Dolores LaChapelle (née Greenwell) was a mountaineer, skier, T'ai chi teacher, independent scholar, and leader in the Deep ecology movement.[1] She graduated from Denver University in 1947 and then spent three years teaching skiing in Aspen, Colorado. In 1950, she made the first ski ascent of Mount Columbia,[2] the second highest peak in the Canadian Rockies, and also of Snow Dome, the hydrographic apex of the continent.[3] After marrying Edward LaChapelle, she spent a year with him in Davos, Switzerland from 1950–51, and then they moved to Alta, Utah[4]. In 1952, their son Randy was born in Denver, Colorado (Randy changed his name to David LaChapelle in his adult years). As a family they would rotate three times a year to their homes and workstations in Alta, Utah, where they spent winters and Randy/David was homeschooled; the Olympic Mountains Blue Glacier Washington, where they spent summers; and Kirkland Washington. Dolores and Ed moved to Silverton, Colorado in 1973 initially because it was here that Ed carried out avalanche research. Later they would separate though they maintained their friendship and professional literary companionship. Ed set up life in Alaska. Dolores, however, enjoyed the San Juan Mountains the rest of her life. She operated Way of the Mountain center from her home[1] publishing, writing, teaching, skiing, sharing ceremony and music.
Dolores was first and foremost a philosopher and researcher. The extent of her research spanned a complex set of topics, which she tracked in a vast library of books and articles. She noted and cross-referenced every text in such a tight web of interrelated material that she would eventually include in her collection, over a dozen thick and hand-typed, three-ring binder compendiums linking it all together. This rare and fascinating body of research includes hundreds of biographical files chronicling a rich lifetime of mountain climbs (she climbed all 14K mountain of Colorado Rockies by age 20), letter correspondence with authors and poets such as Gary Snyder and Art Goodtimes and her overlapping years married to pioneering avalanche and snow scientist Ed LaChapelle. This body of wisdom was stored in Silverton awaiting the opportunity for better archiving and accessibility until July 2011 when the collection's steward, Ananda Foley, (equivalent of Dolores' daughter-in-law) arranged a proper home for this unique collection with Aspen Center for Environmental Studies. Ananda has organized the biographical materials and her interest in personal unfolding to tell the stories of the LaChapelle lives. A posting of this project can be found at the LaChapelle Legacy website. She looks forward to hearing from persons interested in participating (info current as of October 2011).
In 2004 Dolores LaChapelle was received a "Ski History Maker" award from the University of Utah as one of the ten women who figured most prominently in the history of skiing.[5]
LaChapelle died on January 21, 2007.
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"In traditional cultures, when a woman is through bearing her children she automatically becomes an elder who is consulted by all the tribe because she "knows." - Sacred Sex, Sacred Land, and Relationship at: http://lebendig.org/lachapelle.htm
"Contrary to generally accepted opinions, it was neither Christianity nor the development of agriculture alone which created the split between humans and the rest of nature in our European tradition." - Sacred Land, Sacred Sex: Rapture of the Deep, p. 24