FOREVER OUTSIDE ADVENTURE JOURNAL

Adventure

Mount Langley

Mount Langley

Mt. Langley rises 14,032' (4277m) above sea level in the crest of the Sierra Nevada. It is the ninth highest peak in the state and the seventh highest in the Sierra. Langley is often regarded as one of the easier 14ers to ascend, but hey that's sort of an oxymoron!

Holcomb Valley Pinnacles

Holcomb Valley Pinnacles

It was the "official last weekend of Summer," and Friday rolled around I knew I had to get out of the city. Holcomb has over 400 climbable routes and is considered a mecca for routes of moderate difficulty.

Mount Islip

Mount Islip

The Sierra Nevada mountains are ubiquitous when we think of backpacking in California but Southern California still holds a few aces up it's sleeve. The itinerary was to summit Mount Islip via the Big Cienega Trail to Islip Ridge Trail, camp at Little Jimmy, then descend via the Windy Gap trail.

Bear Creek Spire

Bear Creek Spire

This week's entry was my heaviest trip this year. For the weeks building up to the trip, I have to say, I was very nervous.  I have never done any technical climbing at such high altitude and was curious how I'd fair. 

Little Sarasota Bay

Little Sarasota Bay

The trip was low key, about 4 hours, with all the equipment provided. Billed as: Quiet Water Kayak Trip: Enjoy leisurely paddling and observation at a variety of sites difficult to visit by any other means, sounds perfect to me!

Caspersen Beach: Hunting for Shark Teeth

Caspersen Beach: Hunting for Shark Teeth

I always heard about "The Shark Tooth Beach" as a kid, but oddly never made it out.  Now is the time, next stop Caspersen Beach. We had poker faces not telling each other what we found. It was hilarious, the longer we looked, the less we found.  The less we found the more we WANTED to find them, and the hunt was on!

Fingertip Traverse

Fingertip Traverse

The objective today was a route called "Fingertip Traverse" (5.3 YDS) which is a 4 pitch trad climb, 500' (152m) tall. It's a bit of a mission from Los Angeles, it's a 2-2.5 hours drive, a very steep approach, sandbagged climbing, a heavy descent, and the tough drive home after a long day.  However, it's worth all the effort.

Little Santa Anita Canyon

Little Santa Anita Canyon

Little Santa Anita is a brief beginner canyon with many short rappels.
The canyon sits in the southern San Gabriel Mountains and Angeles National Forest, within Los Angeles County.
Getting to what we thought was the end of a mild trip, quickly escalated to a dangerous escape!

Jean Peak & Mt. Marion

Jean Peak & Mt. Marion

I've reached the summit of Mt. San Jacinto twice prior to this trip, but only from the Deer Springs Trail in Idyllwild, that is a very challenging on-trail trip. Our objective on this trip was quite different, it was to grab Jean Peak and Mount Marion summit via cross country navigation.

Eaton Canyon

Eaton Canyon

Canyoneering is often regarded as more dangerous than rock climbing. You could be rappelling off very questionable anchors in highly secluded locations.  How exciting!  This specific adventure was on my bucket list and I proudly crossed it off last weekend.  Find out what out what it takes to descend the Class 3BIV Eaton Canyon upper and lower falls and why it took 14 hours!

Red Rock Rendezvous: Day 2

Red Rock Rendezvous: Day 2

Day two of the RRR climbing festival was the busiest.  We volunteered with Access Fund to help define trails around the Kraft Boulders, lead a trad route in our climbing clinic, and partied like a "rock star"  get it?  Like rocks, rock climbing, boulders, ehhh  just read and see!

Red Rock Rendezvous: Day 1

Red Rock Rendezvous: Day 1

We left Los Angeles on Thursday night and arrived to the campground at 11pm.  Many tents were already pitched with some scattered dirt baggers just sleeping near or in their vehicle, as expected.  2015 marked the 10th annual Red Rock Rendezvous and my first, what will be, annual attendance.  What is RRR? It's only the country's largest rock climbing festival...

Texas Canyon

Texas Canyon

Just 40 minutes off the beaten path of Los Angeles sits Texas Canyon. This beautiful part of the high desert consists of a collection of large sandstone conglomerate domes, isolated rock formations, and boulders. We set out for some friendly climbs and doubled it up with some time to photograph new products for the Forever Outside store.