closest town.
From there, Matt describes what to expect. He walks you through the hike, describing each section and offering fun facts or tidbits along the way. He may tell you what flowers and trees you’ll find (like the fascinating Brewer’s spruce on Kerby Peak), or an interesting historical fact about the trail or area. He’ll often offer suggestions for ways to continue the hike if you’re up for a longer adventure, or offshoots to explore. He makes sure you’re aware of any notable risks, such as exposed sections near which you may want to closely watch a child (or someone with a fear of heights!), a difficult creek crossing, or the presence of ticks. Although not a guide for backpacking, the guide does note where you may find a good camp spot on some of these routes.
Each hike also includes a CalTopo map of the trail, as well as a QR code that allows you to open the map from your phone or download and print a copy. Another thing to note is that any hike
that is not dog-friendly will include an icon at the top of the page, so you know to leave your furry friends at home.
The photography throughout the book is beautiful—I only wish printing costs made it feasible for them to be in color! The marketer in me cannot resist pointing you to Matt’s Instagram account (@offthebeatentrailpdx), where you can find these photos and so many more.
Overall, Extraordinary Oregon! is an excellent guide to hiking in our state and I cannot wait to dive into these hikes in the coming months and years. I’ve always thought it would be fun to make my way through one of Matt’s books until I’ve completed each and every one—I think this may be the one to do it with!
GETTING TO KNOW THE MAZAMA BOARD
by Claire TenscherWith the pandemic and bylaws changes we wanted to give members a chance to get to know who is on the board; not as leaders but as fellow outdoors enthusiasts. For this first duo, Chris Jaworski and Claire Tenscher sat down and had a long ranging conversation about the Mazamas, life, and various adventures. Feel free to use these as conversation starters when you see us, we are working towards being more visible and connected with other members. We’ve excerpted some choice bits for you.
What do you do in the outdoors?
Chris: Climb, mountaineer, kayak, sail, cycle, run, hike, ski, and swim.
Claire: Cycle (road and gravel), swim, run, hike, and ski (frontside and backcountry).
Share a story from your early days in the wild?
Chris: Some friends and I were canoeing the Green River in Utah for a long weekend. It’s a beautiful river and canyon, the weather was gorgeous, we slept at night under the stars. I was sharing a canoe with a buddy, and our natural style of companionship is argumentative, we played basketball together, it’s all part of the friendship. Within the first hour of the trip we were heading for a canyon wall, doing everything we were supposed to when I reached out to brace against the wall and snapped my paddle. I was able to get a paddle from someone else on the trip, but that certainly didn’t help reduce the arguments. Later that day, while arguing about who forgot what, we approached a Class 1–2 rapid, which should have been low key, the only thing the book mentioned was “whatever you do, don’t go over parallel.” So of course, we went over parallel, luckily we didn’t sink, but it was close.
On the final day of the trip the group told me, “Hey you like that kind of stuff, go climb that ridge and scout.” I saw a beautiful flat river as it emptied into the farmlands. Based on my beta, the group decide not to button up our boats, not to tie down every bag because it looked like an easy float. Due to the high tensions, my buddy and I had split up into different
canoes. Of course an hour down the river there was a field of Volkswagen Bus-sized boulders with narrow fast channels. The first boat decidesd to take it and they dumped everything. No one was hurt, but it was a yard sale on the water. My new paddling partner had bought brand new kitchen gear from REI and it was all floating down the river. I don’t think he was very pleased with me.
Claire: On the river theme, my stepmother was a raft guide as a young woman so she’d put in for the Grand Canyon lottery. When I was in high school that private trip permit finally came up. We had a great group with lots of different personalities and a beautiful time of year in the spring before the mud was fully up. We were doing some hiking and one of the early stops required some canyoneering skill. This wasn’t guided so it was up to me to decide if I could do it. The first part of the hike, right out of camp, was a ten-foot red sandstone rollover. I climbed myself up
that and then looked down and realized I had a real problem. While the rest of the group carried on, I sat on the edge and tried to psych myself over my fear of exposure to climb back down. The hike ended with me crying and one of my friends acting as a human elevator. It was an early lesson in correctly interpreting my own skill level and comfortability.
How did you get started in the outdoors?
Chris: Skiing at Little Switzerland, Wisconsin, near the outdoor mecca of Milwaukie where I grew up, getting after that massive 500 feet vert. I remember the haybales at the end of the hill and calf strap ski brakes.
Claire: Living in the woods outside Mt. Shasta, CA, (no, I’ve never climbed it) for my early life, hanging outside my house was an outdoor adventure.
What do you want for the Mazamas?
Chris: To broaden the reach of the Mazamas, continuing projects like what we’ve done with Ski Mountaineering. More hiking, more positive impact on our community. I want the organization to see itself. When you have the opportunity to do what we do and organize around what we do, there’s a responsibility to make a positive impact on the community.
Claire: I want the Mazamas to be a welcoming space for more people. I want there to be more opportunities to participate and more fun things happening.
Interlude
We wandered around topics like Olympic National Park trail
recommendations, career trajectories, books, and snorkeling. We discovered we’re both big fans of taking wildly different jobs so we can keep learning, and we share a sentiment with probably many Mazamas that there are only so many weekends a year in which to adventure.
Favorite book:
Chris: A Walk in the Woods, Bill Bryson—I used to give it out to trip leaders after my boys’ scouting trips.
Claire: Desert Solitaire, Edward Abbey—As a kid my dad read me the Monkey Wrench Gang as a bedtime story. I love this book’s focus on Abbey’s real-life adventures in Arches.
How did you find adventures in Portland?
Chris: A (now) dog-eared copy of Outside Magazine’s Adventure Guide to the Pacific Northwest.
Claire: Did some rambles and made a couple of hiking buddies.
This weekend I was going up to the Olympic National Forest, thus the lastminute recommendation needs, and Chris’ son was driving down from Seattle for a
pre-Father’s Day happy hour. It was a great chance to chat—hopefully we can talk with some of you the same way.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS MINUTES
by Acting Board SecretariesMARCH 22, 2023
Attending: Greg Scott, President; David Urbaniak, Vice President; Claire Tenscher, Secretary; Liz Crowe, Treasurer; Bob Breivogel, Marty Hanson, Charles Barker, Aimee Filimoehala, Chris Jaworski; Staff: Kaleen Deatherage, Interim Executive Director; Guests: Jeff Hawkins, Member at Large, Guy Wettstein, Climbing Committee
WELCOME & CALL TO ORDER
■ The meeting was called to order at 6 p.m. by President Greg Scott.
■ A quorum was present.
BUSINESS AGENDA
■ MMC HVAC
□ Jeff Hawkins: We’re on a journey to carbon neutral. Numerous upgrades over the past decade have been dedicated to this end. Our HVAC system has been broken for nearly two years. This is a proposal for replacing the unit in the archiving room. We’re over the temp limit and humidity for the documents stored in the archive, and we have no protection for water leaks or heat domes. Let’s replace our natural gas, broken HVAC system with a new heat pump mini split that is more efficient. It is more expensive than repairing the broken system, but the broken system is barely serviced in this area.
□ We have unfortunately replaced one newish mini split, this was likely due to too large of a unit being installed, they generally last 20 years. It should have lower operating costs and be more reliable than the 17-year-old unit it replaced.
□ A humidifier alone would heat the room.
□ The work needs to be done, Liz working with Kaleen will identify how to pay for it.
UPDATE CLIMBING PAGE WITH THE BYLAWS CHANGE IN MIND
■ Guy Wettstein: The new climb pricing is reflected on the page, the FAQ has been updated, there are a few open questions but in general we are invited to review the pages and share feedback.
FEB 2023 MINUTES
■ Aimee Filimoehala moved to approve, Charles seconded. All in favor, minutes approved.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR REPORT
■ Nothing raised from committee.
■ Tax exemption for the MMC is in progress.
■ Financial numbers will be available in April.
■ Budget to actuals will not be available for December.
OUTINGS COMMITTEE FEE MODEL
■ Every outing is unique and must be costed differently. In the past the fees had to adjust based on how many attendees because they were meant to cost exactly what the trip cost to run. Covering the leader fees is included in their fixed expenses.
■ Going forward there will be a flat rate based on the costs for the minimum number of people who go. If you get more, they all pay that rate.
■ Per Diem is $35. $150 higher cost for non members. No committee member discount. Leaders get 100 percent of the outing reimbursed. Assistants should get 50 percent.
■ Bob moves to approve the Outings Committee approval to revamp the fee structure, Chris seconded. None opposed or abstaining. Motion passes.
SEARCH COMMITTEE
■ March 31 is the deadline. The committee will review the cover letters and resumes to get down to approximately 8–10 candidates. There will be 30-minute initial calls in April. From there we will have Round 2 interviews with the entire team, approximately 90 minutes. Round 3 will be in person with the entire board; aiming for final decision by the end of May. The final candidates will have background checks.
MT. HOOD PERMITTING
■ Talked to the Mt. Hood ranger, reviewed other organization comments, reviewed Access Committee notes, reviewed other permits, all to come up with a good proposal for the board.
■ We previously opposed the proposal to implement a permit.
■ We believe the Forest Service will pass the permit requirement—so how do we participate to shape it, despite our past opposition.
■ The proposal will be shared with our committees, board largely aligned with the position, but no vote was held.
ADVISORY COMMITTEES
■ Standing agenda item—due to running late we will not discuss tonight.
■ Capital Campaign—we need to start determining some goals and we may need to update the timeline.
NW OUTWARD BOUND
■ Partnership is moving forward. They will use the MMC this summer, 12–14 year olds. They have posted the application on their website, we link to it, we are sharing marketing cost, and they bear many of the other costs like janitorial.
■ Insurance: they provide a rider.
SECRETARY POSITION
■ Claire has asked to resign.
■ No volunteers to take on the secretary position.
■ We will rotate through minute-takers in the meantime.
APRIL 26, 2023
Attending: Greg Scott, President; David Urbaniak, Vice President; Liz Crowe, Treasurer; Claire Tenscher, Bob Breivogel, Marty Hanson, Charles Barker, Aimee Filimoehala, Chris Jaworski; Staff: Kaleen Deatherage, Interim Executive Director.
WELCOME & CALL TO ORDER
■ The meeting was called to order at 7:26 p.m. by President Greg Scott.
■ A quorum was present.
BUSINESS AGENDA
■ Reports:
□ Approval of March minutes
□ Executive Director’s report
□ Committee reports
□ Financial report
□ Membership update
■ Updates:
□ Lodge Capital Campaign
□ Nominating
□ Glaciated Peak Society
■ Policy:
□ Sexual abuse and misconduct discussion.
■ March minutes will be available to be approved later.
■ Kaleen reported on the membership drive that starts in May. To improve participation, there will be no activation or renewal fees during this effort. She commented that Gina is reviewing our communications system to recommend improvements. The Lodge Committee is discussing operational models for the lodge. Kaleen has reviewed options for our banking service. She found Umpqua Bank can provide much better service than our current provider. She asked for a motion to approve. Claire moved we approve that selection; David seconded. Discussion—makes it a lot easier to deal with. Motion passed unanimously.
■ Liz reported December 2022 financials. This period was not budgeted due to our change to starting the fiscal year in January. Most of the loss was due to investments underperforming. Looking at Q1 cash flow is good and cash on hand meets our projections. Other Q1 reports
not available yet. Q1 report will show the new allocation formula costs for each committee.
■ Kaleen mentioned that as we apply for grants we will need to supply a report of our financials. Liz showed a chart of options for reporting our finances as we transition to our financial year changing from starting in October to starting in January. Liz recommended Option 4, to start our next financial review as calendar year 2023. This will leave October 2022–December 2022 as an 'orphan' but make 2023 the basis for future comparisons. Liz made this a formal motion. Bob seconded. Motion passed unanimously.
■ Greg asked if Liz can review our restricted funds and recommend consolidation. Kaleen asked that this be done before the formal transition to the 2023 reports.
■ Greg reported on the Advisory Committee for a capital campaign for the lodge. He attended the last meeting held at the lodge. A summary of needs and a timeline could be presented to the board next month.
■ Claire reported that the nominating advisory group has rescheduled its meeting and will report next month.
■ Greg reported that we currently do not have a policy on sexual abuse or misconduct. Kaleen reported that our insurance providers require we have one. Bob asked if it could be added to our volunteer agreement. Kaleen reported that all volunteers and leaders need to sign it. Add a badge as proof of acknowledgment. Kaleen was surprised we didn’t already have this policy. Mechanics of making policy formal and getting signatures is needed to proceed. Liz motioned we establish a sexual harassment policy and get member's signatures. Aimee seconded the motion. This was passed unanimously.
■ At closing of the meeting Greg mentioned that the State Parks is asking for comments on proposed changes for Smith Rock until May 15. Bob asked if the Conservation Committee could make a statement for the Mazama position. Aimee said she will follow up on that.
■ Greg adjourned the meeting at 8:22 p.m.
SUCCESSFUL CLIMBERS
April 26, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Pushkar Dixit, Leader; Sohaib Haider, Mark Mott, Assistant Leaders. Chris Boyle, Andrew Conley, Ian FitzGerald, Tommy Goodson, Avery Hashbarger.
April 27, 2023–Rooster Rock, South Face. Duncan Hart, Lisa Ripps, Leaders; Thomas Clarke, Assistant Leader. Mark Federman, Shannon Grey, Sydney Yelton.
April 29, 2023–Rooster Rock, South Face. Christine Troy, Toby Contreras, Leaders. Mike Quigley, Colleen Rawson, Tyler Sievers, Carrie Spates.
May 1, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Eric Branich, Leader; Forest Brook Menke-Thielman, Assistant Leader. Kyle Brown, Leah Brown, Conrad Cartmell, Janelle Klaser, Kevin Kohberger, Alex Kunsevich, Kristie Mitchell, Richard Smith.
May 7, 2023–Rooster Rock, South Face. James Jula, Leader; Evan Smith, Assistant Leader. Mari Feher, Megan Lien, Cole Parnell, Michael Smith, Frank Squeglia, Kelsey Sullivan.
May 10, 2023–Mt. Hood, Leuthold Couloir. Darren Ferris, Leader; Ryan Reed, Assistant Leader. Rob Sinnott, Brian Hodakievic, Chris Boyle, Gordon Wilde, Mark Stave.
May 11, 2023–Mt. Hood, North Face. Pushkar Dixit, Leader. Jonny Cushing, Ben Hoselton, Sam Wanzenried.
May 11, 2023–Mount St. Helens, Swift Creek-Worm Flows. Bob Breivogel, Leader; Terry Sayre, Assistant Leader. Austin Johnson, Kathy Kim, Bill Lowder, Melanie Means, David Posada, Elizabeth Reed, Sharon Selvaggio, Tanvi Singh, Amanda Thomas, Midori Watanabe.
May 12, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Aimee Filimoehala, Leader; Darren Ferris, Assistant Leader. Patricia Akers, Peter Boag, David Gross, Courtney Ianello, Evan McDowell, Melanie Potter, Evan Smith.
May 12, 2023–Mount St. Helens, Swift Creek-Worm Flows. Justin Colquhoun, Duncan Hart, Leaders. Saad Ahmed, Shannon Grey, Truth Johnston, Walker Pruett, Jonathan Shaver.
May 13, 2023–Rooster Rock, South Face. Gary Bishop, Leader; Christin Ritscher, Assistant Leader. Bashar Al-Rawi, Antonio Bezerra, Eleanor Bold, Dennis Falcione, Gregory Fernandez, Jeremy Luedtke, Leah Madoff, Colin Miletich, Yaadhav Raaj, Cierra Santiago, William Withington.
May 14, 2023–Mt. Ellinor, Southeast Chute. Trey Schutrumpf, Leader; Lindsey Addison, Assistant Leader. Erik Anderson, Eleanor Bold, Casey Ferguson, Kelly O’Loughlin, Saraja Samant, Mark Santa Maria.
May 18, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Pushkar Dixit, Leader; Mark Mott, Assistant Leader. Lyudmila Likhonina, Elizabeth Reed, Whitney Harvey, Douglas Filiak, Matt Mudrow, Farzane Zokaee, Saraja Samant, Cait Lotspeich, Jenica Villamor, Brandon Ziemba.
May 20, 2023–Mt. Ellinor, Southeast Chute. Joe Preston, Leader; Andy Nuttbrock, Jen Travers, Midori Watanabe, Assistant Leaders. Nathan Loomis, Emily McEntire, Nicholas Peeters, Mike Quigley, Malcolm Reilly, Tanvi Singh, Eleasa Sokolski, Caroline Stanley.
May 21, 2023–Unicorn Peak, Snow Lake. Suresh Singh, Leader; Mark Stave, Assistant Leader. Conrad Cartmell, Chris Conley, Sangram More, Bikash Padhi, Dan Rehmann, Tuller Schricker, Allison Wright, Mallory Zunino.
May 24, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Suresh Singh, Leader; Nimesh Patel, Assistant Leader. Eric Engstrom, Jorge Lopez, Cassie Mapolski, Sangram More, Steven Peterson, John Sullenbarger.
May 25, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Tim Scott, Leader; Sohaib Haider, Assistant Leader. Saad Ahmed, Paul Anderson, Mark Federman, Joshua Gerth, Mark Pothier, Samuel Rundel, Emmet Smith, Amanda Thomas, Midori Watanabe, Matt Wiens.
May 26, 2023–Mt. Hood, South Side. Gary Bishop, Leader; Evan Smith, Assistant Leader. Chelsea Ashcraft, Nicholas Dagenais, Chris Reigeluth, Jonathan Shaver, Merche Trol, Ngan Vo.
May 27, 2023–Mt. Ellinor, Southeast Chute. Christine Troy, Leader; Melanie Potter, Assistant Leader. Lydia Alderfer, Casey Ferguson, Elizabeth Hill, Benji Patel, Colleen Rawson, Steph Reinwald, Angela Schaefer, Carrie Spates.
May 27, 2023–Rooster Rock, South Face. Tom Baughman, Leader; Andy Nuttbrock, Assistant Leader. Jeevitha Babu, Conrad Cartmell, Matt Cleinman, Robert Erickson, Priyanka Kedalagudde, Steven Peterson, Mark Pothier, Ariana Ramirez, Caroline Stanley, Ann Woodruff.
May 28, 2023–Mt. Hood, Cooper Spur Mentorship Climb. Matthew Sundling, Leader. Peter Boag, Rachel Faulkner, Janelle Klaser, Forest Menke-Thielman, Stacey Reding, Christin Ritscher, Jen Travers.
May 28, 2023–Mt. Rainier, Ingraham Direct. Ryan Johnson, Leader; Rebecca Moore, Assistant Leader. Kyle Branderhorst, Wendy Leone, Anna Lio, Walker McAninch-Runzi, Mark Stave.
May 28, 2023–Mt. Thielsen, West Ridge. Thomas Miller, Leader; Ian Beil, Assistant Leader. Ashlin Aronin, Maxwell Douglas, Whitney Harvey, Alex Homer, Austin Johnson, Dani Larson, Margaret Munroe, Michael Smith, Emmet Smith, Arjun Sudhir.
May 29, 2023–Pinnacle Peak, East Ridge. Carol Bryan, Leader; Lynne Pedersen, Assistant Leader. Christopher Boswell, Matthew Gantz, Nicolas Martinez.
MEMBERS OF THE GLACIATED PEAK SOCIETY
All dues-paying Mazamas prior to our Jan. 31, 2023 bylaws amendments have been automatically inducted into the Glaciated Peak Society (GPS). All other members who successfully summit a glaciated peak after that date will automatically become GPS members when they receive their glaciated peak badge. No further action is required. GPS members will be recognized in each bimonthly bulletin, similar to the acknowledgment of climbs in general listed in each issue of the magazine. Below is a list of all the inducted members as of January 31, 2023.
Sherry Aanerud
Wim Aarts
Jim Abbott
Ryan Abbott
Amit Abraham
Courtney Adams
Linda Adamson
Lindsey Addison
Yukti Aggarwal
Alex Aguilar
Agreen Ahmadi
Saad Ahmed
Patrick Aitchison
Urusa Shahriar Alaan
Juan Bernardo
Albaitero Rosales
Katrina Albano
Steven Albert
Shavali Alisher
Louise Allen
Peter Allen
Greg Allen
Stacy Allison
Craig Allison
Sonja Alonso
Kathryn Alsworth
David Alt
Patricia Always
Wanda Amodeo
William Amos
Jack Amoss
Elizabeth An
Anton Andereggen
Jessica Anderly
Jerry Andersen
Meiling Andersen
Danielle Anderson
Edward Anderson
David Anderson
Dennis Anderson
Kelly Fagan Anderson
Peggy Anderson
Craig Anderson
Paul Anderson
Erik Anderson
Christopher Anderson
Joe Anderson
David Andrews
John Andrews
Justin Andrews
Dave Ankrom
David Fernando Antezana
Alicia Antoinette
George
Apostolopoulos
Charles Applegate
Jesse Applegate
Andrew Archambault
Marilyn Arentz
Carol Armatis
Philip Arms
Suzanne Armstrong
Genevieve Arnaut
Natalie Arndt
Riley Arner
Jerry Arnold
Brian Arthur
Kamilla Aslami
Aardra Athalye
Lloyd Athearn
Scott Auble
Chuck Aude
Mitchel Auerbach
Jay Avery
Daniel Avery
Alice Awwad
Henry Axon
Laura Axon
Eloise Bacher
Ed Bacon
Bruce Bagley
Jesse Bahr
Phillip Baird
Kipp Bajaj
Joshua Robert Baker
Judith Baker
Parker Baldwin
Buz Baldwin
Barbara Balko
Gretchen Baller
Gary Ballou
Isabel Banks
Casey Banks
Tom Bard
Richard Barden
Vilmos Barka
Betty Barker
Louis Barker
Ken Barker
Chloe Barker
Oscar Barker
Charles Barker
Susan Barker
Harry Barker-Fost
Eric Barklis
Dave Barlow
Ryan Barnes
Brian Barnes
Michele Scherer
Barnett
Jonathan Barrett
John Bartholomew
John Barton
Paul Bascom
Mary Bates
Don Batten
Paul Battram
John Bauer
Bill Bauer
Mark Bauer
Tom Baughman
David Baumgarten
Scott Bauska
Tyler Bax
Laura Bax
Dave Beardsley
Calvin Beardsley
Carole Beauclerk
Kellie Beck
Larry Beck
Maureen Becker
Anna Becker
Liam Beckman
Kaitlyn Beecroft
Paula Beers
Andrew Behr
Christabel Behr
Ian Beil
Luke Belant
Allison Belcher
Stephan Belding
Ron Bell
Cheryl Bell
Marcum Bell
Sarah Bellamy
Elizabeth Belles
Ray Belt
Ken Bender
Lindsey Benjamin
Suzi Bennett
Thomas Bennett
Julie Bennett
Lori Bennis
Bill Bens
Steven Benson
Owen Bentley
Nancy Bentley
Walt Benz
Max Berezhnyy
Erwin Bergman
Jennifer Bergstrom
Bonnie Berneck
Mary Bernert
Bert Berney
Heather Bervid
Mark Beyer
Erin Beyer
Gary Beyl
Jeremiah Biddle
Ken Biehler
Anita Bieker
James Bily
Richard Binder
Jim Bingaman
Gina Binole
Thomas Bischoff
Gary Bishop
Elizabeth Bishop
John Bishop
Pam Bishop
Harold Black
Andrew Black
Richard Blackwell
Aaron Blake
Bruce Blank
Charles Blanke
Janet Blanke
Matt Blecharz
Jonathan Block
Walter Blomberg
James Bloom
Blake Bluestein
Arlene Blum
Anna Blumenkron
Peter Boag
Thomas Bode
Andrew Bodien
Pam Bodine
Janos Bodnar
Stewart Boedecker
Ryan Boger
Jack Bohl
Mark Bohr
Robert Boileau
Eleanor Bold
Myde Boles
Tyler Bolton
Barbara Bond
Alyssa Bonini
Candace Bonner
Emily Bonner
Maryn Bonniwell
John Borden
Mike Borden
Edna Borders
Oliver Borg
John Borsuk
Jeffrey Boskind
Brookes Boswell
Nick Boswell
Christopher Boswell
Aurelien Botman
Cambell Boucher
Sherry Bourdin
Melanie Bower
Mitchell Bower
Janet Bowker
Bill Bowling
Sydney Bowman
Brian Boyd
Steve Boyer
Chris Boyle
Phillip Bradford
Judith Bradshaw
Justin Brady
Barbara Brady
Lisa Brady
David Braem
Eric Brainich
Erik Brakstad
Elizabeth Brammer
Elly Branch
Kyle Branderhorst
Kevin Brannan
Charles Brasher
Aaron Braun
Jason Breaker
Paul Breed
Bob Breivogel
Terry Brenneman
Lacey Breton
Allan Brettman
Rex Breunsbach
Thomas Brewer
James Brewer
David Brezinski
Lisa Brice
Susan Brickey
Tyler Bridge
Douglas Briedwell
continued on next page
Donald Wright
Joanne Wright
Colleen Wright
Harry Wright
Cameron Wright
Jeffrey Wright
Thomas Wrona
Andreas Wunderle
Sharon Wynde
Michelle Wynkoop
Marina Wynton
Hattie Yamada
Stacy Yamasaki
Louise Yarbrough
Bruce Yatvin
Alice Yetka (Byrnes)
Elizabeth Yingling
Leslee York
Gretchen Yost
Jason Young
Clarke Young
Logan Young
Cam Young
Kirby David Young
Stephen Zadrozny
Katie Zajicek
Aaron Zarosinski
Joey Zarosinski
Michael Zasadzien
Daniel Zawistowski
Donald Zeck
Rick Zeeb
Nate Zeiler
Margaret Zeps
David Zeps
Astrid Zervas
Xin Zhang
Jon Ziady
Brandon Gregory Ziemba
Marilyn Zigler
Roberta Zouain
Joan Zuber
Ryan Zubieta
Carol Zuiches
Linda Zumwalt
The following new Mamama members have joined the Glaciated Peak Society since February 1, 2023.
Hilliary Alway
Jordan Alway
Laken Aubrey Bell
Ryan Bradley
Patrick Arthur Brandimore
Chris Jay Burreson
Brian Campos
Chris Conley
Andrew Conley
Kapil Dave
Jack Davidson
Rob Dietz
Winnie Dong
Maximilian Eline
Cecilia Estraviz
Amanda Ettaki
COLOPHON
CONTACT US
Mazama Mountaineering Center
527 SE 43rd Ave., Portland, OR, 97215
Phone: 503-227-2345 | help@mazamas.org
Hours: Tuesday–Thursday, 10:30 a.m.–5 p.m.
Mazama Lodge
30500 West Leg Rd., Government Camp, OR 97028
Phone: 503-272-9214
mazamalodge@mazamas.org
Hours: Closed
PUBLICATIONS TEAM
Editor: Mathew Brock, Bulletin Editor (mazama.bulletin@mazamas.org)
Ben Fleskes
Brayden Goodlin
Brookelynn Goodlin
Jacob Wolfgang Haag
Chris Hagerman
William Hallgren
Michael Honsa
Conor Jackman
Victoria Johnson
Sydney Johnson
Brad Jordan
Joseph Kealy
Jorge Lopez
Leah Madoff
Cassie Mapolski
Kate McCarn
Tim Minks
Hank Mishima
Matt Mudrow
Abigail Parrott
Kellie Peaslee
Theo Pham
Walker Pruett
Claire Richards
George Rodway
Ben Scandella
Daniel Scott
Tom Scott
Justin Sorensen
John Sullenbarger
Kevin Thrakulchavee
Jonathan Watkins
Members: Peter Boag, Elise Englert, Darrin Gunkel, Ali Gray, Ryan Reed, Jen Travers, and Claire Tenscher (publications@ mazamas.org)
MAZAMA STAFF
GINA BINOLE Office & Communications Coordinator ginabinole@mazamas.org
MATHEW BROCK
Library & Historical Collections Manager mathew@mazamas.org
RICK CRAYCRAFT Facilities Manager facilities@mazamas.org
REBEKAH PHILLIPS Executive Director rebekahphillips@mazamas.org
BRENDAN SCANLAN
Operations & IT Manager brendanscanlan@mazamas.org
For additional contact information, including committees and board email addresses, go to mazamas.org/ contactinformation.
MAZAMA (USPS 334-780):
Advertising: mazama.bulletin@mazamas.org. Subscription: $15 per year. Bulletin material must be emailed to mazama.bulletin@mazamas.org. The Mazama Bulletin is currently published bi-monthly by the Mazamas—527 SE 43rd Ave., Portland, OR 97215. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, OR. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to MAZAMAS, 527 SE 43rd Ave., Portland, OR 97215. The Mazamas is a 501(c)(3) Oregon nonprofit corporation organized on the summit of Mt. Hood in 1894. The Mazamas is an equal opportunity provider.