Inter-Mountain Alpine Club History for the First 50 Years
On September 23, 1948, a group met in the Lewis & Clark School in Richland to
organize an outdoor sports club. They decided to temporarily call themselves
the Desert Rats Alpine Club. More than 50 years later, that same club under a
different name, is still going strong. This is a collection of
articles detailing the club history in the first 50 years. Another historical account written by Larry Upson
is available (Click here).
I-MAC, along with several other organizations, grew out of the interaction of
people living in the dorms during the early days of Hanford. With very few
houses existing in the small, former farming, town of Richland, dorms
(segregated of course) were provided to house the hundreds of men and women who
were employed on the project. Although they were provided with the latest
movies and big name entertainers, more outlets for leisure time were needed. As
these newly recruited employees became acquainted, people with like interests
sought each other out and formed organizations to share and promote those
interests.
Larry Upson was the person who took the initiative in bringing about that first
meeting. Larry, a native of Oregon, had hiked and climbed prior to his
"temporary" move to Richland. He guided the club through its formative years,
serving as the first president and carrying much of the work load the first two
years. Larry was knocked out of commission for awhile when he contracted polio,
but did recover and was able to participate in club activities once again.
Appropriately, he was elected the club's first honorary member in 1979. He and
his wife Teddy currently live in Underwood, WA. which overlooks the Columbia and
Mt. Hood. Each spring they host the I-MAC's overnight for our annual Columbia
Gorge trip and Larry continues to provide the club with information on potential
hikes/climbs, conservation matters etc. All our thanks!
Two of the earliest problems facing the club were choosing a permanent name and
determining the exact nature of the club. Names such as Richland Outing Club
(ROCs), Atomic City Mountain Club and Sage Brush Sprinters were suggested and
rejected at the first several meetings. Finally Larry spotted a P.I.E. (Pacific
Inter-mountain Express) truck one day and was inspired. Many early members
wanted the club to be primarily a social group while others were diehard
climbers. Eventually some fairly stiff hiking requirements were placed as
qualifications for membership. Those requirements have since been eased.
The club's first actual trip was a late October hike in the Blues. The weather
was cold and the trip leader tore the drain plug off the oil pan of his car on a
rocky high center coming out, but a thermos stopper and spare oil in the trunk
got them home. Five carloads of hikers made the trip.
The first full season began in 1949 with a mid February afternoon hike up Badger
"Hill". Other trips that year included skiing at Mt. Spokane, a bike trip and
hikes/climbs in such areas as Juniper Canyon, Cairn Hope Peak, Satus Pass,
Chinook Pass, Mt. Hood, the Wallowas, Kloochman Rock, Priest Lake, Mt. St.
Helens, Mt. Stuart, Mt. Adams, Rampart Ridge, Lake Chelan, Mica Peak, Mt. Emily
and the Blues. Often these trips were to areas where no member had been before
and sometimes the only directions were those provided by a friend of someone.
Mt. Stuart was such a trip. They eventually found the mountain and made the
climb, but got home at 6 am Monday morning. A total of 19 hikes and 15 climbs
(9 official) were made that first year with an average 10 miles and 15 hikers
per hike and 7 climbers per official climb.
Social events included roller skating, ice skating, wiener roasts (including one
in a dust storm). Slide shows and a steak fry at Mt. Spokane with the
Mountaineers.
The club's first mountaineering course was offered early in 1949 with a 6 night
series of lectures covering rook climbing, rope technique, snow and ice
climbing, geology, equipment, map readings mountain rescue and weather. The
cost for the series was 35 cents for members and $1.00 for non-members. The class
concluded with a practice trip in the Columbia Gorge.
The club's first annual banquet was held in December 1949 in the Desert Inn
following the annual meeting. The banquet featured a Mr. M.G. Barnard speaking
on an expedition to Baffin Land. Entertainment was provided by a barbershop
quartet.
Membership costs then were $2.00 per person initiation fee and $3.00 single and
$5.00 couple annual dues. The club had 44 members at the end of that first
year.
1950 was the year of THE outing. The 9 day trip to Oregon's Jefferson Park in
early August took 6 months planning and preparation and, lacking today's light
weight pack gear and food, it was quite an expedition! The group (10 members in
all) divided into an advance party (to purchase all the fresh food on the spot),
an inland group (who climbed Hood and Three Fingered Jack enroute) and a third
group who took the coastal route sightseeing along the way. At Breitenbush
Springs they met the packers and loaded their gear on 9 mules for the trip into
base camp at Scout Lake. Some time was spent in constructing and setting up
camp with its cook tent, supply tent, change tent, sleeping tents/tarps-,
disposal facilities, table and double oven fireplace. By Wednesday they were
ready to hike. The group climbed Jefferson and took various day hikes in the
area, returning to camp for meals of hot cakes, baked ham, steaks, freshly made
biscuits, cobblers and cherry pie, salads, fresh vegetables and milk followed by
campfires, marshmallow roasts singing and recorder music. At the end of the
week, the packers came back for the gear (which included huge kettles, stainless
steel mess trays etc.). After a relaxing swim at Breitenbush Springs, they
headed home. The three wives on the trip did most of the food preparation, but
were able to hike some. More established clubs of that time hired cooks to
allow club members to do more hiking on such trips.
There was a full season of "ordinary" trips too. They started with skiing and
conditioners (Badger, Johnson Butte, Wahitas) and included the Gingko Forest,
Grand Coulee, Palouse Falls, Tollgate, American River and boat trips/hikes to
the Snake River Canyon, Lake Chelan and Coeur d'Alene Lake. Climbs included
Matterhorn & Sacajawea, Guye & Lundin, Adams, Stuart, Cashmere Crags and several
climbs on Hood. One notable Hood climb was billed as a "Tenderfoot" climb and
drew 18 people. 'They left Richland at 6:30 Friday evening, arrived at
Government Camp around midnight obtained their gear, and since it was a clear
bright night, drove on and started climbing at 3:00 AM Saturday morning. They
were at the 9000' level by sunrise and made the summit between 10:30 and 11:30.
They were back to Timberline by 3:00 PM Saturday so drove on home that evening.
Multnomah Falls to Nesika Lodge (Trails Club) to Larch Mt. was a popular trip.
Closer to home, Badger was scheduled a second time in May as a moonlight trip,
departing at 7:30 PM and returning by 11:00. Since they didn't have the Spudnut
Shop, departures usually were made from the Mart - a cafeteria located just
south of the current Federal Building.
A Red Cross first aid course was given in 1950 along with 2 climbing classes.
I-MAC sponsored a public showing of a film, "Teton Adventure", presented by Glen
Exum. There was a charge of 65 cents per person and nearly 400 people attended.
Social events included weekly swims, monthly picture shows and several picnics.
Joe Soldat composed "The I-MAC Song" to the tune of "Home on the Range". The
club separated the annual meeting and the annual banquet this year. In addition
to dinner and a speaker (Mrs. F.D. Mack of Sunnyside) the banquet featured a
presentation of "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" and dancing.
By 1951, the club hiking and climbing schedules did not differ much from what we
have today. There was an occasional exploratory trip into new territory - such
as a 2 day trip into the Clearwater National Forest in Idaho (500 mi. RT).
Annual outings on the order of the big one in 1950 were scheduled yearly for
several years, but didn't occur due to a lack of bodies. (In 1951 only 4
bachelors signed up. A need for women to also go along was expressed). A
number of trips were scheduled jointly with other clubs and often included an
overnight stay at the other club's lodge. Evening activities would include
singing and folk dancing. Occasionally 'mystery hikes" would be scheduled with
the leader and destination unannounced. Trips into a cabin on Priest Lake owned
by Lee Daniels family became a regular event and Juniper Canyon hikes included
tours of McNary Dam which was then under construction.
Cross country skiing gained favor over downhill with Bob Moore providing
leadership. Rick Mack (1950 annual banquet speaker) invited I-MAC to the Gold
Hill cabin (the old cabin-which was originally a prospector's cabin) in 1951
starting a tradition. Climbs were mostly snow climbs due to club members' lack
of experience on rock. Climbing leaders would arrange for rental of axes and
crampons from Seattle for trip participants if given 10 days notice. Then in
'53 the club bought ice axes and crampons to rent out. A deposit of $8.00 per
item was required and weekly rental rates were 50 cents for axes and 75 cents for crampons.
The club treasurer originally kept the equipment and rented it, but it soon
wound up in John Young's basement and a steady parade of renters found their way
to 1501 Johnston.
In 1952 Hank Helmholz had the unique experience of losing his camera on a climb
of the Middle Sister and of getting it back six weeks later while climbing Mt.
Jefferson. Seems that a group of Skyliners had climbed the Middle Sister
shortly after the I-MAC trip and were on Jefferson at the same climb as the I-
MAC climb.
The first conservation issue to come before the club was to fight the proposed
damming of two rivers in the Dinosaur National Monument.
Public showings of films/slides narrated by well known mountaineers were
scheduled every year during the early 50's. Among those presenting shows were
Pete Schoening and Fred Beckey. In '52, I-MAC joined with the Allied Arts
Association to present a showing of paintings by Ross Gill (mountain scenery,
wild flowers, sea scapes) and received a percentage of the profits. We
sponsored a second showing of his works a few years later, but had incorporated
by then as a non profit organization and the IRS objected to our receiving
income from the show.
By 1951, a number of the early members had moved elsewhere, but they often
"wrote home" and many of these notes were published in the Yodeler. Lengthy
epistles were published relating the travels of Warren Hausler, "I-mac's
Innocence Abroad", as he spent many months climbing and sight seeing in Europe.
One of his observations was of the custom of guides who were conducting climbs
in the Alps to put ALL their climbers on one rope - as many as 20 people on a
120 foot rope. These ropes were kept taut and were often used to pull people
over difficult spots.
Equipment recommendations were published in the Yodeler and included: Footwear:
nailed boots (Hobnails for hikers and Tricountis for climbers) or the new lug
rubber sole boots ($14-15), Packs: ruck sack ($4) for short hikes, climbs and
skiing, and the Trapper Nelson ($6.50 - 8.50) for heavy loads (the Bergen was
good, but rode too low), Sleeping Bags: down was best, but was expensive ($30 or
more), Wool batting (not wadding) was good, but heavy; Clothing: wool in layers
- have a wind breaker; Sunburn preventative: a hat plus preparations such as
Norwich greaseless, Coty, Sutra or Skolox. USGS maps were available for 20cents
each.
Interesting side notes published in the Yodeler included development by the
Forest Service of a disposable sleeping bag. It was made of paper with a cotton
batting liner. It weighed 5-1/2 lbs. and cost $5.00. A brief history of
mountain climbing was printed. The first climbs were made strictly to gather
scientific information with Jacque Balmat ascending Mont Blanc in 1786 for that
purpose. Not until 1850 did amateurs become interested in climbing as a sport.
The first alpine club was formed in London in 1857.
The club emblem was designed by Bobbie McIntosh was used in a variety of
settings on Yodeler covers along with mountain scenery and a little lederhosen
clad "yodeler". Trip fees were raised to $.25 (1 day trip) and $.50 (2 day
trip) for members and $.50 (1 day trip) and $1 (2 day trip) for non-members.
Trip fees had previously been the same for both members and non-members.
Changes in membership requirements were made to include an "Associate member"
who had been on 3 trips within 6 months, but hadn't yet made that big trip (over
15 mile hike or a climb with an overnight bivouac) required for full ("active")
membership. Associate members could not vote or hold office, but had all other
privileges of membership. The quorum required to conduct business at the annual
meeting was dropped from 50% to 33 1/3% due to the difficulty in getting a
quorum out without spending 1 1/2 hours on the phone the night of the meeting
(and not everyone had a home phone in those days).
Bob Henderson was club president in 1951 followed by John Young in '52 and Fred
Facer in '53.
A club tradition was begun in 1954 when Badger was climbed for the first time on
New Years Day. In 1954 the Central Washington Mountain Rescue Council was formed
with I-MAC as a participating member. Training sessions were held each year
with a number of I-MAC members attending over the years. Another outing was
finally held - this time in the Tetons. Packers were again hired to haul gear
into a base camp (at Garnet Canyon). Storms hampered activity early in the
week, but the Grand Teton and Middle Teton were climbed. An unusual trip
combined a visit to the Pendleton Roundup and Happy Canyon with a short hike the
next day. I-MACs returning from a climb of Little Tahoma discovered that while
they were gone, a bear had visited camp and systematically ripped open packs,
devouring all food found until it polished off a whole can of black pepper from
Don DeHalas' pack (there were witnesses). Dick Hammond was the club president
in '54.
1955 featured several unusual trips. Randy Brown led a geology field trip in
the Priest Rapids area. An opal hunt was scheduled near Hepner and a hike in
the San Juan Islands. Social events included a charades party and horseback
riding in addition to more usual events. During this period one ski trip a year
was scheduled as a "Bunny Burrow" (camping on snow). The club president in '55
was Tom Evans.
In 1956 Don DeHalas was I-MAC president. There were some climbs, some hikes,
and some social events - but apparently not a whole lot. The fact that about
half (well, lots anyhow) the members of the club got married that year might
have had something to do with the slim schedule.
In 1957 I-MAC went all the way to Tipsoo Lake for a picnic. Four members of the
club participated in the successful rescue of a climber injured on Mt.
Johannesburg. Herold Triebs was president in both 1957 and 1958. During this
time, a number of changes were made to the club by-laws - including the dropping
of the associate member category.
In 1959 Ben Johnson was president. A notable social event was a visit to Ohme
Gardens near Wenatchee.
By 1960 we were meeting at the Spudnut Shop for day hikes. Dick Hammond was
president again. The climbers decided to initiate a climbing award system with
stars (3 approved peak - one red star, 25 peaks - one silver star, 50 peaks -
one gold star) awarded which could be placed under the club patch. Although a
number of people were qualified for some of these awards, no one ever applied to
receive them and the award system was quietly forgotten. I-MAC was officially
incorporated in 1960.
In 1961 John Young was president again. The club made its first visit to the
Juniper Forest. There was discussion as to whether or not the club should
purchase a cabin in the mountains (we didn't.).
1962 started off with a surprise. Those members who climbed Badger on New Years
Day were greeted by a large sign placed there at "12:01 AM by A. Bominable
Snowman (member of Hillary's Hiking Club)". The sign wished the I-MAC a Happy
New Year and advised them that they had reached the summit and could now unrope.
Randy Brown conducted another geology field trip (Horse Heavens to Priest
Rapids) and a limerick contest was held with members invited to furnish a last
line to the following:
A camper whose name was O'Neal.
Was preparing his evening meal.
The campfire went "pop!"
He upset his glop.
Some of the endings submitted included:
And let off with a nasty spiel.
And the odor made everyone reel.
So from Hahn a meal he did steal. (That was Larry Hahn, not our Thad).
Dean Dickinson was president in '62 followed by Malin Weiler in '63.
In 1964 we received an invitation to join Supreme Court Justice William O.
Douglas on a trek along the Olympic Peninsula. There is no record as to whether
any I-MAC member accepted the invitation. Warren DeMier headed the club in 64.
In '65 the first bike tour was held (on the San Juan Islands). One or more such
tours were held each year for a number of years until the formation of the local
bike club. 1965 also saw the start of a several year series of mushroom hunts.
Bill Van Slyke provided leadership on most of these trips, Word was received
that Duane Hudson had carried the I-MAC banner to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro.
The first Christmas tree cutting trip was held in '65 starting another series
which lasted for many years.
Bob Smith led the club in '66. A backpack outing was held in Wyoming's Wind
River Range. A notable social event was a dinner hosted by Pauli Budd which
featured moose ad the main course. The annual banquet featured Gaston Rebuffat,
famous French climber, guide and author as its speaker. 1966 was also the year
a contest was held to determine all the uses of the ice ax. Jim Stoddard won
the contest with an entry of 138 uses. To date he has not yet claimed his prize
which is still being stored in the Young's basement. A total of 250 uses were
submitted by the various entrants and this list was published in the Yodeler.
By popular demand, the list is available on the Web (
250 Uses of the Ice Axe ).
In 1967 John Brimhall was president. A hiking outing was held in Glacier Park
and Pete Schoening described a National Geographic expedition to the Antarctic
at the annual banquet.
In 1968 the AEC allowed I-MAC to conduct a hike up the east side of Rattlesnake
U.S. Citizens only, no smoking, no cameras or other contraband and no walking
off trails. 33 people took advantage of this rare opportunity. Ghost towns of
eastern Oregon were visited. I-MAC opposed construction of the Ben Franklin
dam. I-MACs visited the Marmes Rock Shelter, an important anthropological site
on the Snake River near Palouse Falls which was scheduled to be flooded by a new
reservoir. By pure chance, they arrived at the dig site at the same time as
Senator Warren Magnusen and others arrived for ground breaking ceremonies for a
protective coffer dam. A hiking outing into Idaho's Sawtooth Primitive Area
provided excitement. Toward the end of the week, we arrived at Alpine Lake to
find a small forest fire caused by a previous camper's carelessness. We were
able to put out much of the fire, but couldn't reach a burning snag. Tom &
Chris Reynolds hiked out to Redfish Lake to summon help. A helicopter arrived
that evening. I-MAC met the chopper, helped the two fire fighters carry their
gear and held flashlights for them as they worked most of the night. Alan Gibbs
was president in 1968.
A highlight of the '69 season was a hiking/climbing outing to Mt. Assiniboine
Provencial Park enjoyed by 19 participants, The club held Its first wine
tasting party and first Yakima River float trip (no, those were separate
events). One canoe, one row boat and one rubber raft made the trip from Kiona
to the Horn Rapids Dam. Word was received that the Nepalese government was
raising the cost of a permit to climb Mt. Everest from $500 to $1000. Our
banquet speaker was an aquanaut with Navy Sealab III. The Alpine Lakes
Protection Society was formed and Marlyn Jakub served as our president.
Pete Owczarski was elected president for 1970, but had been transferred to
Seattle. He tried to commute to board meetings for awhile, but had to resign
and was succeeded by Dave Wilson. A hiking outing was held in the Olympics. I-
MAC taught several mountaineering short courses at Columbia High School (now
Richland High) as part of an "Experiment in Free Form Education" program. A
notable social event was a camp food comparison dinner with Richmoor winning I-
MAC approval over Mountain House and Trail Chef. Conservation and ecology
issues were quite important to much of the community as a whole as well as to I-
MAC at this time. The fight against the Supersonic Transport, Zero Population
Growth, routing of the 1-182 bridges (a north Richland route was favored by
many), conservation of water, paper etc. and recycling were big Issues and were
highlighted at Earth Day" observances.
In 1971 our current trip classification system was adopted. Previously the
letters "A, B, C, & D" had been used along with numbers. Ed Sheen was president
in '71.
In '72 Tom Dabrowski headed the club. The AEC opened the White Bluffs/Wahluke
Slopes area on the NE bank of the Columbia to the public for fishing, hunting
and hiking. I-MAC immediately scheduled a trip there. A North Cascades hiking
outing was held. A guest on a trip to Little Big Chief hit a tree while
glissading and injured a knee requiring helicopter evacuation. This was the
first time an air rescue had been required on a club trip.
By 1972 our membership had grown to 105.
In 1973 Bob Strebin was president. The hikers held an outing in Wyoming's Wind
River Range and the climbers spent a week in the Southern Pickets. A solo climb
by a member of that party initiated the formal club policy against solo
climbing. Ghost towns were a popular trip destination that year.
In 1974 the Great American Gas Shortage was a club concern. Transportation fees
were raised and members were advised not to carry extra gas inside their cars.
Our annual banquet featured a glaciologist. Marv Zimmerman led the club in '74.
1975 was not a good year for the club. Several club members skied part way up
Gold Hill despite having been warned not to. Two persons were caught in a
surface avalanche. Dignities were bruised and some equipment was lost. They
were lucky. To add insult to injury, another ski was lost in Richland while
returning home thanks to an unfastened ski rack. A climbing outing in the
Chilliwacks was marred when one member of the party decided on the first day to
bag the planned agenda and simply camp for the week at a lovely spot 2 miles off
the trail, then rejoin the rest of the group on their way out. Trouble was he
didn't tell anyone. The rest of the group spent 3 days searching before they
found him. Bill Reed was president in '75.
In 1976 Pete Owczarski, back in the Tri Cities again, served as president. A
Picket Traverse outing was (apparently) held and Pete Schoening shared slides
and stories of the '74 American expedition to the USSR Pamirs at the annual
banquet.
Tom Dabrowski headed the club again in '77. Our banquet speaker entertained us
with slides of a round the world bike tour. An outing was held in the
Sawtooths. I-MAC scheduled a joint backpack along the Wenaha River with local
Sierra Clubbers. Much time was spent avoiding (or killing) rattlesnakes and
marveling at all the gear (such as a full 48 fl oz bottle of dish washing
liquid) hauled in by the Sierra Club members.
In 1978 the climbers held an outing in the Pickets and the hikers spent a week
touring Zion and Bryce National Parks. There was more debate at board meetings
on transportation fees and they were raised again. An incident on a club trip
led to a formal policy on no marijuana (or other drug) use on club trips. A fun
social event was a progressive dinner where we walked from one home to another
for 4 separate courses. Glenn Hoenes was I-MAC president in 1978. Several
members visited the King Tut exhibit in Seattle.
Sue Nutter became the first female elected president of the club in 1979. An
outing was held in Utah's Grand Gulch. A bread tasting party was a novel social
event. Larry Upson was elected to Honorary Member status.
In 1980 Dennis Elliott was president and Mt. St. Helens blew her cork. We're
not sure if there's a connection. 48 individuals were on an I-MAC climb of Hood
and 8 hikers were enjoying the Columbia Gorge when St. Helens blew. Some of the
climbers watched part of the eruption from Hood's summit and the hikers made a
point of driving to Larch Mt. to watch the eruption which they'd observed
earlier. None of those individuals recognized the full significance of what
they'd seen until they heard radio reports on the drive home. Some of them had
been puzzled by the unidentified black mountain located about where Adams should
have been. Chuck Rogers had made a special trip to observe the mountain and
found himself in a safe ringside seat when it blew. The club put together a
slide show of the eruption for a social event that was so popular that it was
repeated at the Battelle auditorium. The ash fall altered several scheduled
trip destinations. A two week outing was held in Alaska's Brooks Range. An
unusual social event was a St. Patrick's Day potluck: any food was fine as long
as it was green.
In 1981 an outing was held in the Northern Pickets and John Young was elected an
Honorary Member of the club. An early winter storm in the Cascades involved a
number of club members. A Tri-Cities hunter who was not prepared for the bad
weather became lost during the storm. We were asked to participate in the
search and 12 members took part. It was a frustrating experience and the hunter
was eventually found - dead. About the same time, 3 I-MAC members climbing
Rainier were caught in a storm with 2 men from Seattle. They were at Camp Muir
when the storm hit and spent 3 days there before starting down the mountain.
The storm picked up again, forcing them to dig a cave where they spent 2 nights.
They were able to resume their descent and met a rescue party a short distance
from Paradise. Bill Kennedy was president in ' 81.
In 1982 Bruce Napier was I-MAC president. Outings were held in the Sawtooths,
the Sierra Nevadas and the Pasayten Wilderness. The annual banquet featured a
speaker describing his flight for life from an erupting Mt. St. Helens. Tragedy
hit us when I-MAC member Judy Scott, skiing with other club members on a private
trip in the Eagle Cap Wilderness, was killed when she was caught in an
avalanche.
Steve Lyke was president in '83. During several years around this time the club
schedule was exceptionally full. Outings in 1983 included a trip to the Grand
Canyon and exploration of the Dot Lake area.
In 1984 Jeff Scheetz and Preston Andrews spent most of the summer climbing in
the Canadian Rockies. Outings were held in the Stehekin Alps, Yellowstone
National Park and Yosemite. The Yosemite climbing outing was the start of what
became an annual event. The club spent a weekend on trail maintenance and has
tried with very limited success to hold similar work parties since then. Bob
Popielarczyk was president in '84.
In '85 Jeff Scheetz filled in for the scheduled annual banquet speaker (who had
car trouble) and gave us a taste of his summer of 84. An outing was held
visiting Johnny Lakes. The club visited the blow down areas at Mt. St. Helens
for the first time and generous Jill Murphy made a donation to the club. Jim
Langdon was president in '85.
Joe English led the club in '86. Several club members had a chance to compare
their First Aid training with techniques used by the pros when an I-MAC skier
broke a leg in a freak accident a short distance from the top of the chair lift.
The club scheduled a trip Expo '86 in Vancouver B.C. Outings went to Eureka
Greek, Luna Ridge, the Southern Pickets and Yosemite.
Mark Halverson led the club in '87. Outings went to Yosemite, Image Lake,
Valhalla and the Shipwreck trail on Vancouver Island. That last trip featured a
multitude of ladders plus cable cars and swinging bridges for a unique trip.
1988 is still in progress. Jim Truitt is president and we are celebrating our
40th anniversary. Our celebration included a potluck dinner in September, a
moonlight hike up Badger (recreating some early hikes), publication of the club
history, and a display of equipment and photos at the Richland Library.
Unfortunately, some of those photos were stolen. In 1988, a publicity committee
was formed, the historian position was reactivated, summer evening bike rides
were instituted, and a major revision of the By Laws was made. To finish off a
very busy year, Kit Hunt was elected the club's 3rd honorary member.
In 1989 we engaged in one of our favorite activities - changing the club
transportation fee system. It only took 8 months to accomplish the task.
Washington State was celebrating its 100th birthday and several trails were
designated as Centennial trails. We hiked several of them that year. In
addition to the usual spring Columbia Gorge trip, we added a fall trip to take
in the fall colors. Unfortunately there weren't any fall colors yet to view. A
member's van was broken into while we were hiking with considerable loss of
property. Reporting the theft in Hood River was a lengthy process and a fire on
the Washington side complicated getting to the Upson's that evening. We've
never tried a fall Gorge hike since. Marilyn Young was president in 1989.
In 1990 there was concern about the Peshastin Pinnacles being lost to climbing
as a crucial part of the property was private land which was about to be closed
to the public. I-MAC contributed to the fund which allowed the state to buy the
property and keep it open to climbers. Jim Langdon was president in 1990.
Paul Meier was president in 1991. This was the year we introduced I-MAC T-
shirts. Mark Halverson may still have some left.
Pete Rieke was president in 1992. We discovered that the state had dropped our
corporate status. Seems we hadn't paid our annual dues for some time because we
hadn't received the notices - because someone had moved long ago. We re-
incorporated. Six club members took an intensive First Responder first aid
course along with local police and fire fighters. The instructor tried to load
us up with heavy, bulky medical equipment to haul along on all our trips. The
three members who opted to take the certification test (Mark Halverson, Gary
Maupin, and Pete Rieke) had the top 3 scores on the test. Mid-week evening 'back yard'
hikes were instituted that year.
In 1993 Bill Gurwell was president. Having run out of local mountains
(apparently) some of our crew headed to Bolivia to go climbing. Hanford
celebrated its 50th anniversary and urged local organizations to participate.
We started work on two projects : a booklet of "Hikes Around Home" [now available on the website]
and a hike on the Hanford Reservation. Dean Dickinson was elected to honorary membership.
Jim Langdon was president in 1994. We finally pulled off the hike up Bob Cat
Canyon on the NE side of Rattlesnake Mt. - 8 months after we started work on a
"Hanford Anniversary Hike". We waded through tremendous amounts of red tape in
the process. Over 60 people expressed interest with 47 actually making the
trip. We conducted our first trail maintenance trip with Rusty the Ranger. A
women-only backpack was held and forest fires burned 180,000 acres in the
central Cascades. Pete Rieke broke his back in a climbing accident (non-club
trip) losing the use of his legs - but vowed to climb again.
Alan Hosler led the club in 1995. The well-dressed I-MAC now sported an I-MAC
sweatshirt over his/her I-MAC T-shirt. Both men only and women only backpacks
were held this year. The club endorsed the preservation of the Hanford Reach.
A hike along the Tap Teal Greenway produced a surprise: our hikers found a
stolen motorcycle hidden in some brush.
In 1996 Edee Edwards was president. A rapid spring melt brought floods to just
about everyone and washed out many trails and mountain roads causing
considerable shifting of our schedule of trips. Bill Gurwell retired from his
job and started a backpack marathon that has taken him to far corners of the
world. The board tried hard to arrange a surprise 40th birthday party for Jim
Langdon, but was surprised itself when Jim threw his own party. After a
discussion on merits and costs of having a home page on the Internet, it was
decided that it was a nice idea - but cost too much and that I-MAC would
probably never have a home page until "John Young gets his own computer" (read
about 2075). In very short order 2 parties donated a computer each to John.
Afterwards, George Meriwether sponsored a home page for the club. You can visit
us on the web at: www.3-cities.com/~ghm/imac/imac.html [Editor's note:
Isn't our new address, www.imacnw.org much nicer?].
Jim Langdon was president (again) in 1997. The Rock Docs (mountain medicine)
column made its world premiere in the Yodeler. Heavy snowfall in the Cascades
hampered winter activities. Dog hikes were introduced on a limited trial basis.
A formal membership survey was conducted to aid in setting a new transportation
fee system. The new Forest Service trail head parking fees further complicated
a system we hoped to simplify.
1998 has arrived and with it the celebration of our 50th anniversary. Plans for
the banquet are underway. A variety of old and new activities have been
conducted. Social events have included such repeats as the all green St.
Patrick's Day dinner, ice skating and a tea party. The hikes, climbs and winter
activities included a number of old favorites plus geology and photography
hikes. Some club members spent much time in extra committee meetings coming up
with new transportation fees, another major by-law revision, and a hopeful
agreement with snow mobiliers on usage boundaries for Horseshoe Prairie. A solo
skier surprised the January Gold Hill crew when he showed up at the cabin twice
- lost each time. The second time was late in the evening and he was cold, very
wet, and hungry. He also had a frantic wife waiting for him at Crystal Mountain
Ski area on the other side of the ridge. After putting him up for the night,
our crew escorted him to Crystal - leaving the cabin before a rescue party
showed up.
Four years after his climbing accident, Pete Rieke did return to the mountains
on the snow pod he and friends designed and built. His Crank Rainier project
led by wife Wreatha Carner featured a successful climb of Mt. Hood followed by
the climb of Mt. Rainier which was halted by a huge crevasse near the top. They
turned around to climb another day - faring better than other near by parties
who required rescue. Mark Hoza heads the club in 1998.
Over the years a number of events have become traditions. Among these are the
annual hikes in the Columbia Gorge with an overnight stay with Larry & Teddy
Upson and the Cinco de Mayo party hosted by Mark Hoza & Cheryl Eiholzer. The
Christmas and New Year's Eve parties followed by the New Year's Day hike up
Badger and the chili feed are our oldest traditions. Lately the chili feed has
found a home with Judith Bamberger and Bruce Napier. For years the annual pool
party was known as Malin's (Weiler) pool party. Now Phil and Diane Ohl are
filling that role.
We have traditions. We have covered a lot of miles. We have had our share of true
characters. It's been a good 50 years!