Posts Tagged ‘Dr. Eric Meyer’

Makalu!

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

The ColdAvenger has been everywhere this spring! It has climbed big ‘ol mountains and assisted two separate teams on their quest to summit  Makalu; teams Shared Summits and 2010 Makalu Expedition Valandre each were supported by the ColdAvenger.

Chris Klinke

ColdAvenger athletes Dr. Eric Meyer and Chris Klinke climbed with team Valandre to Makalu’s summit.  The team had a great trip with a successful summit, but not without some difficulties. Here is an excerpt from Chris Klinke’s blog about the trip and the final push to the summit:

The Summit of Makalu is really only about 3 ft wide and it is proceeded on either side by a little tiny ridge that drops off on both sides for thousands of feet. It is covered by ice and corniced snow and you have to traverse past a false ridge to reach it. It is very tricky to reach.

I finally reached the summit at 5:59 pm! Alexia and Sandrine summited before me, and I was followed by Phillipe. Yeti had  made the decision to turn around prior to reaching the summit ridge based on weather conditions which was probably one of the smarter decisions of the day.

As we started making our way down the mountain the weather progressed into real nasty storm. Now we were descending the ropes that we has put up and to add insult to injury, they were difficult to find under the snow that had just fallen. We finally reached the bottom of the couloirs after about 2 hours of descending into a worsening storm. We were all aware of the crevasses that we had passed over to reach the couloirs but none of us were sure of our ability to spot them in a white out in the dark. So we roped up and started our descent. It took me until almost 10:45 pm to reach our Camp 4. And along the way there were a few issues, but in the end we all safely reached our Camp 4 by midnight. Everyone was safe.

In the morning, I headed down to ABC. Being completely wiped out a journey that had previously took me 6 hours ended up taking almost 12.

What a great adventure! To get the full scoop on Team Valandre’s expedition to Makalu check out their blog here. Congratulations team! Now get some rest.

John B. Sullivan aka ColdAvenger Pro

ColdAvenger is Everywhere on Makalu

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Dr. Eric Meyer

I’ve always known that Dr. Eric Meyer is a great ambassador for the ColdAvenger. He is an avid mountaineer who climbs some of the world’s highest peaks. He is an accomplished anesthesiologist, who also studies the effects of cold weather and altitude on the respiratory system. Dr. Meyer “gets” the ColdAvenger.  In Eric’s travels he meets and introduces the ColdAvenger to other folks needing the technology and health benefits of the face mask.

Blair Falahey: Courtesy

This spring, Dr. Meyer and the Valandre team are at Makulu base camp attempting a summit. At camp, Dr.Meyer met Blair Falahey, a passionate climber and world-traveler from Australia. Two years ago, Falahey was at Makalu attempting a summit. Unfortunately, he was turned around one hour before the summit due to significant frostbite on his nose. He hadn’t protected his face properly from the frigid winds. Seven months after his frostbite, he underwent composite graft surgery on his nose and sat out the 2009 climbing season. Determined to claim the Makulu summit in 2010, Falahey came back and luckily met Dr. Meyer.

After hearing Falahey’s story, Dr. Meyer asked if he was happy with his current answers for face protection. The answer was a non-convincing, “kind of.” Cue—the ColdAvenger Balaclava. Falahey had tried several types of face masks and systems to protect his nose, but all left him unsatisfied and concerned about his nose getting the proper protection.

Makalu

Falahey instantly loved the ColdAvenger and said, “I felt a sense of calm wash over me. Finally, I had found the solution to my problems. The mask felt great. Comfortable, snug and yet did not restrict my breathing. It works well with my goggles and sunglasses. I can’t wait to take it up on the mountain and try it. It could just be the difference between losing more of my nose to frostbite or not.”

Stay tuned to see how Falahey and his team fare on Makalu. The ColdAvenger is everywhere this year on Makalu…remember that Dr. Meyer and Chris Klinke with the Valandre team and Chris Warner with Shared Summits, are also making attempts to Makalu’s summit and fully protected with a ColdAvenger.

Good luck teams and I can’t wait to hear updates!

John B. Sullivan, III aka ColdAvenger Pro

ColdAvengers are at Makalu

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Makalu Peak, known as the “Great Black” has only been summited 323 times and only 13 times by Americans. It’s not like it was ignored, it is just really hard and cold. Located 14 miles east of Mt. Everest, Makalu stands alone and the summit sits at 8,462 meters (27,765 feet). It is climbing season in Nepal and the ColdAvenger will be there supporting two teams–the Valandre and Shared Summits. Both expeditions are attempting Makalu’s summit.  The summit ridge marks the border between Nepal to the South and Tibet to the North.

SHARED SUMMITS EXPEDITION

Chris Warner, team captain of this year’s Shared Summits expedition to Makalu is pioneering a new route up the southeast ridge of Makalu. He is a ColdAvenger customer and is excited about his venture. His partner, Marty Schmidt, also a happy customer, along with a two-person camera crew will document the expedition. Chris explains, “We are planning on shooting the expedition, including the climbing in HD. Our hope is to create a film (or even better a short series) that captures the overwhelming power of the mountain and the strength a small team must harness to meet the challenge.”

Courtesy: Shared Summits

Chris tells us he is excited to be using the ColdAvenger in this harsh climate. Nothing beats cold weather airway injury at high altitudes like a ColdAvenger and we are happy to be a part of and help sponsor this monumental new route attempt. In a quote from ExplorersWeb Chris explains, “We are hoping to climb a new route to the summit of Makula SE (7803 meters) and then follow the SE Ridge to the (main) summit…Our planned route lies between the SW Ridge (opened by the Czechs in 1976) and the SE Ridge (Japanese climb in 1970).The route will ascend snow gullies and rock bands, up the 7000 foot face to Makula SE. Here is joins with the Czech and Japanese routes along the SE ridge, knife-edge and gendarme guarded all the way to the summit.”

Despite having a small team, Chris and Marty are among the leading 8000 meter American climbers with more than 40 years of experience in the Himalayas and more than 55 years exploring the planet’s tall peaks.

Courtesy: Shared Summits. Chris on K2's Abuzzi Ridge

Chris is the team leader and has been on more than 160 international mountaineering expeditions with 13 summits of 8000+peaks. When not orienteering in places with little oxygen, Chris is the owner of Earth Treks, Inc which operates three of the largest and best-known climbing gyms in the US, operates an  international guide service and a rock/ice climbing school. Then on the side, after work, he help pen and take photos for High Altitude Leadership, a top 25 release on Amazon.

Courtesy: Shared Summits. Marty atop Mount Cook, 208

Marty Schmidt has spent years guiding peaks such as Everest and Cho Oyu under his international guiding operation. He held speed ascent records on both Cho Oyo (which he then skied from summit) and Aconcagua. He then became a member of the Air Force “PJs” who are the only part of the military who are trained to conduct personal recovery operations in hostile or denied areas as a primary mission. He lives in New Zealand with his wife and has two children name appropriately, Denali and Sequoia.

VALANDRE EXPEDITION

ColdAvenger climber Chris Klinke

Dr. Eric Meyer and Chris Klinke, both world class mountaineers and ColdAvenger pro athletes are also headed to the Nepalese mountains this spring with the Valandre Makula Expedition. Both athletes are part of a five person team which includes Brad Johnson, Robbie Klimek and Sherpa Chhiring Dorje. Valandre is sponsoring this team to Makula and the expedition starts on April 14th.

Dr. Meyer studies how cold weather affects the respiratory system and has extensive experience climbing in North and South America as well as the Himalayas  with Chris Klinke, a passionate climber who has experience all over the world on 8000+ meter summits. His goals of mountain climbing are inspiring and he proves that you can get into the sport at any age. At age 35, Chris dedicated his passion full time to the mountains.

ColdAvenger climber Dr. Eric Meyer

Here at the ColdAvenger HQ, I’ll be waiting to hear for updates from both camps on how the trek is going! Updates to follow.

Good luck teams.  Return safely.

John B. Sullivan, III aka ColdAvenger Pro

Mountain Climbers Record Lowest Blood Oxygen Levels

Monday, June 8th, 2009

As you know, Talus athlete Ed Viesturs ascended Mount Everest a few weeks ago.  And as it turns out, Mount Everest may be more than just a mountain to conquer.
image005Nearly one year ago, Everest served as a medical testing ground. Four British researchers climbed to the top, took their own blood samples, and what they found was truly groundbreaking. Their oxygen levels were the lowest ever recorded in live people; well below levels that would normally prove lethal on the ground.   We first read about the study back in January in Popular Mechanics.
The Popular Mechanics article reports the study’s findings on how the average person at sea level has about 13-14 kilopascals (kPa) of oxygen in their bloodstream, but on the top of Mount Everest, the researchers measured their own blood oxygen level to be between 2.5 and 4 kPa, the lowest ever measured in live people. Normally, a person with 6 kPa of oxygen faces almost certain death. These findings dispute what doctors have known to be true about blood oxygen levels and could help doctors treat intensive care patients struggling with low levels of oxygen in their own bloodstream.

19We wonder, what else does this tell us about blood oxygen levels? Can elite mountaineers like Talus athletes Dr. Eric Meyer and Ed Viesturs train their bodies to conserve oxygen and turn off other non-essential body functions while climbing?
Again, to read the article about the study, click here.  And, if you just can’t learn enough, the complete findings of this study have also been published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
It’s so cool that scientific answers can be found 29,000 feet above sea level, on top of the tallest mountain in the world.

coldavengerpro-2Stay out more Scientifically!

John B. Sullivan III  aka ColdAvenger Pro

Life and Death on K2 2008…

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Talus Athlete, Dr. Eric Meyer, will have an article recounting his experiences during the historic August 2008 K2 disaster and rescue, arguably one of the worst disasters in Himalayan mountaineering history, that will appear in the University of Utah Dept. of Anesthesiology newsletter; keep reading if you want a sneak peak….

On hearing his teammate’s radio report of a massive ice avalanche at 8200 meters on K2, Dr. Eric Meyer knew that several climbers above him descending from the summit would be facing a perilous retreat. Meyer, a 1995 U. of U. Anesthesiology grad, was expedition physician and summit team member of an international group attempting to scale K2 (28,250 feet), the world’s second highest peak in northeastern Pakistan. (more…)

Season Wrap-up

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

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In 2008 the ColdAvenger®was the cold weather mask of choice for some of the world’s most renowned athletes in the some of  the most extreme environments. Ed Viesturs and John Stetson used it on the Canadian Arctic Trek for Earth Health. Rachael Scdoris and John Stetson used it in the Iditarod. Dr. Eric Meyer and his teammates used it while climbing K2 for the International K2 Expedition. Ed took it to Aconcagua in Argentina, and many other amazing locations around the world from Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to Antarctica. And today Ed’s got it on Mount Everest as part of his gear during the First Ascentclimb.  Although the ColdAvenger has been tested in many extreme places, it truly excels in its design as an everyday cold weather face mask. (Click here to read the everyday benefits of the ColdAvenger®).2009_classic

2009 is looking like it is going to be great for Talus. We worked hard and played hard in the cold. We attended the 2009 Outdoor Retailer Winter Market for the first time and after a week of crazy fun we walked away with great success.  Look for us at REI, Amazon and Glacier Outdoor Center as we continue to roll into retail shops and continue direct sales online.  Also, come hang

out with us on Twitter and Facebook.

Stay Out Longer™

John B. Sullivan III a.k.a. “ColdAvengerPro”

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