photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Brent E | profile | all galleries >> climb >> eastern_ice tree view | thumbnails | slideshow
It was to be the longest and highest route either of us had tried but in the end it was not to be. Better sense and poor weather reports made Blake and I look from Hunington’s Ravine on Mt. Washington to other objectives further north and closer to home. Having checked the weather for Bancroft I assumed that we may get favourable conditions there and maybe enough ice to last us through our 3 day weekend. So, we set off early Friday morning from Niagara, grabbed an extra helmet from Chossmonkey, and drove fiendishly north!

What follows is the rest of the trip. Take a look at the pictures, as usual, to follow the story along and get a visual of where we were while the memories were made! If the picture has (Blake) in the title it was taken by him. Otherwise they are by me. Most of these pictures are actually by Blake, as you see. My camera battery was low due to cold temps.

Continuing:

When we f-i-n-a-l-l-y reached the north end of Toronto we called the Bancroft donut and coffee establishment, Tim Horton’s, and the hardware store, Canadian Tire, to ask if there was any ice on the Eagles Nest – the crag located right in town. They said respectively that they didn’t see any and that they didn’t know. We were a bit disappointed, but we decided to keep going north and see for ourselves.

We pulled into Bancroft at 10AM. We pulled into the Tim Horton’s in Bancroft at 10:01AM. With the ability to literally see the climbs from the sitting area in the coffee shop we concluded that there was, in fact, quite a bit of ice on one route, and enough on at least one other to occupy us for the day, although no longer.

We finished our coffee and scarfed several maple flavour pastries and walked over to ask permission to climb. I had a recollection that we needed to ask the chiropractor if we could cross their land to get to the climb, and we intended to do so only to find the business closed on Friday. So, we racked up in the parking lot that is honestly 50 horizontal feet from the rock and 300 feet from the base of our first climb and made the arduous approach over the talus.