mit outing club winter school 2000. january 5, 2000mitoc winter school2 goals of winter school...

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January 5, 2000MITOC Winter School3 Activities Hiking (below and above treeline) Winter Camping Cross-Country Skiing Ice Climbing (limited)

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MIT Outing Club

Winter School 2000Winter School 2000

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 2

Goals of Winter SchoolGoals of Winter School

• Introduce wilderness winter sports

• Teach techniques

• Demonstrate equipment

• Teach safety

• Instill wilderness ethics

• Provide first hand experience

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 3

ActivitiesActivities

Hiking (below and above treeline)Winter CampingCross-Country SkiingIce Climbing (limited)

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 4

Why Winter School?Why Winter School?

• Everybody is here with free time (IAP)

• Unique challenges posed by weather and terrain

• Mountains are less crowded

• Preparation for other expeditions

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 5

Pre-Requisites Pre-Requisites

• No winter experience necessary

• Mild weather experience desired but not necessary

• Open mind (accept what others teach you)

• Common sense (know your limits)

• Enthusiasm is welcome

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 6

OverviewOverview

• Why is attendance important?

• First and most important things (clothing, food)

• Cool stuff (lectures, movies, talk shows)

• Leaders are people too - ask questions, get to know them, make friends

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 7

Inherent DangerInherent Danger• Winter environment is unforgiving

• You will be far away (up to a day) from any help

• Serious injury can result from frostbite, injury, and other accidents. You can lose digits or entire body parts

• Death can occur from hypothermia, exposure, accidents, drowning, and other ways

• Several people die every year in the White Mountains, especially the Presidentials

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 8

Why Winter School?Why Winter School?

Safety

Preparation

Fun

Lonesome Lake

Mt. Pierce

Cannon Mountain

Mt. Liberty

Kinsman Pond

Adirondacks

Adirondacks – XC Skiing

Adirondacks - Camp

Dog Sledding in New Hampshire

Ice Climbing – entering the Flume

Ice Climbing – the Flume

Mixed Ice Climbing – Rumney

Sugarloaf

Sugarloaf – Gourmet Camp Cooking

Mt. Washington

Mt. Washington – lunar base

Swiss Alps

Highway Glacier, Baffin Island

Kilimanjaro (5895m)

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 28

LogisticsLogistics• Monday lectures concern special topics:

xc skiing, orienteering, cold-weather injuries, avalanches

• Wednesday lectures cumulative and mandatory: clothing, day hikes, overnights, above treeline travel, safety

• Gear rental Thursday (8-9pm)• Weekend outing• Return gear on Monday (5-6pm)

Lectures: 2-190, 7:00-9:30pm

Office: 4th floor Student Center (w20-461)

Bring Checkbook – No Cash or Credit Cards

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 29

Trip ScheduleTrip Schedule

Week 1Below tree-line day hiking, XC skiing

Week 2Above tree-line hiking, XC skiing, snow camping

Week 3 and laterMulti-day hikes and sustained above tree-line travel

We will continue to have easier hikes throughout Winter School if demand is sufficient.

January 5, 2000 MITOC Winter School 30

Today’s LectureToday’s Lecture• Introduction

• Clothing

• Food and water

• Basic Gear

• Mountain Weather

• Hypothermia

• Cars

• Weekend Trip sign up

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