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Entries from Mt. McKinley


McKinley Expedition: Delaney & Team Take Another Weather Day

Day 10 - Strong Winds and Snow Persist

Today is another weather day, so the blog is about birds.

Birding is the act of intentionally wandering around outside and looking for birds. People who engage in this hobby are called birders. There are many types of birding, some enjoy seeing local birds that are native to where they live, others enjoy making a life list of all the unique birds they’ve seen in their life, and for some - the most extreme birders their goal is to complete “A Big Year”. There are many types of Big Years but the most popular and competitive is The Lower 48 American Bird Association Big Year. The Big Year starts on January 1st each year and ends on December 31st. The goal during this time frame is to see or hear as many unique birds as possible in the contiguous United States and up to 50 miles offshore. There is a fantastic documentary about this competition available for free on YouTube called “Listers”, I highly recommend you give it a watch. 

Now here is a list of bird facts that I can remember to spice up the end blog…

  • The Loggerhead Shriek is a small carnivorous songbird that uses thorns of plants and the spikes of barbwire to impale its prey.
  • The Golden Finch is the state bird of Iowa.
  • The Common Murre is a pelagic sea bird that can dive upwards of 300 feet below the surface.
  • Horned Puffins nest on sheer ocean cliffs and lay eggs with a flat side on them, so the eggs don’t accidentally roll out of the nest.
  • Blue-Footed Boobies have one of the top 5 funniest bird names.
  • Bald Eagles have been known to sink their talons into fish that are too large to fly away with and are unable to release their talons, so they are pulled underwater and drown.
  • Roadrunners are one of the few known predators of rattle snakes.
  • At least one songbird dies every year on the West Buttress route of Denali.
  • Varied Thrush can sing through two sets of vocal cords simultaneously, allowing them to sing incredibly complicated bird songs.
  • Marbled Murrelets nest dozens of miles from their ocean habit, exclusively in old growth forests near rivers. This allows their chicks a higher survival rate due to the fact old growth offers more protection for nesting and when they’re pushed out of their nests to learn to fly, they plop into the river below.
  • Red-Winged Black Birds are territorial and have been known to attack elementary school students walking to their friend Andrew’s house.
  • The Steller Jay was the key to the first Russian expeditions knowing they had made it to Alaska as the Blue Jay family of birds is endemic to North America exclusively.
  • And finally contrary to popular belief, the mosquito is not the state bird of Alaska, it is in fact the Ptarmigan.

Cheers,

Jack and the well-rested team.

Leave a Comment For the Team (1)

Great post on birds. By the way, if you see penguins you have climbed too far!

Posted by: Phil on 5/22/2026 at 6:06 pm


McKinley Expedition: Champion and Team Check in from Camp

Thursday May 21, 2026 - 9:44pm PDT

Welp, we woke up to drifting snow, heavy winds, and the sun outlook of yet another weather day. Today haiku was brought to you by Adam, because it was his favorite day ever.

Wizards of the stove

Waving wands of ice and snow

What will you do next

Adam’s favorite day ever consisted of his two favorite meals. The day started with Cinnamon Toast Crunch and the day wrapped up with Zatarain’s (Jambalaya). The in-between times were filled with cribbage, rotating in your sleeping bag like a hot dog in a gas station and some more story times. The snow continued to fall throughout the day.  We are still set up to carry to 13.5 whenever weather allows.

Check in tomorrow!

RMI Guide Nikki Champion and Team

Leave a Comment For the Team

McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Retrieve Gear, Glad to be reunited with snacks

Wednesday, May 20, 2026 - 9:28 pm PT

Tonight’s dispatch starts with a Haiku from Oliver:

Trango home on snow 

Vented, sturdy and solid 

Palace of solace

Today we woke up to a low cloud, light snow and calm winds. It was our chance to go back and grab our cache. As we let the morning slow roll, we enjoyed the the second smoked salmon meal of the trip and then geared up with empty packs and sleds and started back downhill to be reunited with our snacks and group meals we have been missing. After a quick 30 minutes of down we were digging. 

We then loaded everything up, and headed back up hill for a short hour. As we finally made it back into camp, weather mellowed out and we enjoyed a solid afternoon of building a kitchen, good burritos, and snapping a quick team photo. 

Weather might be a bit tough tomorrow, but when things allow we will gear up to carry to 13,500'

RMI Guide Nikki Champion

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Team you are magnificent.  Pushing your way skywards, onwards and upwards. Heatwave in our little country presently- surviving!!! Special love and hugs to Oliver- you are a great trooper.  Thinking of you. Best wishes to all the team.

Posted by: Olive & John Blackwell on 5/26/2026 at 2:24 pm

Thank you for posting this photo! It is so wonderful to see smiling faces. Sending all the best good-weather vibes and wishes to the team. Love you Bruce!

Posted by: Emily Chaplin on 5/21/2026 at 9:55 am


McKinley Expedition: May 12th Team Reaches Talkeetna

Welcome to the May 12th Denali expedition!

After the entire team completed the first leg of the trip by successfully making it to Anchorage, we packed up and shuttled into Talkeetna to share our first team dinner and a few beers before the real madness began.

This morning started with coffee in town, followed by our National Park briefing, before spending the rest of the day doing an in-depth gear check and sorting through personal gear, group gear, and countless snacks. Once things were packed, unpacked, and packed again, the team was finally ready for the final weigh-in.

Now that the gear is weighed, the clothes are laid out, and the team is prepped, we just wait for a weather window to fly in. The goal is first thing tomorrow morning, so keep your fingers crossed.

RMI Guide Nikki Champion & Crew

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Best wishes Oliver and team for a successful climb. You are in our thoughts and prayers. You can do it so go go go! Great to have had your birthday celebration with new friends another celebration awaits you on your safe return.  Stay safe

Posted by: Olive & John Blackwell on 5/17/2026 at 10:13 am

Best of Luck Oliver & team, make sure you get him to sing a few Irish songs, he is absolutely brilliant, but very shy

Posted by: Brian Payne on 5/15/2026 at 6:48 am


McKinley Expedition: Delaney & Team Cache Gear above Ski Hill

Hello faithful readers!

Imagine the inside of a ping pong ball. Now imagine yourself inside that ping pong ball. That was us for 8 hours today. Today the plan was to take all our excess gear and food and cache it at around 9800. After spending the morning organizing our gear, we took off slogging up “Ski Hill”. Slow and steady was the name of game. Navigation was difficult at best and a blind guess at worst. The team was strong both mentally and physically today. The effort was top notch.

After digging a very large snow hole and burying all our gear, we took off downhill. Home sweet home and burritos were calling our names. A relaxing evening and a filling meal. The simple pleasures of mountain life We hope to wake up to slightly better weather tomorrow, so please cross your fingers for us!

Cheers,

Jack and the Team

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

You got this Forest!!!!

Posted by: Peggy Diaz on 5/15/2026 at 8:06 pm

Go Haley Go!!!

Posted by: Sydni on 5/15/2026 at 5:18 am


McKinley Expedition: Delaney & Team Hang Another Day in Talkeetna

Day 3 – Sunday, May 10, 2026

Hang time in Talkeetna! 

With unflyable weather, the gang spent the whole day on standby. We practiced the critical Denali skill of hurry up and wait, and also practiced our ping pong (table tennis for those who are serious) skills. 

K2 Aviation lost the Talkeetna ping pong tournament to TAT (Talkeetna Air Taxi) last year, so luckily the RMI team was there to train with the K2 pilots. Hopefully, K2 will take a win in 2026!

We also reviewed our sled rigging and had an excellent team dinner at the Lattitude 62.

All eyeballs are looking towards the weather forecast for tomorrow for flyable weather!!

RMI Guide Calvin Jiricko & Team

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Congrats on reaching Camp 1. Looking forward to seeing all the progress. Be safe. Be well. Have fun.
Blessings
Daddyo

Posted by: Don Rodie on 5/14/2026 at 8:14 pm

The best from you all, the mountain and the weather!

Posted by: Steve on 5/13/2026 at 7:38 am


McKinley Expedition: Delaney & Team Arrive in Talkeetna

Hello world!

Greetings from Alaska! After a long day of travel from all over the US and Europe, we all assembled at the Ted Stevens Airport in Anchorage. We then loaded up the shuttle bus with our eccentric driver Ross and drove the two hours to Talkeetna. We then checked into the Swiss Alaska Inn and got the lowdown on the winter Talkeetna gossip from the Inn's proprietor Critter. After a brief break to get settled in we enjoyed some fine pizza at Mile High Pizza Pie. The team finished the evening off with a walk to the river front where we witnessed a large ice flow break up at the confluence of the Susitna and Talkeetna rivers.  Then it was off to an early bedtime to prepare for an early start the next morning to begin gear checking and packing. 

Thanks for tuning in -

RMI Guide Jack and the Team! 

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Health and success to the entire team. Look forward to your updates.

Posted by: Mark Mises on 5/13/2026 at 5:11 pm

Was Jess allowed to participate in gear checks ? Maybe watch her around compressed stuff sacks..

Posted by: Brian Broussard on 5/10/2026 at 10:46 am


Mt. McKinley Expedition: Hahn and Team Return to Talkeetna

Friday, July 4, 2025 - 1:33 AM PT

After we got in the tents at 11k last night, there was a violent thunderstorm passing over with inches of hailstones. We awoke at 2:00 AM to fire the stoves, choke down some oatmeal and get ready for a big day. It was party cloudy but mostly clear, which led to easy  walking conditions. We were walking by 4:00 AM and and fairly soon, we’d reached the upper regions of Ski Hill and then our old camp at 8k. It only took us a further three hours to reach base camp. For late season, conditions were amazing. We never had to cross an open crevasse. We stayed busy at base camp sorting our own gear and helping others to load planes. Our flights came in around 1:00 PM and then we were headed to Talkeetna. Our team had donated pizzas in their mouths within 5 minutes of landing in Talkeetna. K2 Aviation did an excellent job bringing us home. In checking out with the National Park Service, we learned that we had been the absolute last team on the mountain and that the success rate for the season had only been 36%.

We sorted gear for the afternoon and then celebrated with a dinner at the brew pub. We celebrated a safe and enjoyable climb that didn’t reach the summit. That seemed appropriate given how much we enjoyed the effort of simply trying to get up the mountain.

RMI Guide Dave Hahn and Team   

 

PC: Dave Hahn

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Well done!  Did the best you could with the conditions…looking forward to the stories and your safe return to the states.  Karl and Diane

Posted by: Karl Ring on 7/8/2025 at 4:34 pm

God reise hjem etter det som må ha vært en fantastisk opplevelse selv om toppen ikke ble nådd.

Posted by: Erik Blaauw Evensen on 7/4/2025 at 12:45 pm


Mt. McKinley Expedition: Hahn & Team Rest at 14 Camp and Hope for Good Conditions Ahead

Sunday June 29, 2025 - 10:49 pm PT

It was the ultimate luxury to lie in until the sun came around this morning. We ate our last bagel breakfast and lounged about in the sunshine. We rested, but we also schemed and plotted our ascent for the next few days, and that scheming got tougher as the day progressed. We became aware that the teams at 17K had turned around from their summit bids after finding avalanche conditions on the "autobahn". Of course we will need some improvement in that condition by the time we reach the same terrain, so the team will have the challenge of trying to remain optimistic and positive while acknowledging that a problem lies ahead. We said goodbye to Dom's RMI team as they descended through 14 camp, we ate our dinner and we prepared to climb. 

- RMI Guide Dave Hahn

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Keep positive thoughts. Best wishes

Posted by: Richard Harmetz on 6/30/2025 at 6:33 pm

Don’t despair y’all!  Chin up and keep positive thoughts!  If it’s meant to be it will be but don’t take any unnecessary risks!

Posted by: Joe Cunningham on 6/30/2025 at 11:20 am


Mt. McKinley Expedition: Hahn & Team Wait at 14,200’

Friday, June 27, 2025 10:38 pm PDT

Dispatch 14.2 – Storm Day 2

As forecasted, today was a better day. It was sunny and calm… and we didn’t go climbing. The guide team felt that the recent snowfall needed at least one good sunny day to settle and reduce the avalanche hazard. As it turned out, all other teams on the mountain came to a similar conclusion—no teams moved today.

We ended up making pretty good use of the day, though. We roped up and took a field trip to the Edge of the World! Since we are camped in the middle of a large glacial basin, it’s easy to forget just how high we’ve already climbed. A short walk to the edge is a quick reminder. It was thrilling today to climb a rock at the edge and look down a few thousand feet to the Kahiltna Glacier—where we camped a while back.

Back at camp, Calvin gave a well-received instructional session on avalanche beacons, and Sam put all his culinary skill into boiling water for our freeze-dried dinner.

We hope to carry up onto the Buttress tomorrow.

– RMI Guide Dave Hahn & Team

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Stay safe y’all and glad you got to look down at how far you’ve already come. Here’s for clear climbing and good weather!

Posted by: jen ostrich on 6/28/2025 at 1:28 pm

Glad about the weather. Keep smiling.

Posted by: Richard Harmetz on 6/28/2025 at 11:47 am

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