Ice Cliff as Classroom? Outdoor Recreation Program Takes Students Ice Climbing

Ice Cliff as Classroom? Outdoor Recreation Program Takes Students Ice Climbing
Participants scale 30-foot cliff at Stonehouse Pond
April 14, 2026
Author
Makena Lee
Photographer
Makena Lee
Videographer
Makena Lee

On Saturday, Feb. 28, a group of 91制片厂 students took part in an ice climbing trip to Stonehouse Pond in nearby Barrington with instructor Nathan Fitch. At Moss Slab, a 30-foot cliff in the woods off of the Ledges Loop, a thick sheet of ice covers its entirety, providing a perfect space for ice climbing.

Outdoor Adventures through Campus Recreation provides students of all experience levels with trips to learn outdoor skills such as hiking, camping, paddling, skiing, climbing  and more. Ice climbing, which is offered in the early months of the spring semesters, is taught and led by Fitch, a senior lecturer in outdoor recreation. Six ice climbing trips were offered through Outdoor Adventures in the spring 2026 semester, but trips can also be taken during J-Term as LAP 501: Life Act Prog/Ice Climbing.

Students on these trips learn how to stay safe in an ice climbing environment and how to ice climb with proper movement and belay skills in order to work as a team and keep each other safe. Students also gain an understanding of how to prepare for winter environments for a long period of time, and learn how to use the correct boots, crampons (metal spikes for ice traction), and ice picks to climb.

For Elayna Marinelli, a senior from Attleboro, Massachusetts, ice climbing was not something she had previously done because of the high barriers to entry - like obtaining all the necessary equipment - surrounding it. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot about being able to step outside my comfort zone,鈥 Marinelli says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot to get up early on a Saturday morning and come out here and stand in the cold but it鈥檚 so rewarding and it's so much fun.鈥 

鈥淣ate Fitch, our instructor, is the best of the best,鈥 she adds. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a little bit of a celebrity in the climbing world.鈥

鈥淚ce climbing is great but it has a pretty high barrier to entry, and we鈥檙e lucky that we have the equipment like boots and crampons,鈥 Fitch says. 鈥淚f you wanted to get those from a rental agency it would be about $60 to $70 per day, and that鈥檚 not even teaching you how to use them.鈥 Another potential hurdle is location. Climbers who live in the northeast must find multiple disciplines to keep themselves climbing in the different seasons, and climbers who live in warmer climates may not have the ability to ice climb at all.

Jasper Billingsley, a senior from Chicago, Illinois, has been climbing for two years and took Lead Rock Climbing (OUT 547) with Fitch prior to attending this trip. After an opening became available, he quickly signed up. 鈥淚t makes me realize that a good attitude about things you don鈥檛 necessarily understand will get you pretty far and it鈥檚 okay to make mistakes,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that deep.鈥

Both Marinelli and Billingsley noted how beneficial it is to learn a new skill such as ice climbing with other people who may also be doing it for the first time, as it reduces the potential embarrassment aspect. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to do it with other people, and the kind of people who like climbing are usually pretty cool and chill people,鈥 Billingsley says.

Students can sign up for Outdoor Adventures trips through Campus Recreation where they offer trips, events, and clinics to all skill levels. 鈥淛ust give it your all and just try,鈥 Billingsley says, 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be perfect, you don鈥檛 even have to finish the climb, but you still tried it, and that鈥檚 what matters.鈥

Published
April 14, 2026
Author
Makena Lee
Photographer
Makena Lee
Videographer
Makena Lee