ASSINIABOINE IN A PUSH
2:00A.M.,
September 27, 2012, -5 degrees Celsius, Mt. Shark trail head, Kananaskis
Country, Alberta, over 28km from Mt. Assiniaboine, (3618m). I was nervous. It was far.
My body
was still shaking from a week long party binge in Banff, and I was tired. Not
the best time to go for Assiniaboine car to car, but I didn’t have anything
better to do. I knew I couldn’t run the
distance, so I planned to mountain bike to Assiniboine pass – which isn’t
allowed by parks.
I had
woken up in a freezer, the cap of my truck being encrusted in ice crystals,
which slowly melted and dripped on me as I ate breakfast. A frosty bike seat
welcomed me as I started off in the crisp night air, hands quickly froze. Hours
passed as I rolled through the black of night, surrounded only by an all too
small globe of light emitted by my nearly inadequate headlamp. The sun rose as I stashed my bike and
finished my way up to the pass. The
mountain soon came into view, a soaring peak caked in ice and snow. The North East Ridge appeared drastically
harder than the modest grade of III 5.5 would suggest.