Showing posts with label climbing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climbing. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Training - a week of whatever with a Suunto Ambit

Since Expeditie Geluk, the let's-walk-around-the-Netherlands-epic I have a Suunto Ambit watch.
The watch does more then just show the time. It's an alti/barometer, compass, heart rate monitor, time keeper and most of all also a GPS watch that can be connected to the internet.
I got the thing for free for Expeditie Geluk. Free is always a good color.



Now the watch does some fun things that weren't possible in 'old style' running. Of which planning a tour is the most important one.
I haven't ran 'dicks' yet, but yes you can. Or flowers, or cars, or whatever figure you like to plan.
See also: http://runningdrawing.tumblr.com



So let's start with a short review and tell you something about my training and the watch.

The good points:
- you can now go out for a run wherever and always find your way back
- you can start to understand your heart rate in comparison with your run (like higher heart rate when going up hill)
- it actually motivates me to go out more often
- it's a nice and easy addition to map and compass
- easy plug and play computer connection

The bad points:
- pretty bulky
- the route is only a line on the screen, not very accurate
- battery lasts only a day when in full use for the whole day
- hard to find the advanced training options in the software program
- only online software
- sharp edges

Now I have an older version of the Ambit (the Ambit 1.) and I saw the newer version that have no sharp edges at all and are less bulky.
I don't know if anything to the battery life/software options changed.
The battery life is fine for any regular use, just when you'd do a multi-day alpine tour you'd get trouble with the battery life.
Also, when you get in more extreme temperatures the thing gets pretty slow (but still works) up to -25ºC. Below that it starts to get issues, the screen can fog up with -15ºC, it doesn't show the temperature anymore with -35ºC and it will completely stop working around -40ºC (figured this all on our last Alaska adventure this Spring 2014).
Not that any other 'smart-watch' will work with these temperatures though.

Oh, and it doesn't link up with your iPhone or any phone either. Which isn't needed anyway because anyone who brings their iPhone on a run or a climb isn't climbing/running anything serious enough anyway. I mean, running with our iPhone in your pocket is just not comfortable when you run more then 2km. Next to that, the route, your HR, timing and everything is in your watch, so the phone-with-running-app isn't needed anymore.
The newest version does link with your watch and you can read texts on your watch through Bluetooth or something.

So. What I use the watch for.
Every day things.
My work-out week:
Monday: up-hill + down-hill + klettersteig, drytool session
Tuesday: cycling to work + boulder session
Wednesday: cycling to work
Thursday: cycling to work + extreme drytool session
Friday: cycling to work + interval run
Saturday: yoga session and small hike
Sunday: rock climb
Monday: up-hill + down-hill + klettersteig, drytool session
Tuesday: cycle to work
ect...



I was pretty tired last week and it was raining almost every day so we really missed out on the outdoor climbing sessions. That's the thing of living here. We have the mountains "close" (1hr drive) but the closest good climbing gym is more then 1hr driving... And it costs money to drive/pay entrance and money is one of the things we hardly have...
So alternative training sessions. Cycling, running, bouldering, and on my free Monday I do a scramble + long run.

Interesting thing to see are the route, calories, recovery time and heart rates.



The route. As you can see somewhere in the upper middle of my run-hike-scramble I went the wrong way. The path I took to the hut wasn't pre-set in the map so I had to draw a line myself and guess the direction to the hut and the start of the viaferrata. I made a wrong guess and ended up a different route. After a while I realized it wasn't the right way and I had to go back. It would be useful to see more in the screen of the watch then just the line. Interfering roads, paths and landmarks for example. But my Ambit isn't that smart (yet?).
Also the map used to draw the route isn't super accurate (Google maps) for some complicated turns and altitude differences (for example when mountaineering/climbing) a more accurate map would be very useful.
This missing feature combined with the battery power (when in full use it lasts just a day) it still isn't the mountaineering watch it claims to be.

HR: When I do a really intense drytool session my heart rate doesn't go up to max, but my body gets really tired (I had muscle soreness after the Thursday drytool session). But following my watch I hardly have any recovery time after the session (my body tells a different story...).
Recovery: Last run + scramble took me just over 5 hours of non-stop movement. My watch told me I'd need 130hours of recovery. At the end of the day during the drytool session I was too tired to do full power movements. But today I felt okay again.
Calories: I always wonder who invented that thing. Did I really use over a 1000 kCal on that Monday run? And just a 300 kCal on the drytool session...?

Although these numbers aren't probably completely correct (for example sometimes the GPS signal gets lost or my heart-rate band disconnects) it's still a good thing to get a view on what my fitness level is.
Basically it tells me every time again that I can run faster, climb more and cycle longer.



To get a better view on what I mean with 'drytool training' here a little video of last week's session.
Watch my Suunto routes, profile and training on:
http://www.movescount.com/members/lavinia-marianne

Handy: use runs/training sessions of others around you to plan your own run.

Tips and tricks from an other Suunto user:
http://life.tomwright.me.uk/post/45754837411/interval-training-with-suunto-ambit


Drytool training July 2014 from Marianne van der Steen on Vimeo.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Starzlachklamm

Every weekend I try to make most of the free time I have.
This saturday I had the chance to go for an easy ski-tour. Fantastic! It was my first time to just go ski-touring for the ski-touring instead of using it as a tool to  get to an ice climb. I first was afraid on not being able to keep up with the group, being too bad of a skier but... I actually did totally fine!
Motivated to do this more often now :)

Saturday was dry tooling day. Some people promised to join but in the end they couldn't for several reasons. Which was okay because now we had more time to focus on the climbing itself.
The missing hold I was writing about last week is now replaced. I was too scared to drill the hole, afraid to destroy the rock (something in me says drilling holes in wrong). Dennis made the new hole on the place where the hold had broken off and I was happy being able to make the move now :)

I made a little video to show more of the area. It was way too warm so there isn't much ice now and topping out is too dangerous in the roof-routes because of the constant melting and falling ice and rocks from above the roof.
Too bad we couldn't top out the M12 because of that.
As you can see there's more then just M10 and M12.
Contact us if you need any route details as the most up-to-date topo can't be found online (yet).



Starzlachklamm Drytooling from Marianne van der Steen on Vimeo.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Climbing is sooo 2014!

Fireworks over Jokulsarlon, Iceland

Last night Dennis and I were lying in bed and wondering... what do we want to do in 2014.

I've never planned a year as much as I just did for 2014. Big trips, visits and challenges. I've never wanted as much climbing as I want for 2014. And when I woke up this morning, the last day of 2013 we decided to work on all those big plans.

Let me start with the little ones. Motto: Let's play :)

- Build caves in our living-room and bedroom with blankets, the couch and other stuff. You're all invited.
- Play hide&seek with my parents and brother.
- Do cartwheels on the street every day at least once.
- Run, jump and laugh at least once a day.

I also have bigger plans.
First I need to join more snow stuff: skiing. And then I need to drytool more too.
I really hope to join and do well on the Worldcup Iceclimbing this January and February. In between I really want to climb M13 and do some awesome multipitch mixed stuff. In April I'll visit Malta and Thanks to Alpine Mentors I hope to go to Denali in June. Then it's Summer time and at the end of the Summer we're planning a trip to Africa. Maybe Namibia or maybe...? And then...time for even bigger things: India with the Alpine Mentor Programme! And then it's time for drytooling again :D

Hard thing about this programme is money. I truly wish I can finally focus more on training and less on working. We're desperately searching for better and very sustainable financing of all the climbing. Any, any suggestions are more then welcome!

With the idea of sustainability we made a very sad and awkward decision. We decided to end our sponsorship with Petzl. We don't have the feeling we're working on a durable cooperation and think we can't honestly represent the brand properly anymore.
We think it's sad. We've been struggling with this for quite a while now and today was our deadline for a solve of the issues. After a year of struggle with communication and lack of usable climbing gear there came no solve so, we quit...

Anyway. A lot of challenges. Challenges are good. They make you grow, discover and learn.
And that's what I want to wish you all for 2014: play, grow, discover and learn.

- Work hard with a smile -

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Starzlachklamm - drytooling

When most iceclimbers now climb at the Bozeman Icefest (we don't have the money to go there) we enjoy the snow, rocks and ice in Germany this weekend.

Living in Southern Germany gives advantages and disadvantages.
One of the great advantages are the magical climbing areas; of which one of them a dark cold wet, if luckcy frozen, cave with loose rock a.k.a. Starzlachklamm.

Last weekend our colleagues wanted to go there and we were really curious.
Our roommate didn't want to go at all as he just found it an ugly dark hole.
After a slippery icy walk in we figured he was right. And we loved it.

We started with an M8. Daniel Gebel, who bolted most of the routes "commanded" and forbid us to break any of the growing icicles. So it became rather tricky to climb around the fragile curtain instead of into the curtain. Fun!
I think we'd get fired at Edelrid if we'd touch that icicle. So, after some clear comments by Daniel in another route ("don't touch it!") Dennis managed to break off an icicle. Daniel watched it happen. He closed his eyes and shook his head. He mumbled something about "tourists" and "less salary"...

Daniel pointing out how to climb the route. Simon climbs.
Dennis yoga-ing around the curtain.
And then there was this new route Daniel bolted, an extension/direct start of an already existing route. If Dennis could please climb it first so he could flash the route he joked to us.
And so Dennis went up and unfortunately popped off a sketchy tricky hold on one third of the route.

Dennis clipping in one of the safer points of the M10, Daniel belaying.
The tricky route traversed the roof just above the ground. If you'd fall you almost hit the ground making the name rather fitting the route: Arsch bumpe (or something like that). Every clip in the roof was a 100% grounder.
My turn.
I used a different hold in the roof, not really knowing if it was any better then the thing Dennis had popped off. But it worked. Flash :)
We guess, but I have to say I'm not too good in this guessing game, that it's around M10.
Daniel himself was rather ill and the antibiotics gave him too much gravity force around him. The flash attempt unfortunately didn't work out for him.

Daniel figuring his way up the M10.
The next day we were convinced by Ritchi to join him at Chinesische Mauer (Chinese Wall) a beautiful sportsclimbing area in Austria not far from Garmisch-Partenkirchen.
Dennis isn't very fond of the vertical stuff and really didn't get it how we ended up here. Icicles and snow all around and we are sportsclimbing?!

Ritchi in his project. He took an extra day off this Friday to try it again. Maybe he did it...?
I didn't do a very good job either and felt rather challenged in the 7a's and 7b's that I climbed.
Maybe climbing and running every day and working long days for a whole week doesn't help much either. Guess we just needed a restday.

Next weekend. "Fully rested" after the annual Vaude Christmas party with our colleagues. We went to bed around 02:30 and promised to go climbing at Starzl again. Simon and Simon would pick us up around 11. It took us a while to drink enough coffee and eat enough Brezen before we finally headed for Starzl.
On the way in I read Will Gadd's blog-post to the others in the car. It's about modded tools, grading routes and the Olympics. A fantastic honest piece of writing about all the things that also have been in our heads the last weeks. The ridiculous grading of some routes (like the M12 I onsighted in Ouray, which I wasn't allowed to donwgrade), the 'tweaking Worldcup rules' by adding extra length to your iceaxes and the "so called" iceclimbing at the Sochi Olympics where some iceclimbing athletes are going. But also the feeling of recognition in the writing about the Gecko sisters and the failing&falling issue I also feel when I climb.
It's a must read for every mixed climber.

Rather broken, even after all the good coffee, we slowly hiked up to the dark hole again.
The ice had clearly grown and the curtain that we were forbidden to touch was twice the size now.
Meanwhile Simon (Herr Graf) promised himself the only thing he came for was drinking good coffee.
Still he managed to find himself swinging his way up the classic WI4 on the right side of the cave. More then he ever expected to do this day.

Herr Graf and his coffee
Meanwhile we climbed the M8 again without touching the curtain. "Dennis, your helmet almost hits the curtain now!" With his head turned in a awkward way sideways he yoga-ed his way further up.

Now the goal was to climb the big roof. Traverse from right to left through the whole cave. Michi Wohlleben bolted his M13 called "Pray for Power" in there. Crossing all the "easier" roof climbs (M11, M11+, M12...)
We looked, walked up and down, watched and discussed all possible ways and figured we'd need a local for figure how that thing would go. Suddenly the roof looked like a big mess of bolts and pitons without a proper line in between.
Defeated we decided to go up a line that we tried at the end of the day last week. "Pappi's kleine Liebling" an M11 yet again bolted by Daniel. He told us that once you find the right sequence it's not that hard anymore. He was right, we didn't find the right holds and thus didn't figure the right sequence back then.
One small hold at the start. You step on a bunch of balancy stones to reach the thing, then hang yourself in a figure of four and reach for the next thing. And then you hang yourself a big bunch of figure of fours and figure of nines to reach the end of the roof.
Right there, if you don't have the right hold your axe with you hand still fixed on it will get stuck, squeezing off your fingers causing rather bruised knuckles. So I failed. I had to kick the axe out with my feet to get it back again...
The clipping is as tricky as in the M10: fail and you'll hit the ground.
I wasn't that scared actually.
But Dennis was.
He held the rope so tight that I had the feeling I was pulling it out of the grigri myself when climbing. At one point the rope was kind of stuck in the grigri. Hanging in a figure of four, having cold hands and having to pull the rope out of the grigri without falling off didn't really help me. Fail. Again.
Meanwhile Dennis did climb the thing. Making gorilla-tennis-player sounds on his way up the route. A good mixture of scare and power. "Clipping, no not clipping, you got me, got me, watch me now, ergh, clipping, okay, okay, urrrrgh, uhhh".

Dennis at the end of the negative roof in the M11.
Meanwhile it was dark and snowing. I really was frustrated. I wasn't even too pumped, could do all the moves static and none of the moves felt really hard. Okay, let's just take the headlamps out and give it one more go. Now rather give me a grounder instead of a tight rope, now I know that I should skip the nuckle-duster hold and then it should just be fine.
And it was. Completely silent, the two Simons were surprised of my silent climbing, I figured-of-foured my way easily through the moves. The long, long move after the roof bit was just a nice static lock-off and I didn't use the tree that was silently calling "kick me, swing your axe in me". Top. What a hassle.  Tum, di, dum, dum, dum. Suddenly the song "Clint Eastwood" from Gorrilaz popped up in my head after watching the pictures of my own shade on the wall in the dark. Reminding me of the videoclip of the music. The song stayed.

Tricky clipping in the darkness. Picture by Simon Graf.

Awkward shadows in the dark hole. Picture by Simon Graf.
Now one question remains: how do we need to climb this M13 roof thing? Because I need a real project now :)

Read Dennis' view on this Saturday here: dennisvanhoek.nl

Friday, December 13, 2013

Ze Zermans

I've been in Germany for a week now. 
And so much can happen in one week time.

View from our new home in Kleinweiler

We arrived last Monday evening. Pulled everything out of the car and went to bed. 
The whole bedroom was filled with stuff and we realised that giving away furniture results in a lack of furniture... We should have more drawers, shelfs and cupboards to store all our gear. 

On Tuesday I went to look for a job and instantly found one. It's so nice when people keep their promises! As freelancer in the last three years so many people have promised me work and then suddenly when they were supposed to have work and I kept my agenda free for the job they canceled all. And then there I was again; no money and no job. 
But the Germans seem to be accurate and honest so here I am behind my laptop in an office. Strange to have an office job again, but one with benefits. And after one week I can clearly say I have super great colleagues!

Now what do I do?
I have to say, for as far as I know, I'm sponsored by Petzl. Although I haven't seen any new gear for a year now and haven't even tied a knot in the new Petzl ropes yet, I want to stay true to my brand: Petzl. 
But, work and sports is something that's hard to combine. Petzl doesn't provide me with a salary, so I have to work somewhere. 
And that somewhere has just become Edelrid. 
I'll be a 'manusje van alles' (jack of all trades) within the company and support the team wherever needed for three days a week. 

The culture within the company is open, friendly and colleagues become friends. 
A short sketch of this week: 

Tuesday: running to work, bouldering in the midday, coffee made on the gas stove in the office, and climbing again in the evening. 
Wednesday: Drive to work, meetings about work definitions and introduction to the Edelrid product range, climb in the evening. 
Thursday: drive to work, meeting about industrial gear, boulder a bit in the midday and go the the opeining of the Christmas-market in Isny with colleagues.
Friday: run to work, edit some vid's, and rest for a bit.
Saturday: Outdoor climbing with colleagues in Starzlachklamm
Sunday: Outdoor climbing with roommate/colleague Ritchi at Chinesische Mauer
Monday: Run to work (8km), boulder at work, climb in the evening
Tuesday: Skiing with colleagues :)
Wednesday: Drive to work, work... climb, drink gluhwein in the climbinggym
Thusday: Cycling to work, work till 20:00 and restday evening
Friday: Cycling to work, work a lot and go the the companies christmas party...

I guess my week is quite fine like this. 
Would love to climb on more regular basis and I still have to find the right balance between personal interest in climbing materials, work and sponsorship. But give me another week and I'll be happy. 

Though... I really miss my old climbing gym and friends/family are suddenly very far away again...

The very secret German Gluhwein recipe

Training with the Furnace DryIce tools

The famous tower of Isny 

Skiing in Damüls, Austria

We miss the Dutch St. Nicholas on Dec. 5...

How they celebrate St. Nicholas in Allgäu
Thank you Gertrude

The opening of the Christmas Market, with 'EngelenFliegen'

Mixed climbing at Starzlachklamm

Thursday, December 05, 2013

Petzl Dutch Drytool Event - The Video!

A great impression of a super good day!


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Thanks guys for putting this together :)

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Drytool roller-coaster

Trailrunning, climbing, bouldering, yoga, running, route-setting, writing, more writing and more training. And planning. Planning big things. 
It feels like I'm planning the whole year of 2014 already and that feels really strange. I've never planned that far ahead.

Last week we ended the Expeditie Geluk. 
Finally. 
I was dragging myself to the finish line. 
Physically I was all fine and fit enough but mentally I could hardly manage the thing. 
No climbing, "for the sake of the team" someone in the team who turned out to be a completely different person almost broke me. 
Alltogether the whole project was a great experience and I'm still grateful that I was invited to be part of it all. 
Walking the whole (almost whole, as I went to the Alps for a couple weeks in between) border of the Netherlands is something more people should do. 
People that say that the Netherlands is "full" for example.
People that say the Netherlands is all the same everywhere. 
People that say the Netherlands doesn't really have a culture. 



On the way I found people with passion and compassion. 
The big red line though all the meetings we had every day was the connection within the community and the importance of this connection. In the Netherlands politicians introduced a new law, the participation-law. Making it obligatory to participate in the society. 
It's something that was really a need for, but mainly in the bigger cities. Participation is something so logical in the smaller communities, they don't even understand the (in Dutch) difficult word of par-ti-ci-pa-tion.
Culture and language is something I find really interesting. The way how you can see culture through language and language through culture is something very special. 
And also the landscape, infrastructure and history in the Netherlands is so interesting. 
By slowly moving through the landscape by walking I really could see the changes, what closed borders have for effect on culture and how it all changes. 
I have the feeling that I understand the Netherlands much better now.


But I was also happy it was all over and done. 
Now I had time again to do what I really love to do: climb, sport, train. The first thing I did on the evening that we were back again was drive to the climbing gym as fast as I could and climb till closure. 

Right now I'm trying to do a million things at once. 
Preparing two different big lectures, setting routes for the drytool event, searching for 2014 climbing objectives, trying to find and prepare for a job in Germany, making money to pay for my car, and in between só many other things... Waking up at 6:30 and going to sleep at 12:30...


And in between all that I'm trying to get in shape again for the upcoming season. Ice, rock, mixed, snow... Ahhhh, real stuff....soon. 

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Personal Hero and life drugs.

Yesterday midday I drove back to Germany.
Germany, the country that will be my new home for the next couple years.

The Autum clouds on road behind me on the St.Bernhard pass in Italy/Swiss
When driving back it felt like I left a little bit of my heart behind. Like a long colourful rainbow glittered and flew out from my chest behind me slowly evaporated when I drove further away from those beautiful mountains.

The mountains around Chamonix last week
 The last two weeks I'd spent with Steve, Buster, Colin, Steven and a couple of other Mentors in Courmayeur and Chamonix.
Our third trip within a year since Steve started the Alpine Mentor Programme.

I was sceptic. Again a small trip. Just two weeks and a lot of expensive cable-car tickets.
How much can you do and where do I ever get the money from again?
I had huge plans and I knew basically none of the routes that are on my list could actually be done in this week.
The reasons? Many. I can blame people, conditions, money, materials, but most of all I blame me.
Many reasons that frustrate me and drive me.

One of the routes that I really want to climb (soon)
The Jorasses producing clouds in the wind, not the best conditions to climb there these weeks...
That what drives me is something personal. Something just for me and it's probably totally different for you.
Reading the Alchemist again reminded me on how to interpreter the idea of goals.
It's called Personal Hero. Personal Hero can be anything, from a treasure at the Pyramids in Egypt to a Political position in the Dutch Parliament.
It's basically just something to strive and work for.

When discussing what we'd reached during the past week(s) in Alpine Mentors, Steve read the introduction of the Alchemist (by Paulo Coelho) to us.
Being reminded of my own personal goals made me pretty emotional.

As a reminder the the whole introduction here:

“Whenever we do something that fills us with enthusiasm, we are following our legend. However, we don’t all have the courage to confront our own dream.
Why?
There are four obstacles.
First: we are told from childhood that everything we want to do is impossible. We grow up with this idea, and as the years accumulate, so too do the layers of prejudice, fear, and guilt. There comes a time when our personal calling is so deeply buried in our soul as to be invisible. But it’s still there.
If we have the courage to disinter dream, we are then faced by the second obstacle: love. We know what we want to do, but are afraid of hurting those around us by abandoning everything in order to pursue our dream. We do not realize that love is just a further impetus, not something that will prevent us going forward. We do not realize that those who genuinely wish us well want us to be happy and are prepared to accompany us on that journey.
Once we have accepted that love is a stimulus, we come up against the third obstacle: fear of the defeats we will meet on the path. We who fight for our dream suffer far more when it doesn’t work out, because we cannot fall back on the old excuse: “Oh, well, I didn’t really want it anyway.” We do want it and know that we have staked everything on it and that the path of the personal calling is no easier than any other path, except that our whole heart is in this journey.
Then, we warriors of light must be prepared to have patience in difficult times and to know that the Universe is conspiring in our favor, even though we may not understand how.
I ask myself: are defeats necessary?
Well, necessary or not, they happen. When we first begin fighting for our dream, we have no experience and make many mistakes. The secret of life, though, is to fall seven times and get up eight times.
So, why is it so important to live our personal calling if we are only going to suffer more than other people?
Because, once we have overcome the defeats—and we always do—we are filled by a greater sense of euphoria and confidence. In the silence of our hearts, we know that we are proving ourselves worthy of the miracle of life. Each day, each hour, is part of the good fight. We start to live with enthusiasm and pleasure. Intense, unexpected suffering passes more quickly than suffering that is apparently bearable; the latter goes on for years and, without our noticing, eats away at our soul, until, one day, we are no longer able to free ourselves from the bitterness and it stays with us for the rest of our lives.
Having disinterred our dream, having used the power of love to nurture it and spent many years living with the scars, we suddenly notice that what we always wanted is there, waiting for us, perhaps the very next day. Then comes the fourth obstacle: the fear of realizing the dream for which we fought all our lives.
Oscar Wilde said: “Each man kills the thing he loves.”
And it’s true. The mere possibility of getting what we want fills the soul of the ordinary person with guilt. We look around at all those who have failed to get what they want and feel that we do not deserve to get what we want either. We forget about all the obstacles we overcame, all the suffering we endured, all the things we had to give up in order to get this far. I have known a lot of people who, when their personal calling was within their grasp, went on to commit a series of stupid mistakes and never reached their goal—when it was only a step away.
This is the most dangerous of the obstacles because it has a kind of saintly aura about it: renouncing joy and conquest. But if you believe yourself worthy of the thing you fought so hard to get, then you become an instrument of God, you help the Soul of the World, and you understand why you are here.”

Now I don't believe in God. 
I don't believe in religion. 
But I do believe in the power of your own mind.

The Maria statue hit by lighting on the Dent du Geant

In life it's easy to lie, to walk away, to act, to hide, to change, to copy, to fake, to avoid in any way the real thing. 
We wear clothing that hides the actual curves of our body. We wear make-up to mask our natural beauty. We act like we like the person but the only thing we need from them is their money and their goods. We avoid being in hard situations, walk away from arguments or try to solve them with force. We copy others to blend in. 

Alltogether we keep on pretending. Lies. Every day again. 

The beauty of climbing is the honesty. Especially Alpinism, the discipline that many (famous) Alpinists call "the King discipline". 

When climbing you can't lie. You can't be a different person, theres not an excuse. It's just you. YOU have to climb it, figure the right way up. The harder the route. The harder the way.

And it's not just one way. It's just your way. 

A mountain provides many ways to the top. A route can be climbed in many different ways, with many different movements. Depending our your own strengths and weaknesses you find your own personal way to the top. Or any specific point that you want to reach. 



Johann Wolfgang von Goethe once said, when traveling over the Alps: "Der Weg ist das Ziel". 

The travelling, the way to the top, your personal journey makes you the person you are. And believing in your goals makes your journey worth your life. 

The quote especially counts in climbing. Sometimes the top of the mountain is not the thing that actually makes the journey. It might be that the route just doesn't get all the way to the top. Like with sportsclimbing, when it's often just one single pitch and often on a mountain that doesn't have a defined top. Or when on the Everest taking the Japanese Couloir instead of the over trafficked normal-route. Or doing the crossing of the Himalaya and not even getting on the top of the 8000m peaks but just seeing them is enough. 



Or when you're just "not good enough" to reach the top (yet). You probably learn even more by not reaching the top then when it all goes super smoothly and easy. 
Like when we tried the Cretier route on Mont Maudit and had to turn around or when we slept in a crevasse close to Mont Mallet after we were too slow in the bad weather on the crossing of the Jorasses.
And then it feels yet even better when you finally do reach the top or the end of the route!

Rappelling the Bergschrund from the Mont Maudit after bailing off the Cretier route
In the past years after secondary school I studied all kinds of things. Forest and Nature Conservation, Pedagogy, Geology, International Studies in Education and I've always had an interest in Developmental Psychology, Neurology and Politics so I followed quite some lectures and read quite some things about these subjects too. 

My parents always had the opinion that I'm a child of the World. That they put me on this World to become an independent person and that it's their task to get me there. 
They chose a beautiful piece of text on my birth-card from the Libanese artist, writer and poet Kahlil Gibran.

"Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of Life's longing for itself.
They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.


You may give them your love but not your thoughts,
For they have their own thoughts.
You may house their bodies but not their souls,
For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow,
which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
You may strive to be like them,
but seek not to make them like you.
For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.


You are the bows from which your children
as living arrows are sent forth.
The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite,
and He bends you with His might
that His arrows may go swift and far.
Let your bending in the archer's hand be for gladness;
For even as He loves the arrow that flies,
so He loves also the bow that is stable."



Marianna, Kahlil's sister, painting by Kahlil Gibran

As a child, when walking back from the Martin Buschhütte in Ötztal I remember I told my dad; "Pap..., als jullie hier gewoond hadden, dan hadden jullie vast alletwee berggids geweest inplaats van gymnastiek leraaar, toch?" (Dad..., If you'd lived here instead, you probably both would have been mountainguides instead of PE teachers, right?)


Everyone probably has a certain respect for people that sound special in their view. 

Young boys have that with Fire Fighters, young girls with pop-stars. I had my own dream profession: Mountain Guide. 

With 'emongus' respect I looked up to the men that walked and climbed in the area that I never wanted to leave on the end of the Summer Holidays. 

This climbing on holidays always stayed and grew with the years. I even went up very respected mountains with mountainguides lightly directing me through the though terrain. 

When I needed to choose what I liked to study I had many options. The most daring one was the one to study something with nature in Innsbruck so that I could be in the mountains to get closer on climbing. 

The other one was psychology, but, as I hardly understand myself, how could I ever study psychology (?!). I chose for the safest and least daring option: Forest and Nature Conservation at the University of Wageningen. 

The highest mountain there is called the 'Wageningse Berg' and is just a pile of old glacier rocks and sand. 

At that time I had no idea there were actually loads of climbing gyms in the Netherlands and that there were actually Dutch communities that train in those gyms to later on get into the mountains. 

I didn't knew until some friends took me to such a gym. 

Within a couple years I turned 'blind' and only focused on sportsclimbing. Because Alpine climbing is foolish and dangerous. 

I attended national and international climbing competitions and even found myself a boyfriend that loved bouldering. I moved to Iceland to figure that there's more then just bouldering on that Island. 


Iceclimbing. 
I remember my first two times climbing ice. Hot eggs (screaming barfeys) and I forgot my harness. We were far away in the inlands in Iceland. 
With my sling-harness I lead my first WI5 and I didn't have a V-threader. I had to wrap the rope around some dubious pieces of ice for an rappel. My climbing partner didn't dare to climb the route. 
Everything was wet, my sleepingbag was cold and it was dark. 
I was sold. I loved it. 

A year later I found myself on the Iceclimbing Worldcup in Daone Italy after half a year of chatting about iceclimbing with my new Facebook friend Dennis. 
He invited me to travel to the Worldcups in his campervan and I never left the van (and Dennis). 
Not much later we were in a relationship sharing more then just iceclimbing. 

And now I'm suddenly climbing with some of the best Alpine climbers in the world and climbing on places where I could only dream of. 

On the Rochfort Ridge last week.
That all made me think. 
Where do I want to be in ten years? Who do I want to be in then years? 

What if it would still be possible...?

No, your too old to start that. 
No, imagine what age you'd be when you possibly get the ticket?
No, you're not living at the right place. 
No, you don't have the money for it.
No, there are more things that you want to do and this interferes. 
No, because then you can't do your 2 year driving from the Netherlands to China climbing adventure with Dennis. 
No, because then you can't get children. 
No, you're climbing level will decrease so much
No, you won't be able to climb the things that you really want anymore. 
No, you won't make enough money.
No, you can't ski. 
No, it would be too risky spending money and time on it. 
No, it really would be a waste of time.
No, in a year time you change your mind and want to do something else again. 
No, you're far from good enough.
No, you don't really want this. 
No,...

No?

One person always told me I should try. 
Roeland. 
And now I just met his girlfriend Tania. And she told me I should just try. At least try. What was there to lose? 

Oh, well. After four years of doubting and dubbing I made my very very scary, aaah, I'm even scared on writing it, decision: I want to become a mountainguide. 

With a dry throat, I swallow my emotions, I just wrote it down. It's definite now. I'm going to train and practise to become a mountainguide. 

By the time I'm writing this Tania just got her ticket. She's a guide now. 

Now think back on what Kahlil and Paolo wrote. Independence, accepting your goals, don't fail because you're afraid to reach your goal...
All these no's can actually become yes. 




My time, my life, climbing famous mountains with guides (like the Eiger) when I was still a naive young girl, you all brought me to this. 
This is my Weg, and this is my Ziel, and that goal gets me to yet a new road a road in life that keeps me onto the things I love. 
And that, no matter how hard the work, gives me happiness.

Happiness, the ultimate life drug.