Episodes

  • The Hardest Mountain Skill to Teach
    Jun 16 2026

    The hardest mountain skill isn't fitness. It isn't scrambling technique. It isn't rope work.

    It's judgment.

    In this episode of Ridgecraft, we explore why mountain judgment takes longer to build than any other skill—and why no amount of strength, gear, or technical knowledge can replace it.

    Using real examples from the Grand Teton, Capitol Peak, Longs Peak, and Mount Whitney, we examine how experienced climbers develop what can only be earned through time in the mountains: a library of patterns that helps them recognize risk before it becomes a problem.

    Topics include:

    • The three layers of mountain competence: Engine, Hands, and Judgment

    • Why athletic ability doesn't automatically translate into mountain readiness

    • The lessons hidden in accidents on Capitol Peak and Longs Peak

    • Route-finding on Mount Whitney's Mountaineer's Route

    • What climbing gyms can—and cannot—teach

    • Why turning around is one of the most important mountain skills you'll ever develop


    If you're serious about becoming a stronger mountain traveler, this episode may change the way you think about experience, progression, and risk.

    Learn more at Summitborn.com.

    This is Ridgecraft, a Summitborn podcast about hiking, scrambling, mountaineering, and the skills that make mountain travel safer, smarter, and more rewarding.

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    25 mins
  • How Hard Is the Route, Really?
    Jun 13 2026

    Mount Bierstadt and Mount Belford share the same Class 2 rating, yet they feel like completely different mountain days.

    Why?

    In this episode of Ridgecraft, we explore a problem that has confused hikers for decades: the difference between technical difficulty and physical difficulty. A route can be easy to climb and brutally demanding. It can be physically modest and mentally intimidating. Traditional ratings often fail to capture that distinction.

    You'll learn how the Summitborn Physical Difficulty Rating (PDR) measures the true size of a mountain day, why hikers consistently underestimate long routes, and how understanding physical difficulty can improve route planning, risk management, and mountain judgment.

    Topics include:

    • The difference between SDI and PDR
    • Why Mount Bierstadt and Mount Belford feel so different
    • Longs Peak, Capitol Peak, and Mount Whitney
    • The myth of the "hardest hikes" list
    • Why fatigue causes so many mountain accidents
    • How to better evaluate your next objective


    Learn more at https://summitborn.com/summitborn-physical-difficulty-rating-pdr/


    This is Ridgecraft, a Summitborn podcast about hiking, scrambling, mountaineering, and the skills that make mountain travel safer, smarter, and more rewarding.

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    26 mins
  • The Mountain Hates You: And That’s Why You Love It
    Aug 1 2025

    The Summitborn Dispatch Episode 2: The Mountain Hates You—And That’s Why You Love It

    In this episode of The Summitborn Dispatch, we venture into the thin-aired truth of alpine suffering. Host Brian Hamilton recounts a raw, elemental journey up Sahale Peak in North Cascades National Park—where sleet stings, lungs burn, and false summits mock your ambition. But this isn’t just a tale of pain. It’s a love letter to type 2 fun, to the strange church of backcountry hardship that so many of us now worship. Why do we chase the brutal honesty of the mountains? Why does it feel like the wild hates us—and why does that make us love it more?

    What You’ll Hear:
    – A wind-lashed ascent into the heart of Sahale Peak
    – Why type 2 fun has become a spiritual pursuit
    – False summits, shattered egos, and soul sandpaper
    – Geological and ecological context of Sahale and the Skagit watershed
    – Why we keep coming back to places that try to break us

    Mentioned in This Episode:
    – Sahale Peak, North Cascades National Park
    – Fred Beckey and the roots of North Cascades mountaineering
    – Climate change, glacier loss, and the Skagit River
    – The Upper Skagit Tribe and the significance of salmon
    – Our generational search for meaning through outdoor suffering

    Perfect For:
    Climbers, hikers, adventurers, and anyone who knows the strange peace of freezing your butt off on a granite ledge while questioning your life choices.

    Listen Now: New episodes of The Summitborn Dispatch drop every Friday. Available on Apple, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts.

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    12 mins
  • Fault Lines: Kamchatka’s 8.8 — When the Earth Breaks Open
    Jul 31 2025

    A powerful 8.8 magnitude earthquake has struck the Kamchatka Peninsula—one of the most volatile geologic regions on Earth. In this debut episode of The Summitborn Dispatch, we take you beneath the surface of the rupture zone to explore what this quake reveals about the Pacific Ring of Fire, tectonic tension in the Russian Far East, and the eerie quiet that sometimes precedes disaster.

    With reflections drawn from Summitborn’s Fault Lines column, this episode combines geological context, global seismic implications, and a look at why Kamchatka—remote and rarely discussed—is one of the most dangerous places on the planet for future megaquakes.

    🔍 In this episode:

    • What caused the Kamchatka 8.8 and how it compares to historic quakes
    • Why subduction zones create the most violent earthquakes on Earth
    • The role of Kamchatka in the Pacific Ring of Fire
    • How remote regions shape global risk awareness
    • Reflections from Summitborn’s geologic editor
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    16 mins