Short clips
Trailers to full length videos and stand-alone quick tips; everything we make that is under 60 seconds
Four Ways to Warm Cold Hands While Winter Mountaineering or Backpacking in the Backcountry
Having done a full video on attempting to avoid getting cold hands in the first place, what can you do if you end up with cold hands, regardless? Here are four ways to get your hands warm, and you can actually do all four together, if need be. My family and I use these techniques regularly on our hikes, climbs, and backpacking trips in the wilderness.
Trailer to Mountaineering and Winter Backpacking Sleep System for Below Zero Temperatures
Being someone who goes to high and cold places on mountaineering, winter backpacking, and backcountry winter camping adventures, I need a sleep system that can handle severe temperatures (below 0 Fahrenheit or below -18 Celsius) but also not full up my pack and break my back with weight. The fill video shares my personal journey from nearly 4.5 down to 3.0 pounds (1.4 kg) for a winter bag and sleeping pads along with the gear changes I made to get there.
Winter Camping Safety Hack: Duct Tape on Your Snow Shovel
Too much snow can damage a tent be overweighting the tent poles. But getting snow off your tent can damage it, too, if you aren't careful. See why I put duct tape on my snow shovel so that I can better clear snow off my tent when winter camping.
Trailer to Winter Baselayer and Midlayer Combinations for Mountaineering and Hiking
I've seen extreme temperature ranges in the winter. So, when I head out for a winter climbing, backpacking, hiking, or camping, I need to have the right clothing layers. And the same clothing that works for 50 degrees (10 Celsius) doesn't work for -35 degrees (-37 Celsius). And if I always have a down jacket and rain shell, then the difference in clothing needs to be made up by the baselayer and midlayer. The full video provides my four favorite baselayer and midlayer combinations I use to adjust to progressively colder days in the winter.
Start Out Cold: Layering Clothing for Winter Hiking, Backpacking, and Mountaineering
As I teach my kids how to enjoy winter in the backcountry, I have to remind them that stepping out into the cold is supposed to feel cold. And it is a good tip for anyone new to winter adventures: When you are pursuing activities like summit hikes, long backpacking trips, and mountaineering routes, you are going to generate some heat. Your layers need to make sense for what you will feel when working hard, not when standing at the trailhead.
Trailer to Three Hacks for Warm Winter Camping
Camping in winter - either for its own enjoyment or as part of a climbing, backpacking, or mountaineering adventure - can be done warmly. There are lots of little things you can and should do to keep everyone in your group comfortable as possible. But if you were to only do three things, I would make the three things I show in the full length video the ones, as I have found they have had the biggest impact on my ability to control my temperature at night and make for a good night's sleep.
Is the Garmin InReach Explorer Plus GPS and Satellite Communication Device Worth its Weight?
There are legitimate reasons to prefer not bringing a GPS device with you in the backcountry. Costs may be prohibitive. You may prefer map and compass. You may only take short trips out. But if you do anything that is multi-day, GPS devices make the most weight-efficient electronic option. It's more than just gross weight that should be considered, but weight per hour of use. Once you start getting other devices up to the same battery life by bringing battery banks with you, that supposed weight disadvantage starts to disappear.
Trailer to Stopping Lens Fogging: Hiking, Mountaineering, and Alpine Climbing in the Cold
Either poor vision, like me, or sun reflection off of the snow may drive the need for wearing glasses or goggles in the winter on hikes, climbs, while backpacking, and even camping. Unfortunately, glasses and goggles tend to fog up, as your breath and body heat mix with the cold air. The full video documents my journey through various attempts to solve this issue, moving from marginally effectively solutions to something that has finally worked for me on even the coldest mountaineering expeditions.
6 Year Old Attempts Indoor Climbing Route on 30 Degree Overhang
New home. New climbing wall. New route set. At six years old, the twins take on a new bouldering problem; here's the first clean top out. The boys are working on three-dimensional climbing and twisting the hips, often with a drop-knee, to keep the hips close to the wall.
Trailer to What I Wish I Knew About Insulation Jackets as a Hiking and Climbing Beginner
I started getting into the outdoors by hiking to summits. Eventually, I got into technical climbing and mountaineering. The gear I bought for the hikes didn't quite cut it when it came to the climbs. So, for any budding mountaineers and alpinists, here's what I've come to value most in design of various insulating jackets. If you can buy with your future outdoors activities in mind, you can save the money I didn't save. Learn from my mistakes!
Alpine Climbing Isn't Crag Climbing: Racking Your Gear with Gloves
Often times rock climbers wrap their runners and cords very tightly to keep them out of their way when racking them on their harness. But if you get into alpine climbing or mountaineering in the cold environments, that kind of thing can be difficult to tie and untie with gloves. Here's how I find the balance between racking in a glove friendly way but which could be too loose and a trip hazard versus racking very tightly but in a way that is difficult to manage while gloves are on.
Trailer to Stopping Cold Hands in Winter: Lessons from Years of Mountaineering Instruction
After teaching high altitude climbing to lots and lots of different people, the full video gives the four most common (behavioral) reasons I see people get cold hands in the mountains along with what to do about it.
Simplest Thing to Keep Your Sleeping Bag in Good Condition
Sleeping bags can be expensive, and we should take care of that investment. The simplest thing you can do to help keep your sleeping bag lofting and in excellent shape is to not store it in a compression sack when you aren't using it out in the field. Hanging in it our using its non-compression storage bag are better options, if you have the space.
Trailer to Cold! Keeping Morale Up When Winter Backpacking, Climbing, and Camping
In the full length version of this fifth and final video of the Cold! Series, we talk about keeping morale up. How do we keep our team - whether that team be our climbing partners, our life partners, or our kids - in a frame of mind to be proactive and to enjoy their time outside, even when harsh conditions set in?
Winter Hiking, Climbing, or Backpacking in the Outdoors? You Need a Full Side Zip Storm Pant
If you are hiking, backpacking, or climbing in winter, those ultralight storm pants that weigh a few grams are missing one key feature: a full side zip up the outside of the legs. If you have big boots and sharp traction devices on those boots, a full zip becomes indispensable. That way you can avoid shredding those pants or else having to remove your spikes every time the storm shell comes on.
Trailer to Cold! An Introduction to Avalanche Education for Winter Hiking or Mountaineering
The full length version is the fourth video in the Cold! series and it's about a potentially serious issue: avalanches. Avalanches are a complicated topic, and this video can not be an end point to anyone's education, but it can and does introduce the basic principles and provide resources to learn more.
Hike, Climb, Mountaineer? Exercise in the Cold? 14ers in Winter? A Heat Exchange Mask Helps
The cold makes it harder to bring in oxygen and have that oxygen circulate around your body. Whether you hike, climb, backpack, exercise, or just camp, this can put unnecessary strain on your heart and lungs. Scientists have found that a heat exchange mask can help avoid these issues. I've been using one on my mountaineering and climbing expeditions for years. It's helped me keep cold-induced asthma under control as well as helped my non-asthmatic friends perform at their best when we are in extreme conditions.
Trailer to Cold! Small Behaviors Make a Big Difference When Winter Hiking and Mountaineering
The full version is the third video in the Cold! series and it is about the small behaviors you can focus in on, and help your kids and family with, to make your winter backcountry excursions a bit more enjoyable and likely to succeed. These are small "personal management" practices that can make all the difference between getting cold and uncomfortable (or maybe even finding yourself in a dangerous situation) and feeling in control of your adventure.
No Cost Way to Keep Canister Stoves Working in the Cold: a Mountaineering Best Practice
You are hiking, backpacking, or climbing in the cold and your multiday trip would be easier with the convenience of a canister stove - if only they didn't fail in cold weather! Well, they don't have to fail. Mountaineers have been using canister stoves in high, extremely cold places for years. And this simple, no-cost solution can be applied to anyone who wants to camp cook with canister fuel.
Trailer to Cold! Winter Hiking Traction and Safe Movement for the Whole Family
This full version is the second video in the Cold! series and is about how to match winter traction devices like snowshoes, crampons, or MICROspikes to the particular conditions you are facing on the type of snow or ice or frozen ground you need to travel. We also discuss some considerations on how to be place your feet given the slick surfaces of winter.