Wednesday, January 30, 2008

on the road

trust me - i'm a trained professional...

Monday, January 28, 2008

Scott Kennedy Reissued Part Deux

This week from the vault – IMAGES!
This is a series taken in Auckland about a year ago – taking one person’s art and putting my own stamp on it….

Enjoy!
~Scott

Friday, January 18, 2008

Scott Kennedy Reissued

I’ve decided to start a new feature on my blog, something that I’m calling Scott Kennedy Reissued. What it’s all about is a chance for everyone out there in blogland to read some classic articles, stories and general ramblings of mine that maybe you haven’t seen before. I’ll also spice it up with some classic photographs of mine that haven’t circulated beyond the inner circle to keep it visually lively too. As always, I love to get comments on what you read – so if you like something, don’t care for it or whatever – post a comment and share your thoughts!

So without further delay, here is the opening shot of Scott Kennedy Reissued….

As a special treat to start things off, this story has never been published. It was written a few years ago after myself and Gavin Harrison put up a first ascent on a rarely climbed peak on Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. I was always pleased with how the piece turned out, but it just never quite made it into publication. Here it is and I hope you enjoy it!

Cheers,
~Scott

Ocean’s of Stone:
Disappointment and Redemption on Mount Colonel Foster.


(Written July, 2003)

Staring westward, the dying embers of day sting my eyes. I sit alone, only the pounding waves and the fading light to keep me company. The warm sand creeps between my toes, the sea consumes my thoughts. The rhythmic lap of the waves comforts my soul; the cadence beats with my heart. The beach is quiet and peaceful, perfect long-board waves stroll in, set after set. Knees to my chest, I smile and whisper, “perfect.”

In the distance I see something change. Out back the waves turn to mush as the wind picks up. Inbound the wind licks my face, brisk at first then cold, the wind stings. Colder still I shiver, something isn’t right, something doesn’t fit. The warm glow of sunset is whipped clean and replaced with a cold expanse of stars, I shiver again. Reeling from the gunshot of confusion I open my eyes and wake up. Where am I? Where did the beach go?

The idea of an open bivy is much more pleasurable then the actual experience and this one was no exception. Shivering uncontrollably I curse my decision to forgo a sleeping bag. I close my eyes, trying in vein to get back to the beach. No luck, I am only able to conjure the present tense. The south Col of Mount Colonel Foster is cold, windy and dark. My mind drifts between luscious memories of the past and anticipation of the future. I rarely drift far from the sense of cold uncertainty that the darkness feeds. It will be dawn soon, but what will the new day bring?

The plan was hatched on the beach. Gavin and I had finished a day of surfing in Tofino when the idea was thrown down; the Traverse of Colonel Foster. We couldn’t think of a good reason why not, so the idea became a plan and the plan became a mission.

Two days later we were walking towards Landslide Lake in the blazing sunshine. Past the campground, around the lake and up to the snow. Kicking steps in the snow till the moats urged us onto the rock. Fourth-class choss lead us higher and higher, more snow and a calf burner finish delivered us onto the South Col.

Here we would bivy for the night and tackle the south tower at dawn. We would need every ounce of the next day. Starting from the col, we would climb the south tower, descend onto a high snowfield climb to the true summit, then down and up again to the north summit. Finally down once more to the north Col, down to the lake and out. It had all the markings of a massive day.

Five o’clock was a welcome milestone; the alarm clock was a sweet relief from the cold. Gearing up was a synch, no gear to pack as it was all on my back. After filling water from a puddle that would give a goat the shits we started towards the tower. There were a variety of options for ascending to the south summit. Three obvious snow gullies dissected the face. Obvious lines that looked like the ticket. Heading leftward we trudged toward the most interesting of the gullies.

The sun crept into the sky as we reached the snow. Looking at the gully I grimaced with disappointment. The snow only reached a ropelength or so up the gully. Once the snow petered out the real fun began, the angle stepened and rock quality took a sharp turn south. The elevator shaft of leg breakers and life takers was as inviting as freezing free root cannel. The idea of being pounded to submission by rock fall for the day was pissing me off. We scanned the face looking for alternatives. Just to the right of the gully proper was a small cleft in the face, the rock looked solid, one look was all we needed.

My rock beat Gav’s scissors and I tied into the sharp end of the rope. A Volkswagen sized chalkstone blocked the chimney so I worked my way up and left onto a blunt arĂȘte. The arĂȘte looked beautiful, clean and exposed. Upwards over moderate terrain I found decent gear and enjoyable climbing. Halfway through this first pitch something struck me as rather odd. The beta we had on the climb told us that the routes to the south summit were a mess of pins, tat and traffic. This pitch was devoid of all of that. I shrugged it off and kept climbing. After forty meters I moved right, back into the gully, to another chalkstone. After setting up a semi hanging stance I brought Gav up.

Gavin lead through, moving back left, back onto the natural line. Well I may of won the rock-paper-scissors battle for the first pitch, but Gav struck pay dirt on his first lead. The second pitch started with a tricky thin move into a shallow dihedral, to something we had never expected.

A finger crack stretched out before Gavin, Squamish style. Perfect jams, bomber gear and edges for feet; it was a pitch to write home about. Soon enough the rope came taut and I cleaned the belay. The climbing was magic, every finger lock was welded tight. Looking over my shoulder I could see the col shrinking beneath me. The surrounding peaks were bathed in a glowing light that invited the eye. Looking left, looking right the south pillar of The Colonel unfolded around me, I was adrift on an ocean of stone.

Reaching Gavin I nodded with approval. “That was gorgeous, just gorgeous!”
“Just perfect, next one looks good too.” Gavin replied as he passed me the rack.
A deep dihedral just to our right drew me upwards. Funky stemming, little edges and a good crack for gear, up I went. After a half pitch of climbing I arrived at a narrow col, I had intersected with the west ridge. Slinging the top of the pillar rodeo style, I set up a station and brought my partner in crime up.

The angle began to ease above us, we had miles to cover and only so much day. Gavin lead through running out the rope. I flip coiled over my shoulder, when the rope came taut I tied off on a bite and we started simle-climbing. Weaving around stone gargoyles and placing the odd piece we pushed onward.

Almost before we knew it the West Ridge collided head on with the East Ridge, not far to go now. The summit ridge was exposed and scrambly fun; Gavin and I came around a corner to see the large cairn of the south summit. Gavin filled out the register as I sorted gear for the next phase. A short down climb to a sphincter-tightening sidewalk of stone no wider then a diving board. From there it was down onto the snowfield and across to the main summit tower.

Sitting on a large slab re-stacking the ropes I felt the wind for the first time that day. I closed my eyes trying to bring back the warm breath of the ocean; a drop of rain slapped me back to reality. Looking westward we could see a system building, wisps of grey at first. But like a ghost emerging from the depths the grey cloak was quickly shed to expose the black underbelly of the approaching storm. Charging hard, the storm was sucking energy from the ocean bearing down toward us.

Silent, we looked westward hoping the nasty weather would divert to anywhere but there. I bit my lip, the weather was moving faster now, the wind had the sour smell of rain.
“Shit, I just felt a drop.” Gavin looked skyward willing the rain away.

The slab around me was speckled with the black drops of rain. By the time I had my gore-tex on it was officially raining. The westward sky was a mass of black cloud. The imposing peaks to our left were now invisible amongst the cloud. Gavin looked at me, then the west, and then me again, “It’s time to go.”

I knew it too; he was just the first to say it. I swore under my breath and turned around to face the direction we had just come from. “Alright, lets get the hell out of here.”

It was hard to turn my back on the remainder of the route. It looked amazing; steep, exposed, everything a good alpine route should be. I turned once more to look at what we were leaving behind. As I looked the wind screamed in my ear and rain pelted my face. The grey slab that I found tinder dry ten minutes ago was now a black, slippery dance floor. It’s time to go home.

Starting downward we moved quickly, keeping the rope in the pack till we needed it. It made sense to rap our route; we knew the terrain, the belays. We would have to burn for gear to get down, but that’s life, literally. Working down the west ridge I saw something down to my right in the gully. Blue as the dawn sky, a sling around a horn was our free ride back home. It was the gully that we had thumbed our nose to that morning. Standing atop it I trundled down a basketball sized rock, the stone pinballed down the narrow gully gathering more rocks and speed as it went. “Great, this is going to be fun.”

Down we went, the rain pouring now. It was a delicate tiptoe over the shattered walls, every step produced another bomb. The first person would go down trying to clear as many of the loose rocks as possible. Then the second would follow walking on eggshells as the first person sucked themselves into a gnome-sized hole. After several near misses and on nearly chopped rope we were back at the col.

Sitting in the rain we shared a tin of kippers and looked at the face. We looked at the topo over and over again, reading all the route descriptions for the South Summit. To our surprise, none of the descriptions were of the route we had just climbed. Had we done something new? The line we had climbed was solid and obvious why had it been neglected until now? As we ate, more questions were brought up then could be answered. The route was clean of pins, cracks had vegetation, evidence pointed to a F.A. but could we be sure? We debated back and forth convincing ourselves at one instance that we had done a first ascent, than the next moment laughing that idea off.

There was nothing left to do but walk the long road home. The rain soaked me to the skin. My boots were like led, soaked to the core. Kilometre after kilometre we walked, never stopping, just trying in vein to get the whole awful walk over and done with. Hours later we arrived back to the truck; my feet were destroyed, nearly as beat up as my motivation.

The Colonel is just a memory now. The blisters have healed and the grim memories of trudging in the rain are fading away. What it left is the mystery. The jury is still out: did we climb something new? For a long while after the climb I wanted an answer, I wanted to know either way. It was important for me to know. But like all wounds, that one is healing too.

The questions have brought answers, not of weather we climbed a new route but of the significance of the idea. We went to Colonel Foster for fun and adventure; we went to push our limits as climbers and to grow. What we found was an opportunity to cut the ties of security; we found a path that was uncertain. We turned our backs on the relative security of a route that was a virtual guarantee and made the leap of faith into the unknown. We didn’t know what we were going to find as the climb stretched out before us, and in those moments of uncertainty, when the outcome was still a mystery we found what we had been searching for all along.
Pushing into the dark unknown, leaving the security of the known path is what makes us feel alive, not just as climbers but as people. First ascent or not we covered new ground internally and in the end that is for what I am most proud.

Leaning back in my chair I can remember the cool wind on my face as I looked to the west. Surfing on a sea of stone, an uncharted ocean of experiences, set after perfect set rolling in…

For the record: Fosters Logger** (5.7 600m) F.A. Gavin Harrison, Scott Kennedy. July 2003.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

The passing of a legend

Bee Keeper, Philanthropist, Antarctic tractor driver, school builder, Ganges jetboat driver, $5 note poser and climber – Sir Edmond Hillary died yesterday after 88 years of life. Known worldwide as the first person to climb Everest, but that was just the tip of the iceberg to this great man.

Revered in New Zealand as the classic kiwi hardman – tough as nails, cut from the land, he headed overseas to the greater ranges and showed folks how it should be done. His ’53 achievement on Everest brought him worldwide fame and notoriety but it’s what he did after that climb is what will really define his legacy. Building schools in Nepal and using his celebrity beyond the climbing world to help those in need.


For all kiwi’s, even adopted ones, he is the ultimate hero. He is the person that we all aspire to be and hold above all as the best of what New Zealand can produce.

Sir Ed will be missed, remembered and admired forever. By me and millions more.

~Scott

The numbers

Hello again blogland! It’s been a little while since I checked in, and since my last post all has continued to be interesting down here in the Windies. It’s been pretty busy to be honest, not exactly a holiday. Hold on a sec, not a holiday? I’m sure you’re saying that to yourself right now, how can cruising around the Caribbean be anything but a holiday?

Now it’s not exactly the same as, say working in a pesticide factory (I speak from experience on that one…) but it is work, it isn’t just beaches and sailboats. There is actually a fair bit to it. so in an effort to help shed some more light of what writing for Lonely Planet is all about I thought I’d run through some numbers;

Projecting a bit into the future, these totals include the next ten days on the road, so this is for the whole trip…

Days on the road – 49
Countries travelled to – 5 (USA, The Turks & Caicos, St. Lucia, St. Vincent & The Grenadines, Grenada)
Number of individual Islands travelled to – 16
Means of travel:
Planes (big planes that fit a couple of hundred folks, medium planes that seat 20 people, little planes that seat 10 people)
Ferry’s (Ferry’s that fit cars and lots of people, ferry’s that fit 20 people, ferry’s that look like the boat in Raiders of the Lost Ark)
Sailboats
Speedboats
Busses (some that fit 20 people comfortably, some that were the size of a minivan and had 19 people crammed in)
Cars (some with just me and some were ones I hitched rides in with random folks)
Bikes
On foot
Number of Points of Interest I’ll look at for possible consideration for the book (hotels, restaurants, attractions, etc) - 275
Rest days taken – 1 (although I did go to a beach that will make it into the book)
Photographs taken – about 800
Of those photos the number that are of menus, signs and other shots for research purposes – about 400
Number of sunburns – 2 bad ones and a couple of perpetual ones
Days of rain – 2
Number of nights where I was the only person in my hotel – 9
Number of nights I was unable to get free internet – 3
Number of words I’ll write for this project by the 29th of February – 57000
Number of words I’ve written on the road in blogs and other writing projects – 11000




Sea Turtle - Photo by Scott Kennedy


So as you can see it adds up. Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining – I love my job! But it is a job… But don’t shed too many tears for me, it is the Caribbean after all!

Take it easy,
~Scott

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Scott Vs. Wild?

Solo travel is an interesting beast, full of constants and variables. Some things change every day and some things seem to always be the same. The funny thing is, you can never guess what those variables are going to be…

Travelling in the Caribbean isn’t exactly the realm of the backpacker – not many honeymooners like to share a bunk room with a coupe of other dirtbags. So the standard of living that I’m encountering dictates that I’m logging my fair share of nights in hotel rooms. Now when I was a kid, a hotel room was this great adventure – I’d race around and see what was up for free in the bathroom, jump on the bed and search for the pop machine. But things are a bit deferent now – after logging more then my fare share of nights in hotels, plus spending most of my days poking my head into rooms, the novelty of the hotel room has worn off a bit

So back to constants – every hotel room has a bed, a bathroom and in this part of the world a TV. When I spend the whole day out on my feet – dawn till dusk researching, taking notes and writing – the last thing I honestly want to do is read – the TV reigns supreme. Luckily there are a fair few channels to watch – beyond the five, yes 5 religious stations it would seem that The Discovery Channel is a constant. So I’ve been watching allot of shows like Mythbusters and a show called Man Vs. Wild. It’s a pretty cool show hosted by a guy called Bear Grylls who is this former SAS guy who skydives into some wilderness area like Patagonia and has to find a way to survive. Inevitably he ends up eating some nasty, nasty stuff to survive. You know live snakes, raw zebra and squeezing the water out of camel shit – standard sort of stuff!

I’m not sure if some of that thinking, that will to survive at any cost, has started to sink in – but perhaps so…

So I arrived in St Vincent a few days ago, on a Sunday and after a big day of travel I was starving. Now here in the Caribbean, things grind to an almighty halt on Sundays. Things go quick-quiet and the streets vacate and all of a sudden you feel like you’re the omega man. So there I was wandering the streets about 8hrs since breakfast and the dinner options were shrinking - and fast. And then I came around the corner and saw to my horror the only place open.

KFC.

Now, for some folks that would be a welcomed sight, for some it would be a means to an end – but not for me. Thing is, for the last decade I’ve been a vegetarian. And KFC doesn’t exactly ‘do’ vegi, I eat fish but there wasn’t even a fish option. So there I was standing at the counter and said something I haven’t uttered since 1999, “could I have a 3 piece meal, original recipe, with fries and a coke.”

I thought of Bear and dug in. a thigh, a leg, a breast and more trans fat then I’ve consumed since the 1990’s… I’d like to say that it was like eating raw zebra, but actually it was ok. I thought it was going to be a once a decade sort of thing, till the next day which was new years eve. Well that was pretty much a holiday, so at 7pm I walked up to the counter and said, “could I have a 3 piece meal, original recipe, with fries and a coke.” And then as if to add insult to injury, today is new year day, again a holiday, so…. Wait for it… “could I have a 3 piece meal, original recipe, with fries and a coke.”

I think I’m still a vegetarian? It was a survival situation, like eating the pilot after the plane crash – there’s nothing all that wrong with that is there?

You gotta love travelling, where you get to experience new and strange things – like chicken.
Have fun out there,
~Scott