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Take the next step in advancing your mountaineering expertise
"Learning the next level from world class climbers..."
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 Alaska Mountaineering School
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Advanced
Mountaineering Course
AMS' mission is to seek excellence in safe and responsible mountaineering
and wilderness travel while teaching and guiding others. Our core
curriculum emphasizes safety and judgment, leadership and team work,
mountaineering skills, Leave No Trace practices, and fun. The Advanced
Mountaineering Course provides experienced climbers the opportunity
to learn and apply new skills in a challenging mountaineering environment.
Focus is placed on the decision-making involved and skills necessary
for choosing and making successful peak ascents. We will be evaluating
terrain, identifying hazards, and attempting climbs. The advanced
nature of this course requires students to: have a minimum of 2 years
of roped climbing experience, be comfortable in exposed locations,
have belayed, built anchors, and rappelled. Prior experience winter
camping is also necessary.
Features of This Course - 1:3
instructor/student ratio
- Mountaineering skills progression review:
protection, anchors, belaying, self-arrest, snow, ice, and/or rock
climbing
- Peak ascents progression
- Glacier travel and crevasse
rescue techniques
- Snow camping: walls, caves, igloos, quinzees,
trenches
- Avalanche curriculum: mechanics, transceiver searches, snow
morphology
- Rescue scenarios and techniques to reach a fallen climber
- First aid classes: frostbite, hypothermia, altitude-related
illnesses
- Travel on the glacier with skis, downhill and uphill
progression
Expedition
Style & Remoteness Mountaineering courses are
self-reliant expeditions that travel in remote mountain ranges of
Alaska. Throughout the course, students live in the outdoors, learn to
prepare their own meals, and care for themselves. The course format
emphasizes hands-on learning and the application of new skills in a
variety of terrain. From these areas, evacuation to modern medical
facilities can be difficult and take days if the weather is unflyable.
Environment
Mountaineering courses fly into Denali National Park & Preserve, home
to North America's biggest and wildest mountains. AMS scouts new areas
in the Park each year to teach courses. These areas are chosen based
on accessibility and fulfilling course objectives. The exact location
depends on landing conditions and instructor preference. Each of these
areas, with their variety of mountains, beauty and isolation are challenging
and demand respect. Course routes are classic for a mountaineering
expedition in Alaska. Expect to be on snow for the duration of your
course. Weather of all varieties is to be expected: wind, snow, rain,
and beautiful days.
The
First Day
We will meet for gear check at AMS' headquarters in downtown Talkeetna
at 9:00 a.m. on the starting day of your course. Many students choose
to arrive the day before the course. Please be on time so instructors
can start checking equipment. After checking equipment and issuing
any items you need, we will have a course orientation. At 1 pm,
lunch at AMS is provided. After lunch, we pack and dress, practice
fixed-line ascension and fly onto the glacier in ski-equipped fixed
wing airplanes. The 30-45 minute flight into Denali Park is spectacular
and a memorable highlight to the course; it's the quickest way to
access the snowy peaks. This is a busy day, so please take care
of all personal business beforehand.
Course
Progression
The goal of this course is to advance students' mountain skills
and judgment through applied classes and peak ascents. The first
couple days will focus on skills necessary to live and travel safely
in a glaciated environment. Some skills will be review and covered
expediently. Whenever possible, old ways will be challenged and
new and advanced techniques will be introduced. The course format
includes climbing routes which often require the group to split
up into smaller climbing teams. Student-lead peak ascents are also
a possibility. The course breaks camp and moves to new locations
to explore and climb in a variety of terrain. At certain intervals,
classes are taught on altitude and cold related injuries, rescue
scenarios, and avalanche curricula. Leadership and expedition behavior
discussions are also held. Students receive verbal and written evaluations
at the end of the course.
Course
Objectives Mountaineering courses vary in length, route
and environmental conditions. Working with these variables, instructors
strive for the following goals for each student: Safety
& Judgment AMS teaches mountaineering skills, which promote
the health and safety of all expedition members. Each graduate is
expected to: - demonstrate knowledge of the hazards in a
glaciated mountain environment
- participate in making sound decisions
affecting the health and safety of the expedition
- display knowledge
of personal limitations, and the judgment to stay within them
Leadership & Teamwork Students are exposed to
theory and practice of outdoor leadership, teamwork and expedition
behavior. Each graduate is expected to: - work effectively as
a team member
- demonstrate sound expedition behavior: commitment to
the group, a positive attitude, and cooperation to achieve group goals
- effectively communicate ideas and concerns with individuals and
within a group
- show initiative in teaching and leading peers
- employ leadership styles appropriate to the situation; support
others in the leadership role
- use decision-making and planning
skills to participate fully in a safe, environmentally sound expedition
Environmental Ethics An important part of every
course is to teach and practice Leave-No-Trace camping and traveling
techniques. Each graduate is expected to: - perform minimum
impact living and traveling skills appropriate to a glaciated
environment
- show respect for pristine wilderness and fostering
respect in others
Winter Camping & Glacier Travel
AMS courses focus on teaching and practicing efficient and responsible
back country skills. Each graduate is expected to:
- live comfortably and
efficiently in a glaciated mountain environment, camping, cooking, and
dressing for a variety of conditions
- travel competently using safe
and efficient navigation and route-finding techniques to reduce and
avoid hazards
- demonstrate roped glacier travel techniques using skis
or snow shoes and lead rope a team
- take responsibility for the
organization, maintenance and repair of group and personal equipment
Mountaineering Skills The course goal is to advance
all students' climbing ability and make them well-rounded mountaineers.
Each graduate is expected to: - master knots and various rope
handling techniques
- demonstrate proficient crampon and ice ax
techniques for snow, ice and/or mixed terrain
- demonstrate belay
skills: fixed line, running belays, glacier travel
- protection
placement and anchor building techniques
- competently set up a rope
system for glacier travel
- lead climbing theory and application
- consistently perform techniques to reduce and avoid hazards
- recognize and avoid avalanche terrain
- demonstrate the ability to
remain composed and thoughtful in difficult and exposed terrain
- competently lead a rope team on a glacier
- establish a skill base to successfully climb a mountain like Denali
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Alaska Mountaineering
School Colby Coombs & Caitlin
Palmer, Directors PO BOX 566, 3rd Street, Talkeetna, AK 99676
USA phone: (907)733-1016 fax: (907)733-1362 email: info@climbalaska.org
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AMS top image: Alaska Range viewed from Talkeetna Mount
Foraker (17,400'), Mount Hunter (14,570'), Denali
(20,320') |
| © 1997-2003 AMS. All rights
reserved. No portion of the text or images on this page may be
reproduced
without the express written consent of AMS. Web site: Anya Zolotusky
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