Al Fresco Dining
Big-wall climber Chris McNamara prefers eating on summits.
When it comes to food, Chris McNamara is what he likes to call โan opportunivore.โ Though the big-wall climber and ex-BASE jumper once scrounged leftover pizza from tourists at Yosemiteโs Curry Village during summers, the South Lake Tahoe entrepreneur now snags leftovers from the plates of his two children, who enjoy riding shotgun on their dadโs mountain bike and flying across the kitchen on a custom-rigged zipline.
Growing up in Mill Valley, McNamara wasnโt what youโd call an adventurous eater โ a trait that would serve his early lifestyle well as he devoted nearly 10 years to living simply (read: an entire summer eating canned corn and pretzels) and climbing Yosemite Nationalโs Parkโs famed El Capitan, a more-than-3,000-foot climb from the valley floor.
โMy bland eating started early. I pretty much would eat spaghetti and ketchup, which, sadly, my 3-year-old daughter is now pumped on,โ McNamara says with a laugh. โLuckily, our 13-month-old is a little more adventurous.โ

Discovering the Climb
Slurpees, Butterfingers, and reheated Que Bueno nacho cheese from the Little League snack bar (where he started working at age 13) fueled a young McNamara, who first experienced climbing at a friendโs birthday party in eighth grade.
โI saved every single penny. All my friends were spending their money on snacks and baseball cards, and I was just obsessed with saving money,โ McNamara recalls.
His frugality paid off two years later when, at 15, he met a man through his outdoor education class with a business plan for a climbing gym โ Touchstone Climbing, which now has 14 gyms throughout California.
โI had this money from being a snack bar operator, and I gave my life savings to this guy Iโd never met just because I wanted a free climbing-gym membership for life,โ McNamara says. โHe took me up to climb El Cap for the first time, and that pretty much changed the whole trajectory of my life.โ
While living in Yosemite, McNamara wrote his first book on climbing El Cap, launching a career in authoring climbing guides; this would lead to his climbing website, SuperTopo, and, eventually, the launch of his gear-review companies, Outdoor GearLab and Tech GearLab. He also went on to establish the American Safe Climbing Association, which has replaced more than 60,000 bolts and 30,000 anchors on popular routes.
McNamara went on to devote more time to BASE jumping (launching from โbuildings, antennae, span, or earthโ with a wingsuit and parachute), but heโs long since retired from the deadly sport. Today, you can find him mountain biking at Tahoe and developing trails throughout the Sierra. His latest endeavor is helping to develop the Sierra portion of the 5,000-mile Orogenesis Trail stretching from Canada to Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, purported to be, when itโs finished, the longest mountain-biking trail on earth.
Though his wife, Viktoria, is the main cook in the family now, McNamara can whip up a mean chicken marbella โ a briny, sweet chicken recipe with prunes, olives, and capers โ and a bagel sandwich that will keep your pedals pumping for miles of mountain biking.
But cooking on camping trips or at the summit of a long ascent is the ideal, according to McNamara.
โWhen youโre camping, you can eat [Top Ramen] and it tastes amazing. But if you put just a little more effort into your food when youโre camping with your best friends and youโve done something cool that day, to me those are the most memorable meals,โ he says. โIโve eaten at some Michelin-starred restaurants, and, yes, they are amazing and cool, but, in my opinion, itโs not just about the food. Itโs about who youโre with, where you are, and what you did that day.โ
Claire McArthur is a firm believer that fresh air makes food taste better โ as does the company with whom you eat it. Invite her to your next clifftop picnic at Clairecudahy@gmail.com.

Ingredients
- ยฝ cup olive oil
- ยฝ cup red wine vinegar
- 1 cup prunes pitted
- ยฝ cup Spanish green olives pitted
- 1 head of garlic peeled and purรฉed
- ยผ cup dried oregano
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 4 whole chickens quartered
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1 cup dry white wine
- ยผ cup fresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
Instructions
- In a large bowl, create a marinade of olive oil, vinegar, prunes, olives, garlic, oregano, salt, and pepper. Add chicken, turning to coat, then cover bowl and refrigerate overnight.
- The next day, preheat oven to 350 degrees F. In several shallow baking dishes (depending on size), arrange chicken pieces in a single layer and pour remaining marinade over tops. Sprinkle brown sugar on chicken, then pour wine around it.
- Basting regularly, bake chicken until internal temperature is 145 degrees (about 50 minutes to 1 hour). Transfer chicken and accompaniments to a serving tray with a few spoonfuls of pan juices and sprinkle with parsley. Put remaining juices in another bowl or gravy boat for serving.

























