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Crazy Blizzard!!!

We had a foot on the ground already then………… this blizzard blows in HARDCORE! I haven’t seen this much snow fall at one time in years in this area!

Check out this article about the record blizzard on yahoo:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100211/ts_alt_afp/usweatherstorm

The Tristate area isn’t too fond of snow and doesn’t like having to deal with it as far as I’ve noticed over the years. But this storm was different. They were prepared, salting and sanding hours before in prep for the 2+ feet of snow that blew in over us  in a few hours. The meteorologists said up to 40 mph winds, but i’m guessing they were under 30 mph. Still high winds and basically causing white-out conditions with the powder snow that was on the ground. Now I hear there expecting more snow to come on Monday…? We’ll see ;)

Joey @ NMG

We found this post on climbing.com and find it absolutely amazing! Most books are geared toward men whether they admit it or not lol! Well enjoy the read and check out the rest of their website, there’s tons of informative articles, press releases, up-to-date info from international sources!

GIRL ON THE ROCKS – Winner of a 2009 National Outdoor Book Award
By Allyson Coughlin / GlobePequot.com
 
Globe Pequot Press and FalconGuides are proud to announce GIRL ON THE ROCKS: A Woman’s Guide to Climbing with Strength, Grace, and Courage (ISBN 978-0-7627-4518-0, 19.95, Paperback, November, 2008) by Katie Brown, as the winner of the 2009 National Outdoor Book Awards in the Instructional Category.

 

An influential and groundbreaking climber among both genders, Katie Brown began climbing at age thirteen and quickly dominated competition at the national and international levels. Now in her mid-twenties, she is a freelance writer and the author of Vertical World (FalconGuides). Formerly residing in Moab, Utah; she has recently relocated to Southern California. Check out Katie’s blog on www.yourclimbing.com

 The National Outdoor Book Awards stated that “Katie Brown is one of the foremost female climbers in the world and couldn’t be better suited to write this book. It’s a very well done “how-to” guide, embellished with a classy, contemporary design and crisp I-wanna-do-that photographs. What’s so appealing about this book is that it speaks to women with a woman’s voice. Climbing, as Brown says is empowering, and through her words and example, she inspires women to try new things, live a full life and climb away.”

 For women intrigued by the sport of climbing but intimidated by its male dominance and stereotype as “extreme,” Girl on the Rocks is a monumental and essential resource, providing instructions on technique, strength, and mental agility-from a woman’s perspective.

 Through the sage advice of one of the world’s foremost female climbers and the lens of an internationally acclaimed photographer, women learn that climbing is more fun than dangerous, that overcoming fear can boost self-esteem, and that the fitness benefits are tremendous.

 Most women learn climbing from men, but the sport is different for a woman-both physically and psychologically-and it’s empowering for women to learn about climbing from “girls” who’ve been on the rocks themselves. Bringing the sport to life alongside the book’s numerous color photos, Katie Brown’s interviews with female climbers-from a young girl to a sixty-something professional climber-reveal, on a more intimate level, what the sport has done for them.

 Girl on the Rocks
By Katie Brown
ISBN 978-0-7627-4518-0 o $19.95 o Paperback – 7 1⁄2 x 9 1⁄4 – 160 pages – November, 2008
FalconGuides® is an imprint of The Globe Pequot Press / www.globepequot.com

 Here’s another link about the book: http://www.prana.com/blog/?tag=katie-brown

We hope you enjoy and again this article was found on climbing.com, Great magazine, amazing writers AWESOME website!

~Northeast~

These past few weeks have been awesome for NMG! We’ve been scheduling private guides and group trips for Winter and Spring. We’ve booked tons of Spring trips and hopefully everything works out. Facebook, Myspace and Twitter have been a GREAT way to get our company out in the open.

Thanks to everyone who’s been helping us and aiding us in marketing and promoting! AND for becoming fans/friends on all of our social networking pages! We look forward to working with all of you in the future :)

Check out our website for upcoming trips info and add us on FB, MS and twitter! ;) Hope to see you guys soon!!!

www.northeastmountainguiding.com

Joey and Kayla @ Northeast

Reel Rock Tour!

Don’t forget to check out the ‘Reel Rock Tour’! This tour brings climbing and adventure films to cities near you!

Reel Rock Tour Calendar: http://www.reelrocktour.com/#/calendar/

Reel Rock Tour Homepage: http://www.reelrocktour.com/#

CHECK IT OUT!

Joey @ Northeast

RRGCC is celebrating their Annual Rocktoberfest in the RRG and raising money for the Pendergrass-Murray Recreational Preserve. Help them out! Climbing videos, clinics, gear demos, tons of free stuff, a DYNO COMP and MUCH MUCH MORE!!!

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Event Calendar: http://rrgcc.org/feed/

Registration: http://rrgcc.org/register/

Joey @ Northeast

We found a nice little outfitter shop located right in the town of  Delaware Water Gap, PA called ‘Edge of the Woods Outfitters’.

At first driving by it looked like a house (which it is lol, really cool), we saw signs for gear companies on the front porch and decided to take a peak and we’re glad we did. Top of the line gear, knowledgeable staff, clean, well organized and GREAT service. On top of all that, they also have mountain bike rentals and tours and guided hikes in the area on the McDade Trail!

Here’s there link: http://www.edgeofthewoodsoutfitters.com/

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Be sure to check them out next time you’re in town!!! =)

 

Edge of the Woods Outfitters

110 Main St.

Delaware Water Gap, PA 18327

(570) 421-6681

 

Climb Hard!!!!

Joey @ Northeast

By Dougald MacDonald / The Mountain World

A Spanish pair has climbed a new route on the northwest face of the Titan in Utah’s Fisher Towers and proposed the unprecedented grade of A6+ for the crux lead. David Palmada and Esther Ollé climbed Look Out! Danger in 11 pitches, with one pitch given A6+, three A5 pitches, and three A4+ pitches. They placed no expansion bolts at the belays. The pair based the ratings in part on their ascent last year of Intifada, on the Cottontail formation in the Fisher Towers, a route given A6 by first ascensionist Jim Beyer but said by those few that have repeated it to be A4+ or A5.

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Above Photo: David Palmada leading Look Out! Danger, a new route on the Titan in the Fisher Towers. Photo by Esther Ollé.

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Above Photo: Esther Ollé belaying off hooks (and assorted other gear) on the Titan. Photo by David Palmada.

This article was found on Climbing.com.

http://www.climbing.com/news/hotflashes/a6_in_the_fisher_towers/

 

Joey @ Northeast

I’m not really into SciFi movies but this flick looks badass dude!!! Check it out!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXF2nH4Z9sc

Joey @ Northeast

The following article I found on ‘USA Today’.  I think it’s a must-read, I always thought 911 could zero in on a cell’s location exactly, but apparently not.

Here’s the article…….

By: Becky Vevea, USA Today

Darlene Dukes struggled to speak as she called 911 from her cellphone. She could barely tell the operator her address: 602 Wales Drive.The operator, trying to understand Dukes, sent an ambulance to Wells Street in Atlanta— 28 miles from Dukes’ apartment in Johns Creek, a suburb north of the city.

Paramedics finally reached the stricken woman almost an hour after her call on Aug. 2, 2008. They were too late. Forty minutes after arriving at the hospital, Dukes, 39, the mother of two boys, died of a blood clot in her lungs.

 That cellphone call was critical. If Dukes had called from a land-line telephone, her address would have immediately popped up on the 911 operator’s screen, leaving no room for confusion.

 Dukes’ case is like many others across the nation. For the millions of Americans giving up their land lines in favor of cellphones, dialing 911 may no longer mean a quick response. It can lead to misrouted calls, delayed information about the location of the caller and, most important, a slower emergency response.

“Lots of people are dying each year,” says David Aylward, director of Comcare Emergency Response Alliance, a non-profit advocacy group. “We’re sending in responders where they don’t know information about the person they are responding to. We’re sending them in looking for someone when they should know where they are exactly.”

 911 built for land lines

The nation’s 911 emergency response system, built in 1967, was based on the expectation that calls for help would come from land-line telephones, says Paul Linnee, a consultant for emergency communications. Now, with more people using cellphones exclusively, calls that bounce from tower to tower pose significant challenges.

 Cellphone users “almost assume that they are going to be located — and that’s not a fair assumption,” says Brian Fontes, CEO of the National Emergency Number Association (NENA), which focuses on 911 emergency communications.

 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 20.2% of U.S. households had only wireless phones in 2008, up almost 3 percentage points from 2007. Today, the Federal Communications Commission estimates a third of 911 calls are from cellphones.

 Linnee says even the most advanced 911 systems do not allow a dispatcher to get a specific street address for a wireless call. About 93% of the nation’s 911 centers have technology that lets the dispatcher immediately see the caller’s phone number and the location of the cell tower that picks up the call. But the dispatcher must request the caller’s GPS coordinates from the wireless carrier that operates the tower. This process can take several seconds and may yield a location as far as 300 meters from the caller, not much help in a high-rise apartment.

 The FCC requires that carriers be able to locate a caller, within 300 meters, for 95% of their calls in each state. A proposal pending before the FCC calls for carriers to be able to locate 95% of their calls in each county.

 Misrouting common

 Cellphone calls are commonly misrouted to the wrong 911 center, a problem not addressed by the FCC. In Jefferson County, N.Y., just across Lake Ontario from Canada, Joseph Plummer, director of the county’s fire and emergency management, says dispatchers occasionally get calls from Canada.

 Unlike land-line calls, which are sent to the 911 center for their jurisdiction, wireless calls can hit the wrong tower, further slowing the response.

 Misrouting also happens in metropolitan areas where multiple jurisdictions are bunched together. In Cook County, Ill., there are more than 100 different 911 centers, Linnee says, making it extremely common for calls to hit towers outside of the proper jurisdiction.

 Problems run deeper still in areas where wireless carriers and 911 centers have not adopted the latest technologies. According to NENA, 7% of the nation’s 911 centers are able to obtain only the location of the tower that picks up the wireless call and are not equipped to request GPS coordinates for the caller’s location. More than 100 counties still have only this so-called Basic 911 service. Cellphone callers in these counties are unlikely to summon emergency services unless they can orally tell the operator where they are.

 Improvements are coming, however. This month, a 911 center in Waterloo, Iowa, serving Black Hawk County, became the first in the country with the capacity to receive text messages.

 Last week, NENA announced the formation of a consortium of emergency response organizations and wireless experts to secure federal stimulus funds to upgrade 911 operations by using broadband technology. Patrick Halley, director of government affairs for NENA, says the goal is to allow callers to send video and text messages to 911 centers.

 In the year since Dukes’ death, the town where she lived, Johns Creek, has partnered with the neighboring town of Sandy Springs to install a joint 911 center, says Noah Reiter, assistant city manager for Sandy Springs. The new $3.5 million system, partly inspired by Dukes’ death, will launch Sept. 1.

They have officially announced the dates, which are March 19-21 at Red Rock Naitonal Conservation Area in Las Vegas, Nevada!

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Join us and many more for a ROCKIN’ event in the desert! =)

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Here’s the link! CHECK IT OUT and we hope to see you there!!!

http://www.mountaingear.com/RedRock/

Joey @ Northeast

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