Intro to Ice Climbing
A HowNOT2 Course
Intro to Ice Climbing
We have 4 glacier guides in Iceland introducing you to Ice Climbing. This was going to be 3 episodes of Gear, Anchors, and Technique but we were able to smash it all cohesively into the one video you see above. Naturally, as this was filmed in Iceland by Iceland guides, this is taught on glacial ice. Waterfall ice climbing is a bit different but many of the things shared here cross over super good enough at the beginning level. This is intended to read and watch before you go ice climbing with someone who knows what they are doing, so you can absorb things a lot faster. It would have been super helpful to have seen this before going ourselves instead of showing up "cold turkey". Please don't watch an hour-long video on youtube of people you don't know and then put knives on your feet and sharp axes in your hands and try this stuff on your own. There is no way all the nuances of your context can be covered and you don't know what you don't know and could get hurt as a result.
Your Ice Guides
Mike Reid is originally from the USA and imported a surplus of stoke when he moved there in 2018 so he could ice climb... all day baby! He also is an AIMG certified glacier guide and also owns and operates his own private company, ICE PIC JOURNEYS, for ice tours, adventures, and pics.
Ásgeir Már is from Iceland and has been an AIMG certified glacier guide since 2015. He has a lot of experience with waterfall ice as well as he has traveled through the Alps, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand exploring mountains.
Žaneta Bartoňová is originally from the Czech Republic and she has been an AIMG glacier guide for 3 years and is an avid rock climber. She's ice climbing in Antarctica at the moment so she can't finish filling out her bio yet!
Stephan Mantler is originally from Austria and has been climbing the European mountains and Iceland's glaciers for over 30 years. He is an AIMG certified glacier and mountain guide, member of the Icelandic search and rescue team. He owns and operates his own private tour company, STEPMAN, where you can see Ice Caves or summit the highest mountains in Iceland. His guesthouse, Dynjandi, was very nice and comfortable and we recommend it if you visit that area.
Ice Climbing Gear
Even if the rope is set up already, you'll need personal gear. Harness, helmet, crampons, and axes. If the rope is not set up (not sure how since you are going with an expert) you need ice screws, anchor material, a rope, and a belay device and that's beyond the scope of this course.
Harness
The harness you’ll use for ice climbing is essentially the same as for normal climbing, if you already have one, perfect! If not, or if your existing harness doesn’t have a lot of adjustment left, you may want to buy one specifically for ice climbing. It’s important that you’re able to adjust the waist and leg loops to be large enough to fit you when you’re wearing all your layers.
For more advanced applications like leading or longer multi-pitch routes, you may want a harness that has space for a caritool tool holding carabiner. This is a plastic (not-rated!) carabiner which hooks onto the harness for storing ice screws, and occasionally your ice axes.
Helmet
As for helmets, you can choose to use an existing climbing helmet if you’ve got one, but ice climbing-specific helmets have some kind of eye protection built in (ice hurts when it hits you in the eyes), and different helmets achieve this in different ways. Some have just a small brim that sticks out to help prevent things from hitting you, others will have a clear face shield that can swivel into and out of place. If you are on steep terrain and you don't want to risk your axe popping out and busting your mouth open, you could always just wear a hockey helmet. You might look new or confused to other ice climbers but you'll keep your smile at the end of the day. Be aware that face shields or sunglasses can fog up and prevent you from sending. I mean seeing.
Boots and Crampons
Do NOT use normal hiking or snow boots for ice climbing, they will ruin your day and your feet. Mountaineering/ice climbing boots are much stiffer and will help your crampon to stay attached to your feet, and provide a good base for climbing later on. It’s crucial that your boots match the crampon style that you’ll be using. There are 3 categories of crampons that are made: Strap crampons, semi-automatic/hybrid crampons, and automatic crampons.
Strap crampons are the most versatile as they simply use a strap to attach to most boots. They are also the most likely to shift while in use, making doing harder climbing in them a challenge. These crampons are most often used for walking.
Semi-automatic/hybrid crampons combine straps and a metal piece in the rear that hooks onto a lip on the back of some boots. This means you will have to have a compatible boot, but the fit you can achieve is much tighter and more suitable for climbing.
Automatic crampons have a metal piece in the rear and in the front, both of which hook onto ledges on your boot. This crampon requires a boot that is specially designed for automatic crampons, but they provide the tightest and best fit for climbing applications.
Every crampon features adjustability for different-sized boots, however, it is really important that your crampons work well with your boots, and to test them at home. Don’t find out that they won’t work together at the base of a waterfall!
Carrying your crampons for the approach can be in a bag specifically for them, putting the crampons with points together, or facing the teeth in the same direction and strapping them to the outside of your bag (teeth out).
Axes
Axes come straight and curvy, with different blades and different attachments on the back.
Mountaineering axes are meant for walking and going up inclines, but not for climbing. Its straight handle provides little purchase for actually gripping and it's meant to be poked in the snow like a walking stick. Its pick and adze can be used to clear away bad ice and snow.
Slightly curved axes are for a similar purpose but could be used for more technical mountaineering. If you are looking for a 1-tool-does-all type of axe.
The ice climbing-specific axes have a more curved shaft and a pommel/handguard to give you more grab on the tool. These are what you want for your first time ice climbing. You may not need the curviest of all the axes as they are for higher performance steep AF terrain.
"You couldn't just get a normal axe?" by @caiocomix
Ice Anchors
While it’s unlikely you’ll be actually building an anchor on your first ice climbing excursion, it's good to know how they work so you can understand what’s going on or ask good questions to understand the context of that climb. As with rock climbing, we like to aim for a SERENE anchor. This acronym helps us remember a few questions that are important for creating a super good enough anchor:
Strong - Is it strong enough for our application + some safety margin?
A kilonewton (kN) is102kg or 225 pounds of force. Top roping doesn't have a lot of big falls since the rope is above you. The weight of the person belaying also counts. So on average your anchor will see 2kN. If ice screws are installed well, they are 14kn, your rope at the knot breaks between 14kN and 20kN, your rope in a U shape going through the anchor isn't twice that strong but almost. The carabiner is around 20kN and your harness is stronger than your spine.
Equalized - Do the multiple pieces in the anchor share the load equally?
With two pieces, you want them both to hold 50% of the force but realistically one sees more than the other, just aim to have them share the load even though one piece is super strong enough.
Redundant - If one piece fails are we still connected to the wall?
Two screws are redundant. One sling with a knot in it makes each leg isolated and therefore redundant. A triple auto-locking carabiner is so bomber you don't have to have two but if you got them that would be redundant. Yes, you have only one rope but it's not always practical to have two.
Efficient - How long did it take us to build? Take too long and summer will come.
Don't over-engineer an anchor. Keeping it simple and quick keeps it super safe enough.
No Extension - If 1 piece does fail, will the other piece(s) be shock loaded?
This is not very important for top roping as the forces are low and the rope absorbs any fall that may happen because one screw fails. It's just a good anchor principle to follow for other contexts in the future. If something were to fail, you want to minimize how the rest of the anchor shifts and extends. Shock loading the rest of your anchor and ropes rubbing rocks is not ideal.
From tying in with figure 8s to using munter hitches to belay with, if you don't know lots about knots, this EPISODE will going to be very helpful.
Screwing Around
Again, it’s unlikely you’ll have to do this on your first time, but ice screws are the main protection used when climbing ice, so it’s good to know how they work. They have sharp teeth on the end that helps the screw bite into the ice initially, then the ice screw is turned clockwise to engage the threads. Once engaged, these threads guide the screw into the ice until the hanger hits the wall. At this point make sure you don't force the screw in any further, as it will reduce the strength of the placement. Instead back the screw out just a little until the hanger points in the expected direction of pull.
Make sure you got the ingredients for a snow cone coming out of the core
Don't be like Scrat. Don't do this with your ice screws.
See how strong ice screws are in this EPISODE. The longest ones, Petzl 21cm stayed in the ice and the hanger broke at 14kN but the Black Diamond Express 13cm came out of the ice at 16kN and the hanger didn't break. This would be great to watch to learn to trust ice screws and learn when they don't hold.
It is possible but doesn't seem necessary to use V threads for a top rope anchor but we did also test V threads. That is where you drill a V with the long ice screws and thread your rope into the ice. 6mm rope would break before the ice and our ice in our context was breaking at 15kN with bigger ropes. See just how it all happens in this EPISODE.
Getting Knotty
The two most common anchor setups used in both rock climbing and ice climbing are the BFK and the sliding X. Both are super good enough but have some minor differences that make them more useful for different applications. The BFK or Big Fat Knot, allows an anchor to be redundant and limits the extension of the master point should one piece fail. However, if the climb wanders side to side, or you plan on climbing multiple routes right next to each other, it doesn't equalize at all when the direction of the pull changes from what you set it up with. The sliding X, on the other hand, equalizes the pieces really well given any direction of pull. You can check the redundant box by using 2 or 3 slings but, if one piece were to fail, the master point would slide down the length of the sling, shock-loading the other piece. Not a huge problem if you have a bunch of rope between you and the anchor but you want to minimize that on your anchors.
How Edgy Are you
This anchor is built to be over the edge and belayed from below
This is built away from edge to belay from above
However, as we mentioned earlier if it’s your first time ice climbing you likely won’t have to worry about anchor setups and ice screws. Your experience will be very similar to going to a climbing gym to top rope. If you have never top roped in a gym before, it’ll really improve your experience to do that before you go ice climbing (learning things when you’re cold and tired, and hungry is hard). Learning the sequence of how to belay and tie in will translate well to your outdoor ice experience, and allow you to focus on learning how to climb the ice.
Top down belaying with redirect screw for a steep climb
Ice Climbing Techniques
Foot too high, no kicking power
Play It Straight
Get the teeth IN the ice, see how. the secondary points are touching the ice
When you kick, kick the teeth in, not your toenails. If the boot is facing down because you are standing on your tippy toes with your other foot, you are just kicking the top of your boot into the ice. We’re kicking ice here, not soccer balls! Next, you can lower your heel until the secondary points engage. You should be able to feel your foot become more secure.
Remember you are not climbing a rock so don't try to get higher by standing on your toes. If you point your feet down, they come out. Keep your heel down to keep all the teeth in.
Don't Get Cocky
If your foot is not straight in, the teeth can't engage
Arms straight, feet straight
Edward Scissor Hands
Edward Scissor Hands
Two Hand Technique
A frame technique
Notice Žaneta doesn't stand on her tippy toes to keep her feet straight
Just the Tips
- Keep your hips to keep the force on your feet not your hands
- Don't try to retrieve your axe by moving it side to side. Lift it straight up and then out.
- Axe tethers are not to keep you on the axes but the axes to you, Clip them to the rope in front of your face during a top rope session so they are always within reach but don't bungee cord down to your face if they were attached to your harness
- Hockey helmets might make you look new or dumb, but you'll have all your teeth at the end of the day
- If you forgot to take your chalk bag off your harness, dump out the chalk and put a bunch of hand warmers in it!
- Youtube metrics don't tell me if this was super helpful to you, feel free to email me at ryan@slackline.com to tell me yourself so I know to keep adding energy to this course and the others.
PRACTICE
Before you go up the ice, just stay right at the ground and practice using your axe A LOT. Before you tie into climb, practice your foot work right off the ground until you learn how to get the front points in and keep them in. If you go up without doing this, you'll get gassed out and really limit how much ice time you get in.