Morgan’s photos from Stortinden…

Below are Morgan Sahlén’s photos from our adventure on Stortinden a few days ago! 
Check out the account of this adventure here
The approach – long, like many times before… 

The snow was perfect for skiing, but one doesn’t want heavy snow fall on this, huh? 

Luckily enough we found a big boulder to rap from at the top

Me doing the first exposed turns on Mallroy

Me again

Putting in an anchor on a single bomber piton feeling like Hermann Buhl

Back down in the sun!

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Jiehkkevarri 1833 m – Traversing the island via the highest mountain in Lyngen and skiing a wonderful couloir – a venture that could become tomorrow’s classic

Yesterday the Sahlén brothers and myself went for another try of Jiehkkevarri, the highest mountain in Lyngen.
Exhausted from the last weeks big days and not extremely motivated for another early start and climb of Holmbuktstind we took of early morning. Weather being perfect with not a cloud on the sky we easily cruised to the top of Jiehkkevarri in 4,5 hours.
The east couloir on Jiehkkevarri
From there we skied down southeast to get have a look at our objectives: the South face or the east couloir of the mountain. We took an hour to examining the south face (also known as the Arctic Brenva Face) from up close, but we didn’t feel like the risk equaled the rewards so we walked back up again and aimed for the east couloir instead, a beautiful line that doesn’t seem to have had been skied in its entirety before.
It turned out to be a beautiful preserved gem and offered us the best skiing we had for the whole trip! It’s an about 800 vertical meter couloir with a big mountain ambiance totally hidden away from the normally busy (for Lyngen standards) summit. We found the couloir with thirty centimeters of cold powder snow and where totally amazed on how good the skiing was!
This adventure should become a future classic for the new generation of mountain skiers. You get to summit the highest mountain on in Lyngen, traverse the whole “island” and ski a fairly easy but grand couloir in big mountain ambiance with seracs looming high above your head (not too bad though, its only for the lower part), then its only about an hour of walking and pushing to get back to the shores on the east side (where you hopefully have parked a car in advance).
If the couloir doesn’t have a name already, I suggest Linus’ couloir for the passionate skier Linus Johansson who have already skied part of the line and who pointed it out for us! I know people used to climb up this as a climbing route a long time ago, but I can’t really see how this could be considered climbing by modern standards… But whatever name this line will have in the future its still an itinerary that deserve to be a classic in Lyngen.
With this one bagged we start to feel like we are done with the big days in Lyngen for this time. Now its time for some rest, some good powder turns and soon we are of to Cham!
A tired crew getting ready in the morning
The Sahlén brothers
Bjarne with the fjord in the backdrop (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
Our goal, the summit of Jiehkkevarri in the middle
Myself on the flat summit (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
Looking down the south face
Bjarne looking in to the east couloir (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
Morgan and Bjarne walking back up from the entrance of the south face
Morgan belaying me so I’m able to safely check the snowpack
Looking in to the east couloir
On of the brothers in action
Myself, super happy with the skiing! (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
About one third down the couloir
Morgan skiing
And again
Happy Morgan!
Bjarne charging
Bjarne taking of
Morgan…
Myself (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
getting closer to the bergschrunds (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
Bjarne can be seen as the small dot in the center of the picture
Its a big face
Morgan coming down on the glacier
And at the end, walking back… Sliding, pushing and walking it took a little bit more than an hour to get back to the car from the couloir. Its 9 km and we took it easy… (Photo: Morgan Sahlén)
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Failure on Jiehkkevarri – Or, how we climbed and skied the normal route on Holmbuktstind in a snowstorm

On Monday we went to try Jiehkkevarri, the highest mountain in Lyngen, together with Patrik Jonsson (CEO on Magic Mountain Lodge) and Fredrik Aspö.
Our intention was to traverse the whole island via the highest mountain on in Lyngen and then try to spice it up on the way down. We wanted to check out the south face and we also had a great plan B in mind.

We started out early in the morning in good and clear weather, but the clouds where on their way in. The forecast up here is really unreliable so one just have to wake up and hope for the best in the mornings. We where hoping that the clouds would disappear while we where walking so we started up the normal route via Holmbuktstind.

To make a short story even shorter; the weather did not improve – it got much worse and when we where on the big glacier between Holmbuktstind and Jiehkkevarri we could not se much else than each other. We knew that if we would manage to find the summit (that is hard to find in good weather, because its so flat) we would still not be able to do any kind of interesting skiing. So we retraced our tracks and skied down the same way we had come. We got some good turns and got back to the lodge in good time for Mintu hot chocolate.

It was just another good day in the mountains with around 1700-1800 vertical meters of skinning. I felt a bit disappointed though, as this one would have been a great ending to our episodes and we did not have many days left. 

All photos below are taken by Morgan Sahlén:
Bjarne walking in the snow storm

We finally found our way back to where we could see something

Myself skiing some powder

And asking Bjarne where to go

Patrik Jonsson taking a break

Myself skiing

Bjarne charging

Both Bjarne and me visited other realms after skiing

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The Marecottes episode up on Oakley.com

Check it out here!

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An everyday adventure in les Marecottes – another episode from Endlessflow!

This is another episode from Bjarne Sahlén from when we took a small two-day adventure to Les Dents du Midi earlier this winter. The conditions where not perfect but we went out there trying and had another good mountain escapade!


Check out more of Bjarne’s good work at: endlessflow.posterous.com.

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This is it

This one is for all of us out there searching, for whatever that might be!

I shared this one last year too, but I feel like its time for a retake. I’m turning 29 today, and I’m still on the grand search… Jeff’s words are both comforting and alarming for me. I got reminded of it again when I found my girlfriend in tears after listening to him. 

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Stortinden – Mallroy

Yesterday we had another great and long day on the mountain. We drove around the mountain the day before to do some camping along the beach and then, in the morning we walked in to Stortinden on the south island of Lyngen. 
Stortinden with the ramp, Mallroy, clearly possible on the north face – a really special run in the Lyngen alps… 
On one of the first days in Lyngen we spotted this beautiful ramp that crosses the north face of the mountain and we felt from the first glimpse that this would be a perfect project for us!

The approach was long, but not very complex and just after twelve o’clock Morgan and me stood on the top of the mountain while Bjarne had reached his filming spot on the other side of the valley.

From here Morgan belayed me so I could have a good look at the entrance just under a big cornice. I shoveled away plenty of snow and then we tied a sling around a block and rappelled down to the start. I screwed up a bit as the perspectives had changed from the photo in my camera so I rappelled down to the next face further down and Morgan had to belay me so I could climb back up.

But in the end we where right and I started skiing down the extremely exposed start of the ramp. It was steep and at one point there was a meter vide steep traverse to skiers left with hundreds of meter of air under my skis. After that Morgan took over and cruised the wonderful snow on the ramp in big turns. I followed him and got really amazed of the snow quality in this forgotten place.


We continued down to a narrowing where we changed to crampons, down climbed for ten meters and then continued skiers left. We where not totally sure about the continuation because the terrain was very convex with just a little bit of snow on slabs so I banged in a piton and used rope support over a ledge. From here we kept on moving skiers left in to a couloir that offered us excellent snow all the way to the open fields below the face.

At that point I was relieved that we had found a good way down and got really happy to get some low angle powder turns to end the day.

We got back to the Magic Mountain Lodge at eight o’clock to an awaiting dinner. Today we have been resting in the sun, eating lots of birthday cake and doing interviews for the episodes. Tomorrow we are aiming for another big day in the mountains!

The name, Mallroy, hints to a classic on the north face of Midi in Cham. Both runs are including a seriously exposed traverse… 

Boys getting ready at the car

The approach

Morgan making the track in deep powder

Morgan close to the top

Happy boys at the summit of Stortinden

The entrance

The start of the ramp

Some one third down

Morgan Sahlén in excellent snow

Look at the snow cloud!

!!!

Morgan disappeared… not to common on steep skiing missions

Happy Morgan!

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