"The best all around climbing school and guide service in North
America" Jon
Krakauer, Outside Magazine |
Climber Comments and Feedback from AAI's recent trips.
 Bellingham Slideshow
Introduction to the Institute
The American Alpine Institute was founded
in 1975 and since then has been dedicated to
helping climbers raise their skills, protect the
environments in which they climb, develop good judgment,
and safely gain access to the great mountains of the
world.
Though the Institute is especially well known for its
advanced training and expeditions, its international
reputation is based on its dedication to teaching (at all
skill levels from beginners to masters
levels), its high level of customer service, the
outstanding skills of its staff, and its public service
in the areas of environmental protection and public lands
policy.
In its early years AAI was best known for its leadership
in alpine guiding, but since the early 80s,
the Institutes programming has given equal
importance to rock, snow, ice, glacier, and high altitude
climbing. AAI also offers nationally recognized programs
in wilderness and glacier skiing, avalanche hazard assessment, and technical rescue. We offer courses, climbing trips, and
expeditions throughout the year in six states and 16 countries.
Excellence in a guide
service.
Forbes Magazine |
AAIs Approach to Teaching & Guiding
There are several aspects of the Institutes
teaching and guiding that have gained wide recognition
and which stand apart from the goals of traditional
guiding. First, whether you come to us as a beginner or
an advanced climber, we will train you in such a way that
you are prepared to climb competently on your own after
your program. We are not structured to keep you dependent
on guides.
Second, we will help you develop your mountain judgment
as well as your technical skills, so that when you later
climb with friends, you will be a strong team member or
leader. If you join us for ascents rather than a course,
unlike in traditional guiding, your guide will be focused
on helping you improve both your evaluative and technical
skills during the process of completing your ascents.
Third, as a participant in one of the Institute's courses
or guided trips, you will be given significant personal
responsibility in contrast to the artificially protected
experience which is typical of most guided programs and
adventure trips. Through the years we have found that
this approach creates a much more enjoyable and
meaningful experience, makes better rock, alpine, and
expedition climbers, and is likely to have an immense
influence in increasing your safety when you later make
ascents on your own.
Fourth, you will always be exposed to state-of-the-art
climbing techniques, protective systems, and self-rescue
skills. AAI has always been a national leader in the
development of the most effective climbing procedures
that achieve the dual goals of maintaining safety while
effectively achieving climbing goals.
"America's top climbing
school"
Travel and Leisure |
Institute Staff
The AAI staff is composed of some
of the world's most accomplished climbers, skiers, and
mountain educators. Together they have climbing,
research, and expeditionary experience in every major
range of the world and have one or more degrees in areas
related to the physical or cultural aspects of the
domestic and foreign environments in which they guide.
Most commonly their academic backgrounds are in biology,
ecology, geology, and outdoor education, but others hold
degrees in park and forest management, medicine,
geography, meteorology, writing, languages, and
engineering.
In addition to extensive and very diverse personal
climbing experience, they have received professional
training in advanced guiding techniques and rescue.
Collectively they have one of the highest levels of
wilderness first aid training among the worlds
international guide services. All have been certified as
Wilderness First Responders, Emergency Medical
Technicians, or the equivalent.
"Simply the best climbing
school and guide service in America"
Backpacker |
Developing your Skills Achieving your Ambitions
AAI offers training at basic, intermediate, and advanced
levels on snow, ice, and rock, as well as at altitude, so
that at every stage of your climbing development we can
offer you courses and private guiding experiences that
will help you achieve your goals.
Whether its a matter of applying the skills you
already have safely in a new or more exotic environment,
further developing your technical skills so you can climb
harder routes, or expanding your capacity for expert
mountain judgement so you can tackle bigger or more
demanding peaks, we have programs throughout the western
U.S. and in countries around the world that will help you realize
your ambition.
At all technical levels, training can be taken either in
scheduled courses or in a privately guided setting. Our
staff will work with you to determine which courses,
guided trips, or expeditions will most effectively help
you reach your goals.
"American Alpine Institute
is the top training ground for mountaineers,
guides, and mountain leaders, but lots of
beginners start at AAI too."
USA Today |
Our Service to You
From beginning to end, we are committed to giving you an
extremely high level of customer service. At every stage
of your planning, you will find us easy to reach and
ready to provide the information, answers, or assistance
that will make it easy for you to choose and
then prepare for your program.
Sometimes the choice of a climbing trip, course, or
expedition is obvious, but often times there are multiple
options. Youll always find qualified, senior staff
available to help you compare the virtues of different
options and choose the mountain experience that will be
most pleasurable and rewarding for you.
AAI can also
assist you in planning for long-term goals. A person with
only backpacking or rock climbing experience, for
example, may develop the goal of climbing the highest
peaks of North and South America. Whereas a less
carefully designed strategy that repeats training or
omits important elements of preparation may require many
years to prepare a climber, thorough planning for
training in all component skill areas can well prepare a
person for such major goals in just one or two years. If
it would be helpful to you, please call on us for
assistance in charting an approach to your medium and
long-term climbing interests. Call today at (360)
671-1505.
"AAI is the Harvard of
mountaineering schools"
Matt Mooney, New York Times |
Great Gear
In our courses and on our guided trips, participants
learn a great deal about gear and the specifics of its
performance, durability, and range of applications. The
ropes and hardware used in the programs are what we have
found to be the best of their kind. We dont choose
and use gear because it lasts longer in a guiding
situation. We chose it because its performance
characteristics make it the best, and as a result you
will be exposed to the kind of equipment (ropes,
hardware, tentage on expeditions, etc.) that you later
probably will be considering for your personal use.
If you are new to climbing or beginning a new type of
climbing, you may wish to rent some of your personal gear
while you learn more about its performance
characteristics. Once again, in our rental pool you will
find, what is in our opinion, the best gear in the world. We dont
choose rental items because they are cheap and tough; we
choose them because they are the best in their category.
The items you rent will often times will be the exact choice
you make for yourself as purchases at a later date.
In preparing for your program, youll also have easy
access to highly qualified advisers in our equipment
shop. Working with a detailed equipment list that
youll have in your hands, they will help you take
best advantage of the gear you already own, rent gear
that you are not ready to buy, and purchase any other
items that are needed on the basis of performance
criteria and future versatility. Whether you buy gear
through us or elsewhere, we want to make sure that you
get the absolutely best gear for your uses. To help you get the best gear for your program, AAI also offers participants a 15% discount on gear purchases.
Travel
The Institute has a travel counselor on
staff to help you plan the details of your domestic or
international itinerary. Our goal is to minimize the
effort it takes to deal with logistics so you can
concentrate on tasks only you can do: gear preparation and
physical conditioning. We can provide economical
ticketing on flights from home to your program meeting
place, and we'll also help with arrangements for lodging
on the nights before and after your program.
Many AAI climbers also take advantage of our local
knowledge to do some additional exploring before or after
their climbing. From whale watching in Washingtons
San Juan Islands to explorations in the Amazon Basin and
the Galapagos Islands, you can easily create some
exciting add-on adventures. Just call us to discuss some
of your options. The direct travel line is (509)
972-4028.
Areas of Operation
The Institute operates year round throughout the world.
Most program schedules follow the good weather and
temperate conditions. For example summer rock climbing
programs are offered in Leavenworth and the North
Cascades of Washington as well
as in Squamish and the Interior Ranges of British
Columbia because the summer weather is good and its
not too hot!
Because of high temperatures we avoid rock climbing in
Red Rock, Nevada, and Joshua
Tree, California in the
summer, but transfer our activity there from October through April when the desert rock climbing is at it's best.
Some areas have relatively short periods of stable
weather. The Alaska Range, for
example, is typically great for climbing in May through
mid-July but subject to a higher risk for storm before
and after that. The St. Elias
Range has a longer dry season in the summer.
The Alps of France and
Switzerland
have a great climbing season from July through
mid-September, but the one in the North Cascades of
Washington is even longer, lasting from mid-May until the
first week of October.
In the Andes the winter months find us climbing in the
dry seasons of Ecuador, Chile, and Argentina, while in the
summer we move to Peru and
Bolivia.
Temperate conditions are not always what were
after, of course. Winter weather and low temperatures
give us great opportunities for cold weather climbing,
survival skills, and avalanche training in the California
Sierra,
Colorado Rockies,
Washington Cascades, and Canadian Rockies. Those
conditions also provide excellent backcountry skiing for our programs in the western U.S. and the French and
Swiss Alps.
If you have only very specific travel dates available, consult our Programs Calendar to
see the variety of venues where we can offer you trips in that time frame.
Leadership in American Guiding & Outdoor Recreation
The Institute's staff members have played an important
role in the development of the profession of guiding in
the United States. They have played key roles in the
national guides association, in the climbing industry
trade association that has developed public safety and
risk awareness programs, in the establishment of the
Leave No Trace Program as America's national standard for
outdoor ethics and practices, and in Outdoor Industry Association, the trade
association of the outdoor industry, which has played a
major role in the shaping of national recreation policy and the federal funding of public lands administration.
Staff members have played an important part in the
development and administration of Americas
professional guiding association, the American Mountain
Guides Association (AMGA). AAIs director served as
president of the AMGA for six years, another Institute
guide served as president for two years, and a former AAI
guide for three years.
AAI's guide training program formed the basis of the
AMGA's national certification program for alpine guides,
and AAI guides have played leadership roles as the
designers, instructors, and examiners in both the rock
and alpine certification courses and exams. AAI guide
Michael Powers served as national coordinator of the
American Mountain Guides Certification Program for many years. AAI staff members
have been leaders in the design and implementation of the
National Accreditation Program. AAI's programs have been
accredited by the American Mountain Guides Association
since 1987 when the accreditation program began.
AAI has created what could
be the best rescue and first responder courses in
the nation.
Canoe and Kayak Magazine |
Leadership in Environmental Protection and Public Policy
AAI has been a leader among mountain schools and guide
services in the incorporation of Leave No Trace
environmental ethics and practices into courses and
guided trips. AAI's president Dunham Gooding served on
LNT's National Leadership Council and was instrumental in
getting the members of the American Mountain Guides
Association to adopt LNT as their environmental program.
AAI also played an important role in setting up LNT as a
stand-alone, independently funded, non-profit corporation
governed cooperatively by the U. S. Forest Service,
National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife, and representatives of the outdoor
industry.
AAI has devoted significant time to work with members of
Congress and the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, and BLM in
shaping priorities and policies for outdoor recreation
and funding for public lands administration. AAIs
director has provided testimony to Senate committees on a
variety of national land management and rescue issues,
and through both Republican and Democratic
administrations has met with Secretaries of Interior and
Secretaries of Agriculture on recreation, resource, and
environmental funding and policy issues.
AAI staff members have served on a variety of land
management task forces. Additionally, they
have filled the chairmanship of the National Summit
Committee on Rescue in Washington, D.C. and the
presidency of the Outdoor Industry Association, the
national trade association representing the $19 billion
human powered outdoor industry.
In summary, AAI is dedicated to protecting the
environment and to the fostering of safe and
conscientious outdoor recreation. The Institute uses a
significant portion of its staff time and financial
resources to further develop the safety and
professionalism of the American guiding industry, to augment protection of the natural environment, and to foster and maintain outdoor recreational opportunities that use the land
without leaving a trace.
The Institute is a patron or supporting member of the
following organizations:
Conservation Alliance
A consortium of 70 predominantly outdoor equipment
manufacturers who provide grants to grassroots environmental groups.
High Country News The Research Fund arm of HCN allows writers to
delve more deeply into environmental issues in the West.
Leave No Trace
This organization teaches backcountry ethics to all user
groups. They publish the widely used and highly regarded Leave No
Trace booklets.
National Audobon Society
Promotes the study and conservation of birds and
other wildlife, their habitat, and the environment, as well as teaching, and
advocating for environmental policy.
The Nature Conservancy
Nationally recognized habitat conservation group.
The North Cascades Institute
The Northwest's premier environmental
education organization focusing on natural and cultural history.
Oregon Natural Resources Council
Conservation consortium promoting environmental
protection by educating the public & influencing public servants via legal &
legislative process.
People for Puget Sound
Educates & involves people in protecting and
restoring the lands and waters of Puget Sound
Washington Wildlife and
Recreation Council
Dedicated to outdoor recreation opportunities, wildlife
habitat, and natural areas in Washington.
Whatcom Land Trust
Preserves & protects wildlife habitat, scenic, &
agricultural land, and open space in Whatcom County for future generations.
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