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The Mountaineering Handbook
Modern Tools and Techniques That Will Take You to the Top
Taschenbuch von Craig Connally
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung
The first mountaineering instructional guide to focus exclusively on the kind of mountaineering most climbers do, and to collect the best modern practices in one popular resource

Complete and up to date. Emphasizes the best modern practices for alpine rock, snow, and ice.Uniquely focused. Omits what is too basic such as camping and backpacking and what is too advanced, such as fifth-class climbing in its various forms and expeditionary climbing.

The first mountaineering instructional guide to focus exclusively on the kind of mountaineering most climbers do, and to collect the best modern practices in one popular resource

Complete and up to date. Emphasizes the best modern practices for alpine rock, snow, and ice.Uniquely focused. Omits what is too basic such as camping and backpacking and what is too advanced, such as fifth-class climbing in its various forms and expeditionary climbing.

Über den Autor
Craig Connally is in his third decade of mountaineering, ski mountaineering, and climbing rock and ice. He climbs with instructors and guides and has mentored beginning climbers. A contributor to the Sierra Clubs Leader Reference Book, he has given presentations on GPS, ski mountaineering, avalanche avoidance and rescue, map and compass use, and other trekking and mountaineering topics. An engineering manager in the entertainment industry, he brings an analytical eye and a clear and entertaining writing style to this handbook of mountaineering. Hometown: Alhambra, CA
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part 1: Mountaineering1. Introduction

Who's It For?

2. Let's Go Climbing Together

Get Your Head Ready



Get Your Skills Ready



Fast and Light



Get Your Body Ready



Get Your Gear Ready



Get Started



Base Camp



The Alpine Start



The Approach



The Climb



Onto the Rock



Retreat



Be Resourceful



Be Tough



Have Fun

Part 2: The Approach3. Moving Fast on the Trail

On the Approach



On the Climb

4. Wilderness Navigation

Navigation with Maps



Handy Navigation Features



Resorting to Your Compass



Altimeters



New-School Mapping



GPS and UTM



Estimating Travel Time



Lost



Another Way of Navigating

5. Mountain Hazards

Rockfall and Icefall



Rain



River Crossings



Lightning



Avalanche



Altitude



Heat and Cold



Sun and UV

6. Mountain Weather

What You Already Know



Clouding the Picture



When Weather Gets a Lift



Climatology



Predicting Mountain Weather Using Local Observations



Lifting the Fog

7. The Alpine Start

Why Start Early



Morning Begins at Sundown



Turning Off the Lights



The Dread Bivouac

Part 3: Rock8. Climb Rating Systems

Climb with Class



The YDS



Ice with That?



Making the Grade



What Does All This Mean to Mountaineers?

9. Your Climbing Rope

The Basics



Single, Half, Twin



What Specs Are Unimportant?



What Specs Matter?



Recommendations for Mountaineering Ropes



Handling and Caring for Your Rope

10. Equipment for Rock Climbing

Climbing Harness



Belay/Rappel Brakes



Helmet



Carabiners



Runners and Slings



Cordelette



Protection Hardware



Nut Tool



Rap Ring



Knife

11. Climbing Forces

Physics 001



Static Forces



Dynamic Forces and Leader Falls



Real-World Influences on Fall Forces



Strength of Safety-System Components



Force Multiplication

12. Anchors

Tying In



Simple Anchors



Complex Anchors



What's a Mountaineer to Do?

13. Rappelling

Get Connected



Rappel Anchors



Getting Started



Joining Two Ropes for Rappelling



Final Preparations



Self-Belay While Rappelling



Cast Off



As You Alight



Last Is Best



Freeing a Stuck Rope

14. Climbing on Rock

Preliminaries



Belaying the Leader



Leading



Climbing



Placing Pro



Belaying the Second



Seconding



Changeover



Moving Fast on Rock

Part 4: Snow and Ice15. Equipment for Snow and Ice Climbing

Mountaineering Ax



Crampons



Snowshoes



Trekking Poles



Pulkke



Goggles



Shovel



Protection Hardware and Personal Gear

16. Climbing Snow and Ice

Ascending Snow



Crampon Techniques



Mountaineering Ax Techniques



Descending



Roped Travel on Snow



Climbing with Protection



Moving Fast on Snow



Climbing Ice

Part 5: Base Camp Basics17. Lightweight Mountaineering

Step Lightly

18. Equipment for Base Camp

Boots and Shoes



Backpacks



Clothing Systems



Shelter Systems



Sleeping Systems



Fuel and Stoves



Ten Essentials Rethought for Mountaineering



First-Aid Kit



Non-Essentials



Ten Essentials for Cooking



Water Purification

19. Performance Nutrition for Mountaineers

Calorie Consumption



Partial Repletion Is Best



Hydration



Electrolyte Repletion



Calories on the Go



Throwing Fat on the Fire



Protein--You Eat What You Are



Reality Nutrition and Altitude



A Dog's Breakfast



Nutrition on the Go



Get Started as Soon as You Stop



Repletion Starts with Water



Then Total Calories



Reality Dining--Again



Catching Up on Electrolytes



Nutritional Supplements



Sports Supplements



Vegetarian Mountaineers

20. Training for Mountaineering

Follow the Training Advice of German Existentialist



Philosophers



VO2max--The Measure of Aerobic Fitness



Percentage of VO2max--The Measure of Your Personal Aerobic Exercise Intensity



Heart Rate--The Measure for Most of Us



How Long Does Training Take?



At What Intensity Should I Train?



What Aerobic Exercises Work for Mountaineers?



Strength Training



Persistence



Mental Training

21. Wilderness First Aid

Wilderness First-Aid Instruction



First-Aid Kit



Shocking



Takeaway Example



Psychological First Aid

22. Protecting the Natural Environment

Leave No Trace



Access



Be Like Ed

Part 6: Advanced Techniques23. Lightweight Ropes

Rappelling



Belaying the Leader on a Thin Rope



Belaying the Second



Releasing an Autoblock

24. Roped Parties

Simul-Climbing



Fixed Ropes



Rappelling by a Group

25. Self-Rescue

Think Ahead



Plan Your Escape



Ascending



Pulley Systems



Assisted Descending



Evacuation

26. Glacier Travel and Crevasse Rescue

How They Get That Way



Organizing the Rope Team



Off We Go



Safe Camping



When Luck Runs Out

Part 7: The Human Dimensions of Mountaineering27. Human Factors and Not Technical Factors?

Risk Management and Decision Making



Controlling Fear



Leadership



Emergency Response

28. Why Do We Do It?

Travel Solo



Travel with Charlie

Appendix A. Additional SkillsAppendix B. ResourcesAppendix C. GlossaryIndex
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2004
Rubrik: Schule & Lernen
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 376
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780071430104
ISBN-10: 0071430105
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Connally, Craig
Hersteller: McGraw Hill LLC
Maße: 235 x 187 x 22 mm
Von/Mit: Craig Connally
Erscheinungsdatum: 31.12.2004
Gewicht: 0,755 kg
preigu-id: 102453639
Über den Autor
Craig Connally is in his third decade of mountaineering, ski mountaineering, and climbing rock and ice. He climbs with instructors and guides and has mentored beginning climbers. A contributor to the Sierra Clubs Leader Reference Book, he has given presentations on GPS, ski mountaineering, avalanche avoidance and rescue, map and compass use, and other trekking and mountaineering topics. An engineering manager in the entertainment industry, he brings an analytical eye and a clear and entertaining writing style to this handbook of mountaineering. Hometown: Alhambra, CA
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part 1: Mountaineering1. Introduction

Who's It For?

2. Let's Go Climbing Together

Get Your Head Ready



Get Your Skills Ready



Fast and Light



Get Your Body Ready



Get Your Gear Ready



Get Started



Base Camp



The Alpine Start



The Approach



The Climb



Onto the Rock



Retreat



Be Resourceful



Be Tough



Have Fun

Part 2: The Approach3. Moving Fast on the Trail

On the Approach



On the Climb

4. Wilderness Navigation

Navigation with Maps



Handy Navigation Features



Resorting to Your Compass



Altimeters



New-School Mapping



GPS and UTM



Estimating Travel Time



Lost



Another Way of Navigating

5. Mountain Hazards

Rockfall and Icefall



Rain



River Crossings



Lightning



Avalanche



Altitude



Heat and Cold



Sun and UV

6. Mountain Weather

What You Already Know



Clouding the Picture



When Weather Gets a Lift



Climatology



Predicting Mountain Weather Using Local Observations



Lifting the Fog

7. The Alpine Start

Why Start Early



Morning Begins at Sundown



Turning Off the Lights



The Dread Bivouac

Part 3: Rock8. Climb Rating Systems

Climb with Class



The YDS



Ice with That?



Making the Grade



What Does All This Mean to Mountaineers?

9. Your Climbing Rope

The Basics



Single, Half, Twin



What Specs Are Unimportant?



What Specs Matter?



Recommendations for Mountaineering Ropes



Handling and Caring for Your Rope

10. Equipment for Rock Climbing

Climbing Harness



Belay/Rappel Brakes



Helmet



Carabiners



Runners and Slings



Cordelette



Protection Hardware



Nut Tool



Rap Ring



Knife

11. Climbing Forces

Physics 001



Static Forces



Dynamic Forces and Leader Falls



Real-World Influences on Fall Forces



Strength of Safety-System Components



Force Multiplication

12. Anchors

Tying In



Simple Anchors



Complex Anchors



What's a Mountaineer to Do?

13. Rappelling

Get Connected



Rappel Anchors



Getting Started



Joining Two Ropes for Rappelling



Final Preparations



Self-Belay While Rappelling



Cast Off



As You Alight



Last Is Best



Freeing a Stuck Rope

14. Climbing on Rock

Preliminaries



Belaying the Leader



Leading



Climbing



Placing Pro



Belaying the Second



Seconding



Changeover



Moving Fast on Rock

Part 4: Snow and Ice15. Equipment for Snow and Ice Climbing

Mountaineering Ax



Crampons



Snowshoes



Trekking Poles



Pulkke



Goggles



Shovel



Protection Hardware and Personal Gear

16. Climbing Snow and Ice

Ascending Snow



Crampon Techniques



Mountaineering Ax Techniques



Descending



Roped Travel on Snow



Climbing with Protection



Moving Fast on Snow



Climbing Ice

Part 5: Base Camp Basics17. Lightweight Mountaineering

Step Lightly

18. Equipment for Base Camp

Boots and Shoes



Backpacks



Clothing Systems



Shelter Systems



Sleeping Systems



Fuel and Stoves



Ten Essentials Rethought for Mountaineering



First-Aid Kit



Non-Essentials



Ten Essentials for Cooking



Water Purification

19. Performance Nutrition for Mountaineers

Calorie Consumption



Partial Repletion Is Best



Hydration



Electrolyte Repletion



Calories on the Go



Throwing Fat on the Fire



Protein--You Eat What You Are



Reality Nutrition and Altitude



A Dog's Breakfast



Nutrition on the Go



Get Started as Soon as You Stop



Repletion Starts with Water



Then Total Calories



Reality Dining--Again



Catching Up on Electrolytes



Nutritional Supplements



Sports Supplements



Vegetarian Mountaineers

20. Training for Mountaineering

Follow the Training Advice of German Existentialist



Philosophers



VO2max--The Measure of Aerobic Fitness



Percentage of VO2max--The Measure of Your Personal Aerobic Exercise Intensity



Heart Rate--The Measure for Most of Us



How Long Does Training Take?



At What Intensity Should I Train?



What Aerobic Exercises Work for Mountaineers?



Strength Training



Persistence



Mental Training

21. Wilderness First Aid

Wilderness First-Aid Instruction



First-Aid Kit



Shocking



Takeaway Example



Psychological First Aid

22. Protecting the Natural Environment

Leave No Trace



Access



Be Like Ed

Part 6: Advanced Techniques23. Lightweight Ropes

Rappelling



Belaying the Leader on a Thin Rope



Belaying the Second



Releasing an Autoblock

24. Roped Parties

Simul-Climbing



Fixed Ropes



Rappelling by a Group

25. Self-Rescue

Think Ahead



Plan Your Escape



Ascending



Pulley Systems



Assisted Descending



Evacuation

26. Glacier Travel and Crevasse Rescue

How They Get That Way



Organizing the Rope Team



Off We Go



Safe Camping



When Luck Runs Out

Part 7: The Human Dimensions of Mountaineering27. Human Factors and Not Technical Factors?

Risk Management and Decision Making



Controlling Fear



Leadership



Emergency Response

28. Why Do We Do It?

Travel Solo



Travel with Charlie

Appendix A. Additional SkillsAppendix B. ResourcesAppendix C. GlossaryIndex
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2004
Rubrik: Schule & Lernen
Medium: Taschenbuch
Seiten: 376
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9780071430104
ISBN-10: 0071430105
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Connally, Craig
Hersteller: McGraw Hill LLC
Maße: 235 x 187 x 22 mm
Von/Mit: Craig Connally
Erscheinungsdatum: 31.12.2004
Gewicht: 0,755 kg
preigu-id: 102453639
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