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Aspen Times Weekly: Mission Accomplished

THE 6th GRADE EXPERIENCE

Aspen Middle School sixth-grader Elsie Weiss’ mentorship project was indeed unique. But every student gets the opportunity to create their own experience — over the years, students have “worked” in doctor’s offices and preschools, radio stations and restaurants, ski shops and animal shelters. Community mentors have ranged from sheriff’s deputies to ski patrollers to pastry chefs and dozens more.

“The AMS sixth-grade mentorship program is an incredibly valuable and motivating experience for students to explore their passions with adult role models in the Aspen community,” said school principal Craig Rogers.

And regardless of the mentor or line of work they are in, students are required to do the same: put in 30 hours toward the project, half of which is spent working directly with their mentor. Then, they create a project board explaining what they learned along the way. These are presented at the annual Mentorship Project Fair, which this year was held Tuesday, May 16.

The temperature at the trailhead was colder than 11-year-old Elsie Weiss thought it would be. According to her journal, it was about 20 degrees at 7:20 a.m. on that late April morning as she and her three companions set off in search of the 14,265-foot summit of Quandary Peak, near Breckenridge.

The group hiked in for about a mile before beginning to skin up the highest peak in the Tenmile Range. About 200 feet later, they were above the tree line, and later, after a final, grueling 1,000-foot climb, the sixth grader at Aspen Middle School accomplished what few her age have — she summited one of Colorado’s infamous 14ers on skis.

“It seemed like the mountain kept growing and growing and we’d never get to the top, but we finally did,” Elsie wrote in her journal. “Before we left, I wasn’t sure I was up for skiing a 14,000-foot peak. But I did anyway, and succeeded. I realized that you just have to do things, and then you know you can.”



Finding a mentor

“I remember Christy telling me that when she isn’t sure she feels like doing an adventure, she tells herself ‘Always go!’ And she never regrets that she went.” – Elsie Weiss


While the ascent of Quandary took Elsie about three and a half hours, the real journey to the top began almost a year prior. Like any Aspen sixth grader, Elsie was to take part in the school’s mentorship program, which pairs a student with an adult mentor in a field of the mentee’s choosing.



Elsie, a quiet but adventurous girl, wanted to learn about ski mountaineering. And who better to turn to than Aspen’s own Christy Mahon.

“The mountains are kind of that common element that bring people together with so much joy and awe and respect. I think that’s gotten into Elsie’s blood a little bit,” said Elsie’s mother, Rebecca Weiss. “It was almost more about Christy than it was about ski mountaineering.”

Mahon needs little introduction. She and her husband, Ted Mahon, are two of the valley’s most accomplished ski mountaineers. Among Christy Mahon’s accomplishments is being credited as the first woman to ski each of Colorado’s 14,000-foot peaks, which she achieved in 2010.

Since 2011, Mahon has been the development director for the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies. It was through ACES she knew Rebecca, who has long been a naturalist for the organization. Her children, Elsie and Anders, grew up crawling around Hallam Lake’s fertile soils.

Anders, 13, had been through the mentorship program two years before Elsie, meaning Rebecca knew how the program worked and was able to give Elsie a jump start. Ski mountaineering is no small project, and not anyone can successfully navigate an 11-year-old up a 14,000-foot mountain.

But Christy Mahon isn’t anyone.

“We got up the nerve to approach Christy knowing she is like the busiest person in the valley and accomplishes enough for 10 people all rolled into one on a daily basis,” Rebecca said. “We are so, so grateful to Christy for agreeing to work with Elsie for an entire year. Most kids work with their mentors for five or six months.”

GETTING A HEAD START

Many students don’t find a mentor until the fall of their sixth-grade year. Elsie approached Mahon in May 2016, and by June 3 the two had successfully climbed and skied one of Colorado’s 13,000-foot peaks as practice, even bumping into ski-mountaineering legend Lou Dawson at the top, one of Mahon’s idols.

Being in the mountains wasn’t new to Elsie. She had hiked a handful of 14ers during the summer, and had done plenty of hut trips during the winter with her family. Her father, Austin Weiss, is the head Nordic development team coach at the Aspen Valley Ski and Snowboard Club. Both Elsie and Anders are part of the devo team and already are experienced backcountry skiers.

Mahon and Elsie continued to train during the summer and fall, where in September they summited Mount Harvard and Mount Columbia — both 14ers in the Sawatch Range just northwest of Buena Vista — in one go.

As Rebecca put it, “When you do something with Christy, you don’t just go and do it. You really do it.”

“We wanted to pick something that was one step beyond and that would be good training up at altitude for a long day, knowing that’s what ski mountaineering is,” Mahon said. “Elsie did great. A lot of what we’ve been practicing is doing something that really pushes you and then figuring out that you can do anything you want to put your mind to. You just have to be prepared and put in the time, which Elsie definitely does.”

The overachievers

The mentorship program requires students to put in 30 hours toward the project, 15 of which must be spent with their mentor. When Elsie submitted her final log earlier this month, she had recorded 96.25 hours over the nearly 12 months.

Few can keep up with Mahon’s own overachieving mentality, which has helped mold her into one of the country’s most decorated female mountaineers, but she might have met her match with Elsie.

Training for Quandary, which was the final exam, so to speak, of their project, went beyond fitness. Elsie spent time with Mahon at ACES, learning about her day job. They met with Greg Shaffran, a member of Mountain Rescue Aspen, and learned about avalanche safety. They’d go early to Buttermilk and practice using crampons and ice axes. Elsie became familiar with the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and would read the daily snow reports. She read “Mountaineering: Freedom of the Hills,” assigned to her by Mahon, a book considered to be the go-to source for learning the ins and outs of ski mountaineering.

Elsie said she learned two major concepts from Mahon: To always “be prepared” and to “always go.” Both were important to successfully reach the top of Quandary.

ONE LAST TEST

On March 27, Elsie skinned the 3,200 vertical feet of Aspen Mountain for the first time. The only thing that remained was Quandary itself.

On April 22, Austin Weiss, Elsie and Mahon traveled to Breckenridge, where they stayed with an acquaintance of Rebecca’s, veteran avalanche forecaster Scott Toepfer, one of the most well-known names in the field. Toepfer’s son will be a sixth-grader next year at Aspen Middle School.

The following morning, Toepfer decided to become the fourth member of the crew as they set out to get Elsie up Quandary.

One of the first 14ers Mahon skied was Quandary, which she did in 2000 with Ted Mahon, then just her boyfriend. She said it “opened up her world,” and it was an experience she wanted Elsie to have, as well.

“For me to bring Elsie and share that with her and being able to give that back after someone gave that to me 17 years prior, it just was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life,” Mahon said.

“You get to the top and it’s like all of your hard work pays off and all of a sudden the pain and some of the things you’ve gone through dissipates and then you are rewarded for your work. It’s almost like these little cycles of life. Being able to show Elsie that the benefits come from sometimes really pushing yourself.”

Elsie was more than prepared to conquer her first 14er on skis. The foursome got up and then skied down Quandary in less than five hours, although Elsie admitted it wasn’t easy.

“There was one big climb, then a bench, and then the final climb of 1,000 feet. The slope was steep and we had to make switchbacks. The wind was cranking on the ridge,” Elsie wrote in her journal. “I remember Christy telling me that when she isn’t sure she feels like doing an adventure, she tells herself, ‘Always go!’ And she never regrets that she went. I felt like that with Quandary, too. My key to success is ‘the motivation of the other side.’ You cannot see what is on the other side of the peak, so if you keep wondering what is on the other side, it keeps you going.”

JUST THE BEGINNING

The program officially wrapped up May 16 with the mentorship fair, where the students tried to summarize their experience on a large piece of trifold cardboard. This was almost more difficult for Elsie than skiing Quandary, as the program gave her more than she could have ever wanted.

But more than making a major impression on Elsie’s young life, it’s something Mahon won’t easily forget, either.

“This mentorship was really fun for me to almost put on a different hat where I was able to share what I’ve been able to learn and what the mountains and my mentors have been teaching me,” Mahon said. “You see this mentorship snowballing and touching everybody. What starts as a small school assignment turns life changing for everyone involved.”

The two plan to ski at least one 14er together until Elsie graduates from high school, but it’s a friendship that is likely to last a lifetime.

“I just really like Christy,” Elsie said. “She is always smiling and laughing and is really fun to be around. Plus, I like to skin up and ski down mountains. I like the challenge.”

acolbert@aspentimes.com