Archive for the 'MHW Tent' Category

MHW Tent Winner & Answers

Winning location:

The Bering Glacier Scientific Camp on the southeast shore of Lake Vitus, Alaska.

 

 

 

"Glickster, get yer paws off of my tent." The Bering Glacier Camp with Vitus Lake in the background.

Ron Enns from Squamish, BC is the winner and nfrancois gets a runner-up prize!  Nice job guys! 

Ron is debating between a Spire 2.1 or an EV-2 tent.  Here’s how he found it:

I thought back to your New Zealand contest and tried to think of the type of question you might ask, which I thought might be a camping location somewhere on mountain itself, or a place from where expeditions to the mountain would originate. I did some searches on the internet over the last few days and tried to familiarize myself with the mountain and its named features (cols, glaciers, ridges, etc.) and the surrounding area. As soon as I read the Super Cluesday clue though, I knew I had to do some further quick internet searches. I kept checking the comments, thinking you might provide further clues (as you did do) and your additional clue about someone being able to see the location with binoculars from the location that he guessed helped me narrow down my internet searches. I made several guesses of cabins around the area in question, and fortunately one of them was right. 

 

You can get there from here. Click to enlarge and see details of the epic journey and wild terrain.

Lake Vitus details.

 

Details of the scientific camp can be found HERE.

 

Clue Answers:

 

#1 – Continent

In 1995 Troy Jungen (Beaver Indian) and Ptor Spricenienk skied the steep, exposed north face of Mt. Robson in the Canadian Rockies. They are both from Canada, which is part of the North American continent.

 

#2 – Country

Perhaps the ultimate bad-ass skier of all time, Steve McKinney (brother of Olympian Tamara McKinney) was the first person to break the 200 kh limit on skis.  Steve was from the Tahoe, California area, which is part of the country of America.  From left to right in the photo: Steve McKinney, Dick Dorworth, myself, Otis Kantz, Tim Tilton and Bill McKinley.  Photo by Craig Calonica?

 

#3 – Mountain Range or Zone

Known as “The Mountain Kingdom”, the Wrangell-St.Elias National Park and Preserve is the largest park in the US at over 13 million acres.  When combined with Canada’s Kluane National Park and Preserve next door, the total area exceeds 25 million square acres of the wildest terrain on the continent, if not the earth. The WSE Park contains the Wrangell, St. Elias, Chugach and Nutzotin/Mentasta mountain ranges.

 

#4 – Specific Peak

Mt. St. Elias is the second highest peak in America at 18,008’.  Due to its burly, remote location and no easy way down, it has attracted relatively few ski attempts over the years.  Of those who tried, Reid Sanders and Aaron Martin died while trying in 2002. In May of 2000 Lorne Glick, Andy Ward and James Bracken skied from the summit via the Mira Face and back to the Bagely Icefield.  In 2007, a Red Bull team with a reported budget of over 1 million Euros skied the lower section of the south side of St. Elias, then returned months later to ski the upper section, claiming it as the longest ski descent ever done.

 

#5 – Specific Location

 

Our epic journey begins at the top of the peak identified in clue #4… (Mt. St. Elias)

 

Gasp…gasp, shiver….shiver… let’s get going.  It is freezing cold, high and hard to breathe up here.  We’ve been climbing all night to get here and are now going to turn around and follow our boot tracks back down, repeating the line of the first descent (Lorne Glick 2000 descent).  Aside from being too numb to feel anything and bouncing over sustrugi so hard it chips our teeth out, the top part goes quickly and then leads to the business end of the descent – a beautiful, steep, open and exposed headwall.  There’s no time like now, so you start down its flanks which are covered with dragon-skin rippled powder over ice.  You’ve forgotten your camera, which is too bad as the face is so beautiful you could name a classic ski after it, or a small red-headed child. (The Mira Face.  Black Diamond named a ski after it (Mira) and our daughter is also named Mira.) 

 

Each turn brings you closer to terra firma, until at last you glide out on a vast open plane of dazzling white. (Bagley Icefield)  Thank god that’s over, but where do we go from here?  Looking left and right, you decide to follow the sun (setting sun = west) as it slowly sets and start walking.

 

And walking.  And walking.  At the stately pace of early Antarctic explorers, you cover 15km per day for five days and six hours in an almost straight line. (49 miles to the west along the Bagley) You wish you had brought your headphones and start to wonder if you are even still in the protected mountain zone you started in. (you eventually cross out of the WSE National Park & Preserve) Taking a breather you notice a natural arch (feature noted on map) and follow the flow of gravity around it.  (flow of gravity = turn south/left to the ocean)

 

The traveling surface is firmer now, but in a cruel twist of fate, it is also more broken up (Bering Glacier).  On the bright side, you are slowly trending downward and moving faster, but on dark side, you still have two full days of travel at twenty-five miles per day to get there, wherever there might be. (Travel another 50ish miles on the Bering Glacier)

 

Suddenly, the slope runs out and you can ski no more.  You are confronted with a body of water so vividly colored that you pray that it was given the first name of the explorer who first discovered it. (Lake Vitus, named after Vitus Bering) Wondering which way to go now, you hear the sound of large mammals (Bay of Whales) and begin contouring around the water in that direction.  Seeing nothing, you continue around a sharp point (Arrowhead Point), when suddenly it occurs to you… today is April 15th.  Taxes are due and you haven’t paid yours. (you are now at Taxpayers Bay) Fearing your great adventure is now going to end up in a lonely prison cell, you turn and look back in the direction you have come so far from.  Sigh.

 

With you mind on cell mates named Piston Bully and solitary confinement, your gaze drifts over towards the first man-made structures you have seen for weeks (scientific camp complete with a landing strip, satellite dish and antenna), including a BRAND NEW MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR TENT with your name on it!  Perhaps there is a bright future…

 

Within a 20 meter diameter, where exactly are you?

———————-
Thanks to Mountain Hardwear for sponsoring this contest! Help support Straightchuter.com and check out some of their excellent tents at Backcountry.com, or by clicking on the photo below.

MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR SUPER CLUESDAY! Win a tent NOW!


Our epic journey begins on top of the peak identified in clue #4

Gasp…gasp, shiver….shiver… let’s get going.  It is freezing cold, high and hard to breathe up here.  We’ve been climbing all night and are now going to turn around and follow our boot tracks back down, repeating the line of the first ski descent of the peak.  Aside from being too numb to feel anything and bouncing over sustrugi so hard it chips our teeth out, the top part goes quickly and then leads to the business end of the descent – a beautiful, steep, open and exposed headwall.  There’s no time like now, so you start down its flanks which are covered with dragon-skin rippled powder over ice.  You’ve forgotten your camera, which is too bad as the face is so beautiful you could name a classic ski after it, or a small red-headed child. 

 

Each turn brings you closer to terra firma, until at last you glide out on a vast open field of dazzling white.  Thank god that’s over, but where do we go from here?  Looking left and right, you decide to follow the sun as it slowly sets and start walking.

 

And walking.  And walking.  At the stately pace of early Antarctic explorers, you cover 15km per day for five days and six hours in an almost straight line.  You wish you had brought your headphones and start to wonder if you are even still in the protected mountain zone you started in.  Taking a breather you notice a natural arch and follow the flow of gravity around it. 

 

The traveling surface is firmer now, but in a cruel twist of fate, it is also more broken up.  On the bright side, you are slowly trending downward and moving faster, but on dark side, you still have two full days of travel at twenty-five miles per day to get there, wherever there might be.

 

Suddenly, the slope runs out and you can ski no more.  You are confronted with a body of water so vividly colored that you pray that it was given the first name of the explorer who first discovered it. Wondering which way to go now, you hear the sound of large mammals and begin contouring around the water in that direction.  Seeing nothing, you continue around a sharp point, when suddenly something about the view reminds you… today is April 15th.  Taxes are due and you haven’t paid yours.  Fearing your great adventure is now going to end up in a lonely prison cell, you turn and look back in the direction you have come so far from.  Sigh.

 

With you mind on cell mates named Piston Bully and solitary confinement, your gaze drifts over towards the first man-made structures you have seen for weeks, including a BRAND NEW MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR TENT with your name on it!  Perhaps there is a bright future…

 

Within a 20 meter diameter, where exactly are you?

 

SEND IN YOUR COMMENT/ANSWER NOW!

Entry Format:
Continent – (your answer)
Zone/Region – (your answer)
Mountain Range – (your answer)
Specific Peak – (your answer)
Specific Location – (your answer)

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Thanks to Mountain Hardwear for sponsoring this contest!  Help support Straightchuter.com and check out some of their excellent tents at Backcountry.com, or by clicking on the photo below.

How to Win the MHW Tent Tomorrow…

Yes, tomorrow, Feb 17th at 10:00am Utah time is Super Cluesday, which means the final clue will be given right here for a chance to win a Mountain Hardwear tent of your choice!  I will away in Ouray, Colorado, but hopefully things will go well.  If not, be patient.

 
Video of two Mountain Hardwear tents standing tough in a storm.

The idea is simple – after reading the final clue (and the four leading up to it), send in your answer as a “comment” on the final clue’s posting.  Details on how to make a comment are here, and as savy Chuting Spree’rs know, it will speed up your posting time if you are preapproved, which can be done by making a  comment on any previous straightchuter.com posting (including this one).  “Dude, count me in.” is fine and the preapproval aspect comes from the spamming software, not me.  You will not be sent any junk email.

The final answer (the location within twenty meters) is what really matters, but for clarity and fairness, the winning format is:

Continent – (your answer)
Zone/Region – (your answer)
Mountain Range – (your answer)
Specific Peak – (your answer)
Specific Location – (your answer)

If you know the answers to the first four clues, it helps to pretype them for speedy delivery.

You can enter as many times as your fingers can type, but it is the first person with the correct format and answer who wins.

For reference, the final clue is more of a skiing story-problem, which could include all sorts of skiing related travel (skiing, skinning, booting, etc.). You might think about where and how you would travel from this peak. The answers to all the clues can be found on the internet and are real places. Example.

Clues:
Jan 20 – Continent
Jan 27 – Country or Region
Feb 3 – Specific mountain range or zone
Feb 10 – Specific peak or town
Feb 17 – 10:00am – SUPER CLUESDAY! Exact location. Send in your answer NOW!

Good luck! 

———————-
Thanks to Mountain Hardwear for sponsoring this contest! Help support Straightchuter.com and check out some of their excellent tents at Backcountry.com, or by clicking on the photo below.

Chuting Spree Clue #4 – Mountain Hardwear Tent

Follow the rules and five weekly clues, then be the first to correctly identify where the tent is hidden to win a Mountain Hardwear tent of your choice!

Clue #4:  This MOUTAIN is located in the zone identified in clue #3 and has a skiing history which involves two fatal falls, a free-heel first descent and what might be the most expensive ski expedition ever undertaken.

Know the Mountain?  Don’t answer now – save it for Super Cluesday.

Clue Schedule:
Clue #1    January 20th – Continent
Clue #2    January 27th – Country or Region
Clue #3    February 3rd – Specific mountain range or zone
Clue #4    February 10th - Specific peak or town
Clue #5    February 17th – SUPER CLUESDAY!  Exact location.  Send in your answer NOW!

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Help support StraightChuter.com and camp in style with a Mountain Hardwear Viperine 3 Tent from Backcountry.com. Click on the photo below…
 

 

Mountain Hardwear designed the Viperine 3 three-person, three-season tent to be easy to set up and spacious inside. This tent features Mountain Hardwear’s new Crosshub pole structure—one pole holds the whole tent up. Aside from being easy to pitch, this structure results in nearly vertical walls, which means more of the tent’s interior space is useable. With its fly, the Viperine 3 is watertight, so you can ride out the storm in comfort. Reflective guy out loops steady your tent in high winds, and a plastic window on the rain fly lets in light. In warm weather, take off the fly and let air circulate through the mesh door and window.

Bottom Line: The Mountain Hardwear Viperine 3 is your lightweight, spacious, durable home away from home when you head into the backcountry.

Chuting Spree Clue #3 – Mountain Hardwear Tent

Follow the rules and five weekly clues, then be the first to correctly identify where the tent is hidden to win a Mountain Hardwear tent of your choice!

Clue #3:  This protected ZONE is located in the country identified in clue #2 and consists of four mountain ranges and a total area of over fifty-three thousand square kilometers.

Such a big zone and such a small tent...

Know the Zone?  Don’t answer now – save it for Super Cluesday.

Clue Schedule:
Clue #1    January 20th – Continent
Clue #2    January 27th – Country or Region
Clue #3    February 3rd – Specific mountain range or zone
Clue #4    February 10th - Specific peak or town
Clue #5    February 17th – SUPER CLUESDAY!  Exact location.  Send in your answer NOW!

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Help support StraightChuter.com and camp in style with a Mountain Hardwear Helion 2 Tent from Backcountry.com. Click on the photo below…
 

 

The Helion hails as Mountain Hardwear’s lightest two-person tent. And just because it weighs under 3.5lb doesn’t mean this three-season shelter won’t do its duty when rain, wind, or muggy weather comes into play. Mountain Hardwear designed the Helion with the serious superlight backpacker in mind. With the use of only three Atlas UL poles, Mountain Hardwear’s Evolution Tension Arch system stabilizes the tent during high winds. The Helion 2 Tent’s welded construction and fully taped fly guarantee a waterproof camping experience—Mountain Hardwear rain-room-tested this puppy with 1200 inches of rain over 24 hours. PitchLight option: Set this tent’s fly up with poles and the Helion 2 Footprint (not included) for a damn near weightless backcountry shelter.

Bottom Line: The Mountain Hardwear Helion 2 Tent : an ultralight with might.

Chuting Spree Clue #2 – Mountain Hardwear Tent

Follow five weekly clues and be the first to correctly identify where the tent is hidden to win a Mountain Hardwear tent of your choice!

Click here for the Chuting Spree Mountain Hardwear Tent contest rules.

Clue #2:  This skier comes from a famous skiing family and was a Big Mountain Freerider 25 years before the term was even born.  He/she flew a hang glider off the north side of Mt. Everest and was the first person to break the elusive one-hundred and twenty-four point three miles per hour barrier on skis. Sadly, this person died while sleeping in a car which was rear-ended by a drunk driver.

What COUNTRY is this person from? 

Name that skier, or at least the COUNTRY he was from.

Name that skier, or at least the COUNTRY he/she was from. Photo credit withheld until the end of the contest.

Know the country?  Don’t answer now – save it for Super Cluesday.

Clue Schedule:
January 20th – Continent
January 27th – Country or Region
February 3rd – Specific mountain range or zone
February 10th - Specific peak or town
February 17th – SUPER CLUESDAY!  Exact location.  Send in your answer NOW!

________________________________
Help support StraightChuter.com and camp in style with a Mountain Hardwear Spire 2 Tent from Backcountry.com. Click on the photo below…
 

 

The Mountain Hardwear Spire 2 is an ultralight 2-person 4-season double-wall tent for alpine climbers and mountaineers who like to move light and fast in the high mountains. The Spire’s double doors are each protected by a vestibule to allow you and your partner to enter the tent without getting snow inside. The double vestibules are also excellent for cooking in a storm and storing gear. At 4lb 9oz, this Mountain Hardware tent weighs far less than most 4-season double-wall tents while remaining strong enough to withstand horrendous winter storms. Light enough for an alpine style assault and burly enough for a fixed camp, the Spire is an incredibly versatile mountaineering tent.

Bottom Line: Travel light and camp comfortably with the Mountain Hardwear Spire 2 tent.

Chuting Spree Clue #1 – Mountain Hardwear Tent!

Follow five weekly clues and be the first to correctly identify where the tent is hidden to win a Mountain Hardwear tent of your choice!

Click here for the Chuting Spree Mountain Hardwear Tent contest rules.

Clue: In 1995, after numerous attempts by many strong parties, two skiers from this CONTINENT laid first tracks down this twelve-thousand, nine-hundred and seventy-two foot peak, which is the highest peak in its range.  At least one of the skiers was on borrowed gear.

Sketch-ee-mo Johnson. A skier from the continent in question working his/her way down the peak in question.  Photo credit respectfully withheld until the end of the contest.

Sketch-ee-mo Johnson. A skier from the continent in question working his/her way down the peak in question. Photo credit respectfully withheld until the end of the contest.

Know the continent?  Don’t answer now – save it for Super Cluesday.

Clue Schedule:
January 20th – Continent
January 27th – Country or Region
February 3rd – Specific mountain range or zone
February 10th - Specific peak or town
February 17th – SUPER CLUESDAY!  Exact location.  Send in your answer NOW!

________________________________
Help support StraightChuter.com and camp in style with a Mountain Hardwear Casa 4 Tent from Backcountry.com. Click on the photo below…
 

Mountain Hardwear used a unique pole structure to make the Casa 4 four-person, three-season tent easy to pitch and spacious inside. This four-person tent has only two poles. One pole arches over the entrance, branches at two side hubs to create sidewall support as well as roof support, and snakes to the back of the tent. The other pole helps hold up the back end of the tent. Aside from easy setup, this structure results in nearly vertical walls, so you can use more of the Casa 4’s interior space. Put on the fly, and you get 22 square feet of vestibule area as well as a watertight fortress against the elements. In warm weather, leave off the fly and enjoy the breeze through this Mountain Hardwear tent’s mesh windows.

Bottom Line:
Mountain Hardwear’s Casa 4 is your spacious mountain home for friends or the whole family.

Return of the Chuting Spree – Win a Mountain Hardwear Tent!

Between holidays, computer crashes and the excitment of a new ski season starting, the Chuting Spree contest was overwhelmed and needed to take a break… but now it is back and better than ever with a Mountain Hardwear tent as a prize!  Mountain Hardwear is my #1 skiing enabler and I have spent many happy hours flat on my back staring at the inside of MHW tents and counting stitches until I fall asleep in a raging storm.  They make a wide variety of high quality tents that will take an unbelievable beating and last for many, many years.

The winning prize is any MHW tent, excluding the Strong Hold, Space Station and Double Wall Satellite. The rules and concept is the same as past Chuting Spree Contests, so if you get it, read no further and check out the clues on Tuesday’s/Cluesday’s at 10:00am Utah time.

The Basics
Five weekly clues lead to the location of the tent.  Be the first person to correctly identify where the tent is, and it’s yours.

How the Contest Works:
Through a series of ski mountaineering related clues, contestants have to guess the location of the tent. The clues start with the continent the tent is located on, then narrow down to a specific location.  The tent is only there in theory – the real one is waiting for you at the warehouse.

How to Win:
Be the first person to post the correct answer as a comment on the page with the final clue.  Click here for an example.  HINT: First time commenters must be approved, which causes a delay in your comments showing up.  For the fastest comment posting time, get pre-approved by making a comment on an earlier posting so that the computer knows your name. 

Question:  Are there going to be some really hard, stupid, obscure questions?

Answer:    No. Most of them will be easy if you have been following skiing and/or ski mountaineering for a while, and if not, they will be searchable on the Internets. The final clue will be specific to ski mountaineering lore, but it is not necessary to have been there to know the answer.  (Example: In “The Blizzard of Ahhhs” Scot Schmidt stood at the top of this and said “Yeah, I’ll ski it for sure.”)

Clue Schedule:
    Jan 20 – Continent
    Jan 27 – Country
    Feb 3 – Mountain Range, City or Region
    Feb 10 – Specific Peak
    Feb 17 – SUPER CLUESDAY!  The exact location.  Send in your final answer(s) now!

Winning Format:
The final answer is the one that really matters, however in case of a dispute, the winning format is:
    Continent:  (Your answer)
    Country: (Your answer)
    Mountain Range, City or Region: (Your answer)
    Peak: (Your answer)
    Exact Location: (Your answer)

Experienced Chuting Spree’rs pretype the answers to the clues they already know so they can fire off a response as soon as the final clue is given.  The final clue tends to be a Ski Mountaineering story problem that requires some thought and perhaps some quick internet searching.

Rules:

- Tuesday is Cluesday.  All clues will be given on Tuesday mornings at 10:00am Mountain Time on the main page of StraightChuter.com
- In case of a dispute, I (Andrew McLean) will be the sole judge.  I’m the Decider.  I make decisions.
- Immediate family members are not eligible (sorry Mom, Dad, Polly and Mira…)

Prizes:

- Prizes need to be claimed within 90 days of the winning date.  (No, you can’t wait six years for a 2014 EV-9000.)
- Stronghold, Double Wall Satellite and Space Station tents are NOT eligable as prizes.  (These are more like investment properties than tents!)
- Prizes are limited to Mountain Hardwear’s available stock on hand. (Sorry, no custom- made Kevlar Trangos.)
- Shipping will be at the manufacturer’s discretion and only to addresses in the U.S. due to expense and customs regulations. Contestants outside of the U.S. can win, but will be responsible for shipping charges and/or arranging customs.

Sample Contest

Clue #1 (Continent)
Q:  This continent received a record seasonal snowfall in 1998-99.

Clue #2 (State/Country/Province/region)
Q:  The highest peak in this geographic zone is 4207m tall.

Clue #3 (Mountain Range)
Q: Early explorers referred to this range as “The Three Breasts.”

Clue #4 (Specific Peak/Town/Zone)
Q: This peak was first climbed to its summit in 1898.

Clue #5 (Specific location/object)
Q:  The first ski descent of this peak was continuous except for one obstacle.  For a brand new Mountain Hardwear tent, what is the specific name of this obstacle?

Answer:  Click Here

 
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Help support StraightChuter.com and preview the Mountain Hardwear Tent Selection at Backcountry.com. Click the photo below…