Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Grounded in Talkketna

Polar Climb 1 Update-
A large weather front has moved into the area.  It has been snowing since early morning.  Our scheduled flight to base camp was cancelled this morning.  We are in a holding pattern until the weather clears.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

In Talkeetna Alaska

Hi, we are in Talkeetna gettting ready for the climb.  Check out the following for TV coverage from KSTP in Minneapolis.

http://kstp.com/news/stories/S1898793.shtml?cat=1

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Climb Denali in January's cold and dark, alone? That's the plan

Lonnie Dupre of Grand Marais knows full well what he's getting into. In the next few weeks, he hopes to become the first person on Earth to reach the summit of Alaska's Denali (Mount McKinley) on a solo expedition in January.
By: Sam Cook, Duluth News Tribune 
The mountain is so cold, its winds so ferocious and the daylight so skimpy in January, that the odds of success are small. Only nine expeditions totaling 16 people have reached the summit of Denali in winter. Six people have died on winter attempts.
Only one team has reached the mountain's 20,320-foot summit in January. Two Russians in a three-person party reached the peak on Jan. 16, 1998.
Dupre, 49, is not short on cold-weather expedition experience. He has twice skied to the North Pole from northern Canada. He has circumnavigated Greenland by kayak and dogsled. This past June, he and two other Grand Marais men reached the summit of Denali in his only major climbing expedition.
But Dupre puts his January attempt on Denali in a different category among his expeditions.
"It'll be the most difficult I've ever done," he said in a telephone interview in late November."I'm not too worried about the temperature or the lack of light. I've worked with that. But there are about three technical cruxes in the climb I'm trying to get my head around."
Those cruxes are likely to be pitches of 45 to 55 degrees, windswept to pure blue ice, Dupre said. Winds have the potential to reach 100 mph when the jet stream settles over the mountain. Climbers who die on Denali in the winter typically do so because they are unable to self-arrest after slipping off an icy ridge, Dupre said.


HARD WORK
Denali National Park ranger Coley Gentzel of the Talkeetna Ranger Station has twice climbed Denali, but never in winter.
"If I had to sum up the whole experience, any time you climb Denali, there's a fair amount of suffering," he said. "In wintertime, that would pretty much be it — lots and lots of hard work, just constantly having to do something, whether shoveling or cooking, breaking trail. You're usually digging, in some cases for survival."
Part-time Grand Marais resident and polar adventurer Eric Larsen believes Dupre's solo climb will be arduous and not without great risk. Larsen accompanied Dupre on a summer trek to the North Pole in 2006, and he most recently reached the summit of Mount Everest in October.
"There are a million things that can go wrong climbing Denali in the spring/summer climbing season- altitude sickness, high winds, white-outs, falling into a crevasse, avalanches, cold, injury and much more," Larsen said. "Multiply those variables by more cold, less daylight, climbing alone and a distinct lack of infrastructure (other climbers, fixed ropes, marked route), and you have a formula for a pretty difficult adventure."
Larsen said he would not attempt a solo climb on Denali in January.
"I would put that on my list of difficult and dangerous things to avoid," he said.
Gentzel said different park rangers might view Dupre's attempt differently.
"It's sort of a personal thing,"he said. "The response would vary based on the ranger you're talking to. Personally, I try not to discourage anyone. There's a lot of incredible feats that come from people who might be considered inexperienced."


THE 'NEXT STEP'
Although Dupre has vast winter travel experience, including 15,000 miles of dogsled expeditions, he has little mountaineering experience. He used last summer's Denali experience to gather information about a possible winter attempt. This fall, he made the decision to go in January.
"I think it's the next step for me in terms of a challenge," he said. "I wanted to try to find a significant trip that was not as lengthy as a (two-month) North Pole trip. I thought maybe I could do something in a month-long time frame."
To deal with the threat of falling into a crevasse early in the climb, Dupre will be harnessed to a 14-foot ladder. He will be wearing a pack, and a 150-pound sled will be tethered to the back of the ladder. If he breaks through into a crevasse, the ladder is designed to bridge the gap so he can climb to safety.
Because winds can be severe, Dupre plans to dig snow caves rather than using a tent during his climb. That's what the Russian team did in reaching Denali's summit in 1998.
"We climbed it like mice," Russian climber Vladimir Ananich told the Mountain Zone website after summiting the peak with Artur Testov. "We’d hole up in a snow cave for two, three, five days, then poke our noses out to look around. If it was too windy, we'd duck back in; if bearable, we'd scurry up a little higher. And that's how we got up that hill!"
Dupre has corresponded with Testov in preparing for his climb and also has sought the advice of legendary Alaskan climber and climbing guide Vernon Tejas.
"He's been very supportive," Dupre said.
Not that some people haven't tried to dissuade him from this latest expedition.
"I've gotten a few e-mails that I probably shouldn't be doing this," Dupre said.
And his response?
"Well, I can always turn my skis around," he said.


FALL TRAINING
Dupre spent the fall training for his ascent. He has worked out with weights, dragged heavy tires around, hiked with a 60-pound pack and trained in a hyperbaric tent to acclimatize to an altitude of 21,000 feet. He traveled to Washington and Colorado to train in the mountains with more experienced climbers.
Dupre plans to fly to Alaska in a few days, and fly from Talkeetna to the mountain in late December. He hopes to reach the peak by Jan. 31.
He will carry a small high-definition video camera and a computer to send dispatches from Denali. He also will carry a SPOT beacon that will mark his location on the mountain and will confirm if he reaches the summit.
His experience on other expeditions tells him the early part of the expedition will be critical.
"Usually in these really hard trips, if you can make it through the first 14 days of the trip, you're probably going to make it, at least physically and mentally," he said. "You have to get through that 14-day mark."

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Countdown to Talkeetna

Hello folks,
Well the countdown has started.  We are 20 days from departing Minnesota to Talkeetna, Alaska.  Talkeetna will be our headquarters for the end of December and month of January.  Tom Surprenant will be our base-camp manager and point man in touch with me on the trail.  Lonnie will be sending out updates everyday from the trail.
Expedition food consisting of 2 pounds and some 6000 calories per day along with a modified ladder system for crossing crevasses has been shipped to Alaska.  Expedition clothing, electronics and gear is arriving daily from our sponsors: Granite Gear, Marmot, 40 Below, IO BIO, Smith Optics, Rab, and Explorers Web.
Training has been intense. We just returned from Colorado polishing climbing techniques on steep icy terrain Lonnie expects to encounter on Denali's upper elevations.
For additional preparation Lonnie has been pre-acclimatizing using an Hypoxico tent and mask.  By the time Lonnie leaves for the Mountain he should be acclimatized to 21,000 feet.
Coverage for the expedition has already begun with an Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) "Mid-Morning" interview by Cathy Wurzer on Friday, November 26th.  http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/11/26/midmorning3/
An expedition documentary is also underway and is being filmed by Jason Davis of KSTP channel 5 an ABC affiliate located in Minneapolis/St Paul.
For more information please follow http://www.lonniedupre.com

Friday, December 3, 2010

Lonnie at Neptune Montaineering in Boulder

Lonnie visiting Neptune Mountaineering in Boulder Colrado.  Lonnie gave a presentation last evening at the store.  Gary Neptune was our gracious host.  Here is a shot of Lonnie in front of a small part of one of the largest collections of mountaneering and alpine memrobilia that is part of Gary's museum.  Lonnie will be heading to Vail today to work on climbing techniques specific to his climb. Lonnie and Tom departs for Alaska on December 27th.  More updates coming soon....

Friday, October 8, 2010

Polar Climb 1 Introductions

Tom Surprenant - Expedition Manager.   Tom has summited Denali, run 60-plus marathons as well as the Ironman triathlon. He’s a retired Information Technology Director, and one hell of a nice guy.
Lonnie Dupre on Denali in June


First solo winter ascent of Denali in the month of January

Denali, aka Mount McKinley, in Alaska, is North America's highest mountain at 20,320 feet. Denali's high latitude (being close to the Arctic) makes it feel like a 23,000-foot peak. This, along with its unpredictable weather and vast crevasse fields, makes it a challenging climb in summer even by Himalayan standards. But in the winter it's a whole different set of conditions. Winds often exceed 100 miles per hour, temperatures plummet below -50F, and there's an average of only six hours of sunlight.
Only nine expeditions totaling 16 people have ever reached the summit of Denali in winter. Six deaths resulted from those climbs. Only one team (comprised of three Russian climbers) has ever made the summit in January...the dead of winter. Of those nine original expeditions, four were solo, but none of the solos were in January, the darkest and coldest time.

The Plan:

Planning has already begun for the projected one-month winter climb. In June 2010, two other Minnesotans and I made an unguided climb via Denali's West Buttress route. We reached the summit after 13 days. I used that expedition to assess whether it would be possible with my 20-plus years of polar expedition experience, and some modification of climbing gear, to successfully climb the mountain in January.

I will pull a 6-foot sled and carry a backpack, a combined weight of about 150 pounds. I'll be attached to the sled via a 14-foot lightweight ladder and a waist harness. The ladder will help to span crevasses should I slip into one. I will also be using extra-long skis for bridging crevasses.

Six thousand calories per day will be needed to stave off the cold and can be eaten without cooking, with the exception of soups and drinks, to conserve weight and fuel. Some 300 bamboo wands will be carried to mark the route, dangerous crevasse crossings and camps from start to summit to help ensure a safe return during low visibility. Camps will consist of snow caves...even modern expedition tents cannot hold up to Denali's winter winds. Snow caves are more reliable and warmer, essential when it's -50° outside. To train for the expedition, I will hike with 6o-pound packs, run, pull tires, do kettle bells, ski, hone climbing skills in Washington and Colorado, and use a hyperbaric chamber to acclimatize for the altitude.

Objectives:

1. Summit Denali before the end of January 2011.
2. Submit daily blog entries, photographs and audio posts from the trail to support the expedition's website and social media.
3. Provide a platform to bring attention to Alaska's vanishing glaciers.
4. Do something big at the summit that will be documented there.
5. Produce a film and an audio documentary for radio as well as professionally shot still images for publication.