Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The Passion of K-Bone - For Kevin

 
            Fall 2006, It was the move in day of the outdoor Pursuits floor at Roskie Hall, MSU.  In the evening after everyone had shuffled their belonging into their tiny dorm rooms everyone gathered in the lounge to meet one another.  Everybody looked like the typical ski and bike bums, with hoodies and flat brimmed hats everywhere.  But in the middle of the circle was a guy with bright colored hair, tattoos, and two rings on his bottom lip.  He looked like he got lost looking for the punk rock floor.  His name was Kevin Volkening.
            Kevin obviously marched to the beat of his own drum, and the more everyone spent time with him, the more we all realized how good that beat sounded.  Kevin quickly grew to be someone who I considered one of the best friends I have ever had.  The number of people who would describe Kevin the same way is reflective of his character and infectious personality.
            What stands out to me most in the early years was the Granite peak quest.  Kevin and Austin originally hatched the plan to knock off Granite Peak in the winter, something rarely done and way over their heads (having never even been up the mountain in the summer).  The first attempt yielded a lot of effort for nearly no progress, trudging through deep snow in a storm up endless switchbacks to no avail, ending before making it to the high plateau of the approach route.  The second attempt, later that winter, made it further, heading high up drainage and near the upper reaches of the plateau before Kevin broke a split board binding and they retreated.  The third attempt, the next winter, which I tagged along with, resulted in us making it up the plateau, to the high camp, and on the route to the summit before a massive early morning storm forced us to retreat at high speed from 60 plus mph winds.
            The thing about all this effort to knock of one mountain, via one route in winter, was how Kevin reveled in a challenge.  It wasn’t about the summit, Kevin loved the fact that he learned new aspects of the mountains every time he went after something challenging.  He reveled in the opportunity that a goal provided.  Through Kevin’s life, he was always willing to go after something that was a little out of his league, and just learn along the way until he got it.

            Just this last week I had a conversation with Kevin’s father, in which he shared with me the advice he gave Kevin as he left for school.  To balance himself between academia, friends and relationships, as well as extracurricular life.  We laughed at the fact that Kevin took this not to mean equal thirds, but instead to give 110% to all three.
            His passion in the mountains was and is obvious, since those early days he has progressed through learning to ice climb.  Returning to Alaska with Loren and continuing the tradition of patient progression, taking a couple seasons to complete some amazing alpine routes.  Spending countless hours, days, months, years, progressing himself into a fantastic sport climber, alpine trad climber, boulderer.  As his blog says, Kevin loves to climb... Everything...
            Kevin put 110% into his academic and subsequent professional realm.  He had done more relevant research before arriving at college than most people do by the time they leave.  I never knew intimately of Kevin’s prowess in this area, but many of his colleagues have spoken so highly of him in his work that it is obvious he carried the same passion in his professional work.
            Kevin’s amazing friendship is the 110% aspect that I could speak of endlessly.  Kevin was a shirt off his back kind of friend, to everyone.  He had so many people that considered him a close friend because he made sure he knew and cared for everyone’s life, personality, and passions.  Kevin was always about sharing passion.  The climbing club at MSU was such an amazing example, when I came to MSU, it was a sad club with maybe 10 members who really never did anything.  Kevin went from this under serving community to one of the largest clubs on campus that held road trips to the climbing areas over a thousand miles from Bozeman that included 40-50 students.  Many of these members were new climbers. The friendships, love for climbing, and partnerships that stemmed from Kevin’s effort is countless. Kevin was a friend who you always felt close to, whether you saw him last week or hadn’t seen him in six months.  There was always an embrace and outgoing caring, and a good joke that just brought you back.
            I remember when Kevin came back from a long trip shortly after beginning to date Marge, we sat having beers in Bozeman and he told me that he missed Marge the whole time, in a way he had never missed someone his whole life.  I don’t know if he knew then but I did, he had found his partner in crime.  The next time Kevin left for Alaska, he made sure Marge was coming to meet him, there was a proposal waiting for her at the summit of a climb.
           
            I had the fortune this spring of briefly visiting Marge and Kevin in salt lake.  I hadn’t seen them for over 6 months, but they made it feel like it was last week.  The same familiarity and genuine caring that Kevin always contained.  We chatted about life, new directions, jobs, plans.  I was so impressed and happy for the life Kevin had built, for the accomplishments he had made in such a short time.  It pains me to think of the bright future that has been stolen from him, but I am comforted in the fact that Kevin packed an average lifetime’s worth of adventure into 25 years.


This is the last paragraph of a story kevin wrote of one early trip into the Beartooths.  He is speaking of Granite Peak, but I believe it sums up his passion for the mountains.

            “In the dark she is waiting quietly. Her north face swept by wind or perhaps touched by a trace of snow. The summit, and snowbridge, and the bivouac sites, are all waiting. Waiting for the beauty for which she showed us to seep into our veins and consume our lives until we are forced to return. Thus, to her I promise, I solemnly swear, I will visit you again in the winter when you are cold and alone, and I will stand atop your summit.”
                        -Kevin Volkening  1987-2013