In April of 1996, the late Ron Gregg, the late Carl Skoog, Bill Hartlieb and I had a grand adventure in the Canadian St. Elias mountains. The goal was to ski from the summits of several peaks on the upper Anderson Glacier, which we were fortune enough to complete. Carl, Bill and I worked at Ron’s company, Outdoor Research, and we had talked Ron into partially funding this trip as a testing outing for the gear we helped to design, build, market and sell. The previous year , Bill and I had been together on a trip one glacier drainage over, where we had climbed and skied other remote and obscure peaks in the Brabazon Glacier area. This was part of what I called (not so seriously) my “march to the sea.” In 1991, I had skied on the flanks of the massive volcano in the Wrangells, Mount Sanford. Looking at the maps on that trip, I became interested in other peaks in the range. In 1993, my friend, the late Doug Barlow and I skied Mounts Bear and Bona, from where I saw more big, remote, mostly unexplored peaks gleaming in the sunshine - the Brabazon and Anderson mountains. It was a fantastic series of ski mountaineering outings that I look back on with a smile on my face.
Recently, Outdoor Research has produced a film about Ron Gregg called Any Fool Knows https://youtu.be/qjeJU1pk1X8?si=9IMrDif95zeowNn8. It’s very good and does an excellent job of capturing the Ron that I knew in those years. A few of my photos of Ron from that ‘96 trip show up in the film, so I thought I’d share a few more here, some of which I’ve only recently scanned.