Margaret Wheeler is a co-author of the new Backcountry Skiing book that is part of the
Mountaineers Outdoor Expert Series.
I found this news report about an all women's backcountry ski trip that she
led in Washington State. The original article was published on March
19th in the
Seattle PI.
ALL-WOMEN BACKCOUNTRY SKI CLINIC LEAVES THE LIFT NOISE AND CROWDS BEHIND
Last updated March 19, 2008 10:33 a.m. PT
By PHUONG CAT LE
P-I REPORTER
After
a quick check of gear -- avalanche transceiver, probe and shovel -- we
smooth climbing skins onto the bottoms of skis for traction, click
boots into alpine touring bindings and set off for Snow Lake in the
Alpine Lakes Wilderness.
We're after fresh powder, a backcountry ski adventure and some peace and quiet away from cranking ski lifts and crowded slopes.
The
morning temperature is below freezing. The air still. Our breaths form
thick clouds in front of us. We move quickly to stay warm, heading
toward Source Lake basin before cutting north to Snow Lake, in pursuit
of the sun teasing us ahead.
A half-hour out, we've lost
ourselves in the rhythm of skinning. Whirrrl, click. Whirrrl, click.
Our skis slide softly across still-crusty hard snow, heels lifting and
pushing us forward in long gliding motions.
"It's so gorgeous," says Selena Bryan, 49, a dental assistant who lives in North Bend, one of six women on this ski tour.
Our
good-natured guide is Margaret Wheeler, a part-time mechanical engineer
by trade, impressive mountain guide by every other definition.
In
a sport mostly dominated by alpha males, Wheeler, 33, stands out. She's
one of only two women in the U.S. to be a UIAGM-certified guide,
allowing her to guide internationally.
On this Friday morning,
she cuts a figure of a rock star, 6 feet tall with a shock of
platinum-blond hair and a metal-studded belt slung low around her waist.
"It's
all about conserving energy, regulating your heart rate," she tells us,
as we zigzag up the snowy slope on our skis, relying on the traction of
our climbing skins to prevent us from sliding back downhill. "Listen to
your body and don't make it do anything you don't want it to do."
While
the climb up and over the saddle to Snow Lake isn't particularly
strenuous, Wheeler reminds us to pace ourselves so we'll have energy
for the downhill turns.

Compass work is an integral part of Wheeler's advanced ski-touring course.
Wheeler, who works for Pro Guiding Service in North Bend, saw a need
and began offering "She Rocks the Alpine" courses to get women into the
mountains. Her four-day introductory and advanced ski-touring courses
cover all aspects of the sport -- how to do it, when to do it, and how
to read terrain and snow conditions, conduct avalanche rescues and tour
efficiently. (Pro Guiding offers similar coed courses).
"We live
in a fabulous place and there's excellent skiing year-round," she says.
"There's a large, healthy backcountry skiing community here."
More
people are venturing out into backcountry than ever before -- drawn by
fresh powder runs, lighter and better gear and a growing disdain for
crowds and pricey lift tickets.
And while backcountry skiing may
conjure up images of extreme 20-somethings ducking ropes to go out of
bounds, the demographics of our group shows the sport has broader
appeal.
"It's just something I've always wanted to do," said Ann
Finlay, 39, a public relations consultant and mother of two, out for
the first time. "I love downhill skiing but it's just so crowded."
Some
may venture out without the skills or experience to travel in the
backcountry safely, but Bryan is not one of them. She has taken
Wheeler's course for a second time.
"It's surprising how many
people go out here and aren't prepared. It's so key," she says. "I'm
not one to go in blind. There's a lot to know."

From left, Martina Widmann, Selena Bryan and Terri Sanders take a break while climbing to Kendall Lake near Snoqualmie Pass during an advanced ski-touring course in February.
The risky nature of the sport is soon apparent when Wheeler points out
a spot on our trail where a snowshoer was buried and killed by an
avalanche a few years ago. Already this season, nine people have died
from avalanches in Washington, including two snowmobilers, three
hikers, one showshoer and three snowboarders. Early winter storms
produced more dangerous, unstable snowpack, creating higher risks of
avalanches.
"People who get into trouble are people who don't
know what they should be worried about," Wheeler tells me later. Then
there are the people who know enough to get into the terrain but have
"a cavalier attitude," while some are experienced people "who are at
the wrong place at the wrong time."
Get avalanche training and
backcountry instruction, she says. Learn to assess avalanche danger and
how to travel safely in avalanche terrain.
The advice goes on:
Check the weather and avalanche forecasts before you go. Travel with a
partner. Carry basic safety equipment and know how to use it. Be
flexible and willing to change your plans; don't be so set that you
ignore the conditions.
Backcountry enthusiasts go through the trouble because the rewards are immense.
"When
we're out here, you don't think about anything else," Bryan says. Even
when the snow is crud and the skiing variable, she says, it's worth it.
This
day is clear proof. The clouds have parted to a bluebird afternoon. We
skin up through a forest of pine trees, its boughs bending under the
weight of thick snow. The rolling terrain ahead of us looks like
someone lined it with soft down pillows.
We admire the views of impressive Chair Peak and surrounding summits and feel grateful to have the place to ourselves.
After
lunch, we run through avalanche rescue drills and take turns burying
our transceivers in the snow (to simulate a buried victim). As often as
I've done this exercise, my adrenaline always rushes, because I know
the chances of recovering a buried victim drops precipitously after 15
minutes.
"Be slow to be fast," Wheeler says, as if reading my
racing heart beat. We search using a grid pattern, sweeping left to
right and then in the opposite direction until we get a signal. Then we
move in closer, following the flux line until we pinpoint the signal to
within a half meter. Out come the probes, and we're sticking it into
the snow in a spiral until we get a hit.
"Victims" properly
located, it's time for our first turns of the day. Climbing skins off
our skis, we follow Wheeler for a bit of tree skiing before it opens
into a nice bowl down to the frozen snow-covered lake.

Instructor Margaret Wheeler breaks track, above, and plows through powder, below, while leading a group up to Kendall Lake.
Despite getting in no more than a couple dozen turns, no one is
disappointed. "That was awesome," I hear someone say. We want more, no
matter that the snow was thin breakable crust in some areas, powdery
sweetness in others.
We put our climbing skins back on, climb
back up the ridge through switchbacks and retrace our way out of the
valley. It's all downhill from here, our delicious reward for eschewing
chairlifts in favor of foot power.
Then we're all back on the
cat track that leads out to the trailhead, and Wheeler tells us to
watch for the busy line of Alpental skiers and snowboarders who use
this "luge track" to get back to the resort lifts.
Realizing this, Finlay is floored. "There's a lift?"
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