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Sisters
mountaineer bags three peaks
Sisters
mountaineer Brent McGregor set a blistering pace in a solo climb of all
three Sisters mountains September 30, traveling trailhead to trailhead in
11 hours and 54 minutes.
The 50-year-old adventurer
had climbed every peak of note from Mount Shasta to Mount Rainier (the
only peak he didn't summit) and he was looking for a new challenge.
"I'd been thinking about doing
this for about three months and I waited for the right day," McGregor
said.
McGregor acknowledged the
risks of a fast, solo climb.
"I deliberately wanted to
go solo, even though I know your risk is increased when you go solo,"
he said.
McGregor is an experienced
mountaineer and he said that, even though he was moving fast, he never
pushed beyond his personal safety limits.
"I went as fast as I safely
felt good," he said. "I never seemed spooked or out of my element."
The "Sisters marathon" is
an informal challenge; there are no records of times to measure oneself
against. The general goal is to bag all three peaks in 24 hours.
According to McGregor, the
accepted first successful completion of the marathon occurred in 1931.
Since then, many climbers have taken up the challenge, some adding additional
peaks like Broken Top into the effort.
McGregor said he didn't specifically
set a time goal for the climb, but he figured that he'd be happy if he
completed the marathon in 15 hours.
He started out from the Pole
Creek Trailhead at 4 a.m. on Tuesday, September 30. He climbed North Sister,
then Middle Sister, then South Sister.
His pace and route-finding
success put him ahead of schedule.
"When I got to the top of
South Sister in 10 hours, it hit me that I could do it in 12 hours," McGregor
said.
The lanky mountaineer ran
down the last five miles of trail on South Sister to break the 12 hour
barrier with six minutes to spare.
There are no prizes or ribbons
for a fast time on the Sisters marathon. The rewards are strictly personal.
For McGregor, there is a euphoria
produced by working that hard, moving that quickly in the high country.
There is intense satisfaction in testing one's mountaineering skills,
pushing the limits, meeting challenges.
McGregor said he trains very
deliberately for his adventures, monitoring his heart rate and learning
to use diet and hydration to help his body achieve more than seems possible.
He credits that conscious
training for his success on his recent climb.
"Proper eating and hydration
really helps on a long adventure like this," he said.
McGregor already has his sights
set on another adventure in his backyard.
He hopes to tackle the marathon
again, this time adding Broken Top and Mount Bachelor.
He wants to climb all five
peaks in 24 hours without the use of a car shuttle.
McGregor is active in the
local Cascades Mountaineers organization in Bend.
That organization will cover
the Sisters Marathon in-depth at its February meeting, McGregor reported.
For more information visit
www.cascadesmountaineers.org/.
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