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If anyone here is interested in contributing either directly or by suggestions to
High altitude breathing apparatus it would be very welcome, as I do not have access to any useful climbing sources, or if I do, I don't know what they are. Please ping with replies. Cheers, · · ·
Peter Southwood(talk): 14:54, 30 July 2023 (UTC)reply
We have rarely used O2 canisters with demand BVM to optimize for 'recycling' the high exhalation CO2 & O2, but generally only for ('death-zone') medical or tactical "emergency use". (I would rather not climb where I think these risky, cumbersome, & troublesome systems are likely needed for me.)
There is also the use of preconditioning (CO2/O2/N2 stressing) equipment, typically used in conjunction with a sleeping tent.
Boldklub-PJs (
talk) 22:42, 6 January 2024 (UTC)reply
Hello -- Wondered if anyone could help out assessing whether this draft is useful; it's a bit promotional and undersourced but I think the company was genuinely an innovator in indoor climbing. Thanks for any help you can offer the creator.
Espresso Addict (
talk) 14:23, 13 November 2023 (UTC)reply
I will take a look at it later. EP is definitely the most notable company in the design and construction of indoor climbing walls (official supplier to the IFSC for years
here). So notable and would get coverage in the climbing magazines like
Climbing,
Gripped, and
Grimper.
Aszx5000 (
talk) 14:32, 13 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Hi, What's the proper English term for
fr:Goulotte (alpinisme)? There is no article on English WP, and no category on Commons yet. Thanks,
Yann (
talk) 21:07, 28 December 2023 (UTC)reply
There isn't really a direct translation into English mountaineering as far as I know. A
couloir is a wider snow/ice covered gully (there is often the definition that you can ski down a gully/couloir, but there are narrow couloirs/gullies). 'Couloir' is widely used in en-mountaineering.
A French goulette is much narrower than a couloir, and typically one person wide and more ice than snow. I have heard 'goulotte' used in Scottish ice climbing, but ice routes that are like goulettes can also be called "ribbons (of ice)", "seams (of ice)", or even "drains (of ice)". Some just call them "very narrow couloirs". Not as widely used in en-mountaineering as couloir, but is used.
Aszx5000 (
talk) 01:26, 29 December 2023 (UTC)reply