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Rob Hart, founder of Crazy Creek, dies in ski accident

Posted: 02/23/2009 In Category(s): News & Features :: Outdoor Headlines

Rob Dixon Hart, 51, owner of Crazy Creek Products in Red Lodge, Mont., died on Feb. 20 after a collision with a tree on Big Silver run at Red Lodge Mountain. Hart died of blunt force trauma to the chest, according to a statement attributed to Lt. Josh McQuillan of the Carbon County Sheriff’s Department that appeared in a Sunday, Feb. 22 story in the Billings (Montana) Gazette.

In a local Billings KULR-TV report, Ron Ringer, general manager of Red Lodge Mountain, stated that Hart was apparently skiing alone, and another skier discovered him lying in the snow. Paramedics performed CPR upon arrival to the scene but could not revive Hart, who died at approximately 2 p.m. Friends of Hart confirmed with SNEWS® that Hart was wearing a helmet at the time of the accident.

Hart was no stranger to adventure. Many people SNEWS spoke with for this story stated simply that having fun whileRob Hart in kayak living life outdoors was core to Hart’s being. We were told that Hart decided during college to let the world become his teacher, and served as chief executive of the World Pro Fun Tour. The tour’s motto was “You can work all of your life to go to the beach, or you can just go to the beach!” The Tour gave him the perfect opportunity to develop his climbing skills, a passion first kindled at his family’s ranch in the mountains of Wyoming and during family vacations in Switzerland.

His first major climb was as a member of Fred Beckey’s 1982 Ru-Dshe-Konka expedition in the Chinese Himalayas. Later expeditions took him to almost every continent and included National Geographic’s exploration and climb through Patagonia’s Cordillera Sarmiento region and Norman Vaughn’s return expedition to Antarctica.  Hart later guided two expeditions of his own in Antarctica, and several climbs of Mount Aconcagua in Argentina. Hart climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania with his brother Doug, nephew Austin Hart and Jim Kadous of Red Lodge in 2004. Hart most recently led an expedition to climb Mount Tupungato in Chile with his wife Trenay, brother Doug, nephews Austin Hart and Brandon Goldstein and several friends.

Hart founded two expedition companies (Burnt Mountain Ski Inc., and Beartooth Mountain Guides), and guided clients and friends in the Beartooth Mountains of Montana and the Absaroka Mountains of Wyoming. Hart was also part owner of the Red Lodge International Summer Ski and Snowboard Camp on the Beartooth Highway just outside Red Lodge.

A strong proponent of preserving Montana's lands for recreation, Hart believed in the intrinsic and economic value of wild places and actively promoted recreation as a viable and sustainable use of public lands. In a Billings Gazette opinion piece he wrote in 2003, Hart urged policymakers to take preservation into consideration because, he said, "without a strong national policy, we live with the real threat that these recreational treasures will be frittered away over time, road by road, section by section. And once these areas are lost, they are lost forever."

It was Hart’s first invention, though, that would publicly define the man and launch a company – the Crazy Creek Chair. In 1987, along with his first wife, Louise “Weezie” Chandler, Hart began tinkering with a folding, wooden chair used by paddlers. As Hart once told now-SNEWS President Michael Hodgson during a mid-1990s interview, he was trying “to create something that would provide a warm, dry and comfortable place to put my butt in and then lean back on.” Hart told us a few years ago that he never imagined that a simple folding chair would prove to be so popular.

“I was starting working for Outward Bound in 1988 and at that time Voyageur Outward Bound School was running a summer hiking program at Red Lodge, and a lot of the early VOB’s guides were using Crazy Creek chairs,” Dave Matz, president of the Grassroots Outdoor Alliance told SNEWS. “We all ordered direct from Rob because it was the most comfortable and portable chair any of us had used. It was ideal for us to be sitting around and talking with our students, or fishing, or simply relaxing. Before long you saw them everywhere.”

Crazy Creek Products was launched in 1988, and one could argue that Crazy Creek and Hart are responsible for introducing comfort into the backpacking and mountaineering equation. A pad of closed cell foam was no longer good enough. Though there have been many imitators, it is significant that the original Crazy Creek Chair is still produced today. The company’s product lines have expanded to include several styles of chairs designed for a multitude of uses, reflecting Hart’s desire to create comfort in the wilderness or at home.

“When I was at Lowe, we were neighbors with Crazy Creek on the show floor. I got to know him pretty well. Rob was one of those rare guys who just exuded what the outdoors was all about,” Frank Hugelmeyer, president of the Outdoor Industry Association told us. “His product says it all. The outdoors is about having the time of your life and then rocking back with your friends to share that great time all over again.”
Rob Hart in crazy creek hammock
Though he never patented the original chair design, Hart has had five patents to his name since 2002: a Thermal device for maintaining the temperature of body extremes, a backpacker’s hammock and ground bivy, a modular collapsible chair, a combination chair and folding table, and a chair-mountable folding table.

It should come as no surprise to any that as a Montana resident, Hart loved to hunt and fly fish. Hart was also a skilled horseman and herded cattle at his family’s ranch, cowboyed at the ORO Ranch in Arizona, and often competed at the Ski-Joring Finals in Red Lodge.

In 2006, Hart met Trenay Allen. When they met she was a physician’s assistant in Billings and was building a house in Red Lodge. Hart and Trenay were married at Edgar, Mont., in September of 2006.

“Crazy Creek will remain open for business. While our hearts are sad, we will be carrying on the business operation,” said Crazy Creek’s Carol Wohlleben in an email message to friends, family and business associates. “John Elsberry, former business manager for Crazy Creek from 1989-2000, will be taking over immediately as general manager. Crazy Creek will be well-served by his steady and intelligent leadership. Walter Goldstein will remain involved on the marketing and management side of the business. Rob's brother Doug Hart will remain as a director of the company. While we are all heavily saddened by Rob's departure, we want to make Rob proud. We look forward to working with you all to continue to make Crazy Creek a success.”

Hart is survived by his wife, Trenay Hart, of Red Lodge and Billings; his daughter Abra Gasser and granddaughter Ashby, of Phoenix, Ariz.; his mother, Margaret S. Hart of Lake Forest, Ill.; two brothers, Augustin S. (Becky) Hart III of Oquawka, Ill.; and Douglas S. (Harriet Corbett) Hart of Powell, Wyo.; two sisters, Kathryn (Robert) Lansing of Lake Forest, Ill., and Heather Hart (married to Walter Goldstein) of Bozeman, Mont. He is also survived by his in-laws Chuck and Candace Allen of Mount Vernon, Iowa; by three aunts, three uncles, three nieces and seven nephews, and his two hunting Labs, Chug and Khumbu.

A celebration of his life will be held at the Spring Creek Equine Facility at the Red Lodge Vet Clinic (Beug Arena) at 3 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 27.

In lieu of flowers, donations in Rob's memory can be made to the "Rob Hart Memorial Fund," c/o Red Lodge Ski Patrol, P.O. Box 750, Red Lodge, MT 59068.
--Michael Hodgson

SNEWS® View: It is getting harder to write these memorials to friends. He is another industry class act that is gone too soon, but never to be forgotten. Rob would find great humor in the fact that the legacy for such an active man is one that encourages sitting down. In truth, what his chairs were really about was central to the man – it was not so much about sitting, as it was about having somewhere comfortable to kick back that encouraged sharing and reflection with friends and family, or simply spending some quiet time by yourself. More tales than we will ever imagine have been refined and shared while perched on one of Rob’s creations. More quiet time has been realized. More reflection and introspection has been inspired and enjoyed outdoors as a result.

So, with the above in mind, we’d like to propose that sometime this week, winter be dammed, you each grab an old Crazy Creek chair from your gear shed or closet. Call out to your closest friends or your nearby family and ask them to join you outdoors by a fire or on the floor of a cabin in front of a hot stove. And then just sit. Talk about love and life and living. Talk about adventures experienced and still to come. Talk and laugh about anything at all, but do it with family and friends. And know that somewhere, Rob will be smiling with the knowledge that because of him, you are all together, sharing, taking time to slow down, and that your ass is comfortable too.

SNEWS® CHAT -- Have a comment, idea, retort, or an engaging thought that was inspired by this article or from our opinions expressed in the SNEWS® View?

Forum Index >> Article Discussions >> Rob Hart, founder of Crazy Creek, dies in ski accident


Sort By:
Steve Hitchcock Posted on: 02/25/2009 18:30:51 MST
3 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Rob, we will miss you.  

Last August at the Creek City Inn, I spent a good hour before the slide show talking and laughing and enjoying a couple of cold ones with Rob.

I met him when we were both in elementary school in the 1960s. His parents moved to the Chicago area when he was a toddler. My mother was born in that same town where we both grew up. We did not know each other well back then.

A couple of decades later (and more than 20 years ago), at the first summer O.R. in Reno held at Bally's, I was a youg rep looking for lines and Rob and Weezie were launching their line of chairs. I "interviewed" for the line in the way those of you who know Rob imagine. The Crazy Creek business grew.

From that time until I left repping a number of years later, I was happy to represent Crazy Creek and even happier to visit Rob in Red Lodge for "sales meetings" held on the mountain or beside a back-country lake with good fishing or just visiting the company in the middle of a sales loop and spending some time at the sliding glass ranch.

For years later we stayed in touch. My son has a sherpa hat given to him in 1998 for his 2nd birthday by a Sherpa friend who was also visiting Rob at the sliding glass ranch at the same time we were there. We met Rob's daugher on that same trip. All of us enjoyed the Red Lodge fireworks on the 4th (which Rob supplied).

On another occasion my daughter enjoyed a bowl of ice cream given her by Rob's mother at the B-4 ranch to console her when she had been stung by a yellow jacket.

I spoke with Stevie Sidener when he called me with the news today and we remembered a particular "sales meeting" held at a lake near the WY/MT border in the Bear Tooth mountains. Rob conned us all into carrying beer in large qualtities (and booze in glass bottles) along with fresh steaks etc on this backpacking trip with the story that the lake was only 1.5 miles away. It rained. The fishing was great. Rob was spared our wrath for the con job by the fact that his pack was at least as heavy as any of ours. The masters of tarpology ruled.

I remember good times working, fishing, relaxing and partying with Rob and there was no-one better to do any of those things with.

Steve Hitchcock

Edited by bodegahwy@comcast.net at 02/26/2009 15:18:14 MST.

eco bag gal Posted on: 02/25/2009 21:17:53 MST
2 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: crazy creek love  

Some of my favorite times have been hanging out in my Crazy creek-- after biking in Moab or camping up Independence Pass, its the chair that lets you share--adventures, and great times--

Jeff Knight Posted on: 02/27/2009 15:09:04 MST
3 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Rob Hart  

I met Rob for the first time at the same 1988 OR Show my old friend Steve Hitchcock mentioned. Crazy Creek was in the booth right next to ours and Rob and I began a friendship that stood the test of time. We spoke frequently about business and life. He was honestly the one person I could talk to about running an independently owned business in the competitive outdoor marketplace that truly understood my point of view. We shared a comradeship and built our product in some of the same factories and shared sales reps. I had the pleasure to spend time at the sliding glass ranch and his family ranch over Bear Tooth Pass by the Crazy Creek. We'd also both been staying at the City Creek Inn for OR summer and winter for a long time. We had many good times hanging out in the parking lot having a few Pilsners or more often Gin and tonics. Rob was always good for many a good laugh telling colorful stories and jokes.

When my family stayed at his family ranch we met him in Red Lodge and followed him up over Bear Tooth Pass and down to the Ranch.

He drove the pass in his old Audi Quattro like a race car driver braking hard into the corners and accelerating fast out of them. I tried to keep up but my wife Lisa wasn't liking it. We got to the top and he was waiting for us there. I had this same experience skiing with him! He set us up at the ranch and hung out for several hours then headed back to Red Lodge, I'm sure driving the pass even faster without us following. The next week when we stopped at the sliding glass ranch to thank him he told me that after he took us over the pass and returned he pulled into his parking spot at Crazy Creek and the brakes on the Audi failed to work. Rob lived a very adventurous life and I always admired him for it. He knew how to kick back and enjoy and he knew how to drive. He will be deeply missed!

Jeff Knight
Granite Gear

Edited by jknight at 02/27/2009 16:50:12 MST.

Anonymous Posted on: 03/01/2009 16:35:37 MST
1 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: A life well lived, but gone too soon  

Attended Rob Hart's memorial service today in Red Lodge. Lots of
Crazy Creek chairs, big dance floor, incredible comments from friends
and family, including tales of how he shot both his brother and
sister in the butt with a .22 at a family picnic when they were kids.
In later years, he called his mother to wish her happy birthday from
a 17,000-ft. peak in Chile, and on another trip phoned friends from a
bathtub in Tibet while drinking Chateau Lafitte Rothschild. The town
had to have the service in a huge equestrian barn because no church
could have contained us all. Gone too soon, but a life well-lived.
-- Sarie Mackay, Red Lodge

bill gange Posted on: 03/02/2009 20:37:55 MST
3 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Don't just do something, sit there.  

Never was there a man that lived so true.

Anonymous Posted on: 03/03/2009 10:19:22 MST
3 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Rob Hart  

Rob,

You will be missed but never forgotten. Thanks for the memories....

Henry Deutsch

Anonymous Posted on: 03/06/2009 14:03:04 MST
2 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Rob Hart was one the best.  

Rob was an incredible spirit always sporting an ear to ear grin and an contagious laugh. Cheers to him.
Rick Armstrong

Anonymous Posted on: 03/20/2009 14:29:29 MDT
2 user(s) agreed. Agree | Disagree Subject: Rob Hart  

I found out today that Rob has left us......I can't tell you how I feel. I met Rob in 1975 in Red Lodge...We rode BSA Victors over the pass to the B-4... drank beer at the Coal Company...he showed me how to ski the mountain...how to get over to the avalanche shoots.... I met him by chance in a rest area several years later in Illinois...I recognized his little red "beamer"...I sat in his proto type "chair"....
Bob LeRoy...Greenville ME

Anonymous Posted on: 08/17/2009 05:06:54 MDT
Agree | Disagree Subject: the best uncle in the world  

Although it is an incredible loss, I am very thankful for the experiences I had with Uncle Rob.

He showed all of us that life is to be enjoyed and unfortunately that it is short. Nothing was impossible to him.

I am inspired more than ever now to carry on and follow my passions, and have lots of fun outdoors along the way.

We love you Rob and may we all have the courage to follow your legacy.

Philip Hart





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