2 minute read
Lessons from the Black Canyon
door Leadership School (NOLS) course. The canyon, located about 13 miles north-east of Montrose, was referred to as the “anti-Yosemite” — not flashy, not a lot of people and sandbagged climbs. He was hooked before even laying eyes.
“This place will push you to find out what you’re made of and there’s value in that,” he says. This SAR team has some of the most skilled rescue personnel in the world, yet you’d never know it. They train not just in highly complex systems and scenarios, but in all aspects of communication and showing up for each other. “This has everything to do with the canyon, because that place will strip you of your ego,” Brice believes.
“I credit 85% of my success in rescue and health care to learning to become an active follower,” he says. “I wasn’t great at that before my NOLS course and climbing in the Black.” Through experiencing those demanding environments, he realized he loved problem solving his way through challenges. A deep desire and will to run into the depths took root through Brice’s being and translated into a passion in emergency medicine. Although, this comes at a cost to himself.
We can only meet others at the depth that we’ve met ourselves, and Colorado’s 2,722 foot-deep chasm of the Black Canyon of The Gunnison is one heck of a metaphor for that. It takes ability, willingness and courage to bring yourself to the base of the dark canyon floor and to climb the massive shadowed walls back out. Walker Brice — EMT, student of nursing and member of the Black Canyon Search and Rescue (SAR) team — has learned some of the most valuable life lessons within those walls.
Climbing ranger Vic Zeilman describes the canyon as “chossy rock as old as time marred by thick bands of loose pegmatite, steep approach drainages filled with poison ivy thickets, vampire-like ticks, chupacabras and god knows what else” in The Climbing Zine. When you choose to go to the bottom of a place like this and start placing gear up the fissured wall, well, you’re committed now.
Brice first heard about the Black on a Wilderness Medicine and Rescue National Out-
“Yeah, it’s my job, but I also pay a price,” he says. “Meeting someone at their worst deeply affects me, but in the moment, I put those things aside to perform — to look that person in the eyes and tell them we’re going to walk them out.”
How Brice has felt at moments climbing in the Black, uncomfortable and afraid but fully tuned in to calculated performance, is how he feels when he goes into those situations. “I’m taking everything in. I’m thinking ahead. I’m looking at the vital signs and questioning what’s happening inside the body of the person that is sick.”
Part of being in healthcare and the climbing community is also about showing up as a team with compassion, like communicating with the parents of a sick 2-year-old or a climbing partner in a sketchy situation or walking a patient through a 1,800-vertical-foot uphaul rescue. Brice's capacity for empathy comes from the depths he’s faced himself.
In 2020, Brice and climbing ranger and mentor, Philippe Wheelock, had just finished a route on the Painted Wall when they got a call that a college student had driven off the south rim. The recovery took a full week due to snowstorms and helicopter needs. At the time, Brice was struggling at his own rock bottom, yet he chose to move beyond his pain to stay there through it all. Afterwards, he knew this bond with the Black, a place that represented, literally and metaphorically, climbing out of this massive dark hole, was sealed.
Brice is a guy who’s going to get the rope up no matter what. The Black carved him out to be that way. When the only way is up, “Make it happen,” he says, in memory of his late colleague, Cortney. +
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