The Legend 2014
The Legend 2014
The Legend 2014
Legend
THEContents
legend
Letter From the Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Brian Kennedy & Bryan Lehrer
Director Updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A Katahdin Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Douglas Smith
The Armadillo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Collin McCullough
#SURFTERM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
John Cappetta
Caretaker Tv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Jordan Cargill
Alumni Updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Last fall, in a caravan of couches, chairs, and memorabilia, BOC members and alumni begrudgingly moved from our historic meeting room in Alumni Gym to a new meeting room in
Chase Hall. Thus began our year-long move to the BOCs new Chase Hall facilities: a spacious meeting room with high ceilings, a new AESOP office, a council hangout room, and a
customized, Equipment Room. In January we finally cleaned out the last pieces of gear from
the old E-Room in Hawthorne Hall and settled (hopefully) permanently in our new Chase Hall
home. From Chase Hall, we have continued to run old and new BOC trips including 4 sunrise
paddles; 5+ surfing trips; 15+ climbing trips including ice climbing and climbing competitions
in Merrill Gym; 20+ hiking trips in Maine, New Hampshire, and Nova Scotia; and, as usual,
more skiing trips to Sugarloaf, SundayRiver, Tucks, Mt. Abrams, and Saddleback than could
be counted.
Some of my most enduring memories at Bates have been related to the BOC: long debates over
avalanche beacon purchases, bushwacking in the Crocker Mountain Range, and early morning
Clambake set-ups are only a few. Through various BOC directorships, Ive had the opportunity
to grow as a leader, gain confidence in my decision-making abilities, and work closely with
my peers. And I am not the only member of the BOC that feels this way; in holding leadership
positions in this student-run club, members are guaranteed to gain the leadership and communication skills that are integral to success beyond just the outdoor world. And because of this,
were making an effort to revive the tradition of alumni donations to the BOC. With the help
of the recently established Friends of the BOC fund, we can improve our gear stock and facilities to ensure that future BOC members have even more opportunities for outdoor adventures
and personal growth than are currently available. Our next big project is a bouldering wall expansion in Merrill Gym which will not be possible without the help of our donors. If you wish
to contribute to the Friends of the BOC, please contact the Alumni Relations office for more
information. Heres to another successful year with the BOC!
Director
Updates
During the Fall semester, 2013, I undertook the responsibilities of Cabins and Trails along with the dedicated,
hard-working, passionate Joseph Marques, who happened
to be abroad. One of the responsibilities of the position was
to look after the Bates Section of the Appalachian Trail,
located at Bemis mountain. One day I solo-sojourned up to
Bemis. After having a hard time of tracking down directions,
accurate instruction on reaching the stretch were found in
the trail-work journal. The trail includes some wonderful
stretches of ridgeline looking down onto the rolling hills of
the greater Rumford-Mexico area. Litter was collected, brush
was cleared, and a few blowdowns were hacked up. General
organization and cleaning of the camp at Bemis Mountain
shelter was completed and mental notes of some boggy areas
prime for future bog-bridge construction were made. A full
report was given to the BOC upon return. All told, it was a
productive, informative trip on a crisp autumn day, covering
about 7 miles of rugged Bates pride.
Another brief stint included some trail clearing with Dan Paseltiner, Allie Balter, and Judy Marden around the Lean-To
in Greene, ME. Conditions were wet, but we dried off with a
roaring fire and enjoyed a delicious barbecue at the lean-to.
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Safety - Patt Jeffries 14
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We were lucky enough to have several Alumni contributions this year (see alumni contributions), but none as compelling as this beautiful history and tragic recount of
the Baxter State Park Ranger, Ralph Heath, by Dough Smith 63. Doug Smith actively participated in Outing Club activities from 1959 to 1963 and has made Five trips to
Katahdin, a place, he says, remains special in his heart. Smith is best known for the Paul Bunyan snow sculpture built by members of the Outing Club for the 1962 Winter
Carnival, the picture of which is in the Coram Library. See article Raising Paul Bunyan in the 2009 Issue of the BOC Legend.
A Katahdin Memory
Douglas G. Smith 63
n 1948 Earl Shaffer was the first to hike the entire length
of the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine in one
season. He did it again in 1998 at age 79. The night before his
final climb in 1998 Earl penned the above poem and gave it
to Buzz Caverly, the Baxter State Park Director
No matter what date those planning on reaching Mt. Katahdin, the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail,
all schedules center on one date, October 15, the final date
climbers without a special permit may make their rendezvous
on Baxter Peak. Few, if any know how this date came to be
and that it was a result of the tragic loss of a heroic 40year old ranger and the woman he tried to save in a raging
snowstorm on October 29, 1963. Ranger Ralph Heath was
appointed to Chimney Pond Campground by the legendary
supervisory ranger Helon Taylor in 1960. Trips by the Bates
College Outing Club to achieve the Mt Katahdin summit
included camping at Chimney Pond All enjoyed contact with
Ranger Heath who was quick with a story or witty remark
and who was intent on making sure all enjoyed a safe experience at Chimney Pond.
drink the water, the client pulled two glass gallon jugs of water from his pack and emptied the contents onto the ground
thus disappointing young Heath who had expected a swig of
whiskey and rued the fact he had lugged such an unnecessary
load.
Once I asked Heath about fish in Chimney Pond and he
launched into another New Yawka story. It seems one
morning Ranger Ralph asked a person fishing in Chimney
Pond if he was using worms or flies. Assured that flies, not
worms that would contaminate the drinking water, were
at the end of the pole, Heath continued in his duties. About
noon, the frustrated fisherman came to the ranger cabin and
demanded to know, Are there any fish in that pond? Heath,
replied, Nary a one as it is too cold. Why you didnt tell me
this morning? the put-out man demanded. Heath: Well,
you didnt ask. I had my own Ranger Ralph story. Chimney
Pond was a classic campground with trails laid out with rocks
and many lean-tos. Most of these were built in 1958 and 1959
when Army helicopters from Fort Devens, Massachusetts
flew in 34 trips, eleven tons of building material. I worked
with Ralph Heath in the summer of 1960 worked to finish
the interior of the ranger cabin. The Chimney Pond campground had an open dump. One afternoon, I brought our
debris to the dump. The dump was located in an open area
and had a good view of both Chimney Pond and the steeply
rising heights of this most perfect glacial cirque. Sitting on a
stump, I heard a noise. I turned and looked around to see a
large brown bear, eating out of a number 10 can. I panicked,
and made a dash into the main campground and came onto
Ranger Ralph. Ranger ! I said, there is a big bear down in
the dump Ranger Heath, glanced at his watch and said, Yup,
he is right on time. Ranger Ralph Heath distinguished himself in his devotion to duty but won over many friends with
his kindly and authentic Maine humor.
Ralph Heath
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The Defining Tragedy of 1963
Aftermath
The Armadillo
Collin McCullough 14
9
On the Bates Outing Clubs annual Assault on Katahdin I was
packed ass-to-face with every New Englander and their mother
taking advantage of the perfect October weather. As we climbed up
the well marked trail, my thoughts kept flicking back to my four
friends making the climb up the Dillo that day. When I reached
the summit and scooted out to peer over the edge, I saw what they
were in for. Sheer globules of granite faces with well defined crack
systems worked their way up to my perch. I didnt gaze over the
edge for long. Better to be roped in when the bottom drops out. We
all hoped that the climbers would meet us on the summit. They
didnt. While we enjoyed sammys and hangovers on the peak of
Big K, the two climbing teamsJosh Sturtevant and Charlie Grant,
Sarah Xiao and Jordan Cargillwere only beginning a full on
struggle up one of the North Easts crown jewel climbs
Sarah Xiao: I was really nervous. It was the first climb that
I had done where we were all on the same experience levels.
I was used to climbing with people who were more experienced than me.
Jordan Cargill: I was excited. It was an epic climb to a scale
that I had never done before. True alpine trad. There was a
nervousness there, especially because I was leading for the
first time.
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through the brambles and he would stop and wait for me
when I was slowing down because my legs were bleeding.
JC: Definitely stoked I brought pants. Their legs got fucking
shredded, especially Sarahs. It was a grueling climb through
scrub brush. We felt like we had been the first people there
in months. There were some stretches that were dangerous,
fourth class moves, places where you would not stop falling.
In a way it was more dangerous than the actual climb.
THE CLIMB:
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C: There is this scary move where you transition off the flake,
it was a frightening move with very few pieces of protection.
There is one pin you can clip, but it looked unreliable. Turning onto the face was the scary part. You couldnt fall.
JS: I was already sore, tired, and concerned about the rest of
the climb. I was sitting there on this tiny ledge, feeding out
the rope, Charlies gone, cant hear him, cant see him, the
winds howling.Then I rediscovered my excitement for being
on this mountain, I rediscovered my technique and I settled
in. The rest of the climbing was pretty fun.
JC: Then starts the 3rd pitch, this is it, the best rated climb
on the armadillo. Perfect fist and foot jams up this enormous
face, full blunt exposure. You just walk up this thing like a
zipper with a few moves. Then it splits open to what people
call an off width, too big to jam, too small to put your body
in. This is where the number four comes in. Even though its
secure its actually pretty sketchy. I was leaning on this piece,
moving it up as I went up the awkward climb.
JS: The third pitch, the namesake of the climb, is this fists
width crack. I had learned how to climb crack earlier that
year. To be a good crack climber you have to be masochistic,
slam your hand in there and let the rock battle it out with
your hand. The route had the most beautiful fist jams, finger
cracks, fist cracks. That was the most fun part of the climb
for me. I was making my hand uniform with the rock.
S: The third pitch was the best pitch that we did because
it had this amazing crack. There really isnt that much
crack-climbing in New England so it was really surprising to
find that. I had gotten a taste of it in Yosemite last summer
and this was on par with that.
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BOC CLIMBS
Nick Michaud 15
Nine Batesies went down to the Red River Gorge in Kentucky for a
week of climbing over April break, here are some of their favorite
memories. Photos taken by Callum Douglas.Douglas.
Becca Leloudis 16
There was a 5.10c climb we tried on the first day that Nick
and I got a third of the way up before we both got stuck at
the same point, known as the butt crack. It was really frustrating. The next day we came back and decided to bag a 5.10
climb and we both did it on the first try. It was probably the
best feeling at the end of a climb Ive felt all the whole week.
S
Callum Douglas 16
#SurfTerm
John Cappetta 16
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called a high school surfing buddy of mine, Jean Louis, to
see if he would show us around. JL is the most surf-stoked
person I have ever met. JL has no car at school, hadnt surfed
in a month, and knew that the swell was on its way, so he
was amped to play tour guide if it meant he could get in the
water.
Santa Cruz is one of surfings seven holy sites and it has the
most consistently surf-able waves on the central coast, so it
tends to draw a crowd to its better-publicized spots. Our first
session was at the well-renowned Steamers Lane. We caught
a couple sets into the cove but, the waves were a mushy head
high and the crowd belonged in Vatican City on Judgment
Day. Back on shore we were ready for lunch but decided to
check a fickle spot called Natural Bridges, expecting nothing.
Instead, we were greeted in the parking lot with visions of
gnarly, dredging barrels. Despite our cold induced bitchiness,
there was no way JL wasnt going to surf, so we pulled on wet
wetsuits and got hyped for the half-mile paddle. I claimed
that I would surf for forty-five minutes, no morewe were
back at the car two hours later. It was good: steep, deep, head
high drops followed by a section where the wind made every
turn look like it was throwing one thousand bucket-units
of spray, then a high line for the inside racetrack, taken at
NASCAR speed, wind in your hair, feeling like the board is
about to lift out of the water, maybe pull into the barrel if
youre a masochist, and get spit up onto the rocks laughing
hysterically
The swell started to drop, so we bopped around San Fransisco for a day, seeing touristy things, eating sandwiches,
driving nice roads in Marin and staring at the Golden Gate
Bridge. The next day brought a little more pulse to the Pacific, and we met up with JL at Ocean Beach to get pummeled
by six-foot thumpers groomed by a rare offshore breeze.
Then we continued north the One twisting through groves
of cypress and eucalyptus, past working coastal towns hiding
behind signs that read Save Reyes Oyster Farming and into
Sonoma County. As we neared the boundary of the Sonoma
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Caretaker Tv
Jordan Cargill 16
15
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unveiled himself in brilliant pink. As I surveyed the setting
transformed by the suns appearance I noticed a slight pink
hue at the base of the rain columns. At first I thought it a
passing trick of the light, but the pink hue only increased
in brilliance and marched steadily up the columns. At the
crescendo the air was so rich with pink it seemed tangible.
I may have even tried to grab hold of it. As the sun sank I
sat on my granite stool heedless of the puddled drool on my
jacket and uncertain whether or not Id soiled my one pair of
underwear.
When I came to Gray Knob I brought many romantic hopes
for my time as a caretaker. This sunset exceeded any of them.
Alumni Updates
Jeannette Packard Stewart 46
Readers interested in the succulent historical details mentioned by Mrs. Stewart
should fInd and peruse Bates Through the Years: An Illustrated History by
Charles E. Clark
I remember day outings at Thorncrag our first semester the
fall of 1942- when we were freshmen. hosted by The Bates
Outing Club. Then Uncle Sam took most of the men for
World War 2 and we forgot about the place. After the war
ended, we were married on August 9, 1947 when George
started his junior year- we lived in the barracks in Bardwell
House- facing Garcelon Field, one of three barracks for married vets.
We had work days at Thorncrag, as it had been ignored
during the war, and trimmed the paths. The cabin needed
repairs, I believe we spent the night thereI am thrilled that the Outing Club has it's own space in Chase
Hall. Will the remodeling of Chase give you more space? The
Bates Outing Club one of the oldest in the country- perhaps
the oldest coed Outing Club. Always positive feelings about
the Outing Club.
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Joanne Stato 73 - My Camping History
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Julia Holmes Reuter, Class of 1974
I live an hour from Bates in Bethel, Maine, and love it for its
outdoor opportunities and lack of crowds. Im still playing
outside and have been ever since I met my husband-to-be,
James Reuter, 75 on a BOC trip to Tuckerman Ravine in
May of 1972. Classic, eh? We both signed up alone, neither
of us had a friend who wanted to hike to ski! Six signed up
the other four were matched up. We did not fall in love that
day, but it was the day we met.
We hike, bike, and XC ski we gave up alpine skiing
years ago. Unlike many, we find alpine skiing boring and
cross-country skiing much more interesting. We're up to
taking two ski vacations to Quebec each winter to XC ski!
We love the guaranteed snow and the French culture. Professors Caron and Steele from the 70s would be pleased to
hear us speak French! Our favorite places are Mont GrandFonds, near La Malbaie and Camp Mercier in the Laurentides
north of Quebec City.
We hike here in Maine and New Hampshire and get out west
too we have enjoyed the Olympic peninsula in Washington,
many places in amazing Utah, and also, Arizona, Wyoming,
Idaho, Colorado, and California. We have yet to travel west
in the winter. Our son, John Rueter 07, lives in Sun Valley,
Idaho and wants to share his XC ski trails with us, but its
hard to leave our beloved Quebecois snow and easy drive
no shipping skis!
Currently, our summer passion is cycling and Jim cycles 10
months of the year. There's a great shop and group in Bethel.
Jim does "brevets" -- long-distance, timed rides. He and a
friend are working on qualifying for Paris-Brest-Paris, a 1200
kilometer ride in under 4 days in August 2015.
When at Bates, I always looked forward to the BOC trip
signs going up in Commons. Cant thank Bates and the BOC
enough for helping me find my outdoor-loving husband who
pushes me off the couch when I get lazy!
(Photo below; we are on the left. Dont you love Jims hair?
And on the right are Bert Andrews '74 -- now passed on and
there is an exercise room at Bates named after him and his
wife -- not married yet in 1972, Cindy Holmes Andrews '74)
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