Fixed ropes on bad entries [stupid JONG question!?]
Fixed ropes are common on heinous climbing approaches through little gullies, crazy scrambles and other places where a slip would be bad. You've got a heavy load (rack, rope, etc) so a fixed rope can be very welcome. Climbers put the ropes up and replace them when they're getting shot. They can be very, very helpful. So, is this ever done in skiing on sketchy traverses or entries through tiny slots, etc? I've never seen it, but that doesn't mean a thing. I'm not talking about being lowered into a couloir or rapping off a fixed anchor or any of that.
Example: I nearly shit my pants on an insanely narrow, steep approach across the huge buttress slightly below and to the right of Eagles Nest at Alta (bear right past Eagle's Nest and curve down and back towards the left). It was really little more than a very, very steep sideslip path looping down and around the face of the buttress. One side was about 75deg and 100ft down to a sieve of trees at the bottom and the uphill side was about as steep. The fucking thing was boney and narrower than my skis (I was on 190s). Nothing to grab. Clean edging not possible, too rocky. And of course it got progressively worse with no options. I really thought it was over - catching and popping off a rock would have been the end. It was the perfect place for a knotted fixed rope, which in the climbing world would have been there.
Sure fixed ropes could be buried regularly, but with frequent use and proper positioning they'd be easy enough to find. I'm thinking about hiking up there and putting one up as a community service. Flame on.:FIREdevil:FIREdevil