Nice video post. It really gives a sense of the climb. I was a CSU student (from CT) back in June, 1973, 18 years old. A friend (who was much older, being 19) and I decided, after a Friday evening of drinking 3.2 beer, that we would climb Longs Peak on Saturday morning. Neither of us were climbers, had only a topo map showing the route, and did not start the hike until about 9:30 AM. Everyone we met along the hike, including a park ranger, warned us that if we were heading for the summit, we needed to have started no later than about 6:30 AM. "Naw, naw, we're just going for a hike." But after we passed everyone (except for an old guy in lederhosen) along the way up, we started gaining confidence. At the Boulder field, we were again admonished to turn around by people who had already summited and were coming down from the Keyhole But then we saw these little dots up on the North face on what turned out to be the cable route. We thought, well if they can do it, so can we. After crossing the Boulder Field, we climbed up a pretty steep snowfield and reached a steel cable covered in ice. It seemed like the way up. It was extremely scary, but we started up it. The whole slope seemed to lean towards the Diamond, so there was no messing up. Whole sections of the cable and rock were covered in ice. About half way up the cable, a storm blew over the top of the mountain and it started to lightning. The mountain had blocked our view of the approaching storm. Someone below us yelled to get down, then proceeded to run, then slide down the snowfield out-of-control and crash into rocks at the base. We decided that person knew even less about mountain climbing than we did. Scared to death, we weighed our options and decided that death by lightning hanging onto a steel cable was preferable to the terror of going back down that same icy cable and a certain fall to our deaths. So we kept going. At the top of the cable it became just a steep scramble and by the time we reached the summit the storm had passed, and we were left alone, everyone with any sense having already gotten off the top. The sun emerged and we had beautiful views of mountains in almost every direction and the plains to the east. We returned from the top via the Keyhole route, the one actually marked on the topo map. That was itself pretty scary. By the time we got back down to the Boulder Field, the clouds closed in again and a cold drizzle began. On the way down, we met some crazy person (like you folks) who was running up the trail in the rain. We started running down to overcome the cold and soaking and reached the trailhead as dusk was settling in. That crazy guy managed to run up and out of sight, probably to the Boulder Field, then turn around and catch up with us again just as we reached the trailhead. We found out later that the Park Service removed that cable about two weeks after our climb, apparently because so many stupid people were falling or getting struck by lightning. Youth allows you sometimes to survive some stupid decisions. That climb is still one of the most memorable. Although I never became much of a climber, I did become a pretty good hiker. At CSU I met a Colorado girl who had climbed about 1/2 of the 14rs with her family and the Grand Teton and thought 3 weeks of Outward Bound school was pretty easy. I married her, and later with a newborn on our backs, we wrote the first statewide hiking guide, The Hiker's Guide to Colorado, published in 1984. We wrote a second statewide hiking guide (Hiking Colorado II) published in 1999 and more recently two books on the history of skiing (The Lost Ski Areas of Colorado's Front Range and Northern Mountains, and one on the Central and Southern Mountains). Thanks for posting your video. It brought back some frightening (and enjoyable) memories. God bless.
I have your book! My wife and I used it for several hikes. Great story. If you climb a handful of mountains in Colorado, chances are you will inevitably be caught in a thunderstorm, especially if you have an ounce of disrespect for Mother Nature.
be aware. This is not the way to go up Longs Peak unless you are very experienced with scrambling and hopefully with some technical rock climbing training or you shouldn't be here. This is the standard roped rappel descent route usually done after doing one of the very difficult technical climbs of the Diamond Face of Longs. . Rated 5.4. Easy for technical climbers but one slip and you are a goner. I am all for adventure but just taking a "random" route up an unknown route is only asking for trouble. In climbing school we used to teach the Number one rule of mountaineering, "the mountains don't care". Not trying to bash the video. These guys are super fit and impressive. Just putting a little caution out there to the unwary.
I totally agree. Done about 37 14ers and would never go this unprepared up any of them. Got trained via the Colorado Mountain Club and learned how to do them safely. Seen one guy trying to set the record, while I was climbing Red Cloud, Handies, and Sunshine, to climb all 54 of them. For me this is not the way to enjoy the climb and not really safe on many of the others. That's why I also plan for an overnighter just in case one of these people crack an ankle or something.
@@laurencewolf5611 would you solo it in outback runners? I know guys who can climb 5.9 in flip flops so yes you could solo it, however it's a different route than what they had signed up for.
8:06 I use to live in Estes Park, CO. from 1989 to 2005. I learned that shelter was build longtime ago, after some climbers got caught in a bag snow storm and died. It's intentions, an emergency shelter.
Great fun, love your adventures. I love Longs. First climbed it by the Key Hole Route back in the 1980s. Woke up one fine early October day and thought, why not go climb Longs? Hitchhiked from Boulder. Snow started at the keyhole (little stone building thing in the video), and ice axe and crampon climb from there. Hiked out in the dark, hitchhiked back to Boulder. Showered. Walked 3 miles to a party, danced until dawn, walked home. Ah the energy of youth! Long gone. Last time I was just short of 60. Went straight up the East Face, the vertical rock face called the Diamond for its shape. 1,400-1,500 ft of steep, in some places overhanging, granite technical climbing. This time though started very early and got out in time for a dinner in Estes Park while the sun was still out! If one does not want that much adventure the hike into Chasm Lake is stunning and pretty easy. About half the distance and climb of going to the top. Highly recommend it.
These guys are the best youtubers of this kind hands down. Imitators are out there but none as good, funny and adventurous. Cant get enough of their videos, they have inspired me to hit the trails. Love it!
My mother, indomitable, climbed (with 2 or 3 of her regular hiking pals, all men), regularly hiked Longs AND Meeker in one day! Well into her early 50’s. I’ve climbed the Cables once, and have hiked to Chasm Lake many times. Wonderful memories!
The Keyhole Hut was built many years ago as a rescue- survival station. Decades ago, a couple (man/wife) got caught near there with no shelter and died of overnight of exposure (we're talking a lady in an ankle length dress, who was a good climber, but bit it.) Today, the normal flatland crowd tries Long's Peak in cotton sweatpants, windbreakers, and some with a 6pak of beer (don't do it at that altitude) and often get caught in weather on the back side (Keyhole route). I have cajoled and helped many dad's who think their grade school kids and wives in light clothes are safe back there. you cannot run from sudden weather back there. SO, the Park Ranger's use the stone hut for rescue, for injury triage, and of course, it is a respite for people stuck on Old Beaver mountain. Weather can change to winter up there in 10 minutes. JiminCO
I love these comments. I'm stuck in the appalachians right now but a big life goal is to move out to 14er country next year. What I love about the comments is how serious the folks are about the sport. I've been doing whitewater in the southeast for 20 years and I know exactly what happens when people are prepared vs unprepared. I look forward to learning from the rocky mt climbing community and treating these mountains with the respect they deserve. I will say that this up and down in 24 hours thing isn't gonna be my cup of tea though. I gotta be out on those slopes for at least a few nights to get the full experience
Danny, since discovering your channel a few years ago, I've consumed your videos with a level of enthusiasm that's comparable to the feeling I get when my visit to Krispy Kreme coincides with the Hot-and-Now light. What a perfect ratio of adventure and humor. I've laughed a lot...but nothing was funnier than the time one of your mates (I believe it was Matt) was feeling bad on a traverse, and you commented that you weren't sure how his mom was going to get her minivan up there!! Keep it up. And get your crew to the southeast. The Smoky Mountains are top-notch, and I'd love to see your story telling there.
That was intense. There is no way I would have made it up the Cable route, I actually felt anxiety when you showed the ice. Great video, some beautiful shots of the mountain. Makes me want to go back.
I think that's why so many people have died on Long's Peak. They take it for granted and take unnecessary risks. I know you guys are experts but be careful. 58 people have died on Long's Peak.
Fun video! I have been up Longs about six times. Usually the Keyhole route, but once with ropes up the ridge route. First ever time up was two days trek (including a rough night camping in Boulder field)...fastest time was 4:28 from car to summit and back
I'd bet that's part of their idea on how to present, doing class 4 climbing without a solid understanding of the route would definitely cause some issues
So much unnecessary hate in the comments on this one. A) This is Mediocre Amateur, I'm not trying to watch a bunch of dudes rope up for any other basic climb, there's plenty of footage of that out there. B) These guys are gangsters. C) Who hasn't accidentally "free solo-ed' something they shouldn't have? It's part of living and learning. D) The decisions of other people is NOT Mediocre's responsibility. It's ridiculous to think that, and sure is a sign of these whack times. "Dude dies climbing without ropes in Argentina... must be Danny's fault!" Keep it up! This channel is the best. Including the armchair quarterbacks in every comments section. Fave comment of all time is when people were shitting on Danny and Christof's ascent of Mount Hood and said something like "Wait til you get to Rainier, that sure ain't no day hike." And voila, Danny and Christof send it in a day, (which is a relatively normal thing for the most in shape climbers that don't get altitude sick, not sure why that comment was even made.) PS. Sorry if I spelled Christof's name wrong.
I went up a random route one time and I'll never do it again, at least not as unprepared as we were. We were with someone who had absolutely no climbing experience and we almost got stuck because she started to panic and cry as we hit a technical climbing spot with a several hundred foot drop below us. That's obviously our fault. My buddy was leading and thought it looked like a reasonable way to go, needless to say it wasn't. He did another 14er a few weeks later and did the same thing, took some random route and almost got stuck with his girlfriend. Obviously he's not allowed to pick routes anymore.
So stoked for summer! Got an epic run planned for june already :) 8,000 ft and 28 miles. Hardest run/hike ill do yet. El Diente, Mount Wilson and Wilson peak in one day (Lizard Head Wilderness)
Great video guys. I tried solo the cable but weather was wet & some icey rock like you encountered. So went up keyhole otherwise known as egg route cuz of yellow marks. Found the ramp up to the summit very exciting. A great Colorado 14er!
So as a former mountain guide this is an example of what is known in the mountains by experienced climbers as DUMB LUCK. In other words beginners with a lot of running fitness and very light with zero critical thinking knowledge experience and know how don’t get hurt and have an experience called absence of negative consequences and conclude they have good judgment. For example a sprained ankle along with a thunderstorm and they are dead. Dead. Frozen hypothermia. Even good weather how does one partner leave the other and go for help. Always have three. No rain fear no overnight gear. Little water and food. Encounter ice and keep going? No micro cleats. No map. No knowledge of the route up or how it is going down. Posting this video is frankly irresponsible and wrong. Evidently this is one of many videos. In posting this I’m not here to criticize it’s to raise awareness. As beginners we ALL do this stuff. We are afraid of things we don’t have to be and not afraid of things we should be. Intermediates have more accurate knowledge but must be careful in becoming experts that although the probability of serious consequences goes down with skill the lethality can stay the same or increase. Experts must be on high alert for complacency a fatal flaw more likely as one becomes unconsciously addicted to mastering risk getting bored and seeking adventure.
wow..... i just stumbled on your you tube site and have watched a lot of videos. and i subscribed. you guys are terrific at hiking and climbing. there is no rules to nature. just respect based on your agility. you are more agile than i am. i am 60 and can't do what you do. enjoy your young manhood and live the moment. i missed out on my life not getting into hiking and climbing mountains. thanks for your videos you make me dream!!!!
I met Don Sampson and two others (with music) early in the morning just below boulderfield before his jump, early 90's. That was a wild morning, they carried a loud boombox up lol
I may live far from real mountains but i know that type of ice too well. Turns the exposed granite on my hikes in the Canadian bush into a skating rink. Good on you, that's a tough haul.
Just a question, why didn’t you just store your bags at the hotel concierge? they will typically hold your bags until you need them, even after you’ve officially checked out of the hotel room.
Really impressed by these videos! But I don’t believe you hadn’t researched the Cables route (which I think is rated something like 5.5) before asking strangers about it!
I've climbed Longs Peak 7 times. Once, I climbed Longs Peak via the cable route and descended via Kiener's Route. My climbing partner and I roped up for the cable route section. It was also very icy that morning hence very risky without a rope. These guys are crazy. Maybe not like Alex Honnold but crazy none the less.
@@erbium4308 The descent of Kiener's is way more fun and fast compared to the descent via keyhole route & boulder field. There's a nice glissade down Lamb's slide. Back in 1995 there was actually snow on Lamb's slide. It's like extreme sledding. WEEEEE!
@@Melanie-Shea No we didn’t bother with ropes because the only part that might’ve needed them was the chimney which was rated 5.0 and it didn’t seem worth the trouble. Then again I was a crazy 21-year-old.
Hi. I admittedly did not enjoy this one as much as the others due to the difficulty/danger you encountered on the more difficult route you took to the summit. I say this because I really enjoy your videos and do not want you and your hiking partners to be injured. To me, it looks too risky to go this way, especially unaided. Regardless, keep up the great work on your video series. Prayers for safety too...
Loving all your videos! Crazy on how you climb most of these 14ers in trail runners even in the snow, makes me want to return a pair of mountaineering boots i bought and get Trail runners.
So at 6:00 minutes that's called verglas (from the french for glass ice) it's super thin on the rocks and super dangerous because you can't get feet to grip and tools will cause it to shatter and of course it won't take pro. Nice videos, I am going to be checking out your channel as I am starting to get into this as a way to stay in shape (historically I am more of a mountaineer, ice climber, rock climber) I love your fast and light style.
What the hell did I just watch? Randomly go up some route on a 14er. These are the idiots coming to Colorado having to get rescued off these peaks. For anybody that comes across this video, this is not a doctrine on how to climb Longs. Do your research.
God this made me cringe so hard. No ropes, no knowledge, no plans, no concern. I'm no prude; free solo all the shit that's within your skill set. But show some respect for the danger. There are several moments when they are not confident in their route but stick to it anyway. They made it out alive, but it often doesn't work that way, especially on big walls in running shoes.
Jake P These guys know nothing about risk management. Didn’t even bring a rope incase they got cliffed out and needed to rapel. People like this are the type of people who die on Longs
This was horrifying to watch. No respect for the mountain whatsoever. And to top it all off they’re “inspiring” random people of the internet with little to no experience to climb one of the hardest routes in Colorado.
I just subscribed and I really like the content. But you may lose me on this one. Like it or not people are watching your content and making decisions based on it ("if they did it, we can do it") especially due to your username. People die or are hurt because of this. I know that you are not responsible and so on, but if you were to TAKE responsibility, for example, stating that "this is not usually a good idea" or "this is no amateur route" to save some lives, it would garner much respect. I had similar thoughts on the Whitney vid where you scoot up the mountaineers route saying it was easy. When I was on it last winter, one person died the week prior near the summit and another died in the same spot when we were ascending near iceberg. There is an epidemic of amateurs making bad calls out there, and I want you awesome people to be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Again, great content and amazing fitness!
It’s not up to them to prevent anyone from climbing up their via their route or any other. They are simply content creators each person is responsible for their own safety. You’re ability and skill is only known to you and you alone. If you die trying to do something you’re not prepared for its your own doing.
So, the guy in colored socks saw a group of trail runners and told them to take the class 3/4 route. Probably a local trying to be cool for the cameras. I'm glad you boys were able to handle some bad beta. But please please please at least bring a helmet next time. Love the channel!
I would be good not to go up Longs if you are concerned about exposure. The Keyhole route is the easiest and is what most people do. The Clark's Arrow route from the Loft is just a little harder. (It is a little easier to get "off route" and end up descending too much getting into the route.) You could go up by the Clark's Arrow route and descend by way of the Keyhole route. So you are going around the mountain.
You guys are intense. Doing a face scramble like that not knowing where you are going? I did the regular Keyhole route around the backside in August of 2010. Not crowded. Once past the Keyhole, there were few hikers. Windy as heck. I thought I might get blown off the mountain. Took me about 14 hrs. Your route shaves hours off the hike, but looks way more risky. I think I remember looking up at that side of the rock thinking it might be climbable, but I prefer the casual scenic route.
One fractured ankle away from spending the night on the trail. It's great that you carry enough to survive 24 hours laying on the ground in the open at twelve thousand feet.
@just plain horse what's up with all of the overly cautious comments on this video? These guys have spent there entire lives in the mountains. They are well within their limits here. Is it because this is a popular 14er and most of the commenters are not that experienced themselves?
@@morgangalvin8893 it's because this comment section is filled with people like you, not from CO, who have no idea what they are talking about. People like you come here every summer from Nebraska and wherever else (or worse and move here and bring your failed liberal policies) and end up having to get rescued with our tax dollars.
Cool climb! Keep it up guys and don't let the angry internet get you down. You guys are pros despite the channel title, not just random people deciding to climb a 14er.
I agree they are very experienced and fun to watch but sometimes being too confident in your abilities can get you in trouble. Last time I climbed Long's Peak, on that same day, an experienced climber fell to his death climbing the cable route. As we were descending and almost to the car, a group of forest rangers and EMTs were running up the trail quite panicked. I later found out why.
If I left Boulder at 5am, I'd run too: it's notorious for midday lightening. Well, since the trail is over an hour away, I'd probably just wait until the next day to climb it. But they seem like a confident bunch,
Definitely that mountain we climbed in the windrivers two years ago (I think the episode is called climbing in running shoes). I believe the mountain was Overhanging Tower. Even Blake was a little shaken by that ascent.
Nice video post. It really gives a sense of the climb.
I was a CSU student (from CT) back in June, 1973, 18 years old. A friend (who was much older, being 19) and I decided, after a Friday evening of drinking 3.2 beer, that we would climb Longs Peak on Saturday morning. Neither of us were climbers, had only a topo map showing the route, and did not start the hike until about 9:30 AM. Everyone we met along the hike, including a park ranger, warned us that if we were heading for the summit, we needed to have started no later than about 6:30 AM. "Naw, naw, we're just going for a hike." But after we passed everyone (except for an old guy in lederhosen) along the way up, we started gaining confidence.
At the Boulder field, we were again admonished to turn around by people who had already summited and were coming down from the Keyhole But then we saw these little dots up on the North face on what turned out to be the cable route. We thought, well if they can do it, so can we.
After crossing the Boulder Field, we climbed up a pretty steep snowfield and reached a steel cable covered in ice. It seemed like the way up. It was extremely scary, but we started up it. The whole slope seemed to lean towards the Diamond, so there was no messing up. Whole sections of the cable and rock were covered in ice.
About half way up the cable, a storm blew over the top of the mountain and it started to lightning. The mountain had blocked our view of the approaching storm. Someone below us yelled to get down, then proceeded to run, then slide down the snowfield out-of-control and crash into rocks at the base. We decided that person knew even less about mountain climbing than we did.
Scared to death, we weighed our options and decided that death by lightning hanging onto a steel cable was preferable to the terror of going back down that same icy cable and a certain fall to our deaths. So we kept going. At the top of the cable it became just a steep scramble and by the time we reached the summit the storm had passed, and we were left alone, everyone with any sense having already gotten off the top. The sun emerged and we had beautiful views of mountains in almost every direction and the plains to the east.
We returned from the top via the Keyhole route, the one actually marked on the topo map. That was itself pretty scary. By the time we got back down to the Boulder Field, the clouds closed in again and a cold drizzle began. On the way down, we met some crazy person (like you folks) who was running up the trail in the rain. We started running down to overcome the cold and soaking and reached the trailhead as dusk was settling in. That crazy guy managed to run up and out of sight, probably to the Boulder Field, then turn around and catch up with us again just as we reached the trailhead.
We found out later that the Park Service removed that cable about two weeks after our climb, apparently because so many stupid people were falling or getting struck by lightning.
Youth allows you sometimes to survive some stupid decisions. That climb is still one of the most memorable.
Although I never became much of a climber, I did become a pretty good hiker. At CSU I met a Colorado girl who had climbed about 1/2 of the 14rs with her family and the Grand Teton and thought 3 weeks of Outward Bound school was pretty easy. I married her, and later with a newborn on our backs, we wrote the first statewide hiking guide, The Hiker's Guide to Colorado, published in 1984. We wrote a second statewide hiking guide (Hiking Colorado II) published in 1999 and more recently two books on the history of skiing (The Lost Ski Areas of Colorado's Front Range and Northern Mountains, and one on the Central and Southern Mountains).
Thanks for posting your video. It brought back some frightening (and enjoyable) memories. God bless.
I have your book! My wife and I used it for several hikes. Great story. If you climb a handful of mountains in Colorado, chances are you will inevitably be caught in a thunderstorm, especially if you have an ounce of disrespect for Mother Nature.
I loved reading this story
Amazing story, Peter. Thank you for sharing. God bless
Dude thanks a bunch for sharing that
Excellent post!
be aware. This is not the way to go up Longs Peak unless you are very experienced with scrambling and hopefully with some technical rock climbing training or you shouldn't be here. This is the standard roped rappel descent route usually done after doing one of the very difficult technical climbs of the Diamond Face of Longs. . Rated 5.4. Easy for technical climbers but one slip and you are a goner. I am all for adventure but just taking a "random" route up an unknown route is only asking for trouble. In climbing school we used to teach the Number one rule of mountaineering, "the mountains don't care". Not trying to bash the video. These guys are super fit and impressive. Just putting a little caution out there to the unwary.
I totally agree. Done about 37 14ers and would never go this unprepared up any of them. Got trained via the Colorado Mountain Club and learned how to do them safely. Seen one guy trying to set the record, while I was climbing Red Cloud, Handies, and Sunshine, to climb all 54 of them. For me this is not the way to enjoy the climb and not really safe on many of the others. That's why I also plan for an overnighter just in case one of these people crack an ankle or something.
5.4 is easy though, I would solo that.
Gary, can’t agree anymore.You summed it up well. Random detours on a climb like this can be fatal.
@@laurencewolf5611 freakin troll or bot.
@@laurencewolf5611 would you solo it in outback runners? I know guys who can climb 5.9 in flip flops so yes you could solo it, however it's a different route than what they had signed up for.
"We decided to just go up some random route..." sounds like a lead-in on Accidents in N American Mountaineering.
You guys are Fn crazy to do those steep & icy climbs with no rope/ safety gear!!! Whoa!
8:06 I use to live in Estes Park, CO. from 1989 to 2005. I learned that shelter was build longtime ago, after
some climbers got caught in a bag snow storm and died. It's intentions, an emergency shelter.
Great fun, love your adventures. I love Longs. First climbed it by the Key Hole Route back in the 1980s. Woke up one fine early October day and thought, why not go climb Longs? Hitchhiked from Boulder. Snow started at the keyhole (little stone building thing in the video), and ice axe and crampon climb from there. Hiked out in the dark, hitchhiked back to Boulder. Showered. Walked 3 miles to a party, danced until dawn, walked home. Ah the energy of youth! Long gone.
Last time I was just short of 60. Went straight up the East Face, the vertical rock face called the Diamond for its shape. 1,400-1,500 ft of steep, in some places overhanging, granite technical climbing. This time though started very early and got out in time for a dinner in Estes Park while the sun was still out!
If one does not want that much adventure the hike into Chasm Lake is stunning and pretty easy. About half the distance and climb of going to the top. Highly recommend it.
These guys are the best youtubers of this kind hands down. Imitators are out there but none as good, funny and adventurous. Cant get enough of their videos, they have inspired me to hit the trails. Love it!
YO, if you guys keep ascending routes like that you're gonna get rekt
For. Real.
I did the cable route 30 years ago. Yep, ice. In July. No protection. Your video reminded me how stupid I was.
But you did it! We made the Boulder Field at sunrise and the top around 10:30 am.
Got to get off these mountains by noon. Thunderstorms!
You guys!!! Your video is awesome!! 🙌🏼
My mother, indomitable, climbed (with 2 or 3 of her regular hiking pals, all men), regularly hiked Longs AND Meeker in one day! Well into her early 50’s. I’ve climbed the Cables once, and have hiked to Chasm Lake many times. Wonderful memories!
The Keyhole Hut was built many years ago as a rescue- survival station. Decades ago, a couple (man/wife) got caught near there with no shelter and died of overnight of exposure (we're talking a lady in an ankle length dress, who was a good climber, but bit it.)
Today, the normal flatland crowd tries Long's Peak in cotton sweatpants, windbreakers, and some with a 6pak of beer (don't do it at that altitude) and often get caught in weather on the back side (Keyhole route). I have cajoled and helped many dad's who think their grade school kids and wives in light clothes are safe back there. you cannot run from sudden weather back there.
SO, the Park Ranger's use the stone hut for rescue, for injury triage, and of course, it is a respite for people stuck on Old Beaver mountain. Weather can change to winter up there in 10 minutes.
JiminCO
Vaille and Sortland were not man and wife… it all went down in 1925. The current shelter is from 1935 and is a memorial.
I love these comments. I'm stuck in the appalachians right now but a big life goal is to move out to 14er country next year. What I love about the comments is how serious the folks are about the sport. I've been doing whitewater in the southeast for 20 years and I know exactly what happens when people are prepared vs unprepared. I look forward to learning from the rocky mt climbing community and treating these mountains with the respect they deserve. I will say that this up and down in 24 hours thing isn't gonna be my cup of tea though. I gotta be out on those slopes for at least a few nights to get the full experience
Danny, since discovering your channel a few years ago, I've consumed your videos with a level of enthusiasm that's comparable to the feeling I get when my visit to Krispy Kreme coincides with the Hot-and-Now light.
What a perfect ratio of adventure and humor. I've laughed a lot...but nothing was funnier than the time one of your mates (I believe it was Matt) was feeling bad on a traverse, and you commented that you weren't sure how his mom was going to get her minivan up there!!
Keep it up. And get your crew to the southeast. The Smoky Mountains are top-notch, and I'd love to see your story telling there.
That was intense. There is no way I would have made it up the Cable route, I actually felt anxiety when you showed the ice. Great video, some beautiful shots of the mountain. Makes me want to go back.
Yeah theres no way you'll catch me on the cable route lol
Would you do it if you were roped up?
I think that's why so many people have died on Long's Peak. They take it for granted and take unnecessary risks. I know you guys are experts but be careful. 58 people have died on Long's Peak.
Fun video! I have been up Longs about six times. Usually the Keyhole route, but once with ropes up the ridge route. First ever time up was two days trek (including a rough night camping in Boulder field)...fastest time was 4:28 from car to summit and back
Quickly becoming one of my favorite UA-cam channels - keep the adventures coming !
This video should be labeled “Longs Peak - What not to do”. Broke every rule in the book.
@Joe Weber People die on 14ers every single year out here, most of them probably have a similar respect for the mountains as you seem to.
What rules are those?
@@lardtaziumwadmaster The rules state, "Get to the top(and back) without dying." ...They succeed!
Wtf kind of rules are you talking about dumbass 😂
That’s a rude comment, I think you need to explain what you think they did wrong.
Such great videos. Amazing views, great commentary and well edited! Loving every video!!
Great video! Loved it. Thanks so much for making it, guys.
No cables any more ,good slide when wet .
Grew up in the shadow of this peak in the town named for the peak. Both of my adult kids have climbed the peak.
That dangerous mountain has taken lives
as recently as just a month ago !
I’ve slept in that hut, waiting on day light to guide the way to the top. Sweet to see that dicey route to the top
I hope people here appreciate how massively impressive it is that you guys summitted in about 3h10m. Insane!
Good video. I've done Long's three time, first in 1970 up the cable route and the next two times through the Keyhole. Awesome peak!
These guys are lucky they did not get hurt.
I'd bet that's part of their idea on how to present, doing class 4 climbing without a solid understanding of the route would definitely cause some issues
So much unnecessary hate in the comments on this one. A) This is Mediocre Amateur, I'm not trying to watch a bunch of dudes rope up for any other basic climb, there's plenty of footage of that out there. B) These guys are gangsters. C) Who hasn't accidentally "free solo-ed' something they shouldn't have? It's part of living and learning. D) The decisions of other people is NOT Mediocre's responsibility. It's ridiculous to think that, and sure is a sign of these whack times. "Dude dies climbing without ropes in Argentina... must be Danny's fault!"
Keep it up! This channel is the best. Including the armchair quarterbacks in every comments section. Fave comment of all time is when people were shitting on Danny and Christof's ascent of Mount Hood and said something like "Wait til you get to Rainier, that sure ain't no day hike." And voila, Danny and Christof send it in a day, (which is a relatively normal thing for the most in shape climbers that don't get altitude sick, not sure why that comment was even made.) PS. Sorry if I spelled Christof's name wrong.
I've climbed Longs about 10 times...I've done the keyhole route and the loft route but never the cable route. Dicey but good vid.
I went up a random route one time and I'll never do it again, at least not as unprepared as we were. We were with someone who had absolutely no climbing experience and we almost got stuck because she started to panic and cry as we hit a technical climbing spot with a several hundred foot drop below us. That's obviously our fault. My buddy was leading and thought it looked like a reasonable way to go, needless to say it wasn't. He did another 14er a few weeks later and did the same thing, took some random route and almost got stuck with his girlfriend. Obviously he's not allowed to pick routes anymore.
I love your videos and enjoy the music also. Hope to hike that peak in the future.
So stoked for summer! Got an epic run planned for june already :) 8,000 ft and 28 miles. Hardest run/hike ill do yet. El Diente, Mount Wilson and Wilson peak in one day (Lizard Head Wilderness)
Great example of what not to do.
You guys are machines. New to your channel. Wow!
Great video guys. I tried solo the cable but weather was wet & some icey rock like you encountered. So went up keyhole otherwise known as egg route cuz of yellow marks. Found the ramp up to the summit very exciting. A great Colorado 14er!
i just subbed youre a baddass dude. the wrong way episode was nutty... keep up the good footage my man
Soloing the cables route, in trail runners, while its covered in ice sounds terrifying lol
So as a former mountain guide this is an example of what is known in the mountains by experienced climbers as DUMB LUCK. In other words beginners with a lot of running fitness and very light with zero critical thinking knowledge experience and know how don’t get hurt and have an experience called absence of negative consequences and conclude they have good judgment. For example a sprained ankle along with a thunderstorm and they are dead. Dead. Frozen hypothermia. Even good weather how does one partner leave the other and go for help. Always have three. No rain fear no overnight gear. Little water and food.
Encounter ice and keep going? No micro cleats. No map. No knowledge of the route up or how it is going down. Posting this video is frankly irresponsible and wrong.
Evidently this is one of many videos. In posting this I’m not here to criticize it’s to raise awareness. As beginners we ALL do this stuff. We are afraid of things we don’t have to be and not afraid of things we should be. Intermediates have more accurate knowledge but must be careful in becoming experts that although the probability of serious consequences goes down with skill the lethality can stay the same or increase. Experts must be on high alert for complacency a fatal flaw more likely as one becomes unconsciously addicted to mastering risk getting bored and seeking adventure.
Best to climb with selfie stick and no trail beta.
100% safest way possible.
wow..... i just stumbled on your you tube site and have watched a lot of videos. and i subscribed. you guys are terrific at hiking and climbing. there is no rules to nature. just respect based on your agility. you are more agile than i am. i am 60 and can't do what you do. enjoy your young manhood and live the moment. i missed out on my life not getting into hiking and climbing mountains. thanks for your videos you make me dream!!!!
I met Don Sampson and two others (with music) early in the morning just below boulderfield before his jump, early 90's. That was a wild morning, they carried a loud boombox up lol
I may live far from real mountains but i know that type of ice too well. Turns the exposed granite on my hikes in the Canadian bush into a skating rink. Good on you, that's a tough haul.
Just a question, why didn’t you just store your bags at the hotel concierge? they will typically hold your bags until you need them, even after you’ve officially checked out of the hotel room.
Cant wait to try the route up! I would love to see how you guys plan these type of trips/gear prep etc as well as those post run feasts aha
Really impressed by these videos! But I don’t believe you hadn’t researched the Cables route (which I think is rated something like 5.5) before asking strangers about it!
I've climbed Longs Peak 7 times. Once, I climbed Longs Peak via the cable route and descended via Kiener's Route. My climbing partner and I roped up for the cable route section. It was also very icy that morning hence very risky without a rope. These guys are crazy. Maybe not like Alex Honnold but crazy none the less.
dalhuset why on earth would you descend Kieners, it’s normally the other way round lmao
@@erbium4308 The descent of Kiener's is way more fun and fast compared to the descent via keyhole route & boulder field. There's a nice glissade down Lamb's slide. Back in 1995 there was actually snow on Lamb's slide. It's like extreme sledding. WEEEEE!
@@dalhuset did you rappel the any of kieners or just down climb?
@@Melanie-Shea No we didn’t bother with ropes because the only part that might’ve needed them was the chimney which was rated 5.0 and it didn’t seem worth the trouble. Then again I was a crazy 21-year-old.
Leaving downtown Boulder at 5:00 a.m.?? Glad it worked out for ya...
They look really fit, probably they know what they are doing
They are really fast
Right?
Hi.
I admittedly did not enjoy this one as much as the others due to the difficulty/danger you encountered on the more difficult route you took to the summit. I say this because I really enjoy your videos and do not want you and your hiking partners to be injured.
To me, it looks too risky to go this way, especially unaided.
Regardless, keep up the great work on your video series.
Prayers for safety too...
I’m super excited about this UA-cam channel. It’s simply amazing 😎🍀
agreed, very nice; thanks for sharing.
Loving all your videos! Crazy on how you climb most of these 14ers in trail runners even in the snow, makes me want to return a pair of mountaineering boots i bought and get Trail runners.
So at 6:00 minutes that's called verglas (from the french for glass ice) it's super thin on the rocks and super dangerous because you can't get feet to grip and tools will cause it to shatter and of course it won't take pro.
Nice videos, I am going to be checking out your channel as I am starting to get into this as a way to stay in shape (historically I am more of a mountaineer, ice climber, rock climber) I love your fast and light style.
Haha “great view, watch the kids play on the boulder field.” Nice!!
Did Cable route in July. Rock was wet, very freakin exhausting. Lots of exposure between bolts and the summit.
Great video of our magic mountain.
I did the Keyhole route, up and back, 43 years ago by myself. No running, 60 lb pack. Damn near killed me! HaHaHaHaHa Wonderful experience!
Now I'm a 73 year old with a lung transplant. Make sure you do as many of these challenges while you can. Terrific memories.
Also u guys make look all the climbing very easy, which am sure is not the case!
What the hell did I just watch? Randomly go up some route on a 14er. These are the idiots coming to Colorado having to get rescued off these peaks. For anybody that comes across this video, this is not a doctrine on how to climb Longs. Do your research.
God this made me cringe so hard. No ropes, no knowledge, no plans, no concern.
I'm no prude; free solo all the shit that's within your skill set. But show some respect for the danger. There are several moments when they are not confident in their route but stick to it anyway. They made it out alive, but it often doesn't work that way, especially on big walls in running shoes.
Jake P These guys know nothing about risk management. Didn’t even bring a rope incase they got cliffed out and needed to rapel. People like this are the type of people who die on Longs
This was horrifying to watch. No respect for the mountain whatsoever. And to top it all off they’re “inspiring” random people of the internet with little to no experience to climb one of the hardest routes in Colorado.
Y'all are crazy, but awsome. Just watching y'all climb made me nervous. Love your videos, my sons like watching them too.
I just subscribed and I really like the content. But you may lose me on this one. Like it or not people are watching your content and making decisions based on it ("if they did it, we can do it") especially due to your username. People die or are hurt because of this. I know that you are not responsible and so on, but if you were to TAKE responsibility, for example, stating that "this is not usually a good idea" or "this is no amateur route" to save some lives, it would garner much respect. I had similar thoughts on the Whitney vid where you scoot up the mountaineers route saying it was easy. When I was on it last winter, one person died the week prior near the summit and another died in the same spot when we were ascending near iceberg. There is an epidemic of amateurs making bad calls out there, and I want you awesome people to be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Again, great content and amazing fitness!
It’s not up to them to prevent anyone from climbing up their via their route or any other. They are simply content creators each person is responsible for their own safety. You’re ability and skill is only known to you and you alone. If you die trying to do something you’re not prepared for its your own doing.
If this is all it takes to lose you, you should go. Geezus. Everyone's decisions are their own. A shame society is trying to think otherwise.
So, the guy in colored socks saw a group of trail runners and told them to take the class 3/4 route. Probably a local trying to be cool for the cameras. I'm glad you boys were able to handle some bad beta. But please please please at least bring a helmet next time. Love the channel!
class 3/4? Cable’s 5.4 bro
@@erbium4308 Wow, so even worse beta. And that's some mighty soft class 5.
@@joshdorfman9273 He couldn't show the hard parts, both hands working, none for the camera.
You should see their Capitol video mate
Wair so what’s the safest route of there?? Cuz I’m looking at the cliffs at 4:51 and that looks terrifying
No The route they descended is the typical safer Keyhole route.
I would be good not to go up Longs if you are concerned about exposure.
The Keyhole route is the easiest and is what most people do.
The Clark's Arrow route from the Loft is just a little harder. (It is a little easier to get "off route" and end up descending too much getting into the route.)
You could go up by the Clark's Arrow route and descend by way of the Keyhole route. So you are going around the mountain.
You guys are intense. Doing a face scramble like that not knowing where you are going? I did the regular Keyhole route around the backside in August of 2010. Not crowded. Once past the Keyhole, there were few hikers. Windy as heck. I thought I might get blown off the mountain. Took me about 14 hrs. Your route shaves hours off the hike, but looks way more risky. I think I remember looking up at that side of the rock thinking it might be climbable, but I prefer the casual scenic route.
what song is that at 2:23?
Yesterday by Otis McDonald apparently
Love my State, it's gorgeous! Have you ever tried the San Juan Mts? Ouray, Co is the place.
You guys should do the Blanca, Ellingwood, Little Bear Traverse. Hit 3 14ers in a single day with over 8k feet of elevation and some awesome ridges.
A guy I met in Montana suggested the same route. I'll put it on the list.
You're probably aware, but Little Bear is sketch AF
I did the Keyhole/Tourist route to the summit in 1977 when I was 19 years old; there was no "hut" back then.
In 1983 i was 18 and did key Hole route and the hut was there.
You must be familiar with the mountain and have alot of experience.
I almost had to turn this off when they were climbing. 😬
Glad you all made it safely - thanks for sharing.
I did. Couldn't watch.
Your video is so good it would be nice to see two more minutes per.
One fractured ankle away from spending the night on the trail. It's great that you carry enough to survive 24 hours laying on the ground in the open at twelve thousand feet.
@just plain horse what's up with all of the overly cautious comments on this video? These guys have spent there entire lives in the mountains. They are well within their limits here.
Is it because this is a popular 14er and most of the commenters are not that experienced themselves?
@@morgangalvin8893 it's because this comment section is filled with people like you, not from CO, who have no idea what they are talking about. People like you come here every summer from Nebraska and wherever else (or worse and move here and bring your failed liberal policies) and end up having to get rescued with our tax dollars.
@@wrchad23 That is probably the funniest thing I've heard all day. Thank you
This is my favorite new UA-cam channel!
You guys are nuts 😮
Cool climb! Keep it up guys and don't let the angry internet get you down. You guys are pros despite the channel title, not just random people deciding to climb a 14er.
I agree they are very experienced and fun to watch but sometimes being too confident in your abilities can get you in trouble. Last time I climbed Long's Peak, on that same day, an experienced climber fell to his death climbing the cable route. As we were descending and almost to the car, a group of forest rangers and EMTs were running up the trail quite panicked. I later found out why.
Such a good time! Awesome edit!
A friend turned me on to your channel, and I've enjoyed it immensely. Mediocre Amateurs? You are neither! Thanks for another great vid.
Where's the cable? lol I guess 3rd/4th class is ok in running shoes until there's ice...
The cable was installed in 1925 and removed in 1973. (It's a 5.4.)
Hut is shelter for the horrible storms that hit especially lightning. Helps to educate oneself before adventuring
well done as usual
Sausage Mcmuffin with Dasani water., love it.
No eye protection from UV at 14k+?! Why?!???
Live it guys! So inspiring!! Keep up the great work! Ever considered La Plata's Ellingwood Ridge?
You guys are McDonald's for breakfast and got to the peak at 900am! Damn!
Impressive recording! I know how hard it is to record and hike at the same time👍🏼
Amazing channel!
Climbed when it still had cables , what is it now 5.3 - 5.5
Try D-10 on the face ,more entertaining but probably hard to film w/o a camera team at the lake .
seems like a really late start. many ppl go at 2 am.
yeah, if they are hiking, not running it. Running it takes HOURS off the trip.
Yeah, 6:30 isn’t late if you’re fast
I didn't get to the keyhole until 9am, which put me at the summit at noon. It was perfect. Down and off the summit by the time the hailstorm hit us!!
I started this at like 9 o clock once... if you run you can do this in sub 3
The ‘sheer, clear ice’ at 6:00 is called ‘verglas’.
Thanks. I'm going to try and remember that but don't be surprised if I forget it in a future episode.
@@MediocreAmateur - Just realized verglas = vertical glass!
Why the uber if you were coming down the same route?
What was the rush?
If I left Boulder at 5am, I'd run too: it's notorious for midday lightening. Well, since the trail is over an hour away, I'd probably just wait until the next day to climb it. But they seem like a confident bunch,
Never been in that parking lot with many cars. Usually at the trail head at 3 am.
How do you not have more subs
Three huge bags and not a small piece of rope in it, bad move, could've gone horribly wrong
The shelters you find a top mountain peaks are shelters from storms/Lightning
What camera do you use
This is great! Congrats! Why the thumbs down?? Jealous trolls
Everyone: Never hike off trail.
These dudes:
They just recovered a body off the ledges on longs the other day
So what the most scared you have been on a climb/hike?
Definitely that mountain we climbed in the windrivers two years ago (I think the episode is called climbing in running shoes). I believe the mountain was Overhanging Tower. Even Blake was a little shaken by that ascent.
Cool channel, just discovered it