Welcome RIck Sylvester

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Messages 1 - 53 of total 53 in this topic
Roger Breedlove

climber
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Topic Author's Original Post - May 6, 2011 - 12:58pm PT
Hi Rick,

Welcome to ST land. I hope that you post up more of your unique tales.

Hope all is well. All of the best, Roger
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
May 6, 2011 - 01:26pm PT
Welcome indeed! All stories and photos, and thoughtful discussion, welcome at this campfire.

What is Rick's nom de plume?
Anastasia

climber
hanging from an ice pick and missing my mama.
May 6, 2011 - 01:27pm PT
Yeah! I really love stories! I bet you have a few of the best!
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 6, 2011 - 01:46pm PT
welcome Rick!


http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.php?topic_id=1485062&msg=1490321#msg1490321
http://www.supertopo.com/rock-climbing/beta/Yosemite-Valley-Five-and-Dime-Cliff-Five-and-Dime
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
May 6, 2011 - 01:57pm PT
With all his wild exploits, I think it is safe to say,

He’s Gonna Live! LOL
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
May 6, 2011 - 02:11pm PT
With all his wild exploits, I think it is safe to say,

He’s Gonna Live! LOL

+1. Another one of my climbing heros joins ST. Welcome -- and thank you.

John
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
May 6, 2011 - 02:43pm PT
Rick, you ever write that hundred marathons book you tr me about when I fixed your friends that time in the valley?

And oh yeah, welcome aboard 'n shit!!
Wayno

Big Wall climber
Seattle, WA
May 6, 2011 - 02:58pm PT
Rick, I met a guy in Alaska that said he used to climb with you. His name was Gary Hopkins. He fixed my roof in Seward.
BooDawg

Social climber
Butterfly Town
May 6, 2011 - 03:11pm PT
Welcome Rick. Long time no see! But I'll be around the Valley neighborhood for the next few months, once I get back there in early June. Would love to get together if you'll be there. Cheers, Ken
FTOR

Sport climber
CA
May 6, 2011 - 03:44pm PT
anyone who skis off asgard with a parachute for an early bond flic is ok with me.

from wiki-Bond film veteran Willy Bogner captured the action staged by stuntman Rick Sylvester who earned $30,000 for the stunt. This stunt cost $500,000 - the most expensive single movie stunt at that time.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
May 6, 2011 - 05:46pm PT
Didn't Charlie Porter lead all of Tangerine Trip on the FA, with a porta-belayer? And we can't forget the solo first ascents.

A Son of Heart thread: http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/682186/Son-Of-Heart-T-R
PhilG

Trad climber
The Circuit, Tonasket WA
May 6, 2011 - 05:50pm PT
Rick!
Welcome to the ST campfire.
Like any climber's campfire there are some truly interesting people here, and some real nut cases.
I, of course, consider myself among the interesting people!
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
May 6, 2011 - 05:54pm PT
Although I'm not the biblical sort of knowledge-seeker I consider myself
blessed to have known Rick albeit to a lesser degree than many of you.
I can't wait to see some pearls from Rick's internet pen.
(If prodded I might be able to produce a couple of compromising photos, so to speak)
TomKimbrough

Social climber
Salt Lake City
May 6, 2011 - 06:07pm PT
Welcome Rick!
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
May 6, 2011 - 09:09pm PT
Rick is still very much in the mix.

Don Lauria and Rick at the Nose gathering in 2008.

Roger and Peter Haan talking shop about Middle Rock. Rick somewhat uncharacteristically in the background...LOL
the kid

Trad climber
fayetteville, wv
May 6, 2011 - 10:03pm PT
Welcome Rick,
We climbing together a little bit in 1982 and you were a great early influence on my climbing life..
post up some good ones..
kurt
SteveW

Trad climber
The state of confusion
May 6, 2011 - 10:56pm PT

Welcome to the campfire, Rick!
Brandon-

climber
The Granite State.
May 6, 2011 - 11:00pm PT
Ten years ago, I was out at 90' wall in February, showing a visiting friend around and TR'ing some stuff. Rick showed up alone and soloed everything there. He introduced himself, gave me a business card, and told me to call if I ever needed a partner.

Hi Rick.
Doug Robinson

Trad climber
Santa Cruz
May 6, 2011 - 11:01pm PT
Rick is still getting to the head of the line:

Anyone notice that he spent two days in Tuolumne last weekend?

Wish I had been there with you guys!
Allen Hill

Social climber
CO.
May 6, 2011 - 11:11pm PT
He climbed the "Old Man of Hoy" and a couple of other Scottish sea stacks three years ago. He's still at it and a good guy most importantly.
Lynne Leichtfuss

Trad climber
Will know soon
May 7, 2011 - 12:11am PT
Kept walking by this Thread each time thinking your name a bit familiar. Pics reminded me introduced at the Nose Reunion. Welcome on Board this wonderfully eclectic, crazy, fun Campfire consisting of some incredible people. Cheers to Yo Bro. lynne
rottingjohnny

Sport climber
mammoth lakes ca
May 7, 2011 - 12:51am PT
Rick........are you out there?
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 7, 2011 - 12:52am PT
Thanks, everyone, for the surprising and nice welcome. I'm kinda late to the game. To state that I'm a low tech guy would be an overstatement. The word "tech" and any reference to myself should never appear in the same sentence. Anyway, yes, for decades I've been filled to the gills -- apologies to John Gill -- with stories, tales and anecdotes. Maybe I can start disgorging a few.
One omission I noticed on the beta about the Five and Dime cliff was that there was no mention of "Whack and Dangle", an 11a - or is it 11b? -- if memory serves me correctly. The name says it all. Considering my level of strength, skill and flexibility that route due to its nature was right at my limits. I kept at it until I finally led it...once. One day I asked Werner if he'd ever free soloed it as, and as I wrote previously, he used to regularly free solo "Five and Dime". I believe he replied he'd never even done it. A smart man indeed.
rottingjohnny

Sport climber
mammoth lakes ca
May 7, 2011 - 01:06am PT
And now werner is your bitch....
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 7, 2011 - 02:38am PT
Thanks, Allen and Doug and everyone else. Wow, this electronic/computer age is something else. I must be the reincarnation of Rip Van Winkle or something...or someone. Doug, I sure wish you had been alone with us, the ol' "misery loves company" and all. At least that way I could have split the weight of the community gear -- stove, pot and tent -- and maybe derived some enjoyment from the endeavor...or at least not tortured my aged body so badly. But of course you were always way more organized than I. Just before embarking on the trip I dusted off my copy of your book, "A Night on the Ground, a Day in the Open" for the first time in years. What an amazing writer you are. Of course when I, and many people, think of your writing it's "The Climber as Visionary" that comes to mind. But that doesn't do you justice. It's all of your writing. You just state things, capture things, so perfectly. I'm filled with envy. You're surely one of the most skilled and gifted of anyone who 's ever penned on the subject of climbing and outdoors activities.
The reason I reopened your book after so long was that I wanted to reread the section about Peanuts McCoy and your ski traverse of the John Muir Trail. Yes, I was "moonwalking" as you phrased it on my '69 16 days' solo ski attempt on the Muir Trail the year before your successful one. By the way, it was an unintended solo. Everyone who'd expressed interest in joining me dropped out, the ol' "After everything is said and done more is usually said than done". The only reason I didn't do the wise thing and stay at home was because I'd recently been reading about Snowshoe Thompson and figured if he could do what he did in the 1800s on his relatively primitive gear and not to mention with no chance of a chopper search/rescue in the event he failed to reach his mail carry destinations, Genoa or Placerville, then I had no excuses. It was "moonwalking" as you phrased it because I was clad in all I had, the original Lange downhill boots which, with Rosemonts, were essentially the first two brands of plastic downhill ski boots to enter the market. Besides their weight unlike future iterations they were very poorly padded which led to my feet getting sort of decimated. But that wasn't the main reason I quit. It was due to a combination of factors. Primary was that I'd begun running out of food. With attendant feelings of guilt I'd "broken" --but doing no real damage -- into a couple of structures, but probably due to the guilt not taken enough so that I too soon found myself very hungry again. Besides the boot issue was the one of my skis and bindings and the layout of the Muir Trail. No, I wasn't in Rossignols. I had a pair of heavy wooden 210cm "Stein Ericksen" Northland skis which a fellow ski instructor who rep-ed for the company had laid on me. Come to think of it, I probably didn't have all that much advantage, at least weight-wise, over Snowshoe. And a roommate had volunteered a horribly inefficient not to mention heavy alpine touring binding that afforded a maximum of something like all of half an inch of heel lift. Consequently, on most of the uphills it was easier to just walk on the firm spring snowpack with the skis on my pack (a frame Kelty, by the way -- not exactly the ideal low center of gravity pack for pursuits like climbing and skiing). The final coup de grace was the location of the Muir Trail. My understanding is that when the route of the Muir Trail was laid out there was some controversy about not keeping it closer to the Sierra Crest. Near the headwaters of the San Joaquin it dips down to something like 7000' if memory serves me correctly. I began postholing in soft snow. The effort was too much for my stubbornness and ambition, especially in my increasing state of hunger. I had to bail...and to the west, not the east. It's too lengthy to go into here but the outcome could have turned out very badly for me but for a fortuitous circumstance.
One other mini-correction, Doug. You wrote that I was attempting to make, and that Peanuts and you succeeded at, the second ski traverse of the Muir Trail. That's very generous of you, especially concerning your exploit, but no, my goal was not to be second but the first. I was well aware of Orland Bartholomew's 1928/9 100 days' sojourn. But wasn't this before the Muir Trail was "created"? In all the time he spent that winter in the Sierras surely he covered every bit of the Muir but he wasn't following its course per se, n'est pas? I lack the energy to peruse my copy of "High Odyssey". By the way, that winter was a very low one... in great contrast to this 2010/11 season. Supposedly he never encountered a snow depth of more than 4'. "Nuff said...at least for now.
dipper

climber
May 7, 2011 - 02:51am PT
What a treat to read all this....
steveA

Trad climber
bedford,massachusetts
May 7, 2011 - 08:31am PT
Hey Rick,

Welcome aboard! In case you don't remember, we did the West Face of Sentinel
some 40 years ago. Steve
Peter Haan

Trad climber
San Francisco, CA
May 7, 2011 - 10:17am PT
Plenty of copies available of Dougie's book:

http://www.alibris.com/booksearch?qwork=4685155&matches=17&keyword=Doug+robinson&cm_sp=works*listing*title
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 8, 2011 - 01:49am PT
Super great to read all the postings. "Dingus", no one gets in enough backcountry ski touring...or climbing or for that matter resort skiing, something I once heard referred to as "the uphill transportation business". Due to a case of self-diagnosed OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Diisorder) my shoveling to skiing ratio is horribly skewed in the unfortunate direction of the former. But good luck. You still have opportunities. But don't procrastinate! Due to this year's way above average snowpack you may have until only September (but of course it's the nature and quality of the surface that matters).
Steve, of course I remember; you're unforgettable. What I don't understand since it now goes aidless is why we didn't think of free climbing all of Sentinel's West face. I know, all free for only the small elite. Yeah, why didn't Steck and Salathe just climb the chimneys on the upper part of their eponymous route rather than taking forever to put in bolt ladders on the outside face? For those of you who may not know, Steve Arsenault was one of New England's top climbers and did the first solo of "The Prow" which had a decent reputation at the time. Several years would elapse before I'd meet your buddy and fellow New Englander (and founder with this then wife Titione, who originated from Chamonix, of the excellent Wild Things company), one of the best alpinists to emerge from this country, John Bouchard. I got to be his partner on the Eiger Nordwand in '78 the first of the two times he did that route. Despite a decent weather forecast we got hit by a major storm that dropped a meter of new snow. John was hit -- but not badly -- by lightning pretty high up, the third time in his career that he was struck. Without his presence odds were that my body would have ended up hanging and frozen up there as did poor Stefano Longhi's -- just another tourist attraction as viewed through the telescopes of Kleine Scheidigg.
Captain...or Skully

climber
or some such
May 8, 2011 - 01:53am PT
HiYa, Rick. Oh, yeah, I've heard of YOU.
Oh, yes.
An honor & a privilege. Cheers!
martygarrison

Trad climber
Washington DC
May 8, 2011 - 08:50am PT
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
May 8, 2011 - 12:30pm PT
Rick

Here is a related thread on Ostin:
http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.php?topic_id=832070&msg=833798#msg833798

Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
May 8, 2011 - 02:31pm PT
Rick,

Thank you so much for your lengthy and facinating personal historical posting on a variety of threads! Just the kind of real world experiences that make this forum rich and unique...high adventure tales form the days when that was the kind of experiences we were all after.

Drawing these stories and connections out of climbers like yourself is why I spend time posting historical material on this site. Climbing and climbers were far more indelible BITD!

So glad that you are here!

Cheers- Steve
MH2

climber
May 8, 2011 - 03:32pm PT
Nice to see Steve Arsenault's name come up, among much else. Looking forward.
Doug Robinson

Trad climber
Santa Cruz
May 8, 2011 - 06:18pm PT
Rick, I can't believe I'm hearing more of your story, alone on the Muir Trail. And you may not believe it, but I was telling part of your tale to Peter Mayfield just a few days ago. For me it has an epic quality, a sense of crazy go-for-it, launch yourself youthful energy that is indomitable.

Write it down for us, please? All of it!

Here's the scene I laid down for Peter. As you probably know he's the cutting edge lately, doing the longest in-a-push blitz tours over the Sierra. Like circumnavigating the Evolution Group within the space of daylight. Like a 30-hour push that starts in the desert, romps 6000 feet up Taboose Pass, then streaks over Mather Pass on the JMT, then bumps over several more 12,000 foot cols behind the Palisades before exiting over Bishop Pass. And all of it on skating skis. So this is the guy I'm bragging to about you. And this is your story as I remember it from you:

So Rick has bailed from the Muir Trail, lonely, hungry and with shredded feet. He makes it down to Fresno, finally, to an onramp of Highway 99, trying to get home to Squaw Valley. Only now his feet are way worse. It's blistering hot. But he's still wearing the Lange Boots there, hitchhiking by the onramp, because it's the only way to contain the stench of all those oozing blisters...

I know you can tell it better.
rottingjohnny

Sport climber
mammoth lakes ca
May 8, 2011 - 09:10pm PT
I like Rick's pragmatic and adventurous spirit...being rousted by a highway patrolman in his tent next to an interstate...
Conrad

climber
May 9, 2011 - 01:54pm PT
Nice Rick.

Are you the only denizen in Tacoville that has doubled for James Bond?

Super worthy.....

See you about.
can't say

Social climber
Pasadena CA
May 9, 2011 - 02:38pm PT
if requests are being taken, I'd love to hear the tale behind your namesake chute at Squaw

edit:On a slighty different note, did you ever take part in the Chinese Downhill they use to hold at Squaw in the early 70s, I think?
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
May 14, 2011 - 03:13pm PT
Right-O Bump!
GibO

Trad climber
Breckenridge
May 14, 2011 - 11:15pm PT
Hey Rick--I'm wondering if you remember me. I was there for Thanksgiving weekend in about 1971 and we were staying in Camp 4 (still Camp 4, not Sunnyside). I think it was my first trip to the Valley. Not many climbers there, end of season and the weather was a bit ugly. We wound up doing a climb--Pass or Fail first ascent. Seems like it was my first valley climb and it was hard getting drug up a 5.9 in Robbins boots.

That night, or the next day, you showed me some Spademan bindings fitted with a cable release. Along with that, came the description of the "ski off El Cap idea". That all seemed a bit strange, but somehow it looked like it would probably work.

A few weeks later, I was AMAZED to read about the event in the LA Times, and see the great photo they published.

Thanks for the great Yosemite introduction. The Yosemite thing went on for many seasons for me (mainly summer).

Gib
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 15, 2011 - 01:57am PT
I just discovered a bunch of postings I hadn't seen before. There was a big space so I thought that was the end of them. but lo! Being obsessive compulsive -- that,by the way, is my main motivation, even more than ego and narcissism, not that they're not present too -- I feel the need to respond to all. But I've realized I have to do it in segments. A month ago I made an earth shaking discovery, free internet porn -- yeah, I know, the luddite thing. Pretty soon I realized I had a potential big problem due to my addictive nature, and I needed to be very very careful, exercise discipline and restraint. But that threat turned out to be nothing compared to the Super Topo Forum. The trans Sierra sit ski thing got posted there. But for my wanting to check that out I never would have discovered and gotten on Super Topo (so curse Wellman and Arnow, not me). I didn't know about the Forum; I thought Super Topo was just about route information. And -- yeah, the luddite thing again and being non-modern not to mention non young -- I've never been on any social network
Now, a brief word about porn before dealing with some postings replies. Some years ago one started encountering terms like "ski porn", "climbing porn", and "surfing porn" referring to the genre of documentary films filled with sensational sequences but lacking in any real plot, characterization and related. I wanted credit for that term! Ages ago I observed to someone that surfing films had something in common with pornography. The first 10 waves seemed the most exciting thing you've ever seen but then you found yourself yawning, fighting falling asleep, by the 11th. With porn I couldn't believe that this stuff had actually been filmed, almost clinically close up. But like the surfing films, all too soon it got boring, not even sexy... at least to me. Yeah, "all too soon", like sex with me. I know, too much information. The lack of or at best a very thin story line was apparently too much for the sex to overcome. Regarding the outdoor adventure films, I saw the analogy but I wasn't clever enough to have literally coined the terms "climbing porn" etc. Someone like Doug Robinson, amazing wordsmith that he is, could have, would have...or for all I know may have.
Another thing. The little sex porn I was exposed to bitd wasn't all that good. Actually the only film I ever paid to view, and with guilt, was "Deep Throat". I didn't go just for the titillation -- really! -- but for similar reasons as to why I went to "Avatar" -- because it seemed to transcend just going to see a film; it was an "event". Or maybe if anything it was a triumph of advertising/marketing event! You felt you had to see it. And like "Deep Throat", I didn't think "Avatar" was the greatest thing ever, at least as far as story line and the rest, nothing that sticks in your mind several days after the way really good films like "The King's Speech" do (and that's probably key to why it, "Avatar", didn't win the Academy Awards' "best picture") -- the essentially cowboys and indians, superior advanced technological culture wiping out a lesser one plot, black and white characters, good vs, evil and so on. As far as filmic state of the art technological 3D and other breakthroughs there's of course not much debate; it was brilliant (for many viewers this seems sufficient, all they care about. I've never understood this mentality. But then, everyone's not he same -- tolerance, tolerance). But ultimately disappointing, a letdown, not in the former department of something you could really sink your teeth into, relate to, common humanity, that sort of thing -- again, "The King's Speech".
But the porn I discovered last month was something else! Whether the photography is just so much better or the women better looking (Linda Lovelace was just average plus), many if not most undoubtedly due to increased, astronomical rates of body alteration -- or maybe just that I've become an old horn dog, I don't know. All the stuff about lack of plot line, character development and all just didn't seem to matter all that much. Lots of this modern stuff was super high octane. So it didn't take long to realize that there could be problems, married or single, and that I'd best be very careful. And then the Super Topo Forum reared its head, a more formidable threat as it turned out. I might never get outdoors again. Actually, there was another problem with the porn. The guys were such super studs, both endurance and size-wise, that I found myself getting totally emasculated.

Anyway, on to a couple of more mundane things, or at least less sexy. Hi, Tom Kimbrough. Sorry, I didn't mean to imply you're not sexy. I don't want any beef with Barb. Great to see your name. Maybe a lot of people don't know but Tom has a son Paul who's a superstar in the world of telemark skiing. He wins or consistently places near the top in extreme tele competitions including the annual one at neighboring Alpine Meadows resort. He's featured in at least one ski magazine ad, free heel hucking some sick cliff. Way to go, Tom! And Paul of course. Barb too I guess had something to do with it. Barb of course was part of the first female duo to climb the Nose. Quite an accomplished family. Too bad they're not just about the nicest most centered people you could ever hope to meet.

Then there was a mention of Gary Hopkins who some years ago moved from Reno -- yes, a roofer -- to Alaska (and makes the effort to sporadically call, keep in touch -- thanks, Gary) -- yes, another unforgettable partner and person (and of course with the great perspective of great age that's what it's all about and that's what ultimately the Forum is about and why it and all of you are so great and special) even if not necessarily a world class climber like the rest of us -- oh yeah, sure. A really generous kind person, also a lady killer, albeit with some excesses. And I thought I liked meat (an interesting City of Rocks trip -- solid hardcore protein for breakfast as well as dinner -- whatever happened to carbs?). And some people think Chris Fredericks looks or looked like Jesus; Chris has nothing on Gary. For a while Gary and Terry -- I'm forgetting her former last name -- dated. She's been married to climber/skier Dave Adams in South Lake Tahoe for some time. I learned from Jon Arnow during the sit ski traverse that Dave and he partnered, climbing and High Sierra ski tours/traverses, over the years. I was at the wedding reception that took place at Squaw's High Camp. Hey, so was Gene Drake, one of the almost daily, conditions permitting, regulars along with Victor Marcus et al. late afternoons after work at the Truckee post office, at Donner Summit, especially Snowshed Wall, specifically the "Office Cracks". How's he doing (cancer) -- anyone know? You hope for the best and fear learning of the worst. Tried contacting him a while back but the number I had was non-operative. I think I heard that he'd left the Tahoe area, si?
Terry was the most talented female distance runner in Nevada and Northern California. I was in some 10 k races with her -- beautiful legs (she, not I); never was within a couple of minutes of her. A 2:36 or so marathoner she should have capped, and wanted to, her career by competing in the Barcelona Olympics on the Swiss women's marathon team. Like Gabrielle Anderson-Schiess (sp?). the Swiss-American -- dual citizenship like Terry -- woman (longtime alpine ski instructor at Sun Valley, also an amazing nordic ski competitor, age records both in running and nordic) who upon entering the stadium in the final bit of the women's marathon at the second Los Angeles hosted summer Olympics ('80 or '84) walked around the track severely listing to one side, on the verge of being pulled from the race -- yet still recorded something like a 2:48 (try that, critics, and there were many), a very infamous event. Terry thought she could qualify for one of the 3 slots on the Swiss team. But an incorrectly diagnosed case of plantar fasciatis (sp? ) ruined her chances, a huge shame. Some injuries you can run -- no pun intended -- through being careful but not others, not that one. Last I heard she was the cross country and/or track coach as South Lake Tahoe Community College.
Climbing was not her forte. Gary tried to get her into it and you couldn't have witnessed a more perfect example of the old saw, "Don't try to instruct relatives, love interests, people you're in relationships with (there are exceptions), One time Gary and I were climbing in Owens River Gorge, at Negress Wall, I believe. I'd noticed Bachar who was descending near and just ahead of us from the Central Gorge parking area, then lost sight and thought of him. Terry was going for a run along the rim. Afterwards she joined Gary and me. Our attention was on the rock; I didn't know John was free soloing Darshan I believe, a .12a across the Gorge's from us. But Terry had been observing him high above the ground, sans cord. I never forgot her remark, "I felt like puking". The sentiment was understandable. But John was so good...and his ending, despite the risk, so incomprehensible. Like Madsen he seemed stronger than anything, even gravity.

Jaybro, whoever you are, you've got a great memory. Keeping with the running theme -- I thought this was supposed to be primarily a climbing site -- the book was supposed to be about my first 100 -- nice charismatic number -- sub 3 hour marathons, and the title was to be "The Marathon as Odyssey -- My First 100 blah blah blah". It never happened, never reached the goal (marathon c.v.: 116 completions, something like 85 sub3s, 4 drop outs). By the way, it wasn't always fun trying to climb on a decent level and getting in the running mileage. Sh*t happened. I -- and some other Squaw Valleyites -- got sued, wrongfully, for $75 million for opposing a multimillion dollar development, The Resort at Squaw Creek. It was part of an intimation strategy, called SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit against Public Participation), going against the grain of First Amendment free speech rights -- against the project's opponents. You kindly asked me, Royal, in an email some years back, for details about what happened. Sorry I was too busy and/or disorganized to get back to you. I hope this fills in the gap a bit. But defending oneself against a major lawsuit even if it is bs -- essentially I was sued for breach of contract of a contract I never signed, one with a provision about "not opposing or encouraging other opposition" to the project --is a drain not just financially but on time and energy. Both my climbing and running suffered. And of course the aging thing...along with some physical ailments. My intention was to run a total of 153 -- there's a story behind that OF COURSE! -- of the 26.2 milers along with at least 100 of them being sub3. So there was no good happy ending for the book. I was disappointed. I still have hopes of writing a story about the whole crazy obsession (so obvious now via perfect 20/20 hindsight), maybe one of the 13 chapters, in something I've had in mind for eons, "Thirteen Misadventures". And, as always, the best part, the main and real reason for doing so, is some of the great characters I met along the way: Jay Helgerson, the first person to run a marathon a week for a year (and almost all under 3 hours, now living in Portland,Oregon); Don Marathon - he legally changed his name to that - who when I met him was on his fifth hearse (a great car to camp out in as certain climbers had also discovered as well as cheap to acquire as people started trading in gas guzzlers after the first energy crisis of the early Seventies). He was a publicity addict, but a harmless soul, just another crazed experiential junkie -- too bad we don't have any of those in the climbing world -- who claimed he was going to run 2000 marathons by the year 2000...and then the inevitable injuries started creeping in.
And a lot of others -- take Ed Jerome, famous for almost always racing with his little dog Shelly (sp?). People hated that dog; during the initial miles it would be all over the place, tripping runners, before it finally settled down and stuck next to Ed, who could have been type cast in the role of the quintessential "loneliness of the long distance" runner-- torn singlet, little running cap (not unlike Yabo's omnipresent cycling cap). He was also the first "collector" I met. And he gave me the best running tip I ever got. It occurred early in my third marathon, in Sonoma, a real positive ion day, a beautiful fresh sunny morning following a drizzly Halloween when it was just so good to be alive, vital, active. We ended up side by side in the early miles and he said, "Stick with me and we'll break 3 hours. 34 minutes per each 5 miles, and you have a little safety margin." I didn't know who the hell he was, if he knew what he was talking about. I asked if he'd run a marathon before. He said, "Yes", I asked how many. He replied, "110". "What!? In how many years?" He replied something like 10. So I mentally figured and deduced that he'd been averaging around one a month and for 10 years or so. He was a much better runner than I, not just collecting but often winning his age group. He'd done the best, Boston, several times.
Shelly and he died within a month of each other. It caused me to think of marriages where that happens, where it was hard not to believe that the surviving spouse had literally given up the ghost, had no more reason to continue living, and died. Coincidence seemed too pat an explanation. And Ed and Shelly were definitely a couple, an odd couple. Viva the eccentrics, the freaks, the ones who embodied Kerouac's and al the others' wild zest for living and experiences! Shelly had, as usual, not heeded him, run out of a restaurant, I think, into traffic. Rob MacKenzie was an acquaintance of his; they both lived in the same general area, -- Rod in San Jose and Ed in Silicon Valley (at least he worked there, something to do with air traffic control technology). A month before his death, as it turned out, Rod called me. They were in a restaurant together. He put Ed on the line. I asked him how many marathons he was up to. 153. I'd done around 50 then and realized I'd just kept pace with him. And then he was gone. Another weird death. I guess you didn't have to climb to suffer bizarre ends. For some reason he lost his job, ended up in Lancaster. Was riding his bike -- yes, he did that too -- along a highway when a woman in her eighties who had lumber sticking sideways out of her car window hit him, the lumber that is. Claimed to have never even seen him. She had all her windshield duct taped but for a few inches above the dash; claimed the glare bothered her. Ed's parents were outraged, wanted to sue...but against someone so old? I never heard if they did. And turned out that Rod who never achieved the success he sought at climbing (did any of us really, did any of us find ultimate fulfillment, leave it and a lot of other pursuits without a regret or backward glance?) got into running and was able to break 3 hours which most people can't do. A marathon was tough but it didn't have climbing's fear factor. Crazy zany characters that help make life such a rich tapestry. Oops! Cliche alert! Cliche alert!

Yes, the "The Spy Who Loved Me" Bond stunt -- except it originated as an outdoors adventure that almost 10 years later got adapted into a film stunt as a result of the Bond people getting the idea to use it for the film opening from seeing a Canadian Club magazine ad I'd done. That ad campaign was built around an adventure motif, a predecessor of Mountain Dew and Red Bull and a host of others. Now you can't turn on the telly or open a magazine without coming across climbing being used as a metaphor of achievement or whatever to sell some product. Well, climbers et al. get nice paydays. My big mouth -- I prefer honesty and candor -- killed the Canadian Club ad series when I revealed to a newspaper writer what really happened up at Baffin. Due to a series of complications the ad ended up being faked but of course that's a whole 'nother story. Since you brought it up, yeah, it was expensive, reputedly the highest paid stunt in the history of film up to then. My fee's number was not $50,000, more like three-fifths of that figure -- and part of that was supposed to be for expenses, my overhead (gear, getting back into skydiving including some instruction, other stuff). By the way, I always had mixed feelings about jumping out of aircraft and over cliffs..and not just due to the risk. Even though it's been so much a part of the scene of late for climbers and skiers to search out more thrills, specifically BASE and skiBASE jumping, call me old school but I still think it's hard to top climbing and powder skiing. I'll readily grant there is that thing about fast vs. slow twitch, high intensity/short duration vs. low intensity/long duration (the marathon!) types. And these change throughout the course of a life, hopefully a long lived life. End of soap box. Anyway, from what I'd heard the cost of the total stunt based upon crew expenses, transportation, chopper, gear, my fee, costly Panavision camera rentals (can be only rented, not owned) was something like $200,000, not half a million. The original budget for the film was something like -- memory, memory! -- $13 million. I heard a rumor it went over budget, up to $21 million, a minescule fraction of current budgets for that type of film. Nevertheless, the cost of that one stunt still represented a significant perhaps unprecedented portion of the film's total budget.
So here's where the interesting parts of the story come in, at least to me. The stunt was going to be eliminated from the film; it was deemed too expensive. But reputedly due only to "spectacular" footage of my standing on the edge of Asgard in a bright red duvet (too pretentious? -- substitute "parka". I once got criticized by someone from the backbiting element of our climbing community[sic] for writing "etriers" rather than "aid slings" -- hey, I heard that term first, from Haston and Whillans --never forget an insult), filmed from a circling chopper, it was last minute-ish decided to keep it in the script. And here's the other thing. Everyone's(sic) heard about scenes that end up on the cutting room floor. How about ones that never even get into the camera, get even filmed? Asgard looms as one of the most spectacular formations on the planet, especially from angles where one of the twin towers is hidden behind the other. But nothing but tight-ish shots were filmed of it, nothing far enough off to really portray it in all its glory. It wouldn't have made sense script-wise, Bond being atop a tiny summit in view of the fact that when he exits the cabin a long-ish ski chase ensues. It had to be somewhere where the chase culminates in his skiing over a cliff, not off a pinnacle. It could have been a location like back from the Valley rim -- except there are no cabins above Yosemite (Snow Creek hut? -- sort of), just occasional hidden pot plots (well, at lower elevations). Sure, try getting a permit. Lots of locations in the Alps, where it was implied to have been, like Switzerland's Lauterbrunnen valley near the Eiger, sufficed and made sense. As almost a filmmaking axiom the idea, the goal, is to seek to capture the most spectacular footage, and few things rival Asgard in that respect. So it seemed such a shame, such a lost opportunity. Still bothers me.
Willy Bogner who was responsible for and credited with filming every skis scene in every Bond film didn't film Asgard. Six months later, in the Alps, he did film the chase that precedes the skiBASE jump. He was on the program at Telluride's MountainFilm festival a few years ago. I attended his presentation. I always wanted to meet him, but somehow missed making contact. Until that afternoon I didn't realize how impressive his resume, this son of the famous ski clothing manufacturer, was. I knew he'd been ranked 10th in the world in downhill and hence had the ability to film, supposedly skiing backwards as fast as 40 mph. What I didn't know until that show, probably should have figured out, was that he was the inventor of twin tip skis, years before they got popular. That's what enabled him to do the above. Up to then if anything I had a somewhat negative opinion of him, viewing him as basically responsible for Buddy Werner's, and a top European female ski racer's, deaths. It was his filming project, for an ad, when they were killed in an avalanche. Despite Europe -- in fact, most of the rest of the world -- having a far more laissez faire liability culture, with attendant far less litigation, than the U.S., there was supposedly clear negligence and a high profile trial was held. Werner, of Steamboat Springs, was America's greatest ski male racer up to then, the only one to make an impact internationally, sort of skiing's Prefontaine. But until Telluride I had no idea of his c.v., the size and variety of his work and the firsts and innovations of his contribution and creativity. One helluva filmmaker obviously!
It was remarked that our little 11 man second unit was more like a third unit, a little independent production crew of its own. It was headed up by a real mensch, Rene Dupont, a guy I have a lot of love and respect for. He went on to co-produce one of the all time great films, always part of any top ten list of Christmas films, "A Christmas Story". You know it, the comedy with so many great scenes and roles about the little bespectacled kid who yearns for a Red Ryder bb gun.

As far as mandatory run outs on SoH -- f*ck, I'm resorting to abbreviations. First "bitd" and now this; I'm compromising all my highest principles (the sad truth is that this is really messing me up due to the obsessive compulsive disorder thing which manifests itself in various silly ways) -- it just doesn't make sense. I was always way too chicken. Oh, I've done my share, still do (uh oh, the ol' "There are old climbers and bold climbers but no old bold climbers"). But I have no memory of such on SoH. Love to take credit as having exhibited that type of daring up there but I doubt it. So, I just don't know what's being referred to. On the other hand, the chimneys more or less had to go mandatory free. Due to their tight flared nature, when I tried aiding, after reaching way in to place bongs and attaching the etriers -- zounds, I quickly learned I couldn't get my shoes higher than the lowest etrier rungs...and the etriers were in more of a horizontal than vertical attitude.. Thus, each aid placement would have resulted in something like no more than a foot of progress. I'd still be up there...exfoliating. The chimneys were fun but you know what they say about too much of a good thing.

That's it...for today. You have to understand that except for the morning -- ok, I was still in bed -- the weather wasn't all that great today at Tahoe. I had to do something. And now it's begun snowing and odds are that the Amgen bicycle race slated to begin in just a few hours tomorrow is seriously seriously screwed. I hate to gloat but I called this two months ago after one of my daily 5 hours shoveling stints. And you know, homo sapiens reputedly being social beings, I've got to reach out and communicate with somebody; my wife just scowls (gee, I wonder why). Please tone down the criticism. No one's forcing you to read if you don't want to. And it's not like this is causing the destruction of any trees (I know, more likely it would have been forests). But if you're really really bored, got nothing better to do Iike me today...or a masochist, a glutton for punishment....
bringmedeath

climber
la la land
May 15, 2011 - 03:22am PT
Neat! Well, not quite the right word, but...
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
May 15, 2011 - 12:20pm PT
Rick-Burnt the toast, killed the eggs and the coffee is cold, but just finished your last post. Impossible for me to stop reading so had to give the breakfast a pass. Why do I have visions of Kerouac pounding away on his typewriter with an almost endless roll of paper when he wrote "On The Road"? Wonderful, give us some more but first I need to take a break and cook breakfast, again.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
May 15, 2011 - 01:00pm PT
Oh, impulsive Guido, I'm not gonna risk breakfast. I'm saving it for my 'quiet time' tonight.
I know it'll be worth it.
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 15, 2011 - 09:03pm PT
Yeah, breakfast. I had mine around 3 pm today in view of when I hit the sack last night. This Forum is ruining me, once again but for new reasons. I should soon burn out, or mess up climbing due to the lack of sleep.
TomKimbrough

Social climber
Salt Lake City
May 15, 2011 - 09:36pm PT
Rick - I love it. You sound just like you do right there on the other side of the campfire!
I'm heading up for an early season stint in the Tetons. I guess I better take the skis. Paul is up there now but there's no keeping up with him. Snow today in Tahoe I see. Enough to cancel the T of C stage. I'll bet you were going to watch.
We want more of your discourses but don't forget to go outside also.
Cheers, Kimbrough
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 16, 2011 - 04:36am PT
Great to hear from you ,Tom. Have fun in that pornographic range where you used to do ranger-ing.
Say hi to Paul. I'm sure you can beat him on skinny skis. Wish I could join you.

Yeah, I considered spectating if there'd been anything to spectate about. But considering what time I got to bed after ODing on that post it was not in the cards. Anyway, as you know I missed nothing. My big wonder is if there'll be a race tomorrow (technically datewise, today). And whether there's any more snow coming in tonight or manana (sky is pretty calm right now). Just took the trash out and the road, one block from Squaw's main one as you probably remember, would be pretty scary on skinny tires -- at least for a nonprofessional rider like myself. I just don't know how well the highways can be plowed and buffed. They'll sure try; they really want to put this on. It could a debacle. I wonder if they'll ever risk coming back here again. Lots of people are pretty disappointed. There'd been quite a big build up.

All the best!
Rick Sylvester

Trad climber
Squaw Valley, California
May 16, 2011 - 04:45am PT
Mr. the Dood, Not a bad analogy to Kerouac's typewriter roll. I likw it I learned about that only a couple of years ago.

Also around a couple of years ago I picked up "Dharma Bums" for the first time in maybe 40 or whatever years. My memory was that the "Mt. Matterhorn" passages were pretty brief. What a surprise -- just about the whole book is that (really, as you know, California's Matterhorn Peak) and Berkeley. I was blown away. My understanding was that Kerouac was never on it, that he based what he wrote on tales that Gary Snyder related of his scrambles on it -- hard to believe considering how evocative and true his prose is. Maybe that's what it means to be a great writer. All the best.
Allen Hill

Social climber
CO.
May 28, 2011 - 02:57am PT
zBrown

Ice climber
Chula Vista, CA
Oct 8, 2011 - 05:02pm PT
Ski and parachute:

I'm gonna try to edit it down to get the essence of Rick flying, but in the meantime:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaEU_A405zA
mouse from merced

Trad climber
merced, california
May 17, 2012 - 04:12am PT
Quite a TR on the X-ST. It was quite good. I quite liked your Trak skis. I cannot quite quit writing quite quite yet. That's on the QT, Rick. Keep it quiet.

Mouse says yodely-oh to Wellman & Arnoly-ow. Waitago!

Real men sit-ski.

Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Jun 6, 2015 - 11:17am PT
Bump for a story about Rick's route on Shiprock with Chuck Kroger...
Flip Flop

climber
Earth Planet, Universe
May 8, 2019 - 07:40am PT
Bump for the gold standard
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