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PHOTO CONTEST GUIDELINES:
Submit your photos for a chance to win Mammut gear!
Enter your best rock climbing or alpine climbing photo in the Mammut Everyman Exposed 2017 Photo Contest. Rock and Ice will select the best rock and alpine climbing photos to publish issue by issue in the magazine. The best of the best rock and alpine photos will be awarded grand prizes in gear from Mammut. Readers will be voting in September to help us decide who deserves one of two prize packages.
To enter, go to rockandice.com/ee and post your low-resolution (72 dpi) photos. Each contestant may submit a total of 10 photos. By submitting photos you agree that you own the copyright to the photos, and that Rock and Ice may publish the photos in its print, digital and online mediums, plus any other mediums not specified, for any use whatsoever.
If your photos are selected for use, Rock and Ice will email you a request for the high-resolution files and captions. No purchase is necessary to participate—all non-professional photographers are encouraged to send in photos!
You may submit photos at any time. Winners for this year’s contest will be announced in October 17, 2017.
Derek Bredl achieves enlightenment on Lego My Ego (V7), Index, Washington. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 239 (January 2017). Photo: Mike Cox. Daniel Beall sets up for the double-clutch dyno on the men’s V9 final at the 2016 Dominion River Rock Boulder Bash, Richmond, Virginia. Beall took fourth among men and pocketed $600. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 239 (January 2017). Photo: Michael Durenleau. Justin Venezia on Cascading Crystal Kaleidoscope or CCK (5.7), Shawangunks, New York. CCK, a three-pitch outing, is one of the Gunks’ finest and most popular—though a touch run out—classics. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 240 (February 2017). Photo: Chris Vultaggio. Jesse Ramos topping out the technical section of the Kautz Glacier Route on Mount Rainier, Washington. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 241 (April 2017). Photo: Jeremy Joseph. Tim Foote ventures to the Edge of Time (5.9), Jurassic Park, Lily Lake, Estes Park, Colorado. This picturesque route made the cover of Bernard Gillette’s 2001 guide to Rocky Mountain National Park. According to who you talk to, Edge of Time is either over or under bolted, and easy or difficult for the grade. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 241 (April 2017). Photo: Dave Masom. The long march, Valle Blanche, Mont Blanc, Chamonix, France. This photo appeared in ASCENT 2017 (Rock and Ice issue 242), 50-year edition. Photo: Kamil Daniel Jutkiewicz. Magnus Eriksson lights up the aptly—or ironically—named Aurora (6B+ V4/5), Presten (Priest) boulders, Lofoten Islands, Norway. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 243 (July 2017). Photo: Jonas Paulsson. James Kurtz on Sall On Me (7c+), Bagni di Masino, Val di Mello, or “Little Yosemite,” a high-alpine venue in Northern Italy and home of the annual Mello Blocco climbing festival. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 244 (August 2017). Photo: Santiago Gray. Kerry Scott on Bella Donna (5.13b) at the Bat Cave outside Truth or Consequences, New Mexico. This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 245 (October 2017). Photo: Susanna Carty. Jason Halladay negotiates the tricky transition to the pocketed headwall of Dopesmoker, a new 5.12b in the Grotto at Diablo Canyon near Santa Fe, New Mexico.This photo appeared in Rock and Ice issue 246 (November 2017). Photo: Fred Berman.