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DIRTBAG SOCIETY This is an honour to all people who just wanna ride or explore. No matter where one might sleep or crash. In a tent, minivan, studio or mansion.The main focus is somewhere out there. One might have too many brewskies afterwards & wake up next to piece of a Hag just to chop off own arm to be able to escape. Trail Cameras & Feeders Minerals, Attractants & Feed Evolved® Habitats Dirt Bag Attractant View All Restrictions That May Apply UV coating is more visible to deer Appeals to deer's eyes and nose The Dirt Bag Attractant from Evolved Habitats looks like ordinary dirt to the human eye, but the UV GLO-Cote gives off a blue hue to deer, giving them a better chance to see the attractant if they approach upwind. Dried-molasses formula appeals to their keen sense of smell as well as their taste buds, ensuring you see more deer. Available: 5-lb. bag, 4-lb. block. You have no recently viewed items. Wildgame Innovations Apple Crush Juiced

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nyan cat hoodie buyOur Ultra Dirtbags program is for those who want a challenge, an adventure, and a whole lot of fun.
labradoodle hoodieIf you can run 10 road miles comfortably, we can get you to the finish line of a 50K.
lemoore hoodiesIn the process, you become a member of our exclusive Ultra Dirtbags cadre, a merry group of trail junkies.
bape shark hoodie xxlUltra Dirtbags Training will help you to achieve your race goals, whether your goal is to simply complete the race or to achieve a personal record.
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Our coaches design a training program based on your specific goals with the primary goal of keeping each runner safe, healthy and ready for race day.
dirtbag hoodieThis program trains for a hilly, technical destination race and guarantees lots of fun!
aphex hoodie Training will begin on February 4th. Goal race is the Gnaw Bone Dances with Dirt 50K on May 13, 2017. *Race registration not included in the training program price.* The group will meet every weekend for long runs unless otherwise specified. Most runs will take place at Percy Warner Park and the meeting times will be at 7 am. These times are subject to change. Ultra Dirt Bags $150. It is expected that Dirtbag trainees be able to run 10 miles comfortably by the start of training. Most runs will take place at Percy Warner Park. Group runs will take place on Saturday mornings at 7 AM.

Ultra Dirtbags 50K Trail Program Start: February 4th Program Schedule: February 4th-May 13th Gnaw Bone Dances with Dirt 50K- May 13 Program Fee: $150 excluding race fee Description: Our Ultra Dirtbags program is for those who want a challenge, an adventure, and a whole lot of fun. In the process, you become a member of our exclusive Ultra Dirtbags cadre, a merry group of trail junkies.Great alpine pioneers are regarded as romantic, philosophical figures who scour the world looking for the next great challenge. They wax poetic about the importance of climbing, the beauty of the high hills, and the pursuit of human endeavor before comfortably hanging up their boots to print a memoir and speak fondly about their adventures. A Dirtbag to This Day To say that Fred Beckey is a Northwest icon is a severe understatement. He’s the last of a generation of legends, with more first ascents to his name then any other living American climber. At the age of 92, when most have long donated their shoes and ropes to be hung in a museum, he can still be found from Joshua Tree to Leavenworth, climbing one of the hundreds of routes that bear his name.

In 2013, at the age of 89, he made his first trip to climb in the Italian Dolomites. Fred is the original dirtbag, still living out of the back of his car, which was once nearly stolen while he was sleeping in the backseat. His list of partners reads like a hall of fame of American climbing: Kor, Chouinard, Robbins, and Bjornstad among the giants who have held Fred’s rope. A Beckey route has a certain character. It involves a long approach across loose talus, thin, difficult-to-protect splitters, gaping chimneys, and mind-bending exposure that establishes the most direct line to the summit. Among Fred’s numerous first ascents across Washington and Alaska, he established the Beckey-Chouinard on South Howser Tower in the Bugaboos, the Northwest Buttress of Denali, the North Ridge of Mt. Stuart, and numerous first ascents in his beloved North Cascades, including the West Ridge on Forbidden Peak and the Liberty Crack at Washington Pass. Prior to World War II, Beckey’s first ascents were established before the invention of modern climbing technique.

In his formative years, when the North Cascades were an untamed wilderness of serrated, unclimbed peaks, Fred and his brother Helmut utilized a little more than a manilla rope and homemade pitons; forging across dense Northwestern forests for days in what now takes modern climbers mere hours to approach. After serving with the 10th Mountain Division in the war, Beckey returned to the Washington climbing community and found himself at odds with the Mountaineers, the Seattle institution who frowned upon his unorthodox style. In post-war years, he ascended the East Ridge of Alaska’s Devils Thumb, and accomplished first ascents on Mt. Shuksan, Liberty Bell Tower, and Mt. Baker. In the 1950s, when Americans obsessed over the Himalayas and rock climbing was a fringe sport that was considered training for mountaineering, Fred was more interested in climbing North American alpine rock towers than joining major expeditions to Nepal and Pakistan. While he was a member of the unsuccessful 1955 International Himalayan Expedition to Everest and Lhotse where he lost his tent mate, Fred was frequently described as manic and reckless.

He wasn’t invited on the 1963 American Everest expedition and instead turned his eyes toward Canada and Alaska. In the 1960s, Beckey, now becoming one of America’s most well-known climbers, solidified his legend with a handful of stunning ascents in the Bugaboos and the Canadian Rockies, including his famous ascent of South Howser Tower with his apprentice, Yvon Chouinard, and a bold ascent on the mammoth Northwest Buttress of Slesse Mountain. During the age of gentlemen climbers and romantic mountaineers, Beckey and Eric Bjornstad stand before Shiprock Tower in New Mexico wearing full gear and holding a sign that read “Absolutely No Rock Climbing”. The iconic image encompasses everything that Fred stands for: rebellion, freedom, and a penchant for daring to go where few others would imagine. Beckey rarely plans his climbs far in advance. He’s known for thinking up a trip and calling up his partners in the middle of the night to make it happen. Today he prefers to climb with others a quarter his age, such as his recent trip to Italy with Colin Haley.

Now much more cautious, he acts as a statesman and a mentor to the Seattle climbing community. Never married and with no children, Fred still sticks to his ideals, living a life of simplicity over settling down. While his body doesn’t allow for climbing as hard as he used to, he travels from Joshua Tree to the Italian Dolomites, still leading 5.7 pitches in a shredded pair of jeans and old tennis shoes. Beyond his exploits as a climber, Beckey is an established author, mountaineering historian, and surveyor, publishing a guide to his 100 Favorite Climbs, and a survey detailing hundreds of climbing routes across the Cascades. Fred Beckey is a climber driven by passion rather than impressing brands and sponsors. For many who identify with the dirtbag lifestyle Beckey is an idol of a life dedicated to his sport. “In the pantheon of climbing legends, he’s the man,” says alpinist Conrad Anker; “He never got the big, famous peaks, he never did Everest. But just that unrelenting drive to do new routes—that’s what puts him on top in my book.”