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-   -   Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons????? (https://www.boatbanter.com/asa/62446-lots-tidal-range-grand-tetons.html)

Capt. Neal® November 5th 05 09:09 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Check out the tidal range onshore in this pic. Amazing!

http://www.macgregor26.com/photo_gal...wide_large.jpg

~^ beancounter ~^ November 5th 05 09:32 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
its about to blow, ya know......that title surge should
make it easy for haul outs and doin' bottom
work...the teaton's make a hell of a backdrop
for photos...fly fishin' ain't half bad either in the
park....but, my fav area is the hot springs....


Bart Senior November 5th 05 09:47 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Summer Evaporation. Nothing "Tidal" about it.

"Capt. Neal®" wrote

Check out the tidal range onshore in this pic. Amazing!


http://www.macgregor26.com/photo_gal...wide_large.jpg



Clutch Cargo November 5th 05 11:07 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
I've climbed almost every peak in that picture. The Grand has almost 7,000
foot relief.

Clutch

"Capt. Neal®" wrote in message
...
Check out the tidal range onshore in this pic. Amazing!


http://www.macgregor26.com/photo_gal...wide_large.jpg



Capt. Neal® November 5th 05 11:11 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 

"Clutch Cargo" wrote in message .net...
| I've climbed almost every peak in that picture. The Grand has almost 7,000
| foot relief.
|
| Clutch

That's some rugged looking country side. Those peaks must be well above the tree line as
they look bare of any vegetation. Must make you feel small on those mountains.

CN

|
| "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message
| ...
| Check out the tidal range onshore in this pic. Amazing!
|
|
| http://www.macgregor26.com/photo_gal...wide_large.jpg
|
|


~^ beancounter ~^ November 5th 05 11:16 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
i went through the exum (sp?) climbing
schol there...thats a hoot...the peaks are
great for climbing and photography.....


Clutch Cargo November 6th 05 12:17 AM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Treeline is about 10,000ft. We once got almost three feet of snow in early
July, ruined a trip. I've climbed past a wrecked airliner on the NE Ridge of
Mt Moran. There were still skeletal remains about.
The Tetons are newer mountains from a block fault, so they are very steep.
They're big but Canada has even bigger (not taller) ones. It's a bit of work
to climb them, it keeps you young and lets you know when you're getting old.

Clutch


"Capt. Neal®" wrote in message
t...

"Clutch Cargo" wrote in message

.net...
| I've climbed almost every peak in that picture. The Grand has almost

7,000
| foot relief.
|
| Clutch

That's some rugged looking country side. Those peaks must be well above

the tree line as
they look bare of any vegetation. Must make you feel small on those

mountains.

CN

|
| "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message
| ...
| Check out the tidal range onshore in this pic. Amazing!
|
|
|

http://www.macgregor26.com/photo_gal...wide_large.jpg
|
|




~^ beancounter ~^ November 6th 05 02:15 AM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
that's no lie........it sure is a beautiful spot, and
being right "down the raod" from yellowstone
is nice.....

"It's a bit of work to climb them, it keeps you
young and lets you know when you're getting old."


Clutch Cargo November 6th 05 03:27 AM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Have you climbed Long's?


"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
ups.com...
that's no lie........it sure is a beautiful spot, and
being right "down the raod" from yellowstone
is nice.....

"It's a bit of work to climb them, it keeps you
young and lets you know when you're getting old."




~^ beancounter ~^ November 6th 05 03:34 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
i am sad to report i have not climed long's...it is
right in my back yard, and i see it every day...it
is "on my list" of things to do!!.....long's is more
of a hike than a climb, right?...i mean, there are
no techinacal aspects...such as the teatons ....


Clutch Cargo November 6th 05 04:23 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Depends on which way you go. I can see it out the window also.

Some of the easy routes:

Standard route is walk up but has exposure. Cables rated 5.4 but easy and
short. Kieners also rated 5.4 but more danger and exposure.

Have you climbed Grays and Torreys?


"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
oups.com...
i am sad to report i have not climed long's...it is
right in my back yard, and i see it every day...it
is "on my list" of things to do!!.....long's is more
of a hike than a climb, right?...i mean, there are
no techinacal aspects...such as the teatons ....




jlrogers November 6th 05 05:41 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
"Clutch Cargo" wrote in message
k.net...
...it keeps you young and lets you know when you're getting old.

Clutch


Try a 23 year old women. Same result, and a lot more fun.



Clutch Cargo November 6th 05 08:42 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
If I had to choose between mountain climbing and women, the women would miss
me.

Clutch


"jlrogers" wrote in message
...
"Clutch Cargo" wrote in message
k.net...
...it keeps you young and lets you know when you're getting old.

Clutch


Try a 23 year old women. Same result, and a lot more fun.





~^ beancounter ~^ November 6th 05 09:57 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
mountains, like the sea....know when to shut up
and listen......imho



" If I had to choose between mountain
climbing and women, the women would miss
me"


~^ beancounter ~^ November 10th 05 02:28 AM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
-----------------snip--------------------------------
Longs Peak

Towering landmark attracts thousands of climbers each year

10/28/2005
Source: Northern Colorado Business Report

Author: Steve Olson


At 14,255 feet above sea level, Longs Peak is the tallest mountain in
Northern Colorado; one of the most climbed, too.


"From an icon standpoint, it's obvious why it got that way," said Walt
Borneman, who wrote a climber's guide to Colorado's peaks over 14,000
feet, or fourteeners. "Just about anywhere on the plains, you look and
there's Longs Peak."


Longs Peak, the only fourteener in Rocky Mountain National Park, got
its name nearly two centuries ago, when the first U.S. expedition under
Major Stephen Long was mapping the South Platte River in 1820. For the
next 50 years, it was one of those peaks considered unclimbable.


"Probably because of the east face," Borneman said. "When you climb
Longs you have to go around it to climb it."


Although the first recorded ascent was made by Grand Canyon explorer
John Wesley Powell in 1868, its 175 routes to the summit have been
climbed thousands, maybe millions, of times since. A 2003 Colorado
State University study estimated that 26,000 people try to reach the
summit annually and 10,000 of them make it.


Most of them take the Keyhole Route, considered the only non-technical
path to the top of the mountain. It might be the easiest way up, but
it's still eight miles long with an elevation gain of 4,852 feet and
the potential for unforgiving, if predictable, weather.


The Rocky Mountain National Park Service conducts about 60 rescue
missions a year on the mountain. According to park service records, 55
people have been killed climbing Longs Peak, 35 of them from falls and
seven on the Keyhole Route.


Dougald MacDonald, author of "Longs Peak: The Story of Colorado's
Favorite Fourteener," doesn't think Longs Peak is a dangerous climb,
but "if you have a fear of heights or there are places where there are
icy or wet rocks, you would have to take a lot of care not to fall
off."


Last summer, when the ice never melted, the Park Service declared part
of the Keyhole Route a technical climb and novice climbers were shut
out of the summit.


When the gold rush in Colorado was in full swing, Longs Peak was looked
at as the place to mine. "There were a lot of gold mines on mountains,"
said Borneman. "Some of them were on the summit." However, the mineral
belt that was exploited in Colorado ran across the center of the state,
far to the south and west of Longs.


Longs Peak is more a landmark than anything else. Farmers looked at it
as something that loomed over the valleys of the northern Front Range,
stolid and silent, and knew if there was a lot of snow on the summit it
meant that there was going to be a lot of runoff for their fields come
summer. A silhouette of Longs has been used in newspaper logos, and the
"twin peaks" in the Twin Peaks Mall in Longmont are Longs and its
nearby companion Mount Meeker.


There is a feature between Longs and Meeker mentioned by James Michener
in his book "Centennial." If you look at it from the northeast it
resembles a beaver climbing up Longs between the peaks.


"People were coming out here for a while looking for the beaver, to see
if they could spot it," Borneman recalled.


~^ beancounter ~^ November 10th 05 02:29 AM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
Clutch...ever wonder why there are so many
sailors in colorado??


Bob Crantz November 10th 05 08:09 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 

"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
oups.com...
Clutch...ever wonder why there are so many
sailors in colorado??


For the same reason it has the highest per capita scuba divers.






Jonathan Ganz November 10th 05 08:55 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
In article ,
Bob Crantz wrote:

"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
roups.com...
Clutch...ever wonder why there are so many
sailors in colorado??


For the same reason it has the highest per capita scuba divers.


I wonder if it's also has the highest per capita injury rate for scuba
divers.




--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com



Bob Crantz November 10th 05 09:06 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Bob Crantz wrote:

"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
roups.com...
Clutch...ever wonder why there are so many
sailors in colorado??


For the same reason it has the highest per capita scuba divers.


I wonder if it's also has the highest per capita injury rate for scuba
divers.


Occasionally they get sucked into the reservoir outlet grates. They are held
in place against the grate by the water flow until they run out of air.
Decompression must be tricky too, some lakes are pretty deep 200 ft and the
surface over 10,000 ft elevation (~10 psi atmospheric).




--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com





Jonathan Ganz November 10th 05 09:10 PM

Lots of tidal range in the Grand Tetons?????
 
In article ,
Bob Crantz wrote:

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Bob Crantz wrote:

"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message
roups.com...
Clutch...ever wonder why there are so many
sailors in colorado??

For the same reason it has the highest per capita scuba divers.


I wonder if it's also has the highest per capita injury rate for scuba
divers.


Occasionally they get sucked into the reservoir outlet grates. They are held
in place against the grate by the water flow until they run out of air.
Decompression must be tricky too, some lakes are pretty deep 200 ft and the
surface over 10,000 ft elevation (~10 psi atmospheric).


Never thought about the former. I'll keep the latter in mind if I ever
decide to dive in the area.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




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