Black Diamond, Gregory sold

Whoa. This seems out of left field.

Black Diamond Equipment Ltd., the Salt Lake County-based developer and manufacturer of climbing and backcountry skiing equipment, has been sold for $90 million to Clarus Corp., an investor group in Stamford, Conn.

Clarus also spent $45 million to acquire Gregory Mountain Products LLC, a Sacramento-based company whose specialization in technical backpacking and mountaineering products is expected to complement Black Diamond’s gear for rock climbers, ice climbers, Alpinists and freeride skiers.

The combined company will retain the Black Diamond name, and Black Diamond co-founder and CEO Peter Metcalf will become its president and CEO, and be on its board. A Clarus Corp. note to shareholders about the acquisition said nothing about what the deal means for Black Diamond’s plant at 2092 E. 3900 South or the company’s employees.

The Economic Development Corp. of Utah categorizes Black Diamond as being within a group that employs 100 to 249 people.

Metcalf praised the deal in a statement, contending Clarus’s investment will ensure “the golden years of Black Diamond are not behind us but clearly ahead.”

Hopefully the acquiring company’s capital can be put to use for R&D and other quality enhancing activities as opposed to just being another buyout with intentions of squeezing every last dime of margin out of the product and a race to the bottom for quality.

Skatebobsledding

Umm…whoa

Thoughts:shifted

It’s sunny. Finally. Bummer that we finally received January’s longed for 40s and raining this past week, but my mind has shifted to surfing. I need a warm water surf trip ASAP to shake the winter rust. Memories…

Just another shitty sunset

You got ass for days I got lefts for weeks

Stars getting their shine on

LIGHTNING BOLT! ...and phosphorescing waves

A watercooled bay window bus? *head explodes*

OFF-TOPIC TR: Shrimpin’ ain’t easy

Well, actually it is. Went on a fantastic voyage on my buddy’s ghetto fabulous Beachcraft for the four hour season on Hood Canal. A few pics below.

Ghetto fab Beachcraft. Yes, we drilled the pot puller mount (aka board) directly into the gunnels.

Come along and ride on a fantastic voyage

5AM wake up call to get to the launch before the crowds got there. PISSING rain on the drive in, we were bummin’ hard thinking we’d be getting drenched when killing the three hours until the season started. Got to the launch, only a short line, people were QUICK with the launches! I guess the salty guys get ‘er done early vs. the old amateurs we used to have to wait for at American Lake, Lake WA, etc.

Beautiful day on the water, and amazing considering it was pissing rain 10 minutes prior.

Sunrise on the Hood Canal

Got to our chosen spot, dropped anchor, fired up the Jetboil for some coffee (sadly lost my french press kit and my other coffee options are buried in a box somewhere) and killed the hours eating donuts and sippin’ hot joe.

Got into an ideal spot with about 30 minutes to go til go time, prepped our bait and lines, and waited. Pots overboard, crack a beer, wait an hour, pull pull pull 400 feet of rope hoping for paydirt.

PAYDIRT!

We slayed it. Limited out before we’d pulled our third pot, which allowed us to turn tail and get back to the boat launch before the midday negative tide – otherwise we would have had to wait out the tide change til 5PM or so.

A limit of shrimp looks about like this

Back to the crib to prep the catch for their frozen slumber.

Average Hood Canal spot prawn

I befriended one of the little guys, gave him a name, and attempted to teach him to sit and stay.

Camarones learns to sit

He was a slow learner so I found a role he was more fit for.

Camarones learns to stay...between tortillas and cabbage