Why don’t more women try ice climbing? “A lot of women don’t like the cold, and I don’t either,” Weiss says. “I shiver and freeze, but you figure out how to manage the system and stay warm.” In addition to wearing the right layers, Weiss packs peanut M&M’s in one pocket and GU (a sports energy gel) in another. KINDRED SPIRITS Two things keep these women climbing, despite the cold and risk: community and a desire to be challenged. “I live for our community,” says Weiss, who met every one of her good friends in Boston five years ago when she took the ice climbing program. “There’s a huge bond between people that are passionate about the same thing.” Zinser describes that passion as the “pure pleasure” of kicking her crampons into the ice and then setting her ice axes. The calculated movement, the transcendent rhythm where everything else drops away and the brain focuses on just one singular, all-important task. “All you’re thinking about is what you’re doing, in the moment, in the now,” she says. The adrenaline-induced focus and the fun of strategizing where ice ax and foot go best can be intoxicating. And so can mellow evenings in front of a cabin’s wood stove after a vigorous day, when talk is about other times, other climbs, near misses and heroics. Stiffened toes are warmed by the wood fire, a beer sits in one hand. That’s how Savickas often finishes a day of climbing, spent in the company of people she’s seconded or led for almost two decades. But such traditions are threatened. Savickas has found that an already short climbing season has become even shorter in recent years, due to warmer, milder winters. “I always used to climb the Saturday after Thanksgiving up in [Tuckerman] Ravine and now it doesn’t seem like it’s going to happen. It’s not always reliable.” She’s witnessed the same thing in the Alps, where glaciers are shrinking at an alarming rate. She says, wryly, that she “might get stuck rock climbing, like it or not” if the pace of climate change doesn’t slacken. For now, good ice can still be found, but Weiss says she sometimes has to go in search of it at higher elevations where the air is cooler.
|
|||||||
![]() |












