The Moth - Bonus Episode: The Moth Wrapped
Episode Date: December 15, 2024We take a look back at some of the stories that most resonated with our audience. This episode was hosted by Sarah Austin Jenness.If you'd like to check out the video countdown of 2024ās mo...st shared Moth stories we mentioned in the episode, you can follow us on TikTok or Instagram @MothStories.Storyteller:Wilderness guide Monte Montepare takes inexperienced hikers on a glacier expedition.
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Thanks for listening.
Welcome to The Moth Podcast. I'm Sarah Austin-Giness.
The year is coming to a close, and on this special bonus episode,
we're reflecting back on the stories we shared in 2024.
Because we shared over 250 of them
on this podcast.
Yes, 250 stories.
Some of the stories were laugh out loud funny, some were heartbreaking, some surprising and
profound.
Maybe some of the stories made you see things in a different light.
Thank you for listening and for sharing these podcast episodes with your
friends. We love it and we thought it might be fun to highlight some stories
that most resonated with you, at least according to the vagaries of the social
media algorithm. So we made a video compilation of our most shared stories.
A moth wrapped, if you will. A moth cocoon, if you will, even more. Moth
wrapped, get it? Anyway, you can find the list and the videos on the moth's Instagram
at Moth Stories, where you can follow us for more great moth videos, news, and yes
stories. We also have a link in the episode description. And now from your
2024 most shared list, Monty Montepar. Monty told this at a Moth main stage at St. Anne
and the Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, where the theme was Sleight of Hand. Here's Monty
live at the Moth. At 23 years old, I was in my third season working as a glacier guide in Alaska.
I took people hiking on glaciers, ice climbing on glaciers, and that spring I had successfully
summited the 16,000 foot glaciated volcano that looms over town. I was feeling very
confident in my skills in the mountains and I could finally grow a full beard. So
when my friend Elizabeth asked if I wanted to be her assistant on a fly-in
base camping trip, I said, oh yeah that sounds super chill. She told me the four clients were
the women that I had met that afternoon on the deck of the guide service. They
were decked out head to toe in brand new Arc'teryx rain gear, which is a red flag.
red flag. Not only is Arc'teryx the product of outdoor equipment, but generally speaking the newer the gear the less the experience, which was
exceptionally true in this case. They were from New York City and had never been camping. They had never slept in a tent. I lived in
a tent. Elizabeth said, yeah, that's why they want you along. She said, they really like the idea of a full bearded Alaskan along to protect them from
the wilderness.
How could I say no?
Fly in base camping is like car camping with a bush plane.
So all six of us get into an airplane the size of a minivan with wings.
We fly for 40 minutes over forests and rivers and mountains and glaciers, some of the wildest
landscape on the planet.
And the plane lands on a little gravel strip in a giant valley next to an even bigger glacier.
We're surrounded by snow capped peaks,
dripping with ice. There's these babbling creeks, beautiful green
alpine. I'm pumped because I just got a free plane ride to a place I've never
been before. Our clients are in a state of shock and awe and stimulation overload.
And as the plane leaves and goes out of sight,
I watch all four of them have the gut wrenching realization
that they just paid somebody to strand them out here.
They wanted their own personal space
because it was the end of a long trip, so they each
wanted their own tent.
But they also wanted to sleep next to each other because they were afraid of camping.
So I set up four identical tents wall to wall, like a nylon apartment building in the wild. And that night Elizabeth cooked dinner and I entertained and their first night out was
like an REI ad come to life.
The goal of this weekend was to have a relaxing trip, maybe take a couple day hikes.
So the next day we set out to hike to this area of Alpine
on the other side of the valley.
And it was a beautiful, sunny summer day.
But after a couple hours of rocky walking, morale was low.
This was the end of their whirlwind
let's go everywhere in Alaska trip.
And they were kind of over it.
And I'm pulling out all the stops, too.
I'm doing interp on geomorphology,
pointing out the patterns glacial output streams carve,
telling lichen jokes.
Fun stuff.
None of it is landing.
We get to the head of the valley and we see that the easiest way to the alpine is over
this glacier.
And Elizabeth and I take people hiking on glaciers all summer long.
We don't have our full kit, but it's good weather, good hikers, we're good to go.
And when we get up on the ice, everything changes.
Summer glaciers are alive. The ice is sparkling. There's
these creeks carving these beautiful channels. There's these blue pools of
water that are reflecting that glacier blue from the inside. It's stunning and
our clients start enjoying themselves. They're engaging with the environment, they're
taking selfies, doing yoga poses. This is what they're here for. And then we
encounter a little bit of snow and then a little bit more snow. And when you are
on a winter glacier that's covered in snow,
it's customary to rope yourself to each other
in case somebody unexpectedly breaks through the snow
and falls into a crevasse.
In the summer, the snow is gone
and you can see all the crevasses and just walk around them.
This is a summer glacier,
but there's some patches of winter left over.
So Elizabeth goes ahead to scout our way off of the ice, which can be problematic.
And I stay behind guiding our clients.
And I've got them behind me in a single file line, and I'm making sure to stay as much
as we can on the exposed ice.
And if we have to step on snow at all, I use my ski pole to probe it first, to make sure that it's snow over ice, not snow over air.
And now I'm having a good time.
I'm moving my clients through terrain,
I'm picking lines that are mostly ice.
If I gotta deal with a little bit of snow,
I probe, I step, I probe, I step.
I'm thinking, I am a good guide.
Then the next step I take is just in front of my probe pole.
And the snow beneath me disintegrates instantly.
And I begin to free fall into the glacier immediately.
And for long enough to think a few things.
First, I'm gonna die.
Followed by, what an embarrassing way
for a glacier guide to die.
what an embarrassing way for a glacier guide to die. And then, hey, let's try and not die.
And I put my arms and legs and ski pole out to try and slow me down,
and I come to a stop on this rotten pile of snow.
I'm 20 feet below the surface of the glacier.
It is dark and cold.
It's like a long, narrow hallway with tall ceilings and a single skylight.
I have been inside glaciers before but never involuntarily. Not to mention that being swallowed whole by the earth is an immensely humbling experience.
And I just left the four New York Never campers who had just spent their first night in a
tent after being flown into the middle of nowhere and then watched the guy they brought to protect them from the wilderness vanish into thin air.
I assessed my situation and I was not injured besides my ego.
I couldn't see or hear my clients.
I didn't know where Elizabeth was.
So I decided the best thing to do was to wait.
My mind was racing.
How was I ever going to get out of here?
How was I ever going to live this down if I did?
How big of a mistake did I just make?
I knew that I was already starting to get cold and I knew that our emergency
equipment and technical gear was over a two-hour hike from where we were. I knew
that even if we initiated a helicopter rescue it can take up to eight hours for
them to show up. I knew that this was not the bottom of the crevasse. I guessed the ice in that area was anywhere from 600 to 800 feet deep.
And what I was standing on was just rotten snow bridges that had collapsed from two or
three years ago and gotten lodged in this constriction. I started to do some like preliminary
investigation of the snow beneath me, but I didn't want to poke on anything too hard,
feeling like I might trigger a second trap door.
And that's how most people who perish in crevasse falls
go, is they fall down to a point where
they get squeezed by the walls of the ice
and are slowly crushed.
the walls of the ice and are slowly crushed. Glacier ice is so dense that it eats sound.
So I sat there in the quiet with just my thoughts, constricting and releasing my muscles to try
and stay warm without moving.
Finally, Elizabeth looked down at me through the hole that I had punched in the snow.
We made eye contact and neither of us needed to say,
we should have brought a rope.
We went into problem solving mode
We went into problem solving mode and I told her I thought that I could climb up a ways but I didn't know how to get past the overhanging lip of snow at the top of the crack.
It's hard to get past the snowy lip even if you're roped in and you fall into a crevasse.
By punching through you create this overhang that you have to somehow get over." And Elizabeth's eyes
lit up and she said, if you can get up here I can get you past that lip. And then
she disappeared. By the time I started climbing I had been in this crevasse for
at least 20 minutes and I'm cold and I had been in this crevasse for at least 20 minutes.
And I'm cold and I'm stiff.
And it was narrow enough that I could touch each wall.
And I start pushing and pulling on the walls with my hand and using smaller cracks as handholds,
improving tiny ledges with my ski pole.
And I climb up five feet and 10 feet. And then I look down, and I do not like what I see.
This snow I had landed on looks like cotton candy.
And there's darkness through the holes.
And any time that I knock an ice crystal through them,
I cannot hear it hit the bottom.
I climb up five more feet until I'm finally right below the snow, a place that I can't go
any further by myself.
And I establish this icy stance and the reality
of this situation hits me really hard.
I have just turned a relaxing weekend in the wilderness
into a life or
death situation and I'm terrified. And just then I hear the flap of fabric and
a flash of color and the first of four brightly colored brand new Arc'teryx rain jackets.
Tie sleeve to sleeve is lowered down in front of me and I had never been so
happy my clients had brand new rain gear. And I grab a hold of what is at least a
$3,000 rope. And Elizabeth and those New Yorkers hold me past the lip and into
the sunshine.
And when I got there, I was embarrassed.
But they tried to soothe me.
They said things like, we're just really impressed that you climbed out of there.
And you know everyone makes mistakes. They even swore themselves to secrecy to hide
my shame. Which I hope they told some people because that is one doozy of a first time
camping tale. I myself didn't tell anybody for years. I was so ashamed of this incident.
But these days I own that guide service and I tell all the new guides this story under the heading,
the glacier does not care how full your beard is.
Because the truth is we all do make mistakes and the real shame is not being
able to admit them and share them with others so that we can all learn.
Thank you.
Applause
That was Monty Montacar.
Monty is a comedian and adventure guide originally from Breckenridge, Colorado.
He's been the keynote speaker at the Yirei
Ice Fest, is on the cover of the Alaska Packraft Guidebook, and is part owner of the Kennecott
Wilderness Guides in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska. He now performs weekly at the
Upright Citizens Brigade in Los Angeles and lives in a little house on a hill with his
partner Jill, their kid Rocky, and their little dog Sage. The night Monty told the story it
was also his birthday and when he walked off the stage the packed house serenaded him.
Dear Monty, happy birthday to you.
The New Yorkers in the crowd, including myself, also loved that the New York Never Campers
saved the day in the end.
As I mentioned up top, Monty's story is part of our countdown of 2024's most shared Moth
Stories.
If you'd like to watch that video compilation, follow the Moth's Instagram, at Moth Stories.
We'll also have a link to follow us
in this episode description.
What are your favorite moth stories from 2024?
We'd love to hear about them.
Just tag us on Instagram or TikTok at moth stories,
or even better, tell your family and friends in person
about the moth stories that have made this year
a little brighter.
We hope to see you at a moth event next year. That's it for this episode. From all
of us here at the Moth, we hope that 2025 brings you even more stories you can't
wait to share. Sarah Austin-Ginez is a director, the Moth's executive producer,
and a co-author of the best-selling How to Tell a Story, the essential guide to
memorable storytelling from the Moth, which is available now wherever you get
your books. This episode of the Moth podcast was produced by Sarah Austen-
Janesse, Sarah Jane Johnson, and me, Mark Salinger. The rest of the Moth leadership
team includes Sarah Haberman, Christina Norman, Jennifer Hickson, Meg Bowles, Kate
Tellers, Marina Cluchay, Suzanne Rust, Lee Ann Gulley, and Patricia
UreƱa.
The Moth would like to thank its supporters and listeners.
Stories like these are made possible by community giving.
If you're not already a member, please consider becoming one or making a one-time donation
today at themoth.org slash give back.
When you give to the Moth, you help us bring storytelling to students and community groups
across the country.
Thanks for your support.
All Moth stories are true, as remembered by their storytellers.
For more about our podcast, information on pitching your own story, and everything else, go to our website, themoth.org.
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