Smoke Blanchard

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Messages 21 - 40 of total 110 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Jan 23, 2011 - 02:30pm PT
Prompts for hidden salvation is Doug's speciality! LOL

Go easy on the chalk folks to keep the exploration and adventure high for the next wave. Better yet leave the bag at home and leave no trace!
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Jan 29, 2011 - 05:08pm PT
Kleen Bump!
Tony Puppo

climber
Bishop
Jan 30, 2011 - 11:02am PT
I think some of you Buttermilkers might like one of these;



Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jan 30, 2011 - 11:03am PT
How cool is that?!
Tony Puppo

climber
Bishop
Jan 30, 2011 - 11:05am PT
Jaybro,
I got one with your name on it, PM with your address.
Tony
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Jan 30, 2011 - 11:44am PT
Tony- Very cool medallion and photo!

Who took the shot?
BW

climber
Bishop, CA
Jan 30, 2011 - 12:58pm PT
Hey Tony,

Good to see you got those out in the open. Wow, they turned out great. And way better pic than the one I had.

Cheers, Bruce
Peter Haan

Trad climber
San Francisco, CA
Jan 30, 2011 - 01:02pm PT
Actually, DR is out there yesterday and today. With his 15-year old daughter. They are photographing the Smoke course by airplane for his article he is doing. I think the weather even worked out for the shots, from what I could tell front the Bishop webcam.
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jan 30, 2011 - 01:04pm PT
This just gets cooler all the time
Klimmer

Mountain climber
San Diego
Jan 30, 2011 - 01:39pm PT
This is a great thread. I love the Buttermilks and I really enjoy hearing and reading the stories about Smoke.

Thanks for telling me about his book. I just ordered from Amazon, and got a collector's copy for a good price ($15.00). Hardbound and wrapped for library use. Very cool.

I would really love to do the rock course through the Buttermilks (of the Tungsten Hills) that Smoke Blanchard put together. Nice to hear from DR that the entire circuit is now still known or rediscovered. Very cool.

I have a small dream to do a multi-element weekend of adventure through the Buttermilks (Tungsten Hills):

    Smoke Blanchard's entire Rock Course

    Mtn. Bike Loop through Tungsten Hills

    Paragliding Tungsten Hill and thermalling back to the base of Mt. Tom

    Skinning up and climbing Mt. Tom, then BC skiing Elderberry Canyon


How fun and cool would that be? It would be a blast. Very possible to do in 2 days. A weekend of Adventure in the Early Spring, when Elderberry is still in condition and soaring from Tungsten Hill is at its best.


Really like the "Buttermilker" medallion. Cool.



:-)
Tony Puppo

climber
Bishop
Jan 30, 2011 - 02:53pm PT
Steve, the image is from Jan Tiura who climbed with Smoke a fair bit back in the day. She said her husband was just out of frame. I had asked her specifically for a "Smoke up a chimney" photo as that's what seems to evoke Buttermilk scrambling so well.
Glad y'all like it.
Tony
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
Jan 30, 2011 - 04:00pm PT
Jan is a most interesting lady-cook at the Palisade School back then and the first female tugboat captain on the S.F.Bay. Still tugboating and passionate as ever with her photography. Check out her website for some fascinating photos:

http://www.phototiura.com/TUG/tugs.htm
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Jan 30, 2011 - 09:39pm PT
Thanks Tony!
Tony Puppo

climber
Bishop
Jan 31, 2011 - 12:32am PT
I had been hiking up there years before, but the early bouldering was my stepdaughter Hallie and Kick Ryan.

Edit,
Oops, make that Mick Ryan, although many would like to put a foot to his rear.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Jan 31, 2011 - 12:54am PT
This is a really interesting thread. I'd never heard of Smoke Blanchard before, or just slightly. He wasn't a "real" climber, in the modern sense of the word. He might be aghast at some of the things now done in the name of climbing and mountaineering. But he was clearly one of the great mountain men in the Sierra Nevada, and a lot of others ended up perched on his shoulders.
BooDawg

Social climber
Polynesian Paradise
Jan 31, 2011 - 11:59am PT
Since Doug has given Smoke his own thread, I thought I'd post these two photos, taken the weekend of Doug's second wedding that I posted elsewhere:

The half-day that some of us spent following Smoke's lead as he guided us humbly, almost silently through a portion of The Course was one of the most enjoyable days of climbing that I can recall.


Don Lauria

Trad climber
Bishop, CA
Jan 31, 2011 - 01:21pm PT
Mighty Hiker,

To say, "He wasn't a "real" climber, in the modern sense of the word" is to say none of us were.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Jan 31, 2011 - 03:03pm PT
Thanks, Don. My background was in traditional mountaineering, where more than a few weren't very comfortable with hardware and fancy gadgets, and all it stood for. To some, rock climbing wasn't really mountaineering. But I look at it from the perspective of what we all have in common, and the intertwined threads often going back a long time. For example, bouldering going back to at least Oscar Eckenstein, in the 1880s. "Mixed" climbing to the 1920s, or earlier. And so on.

We've had a few characters like Blanchard up here. They may not have had all the latest tricks and gadgets, but did have the essential fire and energy.

Hence my comment on perching on other's shoulders.
Swifter

Social climber
Flagstaff, AZ
Feb 7, 2011 - 03:06pm PT
So great to see this thread! (Thx for the tipoff, Jan and the great kickoff Doug!). I first met Smoke at Nort Benner's home, and in summer of 1965 Smoke and I went on our first “walk” together. His idea was to wade in the Pacific Ocean near Icy Bay and from there walk to a viewpoint from which we could see the ocean from on high. Those who have walked or strolled with him will recognize the “purity” of this proposed summer itinerary as well as his understated manner of describing various “exploits.” (“exploits?” Now THAT is word he would never use or tolerate in reference to himself!) Of course the viewpoint he had in mind was Mt. St. Elias. I’ll check his book to see if he talks about not completing this walk.

Gnomic: The manner in which he liked to describe the evolution of his name typically went something like this:
Companion: How’d you ever get the name, Smoke? It’s just a nickname isn’t it?
SB: Yes, you could call it that.
C: Well what’s your real name?
SB: Oh, you mean the handle I put on tax returns and such?
C: Yes, your real, legal name.
SB: Well, it’s sort of awkward, so people just shorten it to Smoke.
C: OK then, what IS your awkward legal name?
SB: It’s Blacksmoke. Now let’s get those packs on and walk up to the lunch spot...

In reality William Ellis Blanchard had legally changed his name to Blacksmoke. Why he did so was another yarn.
Bill Bechtell

Mountain climber
Montara, CA
Feb 7, 2011 - 09:59pm PT
I first met Smoke in 1968 on a Sierra Club trip to Alaska that he co-led with Jules Eichorn. We did an unscouted hike over Anderson Pass on the lower slopes of Mt. McKinley (it wasn't called Denali in those days). This was one of the trips described in his book.

If I remember correctly, Smoke told me that he got the nickname "Black Smoke" when his day job was driving truck on Hwy 395 between LA and Reno. Evidently when you drive a diesel truck in the wrong gear black smoke spews out the stacks. "Black Smoke" was eventually shortened to just plain Smoke.

I subsequently bouldered with Smoke in the Buttermilks, and hiked across Austria with him and his wife, Sue, in 1970.
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