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Entries By nikki champion


McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Move to 11,000ft Camp

Monday, May 18, 2026 - 11:48 pm PT

The first alarm went off at 5AM. The sound of snow falling on the tent was there, but lighter than the last few days. We spent the next hour paying attention to the weather to see how the winds and snow progressed, and they seemed to stay the same. By 7AM the stoves were rolling and the plan was to move uphill if weather didn't get much worse. The light snowfall and dense clouds lingered, but winds remained calm at camp. By 10:30 we had torn down camp and began our way up Ski Hill in the light snow and clouds. As we made our way through the first few stretches the sun would occasionally try to peak out, but sooner rather than later the clouds rolled in, snowfall picked up, and visibility was reduced to a whiteout. This continued all the way past our cache before the skies broke again. After a tough day, we finally rolled into 11 camp where we found our RMI cohorts, and set up camp right below them. The long day was wrapped up with some ramen, and a little bit of wall building to prep for the next incoming storm. 

We are hunkered down and now set to face the storm, or back carry, whatever weather brings.

RMI Guide Nikki Champion

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

The Taos Ski Valley Team sends their love and thoughts of warmth and the open sunshiny days of New Mexico. Good luck to you all, especially Jeff Moses!

Posted by: Human Resources on 5/19/2026 at 1:55 pm

Wishing you all the best on your expedition.

Posted by: Kevin Prykull on 5/19/2026 at 11:00 am


McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Take Another Weather Day

5/17 - Another morning greated by the soft pitter patter of snow on the tents, as we unzipped the vestibule we were met by moderate snowfall, and low visibility. The waiting game begun. Wait to see if visibility increases, if winds decrease and if the snowfall stop after a few hours, none of those things happened and we settled into another weather day. A morning of breakfast scramble, followed by hours of tent time, some shoveling and some naps. The night was wrapped up with "burgers" and weather. Here's too tomorrow?!

RMI Guide Nikki Champion & Team

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Good things come to those who wait…. sending you all support from Ireland. Maeve

Posted by: Maeve Blackwell on 5/18/2026 at 11:31 am

Sending the sun gods out your way to clear the skies.  Wishing you all the best as you head for the summit. With all the preparations you have done, now the waiting game.  Positive vibes and positive weather forecasts as you make you ascent, if not today then tomorrow! Cheers! Love you KTM!

Posted by: Alison on 5/18/2026 at 11:13 am


McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Rest at Camp 1

5/16 - We woke up to the light sound of snow on our tents, and a thick cloud bank. As we emerged, we couldn't see either end of camp. As the snow continued to fall, and winds blew, we slow rolled our morning waiting to see what the weather would bring. After a morning of paying attention to weather, and some logistical problem solving, we opted for a weather day. 

The morning consisted of bagels, cream cheese, bagels and storytelling of infamous first dates. The afternoon was filled with sport eating, resting and building walls around camp to prepare for any incoming weather. We finished off our day with a dinner of pad Thai, listening to the weather, and mountain wide trivia. If weather allows we will move to 11 camp tomorrow.

RMI Guide Nikki Champion & Team
 

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

Should have brought Yahtzee :)
Enjoy the experience brother …

Posted by: Simone on 5/18/2026 at 11:00 am

Best of luck to Oliver and Team all the way from Ireland, if you guys have another weather day make sure you get Oliver to sing some Irish songs, Daniel O Donell is his favorite, he’s pretty shy but absolutely fantastic and will keep you all entertained, Wishing you all safe passage on the Hill,

Posted by: Brian Payne on 5/18/2026 at 12:33 am


McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Cache at 10,100’ on a Splitter Morning

5/15 - What a splitter morning! We woke up to clear skies, and the entire mountain on display. We had spent the evening before going through our gear. So we were set up to have a quick breakfast, pack up everything we plan to cache, and begin our way up Ski Hill for the first time of the trip.

With much lighter packs and sleds, the climb in the clear weather flowed by and in no time we were pulling into our cache site, right around 10,100'. We took a break, shoveled a deep hole, and dumped about 1/2 of our food and fuel in the hole to see at a later date.

We then turned around with empty packs and sleds and made it back to camp 1 for a night of beautiful views, and mac and cheese with bacon. When weather allows we will pack up, and make our way up past our cache all the way to 11 camp.

RMI Guide Nikki Champion & Team
 

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McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Enjoy First Day on the mountain

5/14 - Day one, done and dusted! We woke up to the call that we could fly, so we got our last fancy coffee drinks for a long while and shuffled over to the hangar to get our soft shells on, and ready to fly. We loaded the planes and by 10AM - planes were in the air!

Once we landed, it was a mad dash to reorganize, leave a cache of goodies for later, and rig up to start to move to Camp One.

A little bit after noon, the teams was tied in and ready to roll. Down Heart Break Hill, and across the Kahiltna Glacier we went. Many hours later we were pulling into Camp One, a welcome home for the night. We quickly began the work of building camp, melting water, and getting a quick dinner of broccoli cheddar soup and chicken sausage rolling. It was a long day, and a late night, but by 11P everyone was tucked into their sleeping bags. Tomorrow we aim to carry somewhere between 9.5-10k, and then make our way back to camp.

Here's to hoping for another day of good weather!

RMI Guide Nikki Champion

Leave a Comment For the Team (2)

You all have our continued focus and consciousness, stay strong.

Posted by: Mark Moses on 5/16/2026 at 8:16 am

You are about to attempt Denali — a mountain so cold, so tall, and so disrespectful to human comfort that even the oxygen up there files complaints.
Some people climb mountains for glory. Some for self-discovery. You’re doing it because apparently paying money to drag a sled uphill in subzero temperatures sounded fun.
At sea level, you are functional adults (not Joe though). Up there? You’ll become exhausted toddlers wearing expensive jackets. Simple tasks become epic quests:
‘Can you clip this carabiner?’
‘I don’t know… I need a snack and emotional support.’
But here’s the thing about Denali: it doesn’t care who you are. Your job title? Irrelevant. Your follower count? Meaningless. Your fantasy football championship? Pathetic. The mountain treats everyone equally — like underprepared penguins.
And yet… you climb anyway.
Because somewhere between the frozen socks, the questionable hygiene, and the moment your eyelashes freeze together, something incredible happens. You realize you can do hard things. Really hard things. Like waking up at 3 a.m. to pee into a bottle without ruining your sleeping bag. That’s growth.
Will there be suffering? Absolutely.
Will you question your decisions? Repeatedly.
Will someone cry over trail mix? Statistically certain.
But one day you’ll ll look back and say:
‘Remember when we voluntarily carried 80 pounds uphill while our lungs negotiated their resignation?’
And you’ll smile. Mostly because you survived.
So when the wind is brutal and the climb feels endless, remember:
Every step gets you closer to the summit.
I’m proud of you brother, of all of you.
SimplePie

Posted by: Keith Berry on 5/15/2026 at 5:47 pm


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


Mt. Rainier: Champion & Women’s team reaches summit

RMI Guides Nikki Champion, Mac Nolde, Celeste Wilson and Annie Chapman led the Four Day Women's Climb July 28 - 31 to the summit of Mt. Rainier this morning.  Reports are clear skies, light breeze and overall beautiful day. The climbers reached the summit early this morning and after spending a bit of time at the summit, started their descent from the crater rim around 7 am.  Once back at Camp Muir the teams will pack their gear and continue the last 4.5 miles down to Paradise. They will end the day with a celebration of their adventure.

Nice work team!

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Congratulations to this Amazing Team of Women!  I’m with you in spirit!  Safe journey to Basecamp!

Posted by: Kim Hansen on 7/31/2025 at 9:21 am


Mt. Rainier: Four Day Climb Teams Reach the Summit!

The Four Day Climb Teams led by RMI Guides Casey Grom and Nikki Champion successfully reached the summit of Mt. Rainier this morning! They started their descent from the crater rim a little after 7:00 am, they will enjoy some breakfast during their short break at Camp Muir before descending to Paradise and arriving back at BaseCamp this afternoon.

They reported some slight winds but, overall, a beautiful morning to be on top of the mountain!

Congratulations on an incredible achievement climbers!

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Mt. Rainier: Champion, Haugen & Teams Summit

At 7:15 AM this morning, the Four Day Climb led by Nikki Champion and Mike Haugen reached Columbia Crest, the highest point on Mount Rainier!  

With clear skies and warm temperatures, the team crossed the crater in perfect conditions—an unforgettable moment on one of the most iconic peaks in the Pacific Northwest.

Huge congratulations to the climbers and guides for this incredible achievement!

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Mt. McKinley Expedition: Champion & Team Recap Summit, Return to Talkeetna

Wednesday, June 17, 2025  - 10:20 am PT

Well, like all good things, this too must come to an end. Sorry we’ve been a bit MIA since summit day—those final days all start to blur together. You don’t get much downtime until you're either sitting at the airstrip waiting out the weather or lucky enough to fly straight to Talkeetna.

Three days ago, on June 14th, we stood on top. The following morning, June 15th, the team packed up camp and began the long, challenging descent. We dropped down the West Buttress around noon, descended the fixed lines, and stopped at 14,000' Camp for a brief six-hour nap.

After our rest, we had a quick dinner at midnight, then loaded up all of our gear from the last two weeks and began the march back to basecamp. We made our way around Windy Corner, down Squirrel and Motorcycle Hill, and finally back to 11,000' Camp. There, we whispered hellos to Dom’s team—who were sound asleep—grabbed our cache, transitioned back to snowshoes, and continued past Camp One to basecamp.

By around 9 a.m. on the morning of June 16th, we arrived at basecamp to good weather and the chance to fly straight off the glacier. By noon, we were back in Talkeetna wearing flip-flops, and by 2 p.m., we were sharing beers and laughter, wrapping up our expedition at the Brew Pub.

It’s all been a bit of a haze—amazing, exhausting, unforgettable. In the moment, it felt like it moved slowly, but now that we’re back on dry land, it’s hard to believe how fast it all went by.

If you've been following me for years, you know I'm a fan of Hiakus...

Fresh socks, frozen boots
Glacier sunburn, summit views
Fly me to a beer

RMI Guide Nikki Champion

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