Bushwack Level 3?

Placing a cam? Slotting a nut? Slinging a tree?
Danny
Posts: 1088
Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2002 7:20 pm

Post by Danny »

i don't remember where exactly the meanest bushwack in the red for me was, but it was 90 degrees and humid and I had a heavy pack and I was crawling up steep hills under rodos more than hiking. I didn't find any cracks but saw some motherlode like caves. The worst bushwach was from the top of the leaning tower to the bridalveil river down the middle of the wash. Pretty much the whole way down I had to use my body and 100 pounds of haul bag to batteringram my way down through the thick shrubs. when I got to the falls I realized I had no idea of how to get back to the valley but that's another story. This was after I had climbed for 24 hours strait and it was now the 31st hour. I wanted my mommy.
User avatar
krampus
Posts: 3933
Joined: Tue Dec 26, 2006 9:31 am

Post by krampus »

Bushwacking was my climbing before I climbed. I can't say how many people vowed never to go hiking with me again in high school, and college.
How you compare may not be as important as to whom you are compared
User avatar
DriskellHR
Posts: 1260
Joined: Thu Dec 20, 2007 11:34 pm

Post by DriskellHR »

I tried to walk my property line at next to MV, it took me 5 hours to walk it (only 6 acres or so) The rodo know no mercy!!
"....... Be sure to linger......." Mike Tucker
User avatar
Josephine
Posts: 2216
Joined: Sun Oct 01, 2006 10:38 pm

Post by Josephine »

RRG BA5: when you're walking and climbing OVER the rhodos cuz they're too thick to go under and it's snowing/sleeting/raining outside.

The only reason to attempt this is when Lander decides there MIGHT be a good cliff somewhere out there and it's too cold to climb anyways. :roll:

I have a new-found respect to those of you that have found the cliffs I like to go to! :-)
"Unthinkably good things can happen, even late in the game." ~ Under the Tuscan Sun
User avatar
Ascentionist
Posts: 1081
Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2005 9:23 pm

Post by Ascentionist »

Danny wrote:wackin chaney is cool
I have to disagree.

Wackin' Cheney on the other hand is fine.

I guess a good part of my life has been spent in the BW4 zone. Oh the stories I could tell, if only I could still see out of my left eye. I can attest to the fact that the SE has some pretty stout bushwhacking. I haven't come across much in CO that comes close to a "normal" (about BW3) bushwhack in Kentucky.

Any time I've come across a guidebook description here that says "bushwhack" I am seriously disappointed. In Colorado (and maybe a lot of the semi-arid west) bushwhack means "no trail" not "dense tangles of iron-like vegetation with homicidal tendencies." I had to laugh at one such hike where the thickest vegetation was ankle high and you could walk around all of it.
There is no TEAM in I
Canuck
Posts: 348
Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2002 12:46 pm

Post by Canuck »

I've done BW4 in northern New Mexico. Thick scrub oak, pine and holly and other vegetation with "homicidal tendencies" on a 2-mile traverse of a steep south-facing slope. All in 90F heat. With 45lb pack. But it was for work, not to get to a crag. I've got some awesome scars from that day.
TradMike
Posts: 1173
Joined: Thu Nov 07, 2002 2:57 am

Post by TradMike »

"Loss of temper inevitable" - I've seen that a few times in NC.
DuppyC
Posts: 144
Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2005 8:53 pm

Post by DuppyC »

Danny wrote: I wanted my mommy.
I've always wanted your mommy...she's hot.
"No one has to do something he doesn't want to do for the rest of his life. But then again, if that's what you end up doing, by all means convince yourself that you had to do it; you'll have lots of company." HST
Post Reply