VertFest 2008 Sees Modest Growth - 2 skiers vie for prizes and support NW Avy Center

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Written by Craig Dostie   
Monday, 03 March 2008

Crystal Mountain, WA – The second annual VertFest was a resounding success with 62 racers participating in a randonnée rally while hundreds of skiers checked out backcountry equipment from local retailers like Marmot Mountain in Bellevue, and manufacturers like Dynafit, Atomic, K2, Black Diamond, Fritschi, G3, Karhu, Scarpa, Rottefella, Garmont, Crispi, Osprey, MSR, and 7TM. The main sponsor and organizer of the event was Outdoor Research, along with host, Crystal Mountain Resort.


The first pitch of the course, with positions already evident.

This has been a good year for snow in the northwest, but that was underscored on the day of the event as a fresh six inches of snow fell on the slopes of Crystal Mountain. This made for interesting race conditions, especially on the upper section of the course where the base layer was icy, making good grip on the main skin track truly challenging. Many skiers wised up and broke their own trail, allowing for a true backcountry experience where the path you take counts, and several positions were exchanged at this stage.

Two basic categories of racers participated in the event, professional and recreational, with sub-categories for women, telemark, and splitboarders. Recreational racers ran the course once, completing a 2600 vertical foot loop that went from the base (4,400’) to the top of Silver Queen (7,002’) peak, while the race division did a second lap up for a total of 4800 vertical feet, with a variation on the downhill leg that brought them through the Bar Pits.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bene Bohm, putting the move on to win with a time of 1 hour, 45 min., 33.6 seconds. Smokin' He moves that fast ALL the time as some of us found out the next day in the backcountry.
Photo by Derek Jensen

The winner of the Race Division was Benedict Bohm, from Germany, Dynafit’s internatioal sales manager with a time of 1:45:33.60. Salt Lake City’s Jared Inouye came in five minutes later and Miki Knizka seven minutes later still placed third. On the first lap Jared was a mere 9 seconds behind Bene, but the second lap revealed the difference a longer stride can make. In the women’s pro division Monika Johnson from Seattle won the women’s pro division with a time of 2:34:00, with Hillary Harrison from Crystal Mountain in second, and Lina Augaitis from Vancouver placing third.

In the recreational division, where the skiers only did one lap, Randy Iddings from Enumclaw, Washington (just down the road from Crystal) won with a time of 1:22:44.60, followed by Ben Neilson from Renton and then Daniel Tomko from Bellevue, Washington.

Unlike the first VertFest, the second incarnation was more of a local event. Nearly every racer in the rally was a local from Washington, or nearby Oregon and British Columbia. Only four came from further, one each from California, Colorado, Utah, and Germany. Missing were the regulars in the USSMA race series. They were all in Europe attending the international championship races. The result was several people placing overall higher than expected.

 

Related Links:

Report on VertFest 2007

SLC Samurai Blog on VertFest

 

VertFest '08 Race Results

Men - Race Division (2 laps, 4800')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Benedikt Boehm Munich
DE
01:45:33.60
2
Jared Inouye Salt Lake City
UT
01:50:21.41
3
Miki Knizka North Vancouver
BC
01:57:04.26
4
Stano Faban Coquitlam
BC
01:59:28.35
5
Seth Davis Seattle
WA
02:00:23.72
6
Lowell Skoog Seattle
WA
02:17:23.31
7
Dan Nordstrom Bellevue
WA
02:35:40.31
8
Ben Bliesner Rhododendron
OR
02:38:13.16
9
Dan Cauthorn Seattle
WA
02:41:28.60
10
Paul Russell Seattle
WA
02:45:05.83
11
John Stimberis Ellensburg
WA
02:48:53.60
12
Crispin Prahl Seattle
WA
02:49:39.60
13
James Rowe Seattle
WA
03:34:01.60
14
Joe Wadden Seattle
WA
03:48:40.08
15
Sean Wetterberg Lynwood
WA
03:52:00.89
16
Alan Rouleau Duvall
WA
03:52:28.79

Women - Race Division (2 laps, 4800')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Monika Johnson Seattle
WA
02:34:00.72
2
Hillary Harrison Crystal Mtn
WA
02:39:17.22
3
Lina Augaitis North Vancouver
BC
02:42:24.40

 

Topping out on the K2 face, the steepest section of the course where booting was the fastest option.
Photo by Kieth Karlick

 

Men - Open Division (1 lap, 2600')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Randy Iddings Enumclaw
WA
01:22:44.60
2
Ben Neilson Renton
WA
01:22:49.12
3
Daniel Tomko Bellevue
WA
01:24:02.45
4
Herb Cole Seattle
WA
01:24:28.67
5
Scott Kingland Enumclaw
WA
01:25:00.42
6
David Reed Golden
CO
01:27:31.24
7
Sam Carlson Tacoma
WA
01:29:01.38
8
Klaus Fleischmann Issaquah
WA
01:29:59.92
9
Aaron Ostrovsky Seattle
WA
01:31:43.48
10
Andrew Bates Dupont
WA
01:36:42.94
11
Rick Knowles Orting
WA
01:36:46.40
12
David Coleman Kenmore
WA
01:38:02.43
13
Patrick Millegan Seattle
WA
01:40:38.25
14
Rob Jensen Tacoma
WA
01:42:29.91
15
Don Denton North Bend
W
01:46:48.62
16
David Moir Seattle
WA
01:48:29.77
17
Paresh Kamdar Seattle
WA
01:49:38.06
18
Chris Roy Blaine
WA
01:54:17.42
19
Bruce Mcmillan Sammamish
WA
01:55:14.11
20
Andrew Burns Edgewood
WA
01:56:40.42
21
Bill Wagner Seattle
WA
01:57:25.69
22
Boe Zinter Sammamish
WA
01:57:26.60
23
Alex Kutches Edmonds
WA
01:57:56.72
24
Dave Perella Seattle
WA
02:08:31.61
25
John Waechter Seattle
WA
02:10:26.60
26
Jerry Bosch Seattle
WA
02:11:13.40
27
Gary Bamesberger Woodinville
WA
02:14:00.54
28
Hugh Everett Seattle
WA
02:57:29.52

Women - Open Division (1 lap, 2600')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Kim Kircher Medina
WA
01:33:38.21
2
Andrea Ostrovsky Seattle
WA
01:36:49.60
3
Mary Geddes Snoqualmie
WA
01:53:43.64
4
Johanna Oseland Lake Tapps
WA
01:55:43.36
5
Lisa Redburg Seattle
WA
02:48:21.53
6
Katherine Feeney Vancouver
BC
03:39:32.72

 

Only a minute in to the race with the first pitch just ahead. Photo by Kieth Karlick

 

Tele Division (1 lap, 2600')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Brian Patrick Enumclaw
WA
01:28:46.47
2
Max LaBerge Tacoma
WA
01:44:32.65
3
Ryan Dale-Johnson Kamloops
BC
01:55:52.24
4
Craig Dostie Truckee
CA
01:57:12.25
5
Kaan Williams Vancouver
BC
01:57:20.60
6
David Burke Seattle
WA
02:02:43.01
7
Jeffrey Edfast Duvall
WA
02:34:32.25

Splitboard Division (1 lap, 2600')

Overall
First Name Last Name City
State
Time
1
Jason Killgore Seattle
WA
01:30:00.00
2
Ruaraidh Stenson Issaquah
WA
01:40:36.60
Alex Kutches, OR's sales manager, preping for the race on Three Way Peak, Crystal Backcountry.
Photo by Craig Dostie, courtesty Olympus E-510

 

One of the little understood things about randonnee races is the why? Backcountry skiers who have never done it wonder why you would waste a perfectly good backcountry day skinning up a dedicated route with a bunch of other backcountry skiers. It seems to antithetical to the entire backcountry experience.

More race prep, er, backcountry turn earning.
Photo by Craig Dostie courtesy Olympus E-510

Indeed, as you look at it, it is. Skinning up a slope in-bounds at a resort as fast as you can, just to see if you can beat everyone else is completely counter intuitive to earning your turns. There’s no solitude, fresh tracks, or even the opportunity to simply soak in winter’s beauty. Instead the emphasis is on speed and sweat. There’s hardly even any opportunity for creativity in the line you take since you must follow a specified course.

But there is a camaraderie that occurs that you don’t find in the backcountry. It’s sort of like the experience most folks have when they run a 10k race. Most people don’t run a 10k race because they expect to win. Rather, they participate for the simple fun of sharing their love of running, or in this case, backcountry skiing, with a bunch of other like-minded souls. By doing it with a large group, they are making a public statement to those who see the deed. It’s a fun way to taunt others to join in, and to make them wonder what they’re missing.

On a real backcountry trip, the camaraderie is enhanced by the conversations on the skin track up. There isn’t much extra breath available for conversation while randonnée racing. You’re busy concentrating on maximizing your stride and the grip of your skins, or perhaps maneuvering past the guy in front of you, or simply keeping your pace up so that you beat your own time. But there is a solidarity you share with everyone in the race. So while conversation is absent in the race, it positively overflows after. Strangers and competitors become friends and brethren. You share the experience as you recount how you dealt with various sections of the course, laughing at yourself and each other, and congratulating each other too. You have the same sweet sense of satisfaction that you have after a great day earning turns, but you have it as a common bond with not just a handful of friends, but with a crowd of ‘em. You also know that you planted a seed with the lift crowd that the slopes they dream of skiing beyond the ropes are there for the taking, and you showed them how to do it.

There is another practical reason. All the proceeds from this event go to supporting the Northwest Avalanche Center who provide important avalanche forecasts for the region. That alone makes this a worthwhile event to join in on.

Do I sound like I’m trying to talk you in to racing? You bet I am. For those who missed VertFest at Crystal, a second festival and rally is coming to Alpental, March 29, 2008.






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