tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3587324322209618232024-03-13T11:25:52.732-07:00Gumbies! On! Crack!In which are detailed the construction of an 18-pitch free-route in Squamish, BC, random notes on the climbing life, and shit talk. Starring Napoleon, the Driller, McBennett, McMcLane, The Filth, Butch Hillhurst, and a cast of thousands, including beautiful women, unicycling midgets, and random intermittent dirtbags.Butch Hillhursthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06351152440526017834noreply@blogger.comBlogger73125truetag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-63312965990494071692014-08-20T11:14:00.000-07:002014-08-20T11:14:22.132-07:00Shot by RockA few years ago in Spring, I pulled one fine Monday morning into the parking lot at work and saw a colleague getting out of his car. This was one of those ass-kicking shiny new sports cars, all angles and chrome, the car version of a Jersey Shore character in a tight t-shirt. My colleague-- let's call him Dee-- was pretty proud of his ride. "It's only $750 a month," he said, "and I signed a five-year lease, so I can get out of it at the end." He looked pretty tired and I asked him if he was OK. He said he was tired from his weekend job-- bouncing at a club on Granville.<br />
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Later that week, I heard a colleague-- let's call her Pulley-- doing one of two things that property-owning Vancouverites do when they discuss real estate: patting themselves on the back. "I'm SO glad we bought on the East Side," she said, "But out in Dunbar...you know. I LOVE our neighbours, where we are now." That, dear readers, is code for "West Siders are rich snobs," which is in turn code for "I feel inadequate because I earn less money."<br />
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Ah yes, the rat race.<br />
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Some weeks later, Dee was on "stress leave" and I googled his car, which, it turned out, cost about $60,000 with $7000 down for the lease. The guy made $3500 a month, after tax say $2800, and his car payments were $750. Leave him $2100 to live. His house was worth around $350,000 so let's add in $1200 for mortgage and whatnot. Leaves him $900/month for food, gas and whatnot. No wonder he was moonlighting! Now, the house made sense...but the car? Really? $10,000 a year for a showpiece? <br />
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I didn't get it until a few months later, when I was playing a session out in Langley. This, as my snobbish colleagues say, is Redneckville. The pub parking lot was full of drug dealer cars-- Asian things with fins, spoilers and small galaxies of chrome-- and of suburban rides, like big SUVs. My own shitbox looked like a rusty toy. This was where Dee lived...no wonder the guy felt like he had to throw down for the appearance of $60,000 worth of car.<br />
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It was a warm September evening and as I carried my mandolin past groups of weight-room-jacked twenty somethings in tight t-shirts discussing how "parts for that thing will kill you," I felt much the same as I did eating lunch with colleagues: totally out of place. But not uncomfortably so. It didn't really matter to me that my car is a piece of crap-- my mandolin is worth three times what the car is-- and that I live in a one-bedroom apartment. <br />
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It didn't matter, cos I'd been immunised by mountains. My peer group includes The Filth, whose aims in life include writing a novel, raising his kid, and climbing V10. Then there is <a href="http://www.markraymondmason.com/">The Surveyor</a>, who pretty much lives for his kid and his camera...he's an abstract photographer. Then there's Tony McLane and Hannah Preston, who live to climb, and climb to live (both are new guides). The Brewer has two kids, has been married 18 years, and still sleeps with his wife on a futon on the floor.<br />
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One thing none of these people care about is appearances. They drive crappy cars. They cook, bake and brew. They read. They volunteer. They paint, make art, or play music. They take care of kids. They do work they like, or they don't work. They CLIMB. A good day for them is being so fucking tired at 8 PM that they can't move a muscle but still have ten pitches left to climb. <br />
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I guess it helps that none of us are involved in the corporate world, where, as a friend put it, a woman needs to spend at least $2000/year on clothing alone to keep up appearances (a corporate woman's suit can be worn for 15 months, apparently), and where the reward for work is money and a title. It also helps that, for most of us, activities and people matter far more than stuff. While I do feel somewhat self-conscious when I go to a yuppie cunt restaurant in Vancouver, it doesn't really matter: what is a new outfit compared to runout 5.whatever?<br />
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The Fall day I first climbed the Grand Wall clean, my friend Corinne and I stopped for shawarmas in Vancouver, and we had to cross party-zone Granville St. On finishing eating, walking back to the car, we were accosted by a group of Jersey Shore types: tight shirts, gelled hir, bla bla. It took me a minute, buzzed from food and Wall, to realise that these guys-- for no apparent reason-- wanted to fight. One of them swore at me. I dunno what he said. I DO remember saying something like the following: "About two hours ago I had a 3 mm thick piece of metal between me and a 300 meter groundfall. So I'm not really going to worry about you." I remember smiling at him. It was like, despite all he booze and testosterone in his system, he was 200 yards away. It was fine.<br />
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Once I was coming back from lunch with my ex-girlfriend, and she stopped at a fancy furniture store window. Man, was their stuff ever cool. I made myself look away, and did the same thing two stores down at the shoe store. You look at this stuff, you see it on TV, you think about it, you imagine your living room or closet filled with it, and suddenly you're making career and vacation choices around it, and you feel bad if you don't have it.<br />
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Fuck it. The mountains gave me a reality shot, and Tyler Durden was right: the things you own end up owning you. "We buy crap we don't need with money we don't have to impress people we don't care about." Or, as Ron Kuk put it, "climbing showed me that there are two worlds: one where moneynis sacred, and another where EVERYTHING is sacred."<br />
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My colleague Dee went on to develop a coke habit. He went to work in the Alberta oilfields, where he had some kind of epiphany at 3 a.m., wrestling a couple of hundred kilos of twisting pipe into a hole, came back, ditched the fancy car, and downsized the house. Drives a beater, chills with his woman and kid on weekends, and actually enjoys time off. Pulley is happy as a clam with her East Side house. After all, since Vancouver real estate went up nine billion percent, she can now consider herself a de facto zillionaire, which has gotta be worth something, even though it's, sigh, not Dunbar.<br />
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-57116594052893582232014-08-20T10:54:00.001-07:002014-08-20T10:54:42.432-07:00Some notes on foodWhat to eat? I am always interested in what people eat and bring climbing. So here in no specific order are some food observations for those doing long days in the mountains.<br />
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First, diet should basically focus on three main most important aspects: adequate calories for your day, not too much sugar or simple carbs (otherwise you get carb crashes aka bonking), and good post-hoc recovery food which should have protein, good fats and complex carbs. Oh and water.<br />
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Second, diet, in terms of training, is not that important. As Will Gadd puts it, a guy eating McDonald's and training 30 hours a week is going to kick the ass of a guy who trains 5 hours a week and eats strict organic Paleo or whatever. The world's best runners-- Kenyans-- eat basically everything, and they drink gallons of sugary tea, and that long-distance nut-job runner Dean Karnazes (sp?) orders pizza and burgers during his 200 km epics.<br />
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<li>Vegetarians-- awesome-- but big prob is, you guys need low-glycemic-index food (food that turns to blood sugar SLOWLY) and outside of nuts and cheese there is very little such in the vegetarian world. The shit that I see vegetarians bring on big days-- bars-- generally fry them; man cannot live on carbs alone.</li>
<li>The energy you have today is what you ate yesterday. Stuff yourself at dinner.</li>
<li>I think bars and gels are a massive rip-off. In terms of cents per calorie they are crappy (best deal is still IMHO Sesame Snaps). </li>
<li>The single best food I have ever taken into the alpine are Landjäger-style pork sausage. Easy to stick in pocket, no wrapping, plus they have masses of fat, which is a slow-burner and loaded with calories.</li>
<li>In terms of diet, the only two I have ever seen that had results worth focusing on (ie they give you long-term stable energy, are healthy, and are do-able) are The Zone and ketogenic. The Zone is great but a pain in the ass because you have to balance out carbs fat protein etc into "blocks." Ketogenic diets-- where about 85% of calories come from fat-- are the holy grail of good eating for climbers because <i>getting your energy from ketone bodies instead of glucose means much more, and much more stable, energy.</i> </li>
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My brother, despite a stress-free and happy life, some years ago developed insomnia, and after a ton of tests pills and other whatnot, long story short, he discovered he basically couldn't tolerate simple carbs. This led him to the ketogenic diet, which stabilised his sleep immediately but which had two unanticipated side effects: (a) he lost a bunch of weight and (b) his energy level and consistency of energy level went through the roof. His wife and kid went "on keto," and then my sister, but the most surprising thing was my nephew. He had always managed to easily gain and keep weight on, to the point where at 5'10" he weighed around 250. When I saw him at Christmas I didn't recognise him: he was down to 170, this despite being an Engineering (read: no life) student. Secret? Keto.</div>
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I personally don't need keto-- I'm skinny as a rail and I have no sleep etc issues-- but if you are the kind of person who gains weight easily, check it out. The best resource I have found (explaining the science, and adding a few recipes, plus some fascinating anthropology), is <a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Science-Carbohydrate-Living/dp/0983490708/ref=as_sl_pc_ss_til?tag=healeatipoli-20&linkCode=w01&linkId=AUWZCLQPJQXFK5LZ&creativeASIN=0983490708">This</a> book. Note that keto is <b><u>not</u> </b>the Atkins diet.</div>
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<ul>
<li>Water. Without it, nothing else works. Your heart slows, your brain slows, your muscle seize, you cramp...Bring more, and either drink and then piss more, or dump it. Alpinists set their watches to force themselves to drink every 15 minutes. A good guide is, if you are operating at 70% of max heart rate at sea level at 18 degrees Celsius, you need one litre of water per hour (cycling data). If your piss is not clear, you are dehydrated. Those "hydration bladder" thingies are great BUT I have never yet seen one that didn't explode so I'd bring 2 extra bottles and periodically refill the bladder. If the bladder blows you still have water.</li>
<li>The worst food is an all-day supply of bars. You WILL bonk at some point.</li>
<li>Back in the day alpinists liked sausages, and also shots of olive oil (and dried red peppers): yummy, fatty, dense in calories...</li>
<li>For recovery, the most important things are water, complex carbs and PROTEIN if the day has been hard on muscles.</li>
<li>If you are vegan, good luck in the mountains.</li>
<li>There is a lot to be said for introspection re: diet. Add or cut something out for a week, and see how it feels.</li>
<li>If whatever you do re: food in mountains or in normal life makes you miserable, hungry, craving-filled, etc, it's a bad idea in short term and unsustainable in long term.</li>
<li>Any "diet"-- system of eating for any specific purpose-- should focus ONLY on your comfort and performance. If you are dieting for weight loss, you are going to have problems long-term. Why do we do-- and stick with-- things in the long term? <i>Because they make us feel good. </i>And we feel good when we can DO stuff. If you are out climbing, hking, walking, playing tennis, whatever, and it's making you sweat, and it's fun, and you can do it with a buddy, you'll want to go back to it. Your "diet" should be designed to enable you to do that fun stuff. All other reasons-- unless you have a medical condition-- are bogus.</li>
<li>One should not IMHO skimp on the fun stuff. Peter Croft's coffee consumption is LEGENDARY, as is his ability to scarf pie after epic trad days. Will Gadd likes Scotch post-send. I know a few sponsored climber types who love an occasional cigarette. Most people would basically pre-sell their future or current children for good chocolate. People in keto will avoid sugary stuff (and after awhile won't want any anyway), but generally I would say, eat it! </li>
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Butch Hillhursthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06351152440526017834noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-62450810831986325322014-08-20T09:08:00.001-07:002014-08-20T09:20:01.982-07:00A Cap on CrapA few weeks ago the Hink and I climbed the direct North Ridge of Stuart. Now, the Hink and I disagree about everything-- Israeli foreign policy, God, evolution etc-- but we can crank big routes together so off to this Fifty Cassic it was.<br />
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Hink brought twenty pages of maps and topos, a cell-phone that linked to GPS and google maps so you could watch where you were in real time even when out of cell range (don't ask me how he did it), an altimeter, a watch and a Thingy that could send both distress calls and sexts to the person of your choice via satelite. <br />
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Hink kept meticulous track of time: when we left the car, when we got to ____, when we started ____, how hig we were when ____ etc etc.<br />
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The route-- about 3,000 feet, with 5 pitches of 5.7, 5.8, 5.9, 5.9, 5.9 and a load of around 5.3-- went down according to Hink in 6 hours. The return to car was no problem.<br />
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It would turn out that we actually needed two things on route: a simple coutour map of the area to let us get to the base of the route, and a photo taken from the descent that showed the descent couloir. Unnecessary was everything else. It turned out to be like the difference between the Stupidtopo guide to Mt Russel's Fishhook Arête in the Sierras, and Croft's. The Stupidtopo has an entire page of details, descriptions, beta, bla bla. Croft's has "the arête is climbed from its base."<br />
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I was yesterday hiking with my 73-year-old Mom in the Kananaskis and there were all these young fuckers with their toys. Cameras, phones, GPSs, walking sticks, pack covers, MP3 players (why?--<br />
mountain silence <i>is</i> music), printouts of trail maps, etc. It seemed like most of them were making<br />
sure that reality conformed to its electronic, reported, printed etc counterparts, than vice versa. The Filth and I once in Vegas got four pitches up something which had a chimney with 50 foot runouts, no bolts, and no bolted anchors. We managed to convince ourselves through focus on the topo that we were, in fact, on a bolted face route before realising, no, we're idiots, we are not on route.<br />
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And here's the lesson: <i>we interact with what we bring</i>. If you have a map, you'll stare at it. If you have a phone, you'll answer it. If you have a GPS (God help you) your waypoints will be much more interesting than the route or the wildflowers. If you have a watch, you'll be noting the time. If you have a Thingy, you'll be sexting your sweetie or spraying to your buddiesninstead of watching the sunset.<br />
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I'm a total pussy and I havn't soloed anything really hard, but I must say that the most memorable climbing has always been freesolos. Not because of fear (if it's scary, you shouldn't be soloing it), but because <i>all distractions disappear</i>. There is nothing except you and the rock. So the climb fills your head. I can tell you every move on the Snowpatch route despite having done it only once, three years ago, whilst with sport projects I need to do them like 7 times to remember sequences. Why is surfing the world's second-coolest activity? Because <i>there is nothing between you and the ocean's power</i>. It is experience, reduced to its essence.<br />
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I thought about this often. In the Creek, you meet these Colorado yuppie cunts who whine about their jobs but drive $50,000 trucks. Hello, who the fuck needs $50,000 worth of truck? Chains and snow tires are WAY cheaper than 4x4 and an immense cargo box is a mere $1,000, much cheaper than than gas etc involved in driving a rig. $15,000 worth of used Subaru could translate into months of stress-free dirtbagging. <br />
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I have never driven anything other than shitboxes-- my most recent, a Yaris, is only 7 years old, the newest car I have ever owned-- and while the inevitable social pressures exert themselves on me (it feels way cooler to drive a big-assed truck or fancy Benz or whatever my Dad currently has, because, let's face it, we are inherently status-sensitive and cars are the second-biggest status marker)-- I take the long view: <i>bad cars = good times.</i> And so it is with anything else techy. Objects = distraction. Get <i>rid</i> of it. A GPS is not necessary unless you are on an Alaska glacier at night in a snowstorm. Who needs a watch? Who cares whether you've walked 3 or 3 1/2 hours? The most useful item on a watch is an alarm clock. Altimeters-- if you aren't in the Himalaya, not necessary. Satellite phone or texting Thingy? Not on a 50 Classics climb. Google Earth maps loaded onto a GPS-linked phone? How about <i>we just look around us instead? </i>Plus, as soon as you have your backups, your guard goes down. I can't imagine cell phone users with reception beng more cautious in the backcountry than those without...<br />
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Anyway, Hink and I basically ended up looking only at a map. The objects stayed stashed in pack. To me this was the lesson: less is more. What you bring defines and limits the experience.<br />
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<br />Butch Hillhursthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06351152440526017834noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-2842053838590871802014-08-18T13:05:00.004-07:002014-08-27T19:03:26.465-07:00Da muddafuggin' Beckey-ChouinardYou weigh each item between mosquito swats, eyeing the rapidly-filling pack. Extra longjohns? Nah. More coffee? Fuck yeah! It's three hours and 3,000 vertical feet to the Applebee campsite in the Bugaboos and every gram counts....sort of. <br />
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McBennett and I are sweating balls at 9:00 AM and storms are far from our minds. This trip-- hastily improvised around the end of what looks like the best-ever Bugs weather window-- is going to be a headcleaner. Both of us are looking down the barrel at life changes. In my case, a recent breakup which, if I detailed it, no-one would believe, kids moving on, being on strike, the busiest year of all time professionally, watching my Dad suffer and then struggle with recovering from a stroke. <br />
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Especially tough has been watching Dad deal with the stroke. At age 81 this kind of thing is expected, but you don't ever really get OK with it. Watching a guy who once shredded black diamond ski runs, who arrived n Canada with $20 and no English and built a multi-million dollar business, and who is strong as an ox, work at walking to the bathroom with two canes is fucking <i>hard</i>. Even worse was seeing the rest of the stroke patients at the Fanning Center in Calgary: people who had one body-side not working, who drooled, who flapped their hands helplessly, who struggled in the dry July sunlight to roll medicinal joints outside. My Mom, ten years younger and in amazing shape, one day said to me "if I ever end up like <i>that</i>, pull the plug."<br />
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McBennett is a guy I have tried hard (for me) trad climbing with, and he and I have the climber's <i>sine qua non</i>: total confidence in each other. The worries, when they come, will be outside the circle of us two. While one or both of us might not be able to pull a move, do an approach or whatever, together, things <i>will</i> hang together. McBennett is 15 years my younger and three times the climber and I'm grateful for his enthusiasm and mad rock skillz.<br />
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So of course we shit-talk each other before strapping on death-sized loads and beginning the hump. I am amazed at McBennet's fresh-veggie menu and his immense set of clothing options, which include two pairs of longjohns. My newly smoking-free lungs power me up the approach and I arrive at Applebee sweating but not blasted. And there are like 200 people there. Literally every flat spot has a tent on it. <br />
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The first person I run into is Will guzzling both water and <u>A Prayer For Owen Meany</u> in<br />
the mid-day sun. He and Matt are working on some sick insane 14+ trad line but they are doing it sportclimber style: three burns a day starting at 1 pm. We catalogue who brought in which books (me a Murakami novel; Will a story collection; Matt has audiobooks; Mcbennett a book about astrology) and this is good; if (no-- when; this is the Bugs) the weather shits on us, we have entertainment options other than meditation and route discussion. I am also psyched that Will is there because this guy always has a giant-sized stash of Ibuprofen with him and he is a generous sort. McBennett arrives a bit later, gassed from the approach-- the guy has been working endless 12-hour shifts-- so we decide to work on our tans and reading.<br />
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Bugs weather speculation, built of at-best sketchy data-- weather reports checked at km18 end-of-cell range, fragments heard on the radio, or imported by the ranger every morning-- begins. Our objective is the Beckey-Chouinard (no bivvying-- I have it in my head that this would be poor style. Not that I can define good style exactly) and we need a lack of rain. Tomorrow looks like 30% chance of showers, thereafter shittier, so over a dinner of coconut-milk veggie and quinoa curry, the decision is made to go for it.<br />
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Sleep does not come easily. I piss again and again the tea I foolishly drank at 8 pm. A midnight, atop Bugaboo Spire, headlamps pick their way down the Gendarme. Oh, you poor motherfuckers. My stomach is doing backflips around coconut curry, and horrendous gas is coming out of both of us. At this rate I'll be able to plug my anus into the stove to brew coffee. When the alarm goes at 3 AM I can't tell if I've been asleep. After coffee and food McBennett says "just watch me, I feel weird," and of course I promptly ignore this warning. Intuition, experience and reason all go out the window as I am so fucking stoked to climb this route.<br />
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We avoid the Snowpatch-Bugaboo col, which looks like a giant took a shit on it, massive rockstains all down its front, rockfall having chopped a couple of climbers' ropes mid-rap (they survived) and sneak around the base of Snowpatch. As we leave camp, we see a pair of lights attempting the Snowpatch col. Madness. It's been shitting rocks all night. Atop the Vowell Glacier, in now blowing rain and mist, stumble six apparitions. It's the Bugaboo crew, now in their 30th hour of movement, having spent all night descending the Kain route. We feed them granola bars and sandwiches, knowing suddenly that, holy crap, climbing the Beckey feeling like this, in this weather, is a REALLY DUMB IDEA and wondering, <i>how the fuck did we ignore all the signs?</i><br />
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When I finally wake up again in the tent, it is 10 AM and the smell of coffee makes the sun impossible to ignore. It is a magnificent day and Will and Matt are rolling out of bed, the campground is nearly deserted, and somebody is smoking weed, man. The Weed Man turns out to be a Yankee who, on crossing into Canada and not having any weed, man, decided to google "where can I buy weed in Osoyoos?" This actually found a man, a place and a time, and eventually a half which American Weed Man was sharing.<br />
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Coffee can't just sit in the bag on a sunny day so after four blastersfull and some serious leg vibrations McBennett and I go up to do McTech which I have wanted to try like 30 times but there are always 18 parties on it. With a 70 meter rope we do it in 2.5 pitches and I get why it's always crowded-- amazing perfect granite cracks that make me forget the disappointment of the non-Beckey.<br />
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At camp the weather speculation begins again-- 3<i>0% Thurs, 70% Fri, let's do it, let's not, one chance, what if it rains on top,</i> etc-- so we decide, YES. This dinner features no coconut so both of us actually sleep and at 3 AM we are up and at it. I have a bivvy sack so elect not to bring my micro-downie.<br />
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We leave camp at 4:30, trudge up to where we'd met the Apparitions, then head up the SW side of Pigeon and descend into East Creek. At 9:00 I am plugging cams into perfect granite and we are off. We have a double set and a 4, and are simulclimbing on blocks. At Pitch 11 we catch up with Tom and Brian from Philadelphia. McBennett is still gassed from work and hands the last couple of leads over to me. Clouds are rolling in and wind is up, and McBennett mutters about his heart feeling weird. Shit. <br />
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The Beckey is not hard, but it is one hell of a workout. Every pitch is sixty meters. You are guaranteed a crux far enough up from your belayer that a fall would be ugly (the exception being the first 10a pitch, which McBennet leads in fine style). And if you're dumb enough to do the thing in a day, you've already been walking for 4 hours when the first of about 2,500 feet of climbing starts.<br />
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The route's real pleasure, other than its amazing rock, is its situation. You are way up there, with wild remote valleys, no roads, masses of glaciated peaks, etc, all behind you, and the astonishing vertical North Howser off to your left. You feel like you're OUT THERE.<br />
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At the top of the 14th pitch the weather finally shits the bed completely. Howling wind and rain smack us and we strip and add longjohns and all other clothing options-- which in my case do not include a downie-- to shaking bodies. Tom and Brian haul our rope and fix it so we get a free jug up the last icy pitch and then it's routefinding 101: a rap, then fifth-class ledges to the summit.<br />
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I've just climbed the most famous alpine rock route in North America and I don't have thirty seconds to stop and look around. The wind is so strong we can't hear each other from ten feet away, we can't tell one direction from another because it's so foggy, and we therefore have no idea where the fuck we get off this thing.<br />
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On top of this, it's freezing, and like an idiot I havn't brought gloves. It was at this point that McBennett, who's been feeling like crap for most of the day, revives. I am fried-- I've just led fourteen pitches, found the 5th class approach to the summit, and am freezing-- but McBennett tunes right in. "We have to stack and carry ropes on rap," he shouts over the wind, "and let's simulrap with Tom and Brian." Good ideas all. We find the raps and got moving. Here's us starting the descent.<br />
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My biggest worry after finding the raps is hypothermia. Tom and I simply don't have enough clothes. I have a bivvy sack but...small consolation if you end up with stuck ropes on rappel on a footledge 200 meters off the deck. Rapping with Tom and Brian slows us considerably, but is safer, I think: if we have rope issues, we could use one of their two 60s.<br />
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Here is us setting off on the third or so rappel.<br />
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Eventually we get to the glacier and then it is a mad sprint toward the Snowpatch rappels that bypass the glacier. We find them, and manage the six raps with only one stuck rope, then stumble for hours through hallcinatory boulders and snowpatches and into Applebee at 1:30 AM.</div>
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The next day every muscle in my body felt like it had been chewed on by sharks. I drank litre after litre of water but could not shake the cottony feeling from my mouth. Six pots of coffee couldn't wake me.</div>
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Will, and Matt-- who had what looked like a partial pinkie amputation-- also spent the day lazing around and we got to spend a bit of time chatting. There's a few things that impress me about these guys. First, they climb like fiends and drive shitty cars. I can guarantee you that if you meet a guy with an awesome 4x4 truck he will talk much much harder than he climbs. Will has an awesome purple-red minivan that looks like a giant stealth suburban grape. It's an old question: what is worth investing in? In my experience, bad cars = good times. I did the math on my last shitbox, a Hyundai Accident, and it came out to-- all in-- something like $3,000/year. Had I opted for anything fancier, or with 4wd, or newer, or whatever, the bill would have been $2,000 a year higher. But man, a crappy car paid for trips to Bolivia and Colombia and loads of climbing. I look like a joke driving it. It's especially funny at work where all my colleagues have nice respectable vehicles, SUVs or trucks if they can (suburban status and all). But I can tell you, when I die, I won't give a fuck about what car I had-- or even remember what I drove-- but I'll be stoked that I had enough time and $$ to climb. I always remember the dude from Colorado I met in the Creek who whined about the dreadful hours his job demanded. His truck must have cost $70,000. Holy shit, dude, ditch the awful job and the small-penis compensator and get a life! Owning a piece of crap car would buy you a year of climbing.</div>
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Then there's the devotion. These guys will have spent eighty days by summer's end working four pitches. Two bolted at 13+ and two on gear at mid-14 and they expect another summer needed to send. Holy crap, the monks had nothing on these guys. I also like that they both read and are far more interested in talking about things they've read or watched or done outside of climbing than they are in yapping about climbing. (This is a quality I've noticed in a few of the other elite climber types I've met. Croft HATES climber talk; Long likes any kind of story and is pretty philosophical; Will Gadd is a rabid reader of everything (if the guy wasn't a climber he'd be a great lawyer or lit professor) bla bla). Actually a good solid personality quirk of any thoughtful human: can you talk about something other than your job?</div>
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On Saturday it was pissing rain so we packed up and ambled down the trail. Well we only did one cragging day and one alpine route but then I thought about luck. First, McBennett AGAIN proved himself. How awesome is it to know your partner's got your back? Second, I was walking. WALKING. My Dad can't do that. Neither can a load of people. Third, I was climbing. CLIMBING! What do poor people in most of the world do when they have a day off? Fuck all, that's what, cos that's what one can afford. Fourth, I felt that fine, clear sense of balance you sometimes get. On the one hand we could have died if getting off Howser had gone wrong. On the other, my Dad for whatever reason was still alive. We choose near death; others get thrown into it. Made me feel arrogant and grateful.</div>
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At the bottom Will and Matt were off in Will's stealth raspberry van to the Big Horn Motel in Radium for four beers each, a shower and some Interwebz time. How awesome is that? Think about this. These guys are among six or so people in the climbing world who can climb 14+ trad. This makes them the climbing equivalent of Lebron James or Michael Jordan. James and Jordan pull(ed) in like $40,000,000 a year and have multiple cars, yachts, yadda yadda. You can bet that Lebron doesn't stay in a motel after a big game. I watched an interview with Alex Honnold where at the end they showed the white van he lives in. The interviewer said "you <i>live</i> in this?" as if the van was a death sentence and Honnold smiled and said "yeah dude it's AWESOME got a bed and everything!" and he beamed as he showed the interviewer his pull-out gear drawers. If objects and status are your goals, climbing s an idiotic life choice. If living LIFE is your goal, climb, or have kids, or build/make something new. Honnold, who Will Stanhope describes as "the best in the world," lives like a '70s hippie minus the drugs. </div>
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Best lesson of all from mountains, one we learn over and over: I'm alive, thank God, and there is way more to life than owning crap.</div>
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<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-80049383541206869192012-06-27T14:55:00.000-07:002012-06-27T14:56:56.366-07:00I Hate The Environment.The other day a colleague asked me whether I would be climbing a lot this summer. I said yes.<br />
<br />
He then said "you're really into the environment, aren't you, Butch?" This was a reference to both climbing and to one of my work projects, which involved building a community garden.<br />
<br />
"Fuck no," I said, "I hate the environment."<br />
<br />
The lunch crowd fell silent. No; I had not mis-spoken. I do, in fact, hate the environment. I want it destroyed, used up, chewed-over and spit out. I want it dead. I want endangered species gone, plentiful species endangered, topsoil trashed, and a planet so fucking hot from human CO2 emissions that I can bathe in the Arctic ocean in January wearing only my thong and some SPF400 waterproof sunblock.<br />
<br />
I guess I oughtta explain what I mean.<br />
<br />
What does love mean? Caring for and sustaining something which we recognise has worth-- as much worth as we ourselves--in and of itself. Your wife, your dog, your kids, your friends: yes, you may want sex, affection, old-age security or climbing partnerships from them, but fundamentally you recognise something inherently valuable and dignified in them, and you support and care for them because of that. They might not love you back, or they might love you more or less than you love them, but still.<br />
<br />
And hate? Well, a short definition might be "a selfish disregard". In other words, if I hate something, I use it for my own ends and I don't care about its needs. This could involve projecting fear and self-loathing onto people of a different colour, language, origin etc, from me, and me then calling them names, or beating on them with a baseball bat. It might mean sixteen-year-old me making friends with the dorky kid in computer class just so he would do our dreaded programming project and I could get the necessary B. It could involve me ignoring the homeless guy outside the IGA on my way to the pub, with my $3,000 mandolin and $20 to spend on beer.<br />
<br />
So, do I love the environment? No. I fucking hate it. <br />
<br />
What I LOVE is this. I love my shiny new iPhone. I love my girlfriend and our kids. I love climbing and the wilderness, especially when it doesn't have too many people, or too much garbage, in it.<br />
<br />
One of my colleagues then asked me about the outdoors. "If it serves me," I said, "I love it. Other than that, fuck it."<br />
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If I loved the environment, rather than hating it, this is what I would do.<br />
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I would first of all stop working. Work earns us money; money has value only insofar as it allows us to use or trade stuff, all of which has its origin in the natural world. Money is made of oil, coal, natural gas, steel and other mined goods, of harvested fish, of grasslands and woods turned petroleum-product-fertiliser-and-pesticide-powered monocultures. Money is made of resource extraction. And if you don't earn money directly from the environment, such as by being a teacher, a politician, a lawyer, a "knowledge worker", or what have you, you're getting a cut of what the "extractors" are making. As scientists will tell you, <span style="background-color: white;"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/goog_1278736463">in the majority of the countries with economies in </a></span><span style="background-color: white;"><a href="http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/rstaff/grubb/publications/GA12.pdf">transition [to higher GDPs] the growth of GDP per capita associates with growth in emissio</a><a href="http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/rstaff/grubb/publications/GA12.pdf">n per capita</a>. Some more than others, but the bottom line is clear: you wanna be rich, you do it by extracting more stuff from the environment, and then you spew more crap-- like CO2 and garbage-- back into the environment.</span><br />
<span style="background-color: white;"><br /></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white;">If you want to be nice to the environment, you have to use less stuff, and then throw less garbage into it. That functionally means you don't own a car. You eat little meat. You work mostly at making food that you grow yourself. You live in a small house, with loads of people, you don't travel (except by foot, or horse if you're rich), and you own few objects, all of which last a long time and are then recycled. You make food, medicine, music, clothing and shelter. The science is crystal clear: an ecologically sane life = less stuff and fewer activities. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="background-color: white;">But that socially sucks. I would have to live in a shack, eat simply, not travel, ditch my shiny new iPhone, etc. Fuck THAT-- let the Third Worlders live like that. I want what's MINE.</span><br />
<span style="background-color: white;"><br /></span><br />
<span style="background-color: white;">Now, you may well say "ah yes, let's focus on the really important things in life, like learning, and community. Let's value those over owning stuff. Let's direct our energy (literally) into "good things" instead of McMansions, cars and vacations in Hawaii. Well, sadly, as Jame H. Brown <i>et al</i> note,<a href="http://www.blogger.com/goog_1278736475"> "</a></span><a href="http://www.blogger.com/goog_1278736475"><span style="background-color: white;">it has </span><span style="background-color: white;">not been possible to increase socially desirable goods and </span><span style="background-color: white;">services substantially without concomitantly increasing the </span></a><a href="http://www.aibs.org/bioscience-press-releases/resources/Davidson.pdf">consumption of energy and other natural resources and <span style="background-color: white;">without increasing environmental impacts that now include </span><span style="background-color: white;">climate change, pollution, altered biogeochemical cycles, and </span><span style="background-color: white;">reduced biodiversity."</span></a> In other words, even the "good stuff"-- like music lessons for the kids, wheelchairs for the elderly and education for all-- involves trashing the world.<br />
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If I loved the environment, I would stop climbing. I used $200 worth of gas to go to the Sierra and back last summer. If everybody in the world had equal access to oil products, we would have one litre per person per day, for everything-- heating, driving, making nylon ropes and plaastic TVs, etc. I have $2000 worth of climbing gear, mostly oil products an aluminum...pure garbage and pollution.<br />
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I would stop traveling and flying in airplanes. It takes a hundred or so litres of jet fuel to get me to Indian Creek and back. Worth about the yearly per-capita GDP of Mali.<br />
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I would stop eating meat. The simplest of Google searches will show you that eating any meat other than the occasional backyard chicken, who's grown fat by eating scraps and grubs, is the single most destructive thing a person can do. It takes ten calories of edible plants to produce one calorie of meat.<br />
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I would stop driving. Even my shitbox costs $4000/year to run. Enough $$ to support four Guatemalans. And no, I would not drive a Prius or other hybrid. After all, a Prius gets 90% of the gas mileage as a shitbox like my Hyndai Accent...but costs twice as much. The $15,000 more that you pay for the Prius...that's money, and money is energy, and natural resources. (I do like hybrids, though, because if I stop thinking, I can feel like I'm better than rednecks and other motorists with big vehicles. I can Show That I Care)<br />
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If I really loved the environment, I'd be a hunter-gatherer, as agriculture is probably even more environmentally destructive than mining and the use of fossil fuels.<br />
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Anyway, the upshot of it all is that I want it all. I want an easy job, security, lots of fun recreation and few hassles. I want shiny new objects regularly. I want clean national aprks and crags. All I want is what people around me have. Is it unreasonable to want exactly what others have? I didn't think so.<br />
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So, yeah. Fuck the environment, and fuck the five billion people on the planet who live on one-twentieth of what I do, in the midst of filth and deprivation. Gimme my stuff, my climbing and my life!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-70985491553612419022012-05-25T11:51:00.001-07:002012-05-25T11:51:38.240-07:00The ugly sideAt the crack of noon, under a cloudless sky, The Brewer and I roped up for Beulah's and Heliotrope, at the Solar Slab in Red Rocks. I was sweating from the approach and stuffed my shell into my pack on top of our post-climb PBRs.<br />
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"Butch," said The Brewer, "I'm bringing my shell."<br />
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I rumaged around memories of epics and concluded that The Brewer was right and stuuffed the shell into a stuff sack, clipped it to my harness, and set off.<br />
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I sweated enough to strip down to my blinding white skin, and on arriving on the Solar Slab terrace, we looked up and saw five people at the bottom of Heliotrope, which shares a first belay with Solar Slab and Sunflower.<br />
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At the belay were two parties. One was three women-- one experienced and two not. These had started their day at 6:00 AM at the gate, and had taken six hours to climb the three pitches of Johnny Vegas. The other two were a couple from Oregon. The girl wore a pair of jeans and a t-shirt, and her boyfriend shorts and a t-shirt, as well as a surprsingly large pack. They were on their first multi-pitch. <br />
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The three women set off up Solar Slab and I chatted with the girl as she followed up Heliotrope and I led behind her. They were on their first-ever multi-pitch. At this point the wind had picked up considerably, and we enjoyed perfect temps with the sun.<br />
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As I arrived at the bottom of the third pitch of Heliotrope, the guy was leading up onto the very runout fourth pitch, and, in somewhat higher wind, his girlfriend was shivering. I lent her my shell and brought The Brewer up. The girl thanked me for the shell and said she had left hers at the base. When I asked what we in her boyfriend's pack, she said he was carrying another rope, and their lunches.<br />
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Meanwhile, way below us, the party of three was still on the first pitch of Solar Slab proper. Their leader was a snail, as were the seconds, who were not simul-seconding, even though they had two ropes.<br />
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The Oregonian leader got scared and bailed onto the neighbouring route, Sunflower, and The Brewer and I climbed up. At the top of Heliotrope, the wind was ripping, the sun was gone, and clouds were moving in. We ran into two girls, Heather and Angela, and agreed to share ropes and simulrap down the Solar Slab raps. Heather had a shell, but Angela didn't, and so The Brewer gave her his. He had two wool layers and a fleece on.<br />
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As Heather and I rapped down, we looked across and saw the Oregonians. I asked them if they were bailing, and they said "nah, we're gonna finish."<br />
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I said "It's cold, you don't have a lot of clothes, and it might rain. You should bail." They wanted to comtinue.<br />
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A few raps later and we reached the belay where we had first met the Oregonians and the three women. The three women were bailing in what was now near darkness, very high-- like sideways ropes high-- wind, and very cold temps. It took them fucking forever to set up their rap, and then they refused to simul-rap. Above us, The Brewer was yelling rap beta to the Oregonians, who lacked not only clothes but headlamps.<br />
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"Look," I said to the three women, "there are seven people here. You're going to hold all of us up in bad weather. If you are worried about simulrapping, the first person can fireman the rest."<br />
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"Um, we're not comfortable with that," said the experienced woman.<br />
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The Brewer and Angela arrived, and The Brewer explained that the Oregonians had now found the rap route. They did have a light, it turned out-- one had a micro pen-light. At this point I stopped worrying about the Oregonians. All they had to do was rap straight down and they would get back to their packs. Iw as a bit worried about The Brewer. He's tough as nails, and smart, but there's only so much you can do while the wind rips away at you.<br />
<br />
By the time we rapped onto the Solar Slab terrace, it was dark, and the wind was howling. The three slugs managed to stay ahead of us on the next rappel, but on the rappel after that, they went the wrong way, and their whole system turned into a clusterfuck. The first woman rapped way past the anchor, into the wrong part of the gully, and decided to jug up.<br />
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"Fuck it," I said, "we're passing," and installed a sling and biener on a tree to bypass the slugs. Heather and I set off, passing the slug woman and her prussiks. If you have ever climbed the Solar Slab gully, you will know how ridiculous this is-- it's third class, and here was this woman, jugging!<br />
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As Heather and I started the final rap, a few drops of rain and hail fell. By the time we reached the ground, thirty seconds later, it was pouring and sleeting. And by the time we retrieved our packs and brought them to the ropes-- maybe two minutes-- there was a waterfall blasting down the gully, out of which emerged a soaked Brewer and Angela. I could nto believe my eyes. The waterfall was literally so powerful that no normal human being could have moved up it, even ont he third-class rock under it.<br />
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As we packed, we heard yelling, and looked up. The three slugs were doing their slow thing in the guly, but the Oregonians were atop the Solar Slab buttress, their tiny lamp a-flicker. Through the howling sideways wind and sleet, we heard "HEEEELLLLLLP!"<br />
<br />
Fuck.<br />
<br />
There comes a time for all of us when the decision we are about to make will have life-and-death consequences. We had all of our clothes on, and were freezing. Above us were two climbers minus proper lights and clothes, in what was now a full-on snowstorm.<br />
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There was no way to climb back up to help them. Sandstone is mush in water; the gully had a waterfall blasting down it; we were frozen and out of food. So we called 911. <br />
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The S.A.R. guy they put us onto said that there was literally nothing to be done. He told us not to attempt a rescue. He also told us that there was nothing he could do until morning: sleet, darkness and very high winds would prevent both climbers and helicopters from doing anything. He also advised us to make sure we were not putting ourselves in danger.<br />
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We went to Vegas for fast food and what followed was the most miserable night of my life. There were two dead people out there. Cotton clothes, no light, and trouble finding the bottom half of the rap route = death. I tossed and turned.<br />
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The next morning, as we silently waited for coffee to boil, a climber walked into our site and told us that S.A.R. had flown out at first light and had found the Oregonians, who had rapped Johnny Vegas, having had to cut various stuck ropes, and who had made it to the ground, but were too hypothermic to move. When S.A.R. got to them at 6:00 AM, the girl's body temp was 83 degrees. Both were in critical condition in the hospital.<br />
<br />
An hour later we saw a Ranger, who said "your 911 call saved their lives."<br />
<br />
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* * * *<br />
<br />
The question as to what we did right and wrong still bugs me. Should we have done anything differently? I have a few ideas.<br />
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a) It should-- but unfortunately doesn't-- go without saying that if you are on a multi-pitch, you should, always, have a rain-shell, a hat, and a headlamp, which can hang, light and hassle-free, from your harness. Angela lacked hers, as did the Oregonians, and I nearly left mine behind. There is no way that having this stuff is gonna slow you down, or compromise your experience, so just fucking bring it.<br />
<br />
b) The three women slugs made poor decisions. If you are climbing in three, and you are paranoid, and slow, and one of your party is a gumbie, you should not be on a multipitch. And if it takes you six hours to climb three pitches, you would be best off not starting a six-pitch route at 1:30 PM. If things go sideways, and one experienced person has to mandhandle two others off a route, you are asking for trouble. It is necessary to re-evaluate objectives in light of what happens. As I write, four people just died on Everest, and what it comes down to is, they wanted it badly enough that objective reality (it was late, and they were exhausted and sick) got ignored. <br />
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On top of that, when the shit hits the fan, you defer to the experienced, and you move fast. We simulrapped with the girls; the slugs should have done the same, or at least let us pass earlier. If you are gonna fuck around, don't interfere with others.<br />
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c) The Oregonians made every mistake in the book. Too much gear, too little clothing, not assessing their situation, refusing to turn around, no headlights, not having proper beta for finding the rap route-- add that to bad weather and you've got a disaster.<br />
<br />
d) Did we screw up? We did...but there is no way we could have known that we did. The Brewer managed to direct the Oregonians to the rap route, and then we descended. We could have waited for them on the Solar Slab terrace, but when we were rappeling off the terrace, we saw them, descending the rap route. We had no way of knowing that they would have trouble finding the rap route off the terrace. They also had double ropes, which, we assumed, would make for fast raps, as they had for us. They had, after all, climbed up past the rap route that morning.<br />
<br />
Should we have waited at the base of the cliff for the Oregonians? Maybe...but we were out of food, and frozen, and we did not have any emergency equipment like bivvy sacks. If the Oregonians had come down with any problems (e.g. hypothermia) we could have done little more than huddle with them. This would however also have put us into major danger. We could not have gone back in, because the park gates were closed. <br />
<br />
My S.A.R. friends in Squamish say that you take care of first yourself, then your rescue team, and finally the accident victims, in that order. A rescuer or team who are in danger or unable to do X or Y are going to not only not help the victims but also put themselves in danger, potentially amplifying the problem.<br />
<br />
e) Finally, <b>making things safer for people does not actually make things safer</b>. Solar Slab, which gets at least ten ascents a day, was equipped with a dedicated, 30-meter-at-a-time, bolted rap route. Paradoxically, this route has not done much to reduce epics and accidents. While it is now easier and faster to get off, this same ease and speed means that more less-experienced, slower, weaker etc parties will try the route. This will obviously lead to congestion, but it will also mean that, when things go sideways-- like rockfall, or weather-- there will be more people with fewer skills up there. The best rap route in the world is not going to help you if you can't retrieve stuck ropes, or if you forget your shell, or if you climb into poor weather too late in the day. <br />
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e) There is my Supertopo post (and many responses) <a href="http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/1455734/RedRocks-Accident-with-some-analysis-read-learn">here</a>.<br />
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Anyway. Everyone survived...but now I look at sunny 5.6 routes and I'm glad I have a light shell and a pocket lamp.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-5946621319823085732012-05-04T13:09:00.000-07:002012-05-04T13:09:33.815-07:00The Gota storyIt's been two years since The Driller and I put up La Gota Fria. As of this writing, we have the FCA-- first complete ass-- with two pitches (12c ansd 12a?) remaining to be freed. I'm not holding my breath.<br />
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After our ascent, a bit of a <a href="http://www.squamishclimbing.com/squamish_climbing_bb/viewtopic.php?t=2842&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0">shit-storm</a> happened on-line. Basically, Napoleon was unhappy that Driller and I had done the First Ass of the route without him. He having done the First Ass of some of the pitches, wanted to be included in the First Ass, but wasn't, and this is why.<br />
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When we began the route, in 2008, Napoleon and I started ground-up. We immediately ran into one problem: Napoleon didn't want to show up for work. After the second day on the route, we made plans to work a third, and Napoleon sent in his stead Kasper Podgoski, who nabbed the Fist Ass of P1 and 2 with me (on aid).<br />
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After this point, Napoleon would only show up for the occasional day. It became obvious that the route was going to go, and it became equally obvious that, if we wnet at Napoleon's pace (one day per month) we would be retired by the time the FA came around. So I recruited The Driller, who has a ton of aid experience. The Driller, despite having a non-climbing girlfriend (now his wife), a full-time job, and full-time school, ALL AT THE SAME TIME, became a regular feature on the route. I also had a non-climbing girlfriend-- and we have kids-- and a full-time job, so during the doing of this route, both Driller and I gave up quite a few climbing days.<br />
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Together we pushed the route -- entirely ground up, via aid-- to the top of P10. Napoleon disagreed with the tactics. For him, ground-up was too dangerous. However, he had not led a single pitch. At this point he proposed that he rap in from the top, so he and our friend Ben hauled a few hundred meters of rope up there and they rapped down and isntalled fixed ropes to the top of P10.<br />
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We now had fixed ropes-- as of April 2009-- on the whole route, and it basically came time to clean, log and bolt. This work, while not awful, isn't nearly as fun as actual climbing. You are hanging from aiders or a butt-bag, hacking away at dirt, logs or flakes of rock. Yes, you can shit-talk with your partner, and the views are great, but it's not climbing. <br />
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As the route progressed, Napoleon did less and less work, while Driller and I kept at it. Napoleon would send us missives which included JPEGs of the route with suggestions that we "scrub variations" on the route. In the summer of 2009, on several occasions I was on the route, working, while Napoleon would project this or that on the Badge, and yell at us "hey fuckers, you guys should try climbing something!" and so on. Indeed, that summer, Napoleon-- who was working 8 hours per week and not in school-- was climbing five days per week, and came out twice to work on the route.<br />
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In March of 2010, Driller and I told Napoleon flat-out that when the first ascent was going to happen, he would not be on it unless he massively upped his work commitment. He responded with "I will be available to work on the route in May and June." Instead, he went to the Valley and we didn't see him for two months.<br />
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One week before the first ascent, I ran into Napoleon and his girlfriend in Starbucks. I told him that Driller and I were gunning for the First Complete Ass next weekend. He said "cool" and I said that we would save the two 12+ pitches for him, to which he said "cool."<br />
<br />
On July 10, 2010, Driller and I did the F.C.A. of La Gota Fria, freeing all but two of the pitches.<br />
<br />
The next day, when I put the topo online, the shitstorm started, with Napoleon name-calling both Driller and I on Squamishclimbing. He was told by the admin that if his comments persisted they would ban him, as he was slandering both of us.<br />
<br />
When I added up the days of work on the route, it had taken something like 53 person-days. I had done around 30, Driller 15, and Napoleon 8. Other people like Ian Bennet, Tony McLane, Ben Roy, Paul Cordy and Kasper Podgorski had put in time as well.<br />
<br />
Napoleon was angry that he'd been excluded from the F.A. I still have mixed feelings about this. His lack of work-- especially considering that he had no job, no girlfriend, and summers off-- was shocking. At one point in the summer of 2009, I called him to see if he wanted to get out onto the route, and he said "I can't; I've been climbing all week and I am too tired." While he enjoyed a climbing summer, Driller and I hung on ropes and dug mud. <br />
<br />
Were we selfish in excluding him from the F.A.? Probably. Were we justified? Dunno, but it felt like it, and still does. If I were as generous as I'd like to be, I might've forgiven him...but that route came at great personal expense, it cost Driller and I many climbing days, and it felt like Napoleon was more into talking about the route than doing the work. Indeed, it became particularly galling when Driller and I would run into acquaintances mutual to us and Napoleon, and hear them say "so Napoleon was talking about your guys' route. How is it going?", when Napoleon would have been months not climbing the route.<br />
<br />
In the end, the route forged a much stronger and deeper bond between the Driller and I, who shared some hair-raising moments. It also taught me to aid-climb, to confront fear, and it showed me that small acts of selfishness (like showing up hours late for climbing days, and refusing to work, and assuming your partner will bring all of the stuff you forgot to pack cos you were out partying till 3 A.M. the night before) often portend much bigger ones.<br />
<br />
So, yeah. Ya dance with them what brung ya. But not forever.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-18247147543049865012012-05-04T11:48:00.001-07:002012-05-04T11:58:39.933-07:00Head GamesSo I am a little short of regular partners right now.<br />
<br />
The Filth has a baby and lives in Chiliwack, where, when not wiping up poo or banging away at either the wife's ass or his keyboard (he is writing a novel), he strokes himself while staring at the likes of either Slesse or the Internets full of bouldering pictures. <br />
<br />
The Driller has become a full-on corporate whore, much like Napoleon, the main differences between these two being that the Driller had a soul before he went over to the Dark (well-paying) Side, and he gets laid regularly.<br />
<br />
The Brewer has been ski-touring. Before that, he was swamped in Minion Training. This is when your previous Minion-- a.k.a. Brew Bitch-- gets fired, and you get a new Minion, who must be brought up to speed with things like degrees Plato, sparging rates, and why not to connect the brown ale hose to the I.P.A. tap. Which adds up to not much climbing, but The Brewer generally has kegs and kegs of beer at home to compensate him.<br />
<br />
So Butch has been bouldering and is pleased to provide free advertising for <a href="http://www.hiveclimbing.com/">The Hive</a> a new bouldering gym right beside Cliffhanger. Now using my sexy new used longboard and chugging a few beers, I've been riding (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZYY8AylpPg&feature=related">and falling</a>)down there and cranking a few V19s to stay in shape. After all, this is the summer when my long-awaited project, a nude freesolo of The Nose, goes down.<br />
<br />
The attentive reader will have noted the massive blatant lie in the former sentence. That's right, folks-- The Hive does not give its boulder problems V grades. Really!<br />
<br />
I talked to a setter there who told me that the deal was this: when you put a grade on a problem, people typically have several set reactions:<br />
<br />
a) "it's soft for the grade"<br />
<br />
b) "it's hard for the grade"<br />
<br />
c) "I can't do that, it's too hard"<br />
<br />
d) "I can't be fucked to do that-- it's too easy, and I am training for my nude freesolo of The Nose"<br />
<br />
I heard this and I thought back to two of my former limits-- getting into 5.10s and then 5.11s on trad. I had a trad rack for a whole year, was climbing 11+ on bolts, but lacked the sack (what women call ovaries) for 5.10. This, I thought, was the realm of HardPeople. Well, I would eventually break through this barrier at the Malamute, back when the thrill of climbing there had more to do with the routes and less with breaking the law. I sent a 10a or maybe 10b with some nice scary wet moves at the end. Anyway it turned out to be really cool, but not hard at all, leading me back to the old saw: walls are made of thoughts.<br />
<br />
My 5.11 moment came one year later. Bones and Eamonn slept on my floor en route to Alaska one spring morning, and I was jealous as I drove them to the airport. Then The Lawyer called. We had climbing plans. He said "I'll be two hours late, and I am bringing my wife, who is getting a massage."<br />
Argh Jesus fuck, I thought, the dumb bitch got it backwards-- massage AFTER climbing-- and anyways she was one of those people who climbed so that she and Her Husband! could "spend time together." This is another way of saying it was as much an act of masochism to watch her climb as it was for her to actually climb-- she just didn't want to be there, but she had to keep a steady eye on Her Husband!'s other girlfriend, Rock. Goodbye HardPeople, hello Puss-fest.<br />
<br />
<br />
So we ended up at the Bluffs on the world's nicest Saturday at 1:00 and The Lawyer led up that 5.9 corner up and left of Penny Lane while The Wife belayed him. When The Wife got on the rope it became obvious that this was going to be one of those two-hour pitches. An urge seized me and I walked over to Penny Lane. I put on my shoes, and jumped onto Penny Lane. The couple racking up for it said "NO! DON'T SOLO IT! WE'LL BELAY YOU! PLEASE COME DOWN" but I went on and did my first freesolo without really thinking about it. The route's crux is a one-move wonder ten feet off the deck and I barely noticed it. On top, I slid down the other end of The Lawyer's rope while The Wife made noises about having brought the wrong shoes.<br />
<br />
Now I am not spraying here. I have gone back to that route with a rope, and been scared. I have backed off of solos. I have felt like-- and been-- a total pussycat, and if you don't believe me, ask The Driller or The Filth. But back on the ground I realised that I'd just gone through another wall. I ran around the Bluffs and soloed every easy route I could find, then roped up for Partners in Crime, and onsighted my first 5.11 on gear. Walls are indeed made partly of thoughts, and that day I had the single best climbing day until then of my life.<br />
<br />
So back to the gym.<br />
<br />
Apparently they decided on this "grade cluster" system. Routes (problems) are "graded" colours, and each colour roughly corresponds to a set of grades. EG yellow is V3-V5, orange or whatever V1-V3 etc. What this does is, it gets people to<br />
<br />
a) try a variety of moves within a colour group (grade)<br />
b) not worry about the grade so much<br />
c) not argue about grades' hardness or softness<br />
d) appreciate the moves and difficulty, not the grade<br />
<br />
This reminded me of a Croft line, where he talks about how the other Bishops bouldering adventure is-- no, not V19 highballs a la Sharma-- but the smell of sage underfoot, a sunride, and the wonder of finding and climbing something nobody's seen.<br />
<br />
Anyway I have had a marvellous few sessions there and am very much enjoying it. No, the bastards didn't pay me to write this, though they should. Some free passes are in order. The OTHER thing I like is that they make all the holds on the prob the same colour, so, if you are a dumm giy like mee, you don't have to expend valuable energy trying to find your graying islands of purchase in a sea of dusted wall and peeling tape.<br />
<br />
Knight to king's fourth, Cliffhanger.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-90299629017280461802012-03-23T21:29:00.006-07:002012-03-23T22:47:55.044-07:00The Greatest Climbers I've Ever MetAlex Lowe once famously answered "Who is the greatest climber in the world?" with "the person habing the most fun. <br /><br />I was thinking about this at about 5 a.m. one cool dark July morning at Whitney Portal. I'd been in the Sierras for a week with my dear friend Loreen, and our grand total of successful climbs was zero. Loreen had had altitude sickness and serious cramps on the Hulk. On Conness, the altitude had kicked her ass, and I'd scared myself shitless with a tiny, five-cam rack on fifty meter 10+ pitches in swirling fog and wind, 10 km and a 12,000 foot pass from any help. And at Whitney Portal, she'd developed giardia. <br /><br />I felt for her but mostly I was being a self-indulgent jerk (internally). Here I was in the land of visionaries like Galen Rowell, Chris Sharma and Peter Croft, climbing fuck all. Loreen wanted a couple of days to scarf antibiotics, so I'd put up an ad for a partner and the response came froma guy camped at Upper Boyscout Lake. He had a rack and gear-- all I had to do was show up with a harness and suoes, and we'd go climb some Russell routes. <br /><br />Well, I made my way up to Boy Scout and found the tent but not the climber. Now what? I wandered along the shore of the lake, a loopy green-blue eye, snowcrusted, staring at the purple morning sky. I had shoes, chalk, a shell, a headlamp, my MP3 player, and food. I walked over to the base of The Fishhook on Mt Russell, put rock shoes on, and sat quietly, waiting for the free-soloist's "nay" signal. This for me has always been the sine qua non of free-soloing: waiting for the inner voice that says "today is not the day." I can never feel a for-sure "yes" from that voice...cos, let's face it, soloing is insane...but I've most defs gotten some loud NOs. The no wAs not forthcoming, so up I went. <br /> <br />I'd done the Fishook before, on a rope, and wasn't worried. Croft's guide, a copied page in my pocket, also had exactly the richt amount of beta: "climb the arête" . So I did, past the obligatory rattly three-move 5.8 sequence and then fired into endless blocky cracks and bomber jams<br /><br />On top I read summit register posts by people who climbed for their wife, despite their wife, in memory of so-and-so, and because, well, they could. It was 11 am and Whitney loomed. I grabbed my binocs and, thisbeing Saturday, saw ten parties at least on the East Buttress. I descended the scree slope back to my pack, and walked back to Boy Scout. It was 2 pm. A party just off the Mountaineer's Route was talking dinner. Loreen had steaks planned. But somethig drew me up and I soloed the East Face. This route has a few major air-under-your-ass sections, but your weight is on your feet, and the holds and rock are bomber. At 4pm I arrived on Whitney's summit in sunlight golden with firesmoke and empty-- no tourist screaming "GUESS WHERE I AM!" into cellphones-- except for some sociable crows. <br /><br />I had an ice ax and thought about the Mountaineer's descent, but I'd heard there was a fine walking path-- the hiker's-- and toom that. Well, the first 4 miles or so, dropping along a ridge, trail threaded through quartzite and granite towers glowing orange in sunset and smoke, was wonderful. Then there was the snowfield, steep and frozen. At the first campground, somebody told me I had only 14 more miles to go. By the time I got back to camp I had been moving for 21 hours, climbedn 10,000 vertical feet, and walked about 45 km. I know, somebody like Croft would do this in like 3 hours. But I felt great: new route soloed, new trail walked, beautiful views, etc. <br /><br />The next morning I awoke to Loreen making coffee and talking to a guy whonhad seen my partner-wanted ad, and who wS trying to pick her up in time-honoured tradition: by offering help for her truck, 1200 miles away but right there in her thoughts. When they heard about my day, they both said "holy shit!" and the stupid part of me was all gratified. Fuck, was I ever awesome!<br /><br />Then our neighbours came over. These were two wiry, wizened Korean-Canadian women in their late 40s. They had summited Whitney via the hiking route the day before. They saw my gear and were full of questions. "You crime a rock? How a much you pay for gym?" Tea and time eventually revealed that these two were grannies, and that their families basically thought they were insane. Traditional Korean women according to them were supposes to cook for men, care for babies, and decorate the house. These two were due to take a climbing course tomorrow. "I rike to crime Moun Russer" said the elder, then asked if I wanted to go to the Vancouver gym with them. <br /><br />How would YOU like to be domestic, subservient to husband and tradition, and physically inactive for 50 years of your life, and then start something so different that your family basically thinks you're insane? You ready to stick with it? <br />Well there you have it. Peter Croft can do it in 5 hours. Me in 21. The Korean ladies, probably never. But who's the best climber? The person facing the biggest set of challenges and going for it, full on: the Koreans bUnknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-88403671879547095962011-08-05T10:39:00.001-07:002011-08-05T11:11:17.605-07:00Vancouver hipstersThe other day I was cycling down Main Street on my 18-speed racing bike, which has brakes. (See? I'm uncool, or however you say that nowadays). I passed a hipster on his bike, one of these single-speed, five-spoke-wheeled, impeccably colour-coordinated affairs. The guy had the tight pants, underwear showing, full beard, T-shirt with band logo, mid-'80s glasses, etc. <br /><br />We were both headed for the liquor store, me for my daily bottle of Jack Daniel's, hipster for his twelve-pack of Pabst Blue Ribbon. I bought my bottle, stepped outside, sat down outside McDonald's, and took a massive swig. Suddenly 10:00 AM felt good. Hipster emerged, un U-locked his "whip," stuffed his U-lock into his tight pants pocket, and rode off. I wondered how he was going to skid-stop his fixie with a case of beer under one arm.<br /><br />At this point I thought of a conversation a friend had with her bike mechanic:<br />Sheena: How do hipsters stop if their bikes have no brakes?<br />Mechanic: They don't-- they just keep on being hipsters<br /><br />Then I realised, he wasn't riding a fixie-- it was a single-speed bike with f+b brakes. I went home and on a whim googled the band name on the guy's T-shirt. (I am always on the make for cool bands to download and then not listen to). The band in question was, it seems, an alt-music (whatever <span style="font-style:italic;">that</span> is) parody act.<br /><br />So...let me get this straight. He rides something that <span style="font-style:italic;">looks</span> like a fixie, but isn't. He buys PBR-- the cheapest of American beers-- which isn't the cheapest of Canadian cheap beers (that honour, at least at my local liquor store, goes to Cariboo). He dresses hipster, presumably to show how cool he is (or is not, which of course is even cooler). The guy, I thought, is like a copy of a hipster, signalling membership in the tribe via proper purchases.<br /><br />Then I thought about his T-shirt, and got lost in the many levels of irony involved in advertising your love of a band that made fun of you...and realised, OK, this is meta-hipsterdom. I am no longer smart enough to figure out-- or to even determine whether or not it is WORTH figuring out-- whether or not this is real hipsterdom, or a copy, or a lame imitation, or majorly meta. Hipsters, you win.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-71001505188959411982010-10-04T16:46:00.001-07:002010-10-07T12:47:11.934-07:00Beware the BritThis entry should basically be a warning: beware of old-school Brit trad climbers. <br /><br />I have been trying to "get on the hill" with Squamish hardman Kevin McLane for years. His son, former hair model and now rock-climbing guide, Tony, and I have had a few days, but I've always wanted to see what McLane <em>pére</em> was all about.<br /><br />While I <em>like</em> making assumptions and generalisations, I <strong>LOVE</strong> stereotypes, so I went right ahead and assumed that McLane Sr. would be a bad-assed and fearless gear-minimalist with more black humour than shiny new cams. And, after years of <em>are ya free Sunday?</em>s, we finally met up in Squamish at Napoleon's Favorite, where we began the day as all good climbers do, by getting stupidly overcaffeinated while the once-dry pavement outside became slowly darker with invisible mist, and people of every sporting persuasion dropped by to avoid the...mist? rain? cool?<br /><br />McLane and I spent three hours avoiding the rain, then finally said "well fuck it!" and headed toward the Squaw, or whatever it is now Natively Correct to call it/her. Loaded with a ridiculously small rack, a few bieners and 5 slings, plus a Barley topo that looked like black spaghetti drooled by a retarded abstract artist onto a crag picture taken by a blind photographer, we ambled up. <br /><br />At the base of The Sleeping Native Woman, we found a plethora of black bolts heading up into some oddly-bleached-looking fine cracks. We were in the general area of Straight Outta Squampton, White Feather etc, but since Barley's topo looked like a schizophrenic's Cubist rendition of the Squ-- oops, I mean, the Nobly Reclining Native Goddess-- we hopped on the easiest-looking thing there.<br /><br />A mere five minutes after roping up with McLane Sr., who has nailed the Grand, done early FAs in Yosemite, climbed grit when there were only pins, hammers and balls for gear, and most recently celebrated his 60th birthday by doing both the Grand Wall and the Test of Metal in one day, sucky me was whining like a puppy as I crammed a left leg into a 5" offwidth and pawed with my right at rain-greased granite.<br /><br />McLane Sr.'s largest cam, one of those Wild Cunt blue things, rattled around inside the off-wdith flake. The cam was like monogamy for a Mormon sex addict (and they are legion...Utah has the highest rate of porn downloads per capita in the U.S.): it impressed Mom wen you told her about it, but it wasn't nearly enough once you got into action. I whimpered and grunted and then mantled to something safer. <br /><br />McLane Sr., it turned out, was doing a Buddhist thing and reducing his gear-stash. No draws, long slings, or chalk...oddly like back in 1970, when his roadie self discovered the joys of fear, pain and near-death and abandoned the world of Spandex, speed and speed. His climbing partner-- with whom young McLane was to do some hairy shit in the Alps and the Valley, back when hemp ropes, Whillans harnesses, glass wine-jugs and headbands were de rigeur-- had one rule about gear: one brought six pins, six slings and twelve bieners on a route. Period. <br /><br />Kevin did the 6th ascent of the Becky Chouinard in 1971 or so. This being early in the game, beta came from Fred Beckey, who they found in a bar in Jasper, waiting out the rains and seducing the waitresses, one per night. Beckey's beta-- written on a napkin-- included three sentences. One each on how to get to the Bugaboos, how to find the Howsers, and what the route looked like. It took them 1.5 days and they had 6 pins, 6 slings and 12 bieners. 30 years later to the week, McLane repeated the route with Mark Piche, who at the time of the FA had been a swimmer in Papa Piche's nut-sack, in 9 hours...but with a rack that weighed three times as much.<br /><br />(The most remarkable part of this story is not the climbing, which was balls-out for its time, nor the micro-rack, nor the fact that Fred had by this time slept with half of the waitresses in Jasper, but rather that all the waitresses were still keen on serving him beer, much of it free, and none appeared to be fighting about their conquest.)<br /><br />Hardman set off up our second pitch and styled the wet slab, and then the no-gear wide crack, with only the occasional huff and puff. When I followed I noticed an enormous gap between his second piece and his third-- like 10 meters-- and again shuddered. We rapped off this pitch and into the neighbouring route, and I led a fine 10- pitch, and then, darkness approaching, we rapped.<br /><br />OK the man is a full-on hardman...but the ultimate evidence for this had come to me some years ago, when young Tony told me that his Dad and Mom, even after a divorce, got along splendidly.<br /><br />"That's cool," I said, happy to hear that young McLane wasn't in the midst of custody battles or arguments over finances.<br /><br />"Yeah," said Tony, "they get along great! Actually my Mom is getting re-married and my Dad is going to the wedding. Err, no, wait, he's not. He WAS going to go, but he got invited to go to the Bugs." You can take the man away from climbing...<br /><br />So! McLane Sr is a bad-assed and largely fearless gear minimalist. Be careful if you get the invite to climb with Kevin...he'll want half the gear and twice the runout you do...at age 62.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-50429278666104677242010-09-27T11:12:00.000-07:002010-09-27T11:57:33.566-07:00Ed Spatt 1963-2010<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjXaKplLJlrroOssKk_AzeutPgqw3pMlB5o6Ty_zj89Ki6cZcXN6J5zUfLP5xdKaLL5bTsNQjW67w74YRWi4DdKkkuJwgDWKRyh3x1f86OYLBsa5eKTaErHtDq7n1Qdqp1TbvhTLVK01uU/s1600/ed+pic.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 264px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjXaKplLJlrroOssKk_AzeutPgqw3pMlB5o6Ty_zj89Ki6cZcXN6J5zUfLP5xdKaLL5bTsNQjW67w74YRWi4DdKkkuJwgDWKRyh3x1f86OYLBsa5eKTaErHtDq7n1Qdqp1TbvhTLVK01uU/s400/ed+pic.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5521669349531064210" /></a><br /><br />Ed Spatt died in August, of lung cancer. That a guy who'd spent his whole life in the mountains, and probably smoked less than ten cigarettes in his lifetime, should die of lung cancer, is one of those fucked-up things that nobody can really explain.<br /><br />I climbed once with Ed, a slab route on the Apron. I don't remember the route, but I do remember that it was incredibly hard (but Ed, who'd said "I'm in pretty lousy shape, onsighted the 11+ pitches), and that Ed's enormous climbing shoes stunk like sun-warmed dumpster when he peeled them off on Broadway. He was my physio. I last saw him in February, in the gym, revving up to train after finishing radiation therapy.<br /><br />So I drove yesterday in the rain to Squamish for the celebration of Ed's life and I'll pass on a few of the stories that brothers, parents and friends passed on.<br /><br />Ed was born in Bolivia. Red-haired and gangly, he wold respond to locals' stares by saying "<em>Soy boliviano, pues!</em>" and smiling. On arriving in Canada at age two, he quickly figured out that when he couldn't get what he wanted (usually more food), he could say "you're discriminating against me because I'm Bolivian!"<br /><br />Ed grew up with two brothers and, well before he was old enough, he was doing adult stuff. One day a horrid stench came from his closet. On investigation, it turned out that young Ed was brewing beer in secret, having asked his mother, who'd said "absolutely not!" He was in the mountains early, hiking and skiing with family and climbing Slesse by age 16. Ed's teen climbing adventures also included beer-fuelled night-time ascents of the Lion's Gate Bridge towers and various UBC buildings. <br /><br />Friends and family remembered Ed as somebody with a serious cholcolate habit, an infinite appetite for both food and the outdoors, and as somebody who, no matter how bad things got-- and they get pretty bad in the alpine sometimes-- never complained. <br /><br />One day in the late 1970s after a first ascent in Squamish, Ed and the two first ascentionists were sitting around the top of the cliff. They were thining what the route should be called. A Beatles tune? A Carlos Castaneda character? Ed, staring across the channel at the fast food on the 99, said "man, all I can think about is burgers and fries!"<br /><br />Greg Foweraker told about Ed's appetite. At a popular local place in the late 1970s, it was all you could eat for $5. Ed would eat a head of lettuce the night before to try to expand his stomach, and often managed to get down four or five platefuls. Years later, when Peter Croft (another guy with a legendary appetite) returned to give a slide show, Ed put his hand up and asked Croft "Hey, is it really true that you only ever got two plates of food at the all you can eat place?"<br /><br />Ed qualified as a teacher, and, after teaching physics and math for five years, quit, because he was bored, and became a physio. He often wondered why people retired at the end of their lives, since that was when you'd be old and worn out, and unable to do fun stuff like ice-climbing and bike-racing. Ed wore red pants and red jackets. Ed needed food and would go hypoglycemic. More than one climber said it was dangerous to climb with a sans-breakfast Ed.<br /><br />Rachel Stenberg told about kayaking with Ed and a group of people in the Charlottes years ago. One of them was into the Zen of rudderless kayaking, and when one day injuries prompted kayak-shuffling, superfit and superconfident Ed ended up in the rudderless kayak. And, on the trip's calmest day, in the middle of the sunny ocean, with nary a wave in sight, Ed managed to dump the kayak! After a letter-perfect ocean rescue, Ed was reinstalled in the rudderless, and instead of cussing the kayak, told the rescuers that he was happy -- after years in boats-- to have been shown how to pull off rescues properly.<br /><br />One partner told of Ed's first attempt at Penny Lane. Ed whipped, ripped a piece, and stopped, a few feet above the ground, hanging upside-down, an ear-to-ear grin splitting his face. "Pretty intense, huh?" he said, and got back on the horse. Lots of people, including Ed's girlfriend Nica, told about how, last summer before his death, even when he could no longer walk or talk, Ed's enormous smile brightened his hospital room.<br /><br />Food, food, food, beer, wine, food, mountains, food, biking, oceans, his friends, food, math, his brothers, food, his parents and relatives: Ed loved 'em all and made all of us smile. We'll miss you, tall man. <br /><br />May there be a fucking MASSIVE chocolate buffet wherever you now are.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-65059297838200141052010-08-12T13:03:00.000-07:002010-08-12T14:32:01.073-07:00Into the Great Wide Open...I knew exactly what was coming up, and I was stoked. Tomorrow, Oz and Hobbit Book: perfect Tuolomne granite, six pitches, a super mix of bolts and bomber gear climbing. The day after, we would climb the Harding Route on Mt Conness: ten pitches of 5.9 in a spectaclar position, ending at 13,000 feet. The good Peter Croft gives both the maximum number of stars.<br /><br />We pulled otu of town, loaded with food, booze and gas, and would our way up to the Sawmill Campground, where we hauled our tents to the site and swatted bugs. My partner, The Captain, was however oddly quiet. As we finished set-up, I asked him what was up, and he said that his Mom had gone to hospital with some as-of-yet undiagnosed ailment. He was worried.<br /><br />The next day The Captain led us through the first two pitches of Oz, and I launched into the coolest-looking crack I'd ever seen, outside of the Split Pillar: 40 meters of overhanging dihedral, perfetc hands, and feet to take the edge off. And as I placed my third cam, it hit me.<br /><br />Suddenly, I couldn't move. My right arm, jammed into the smooth clean crack, stiffened. My legs felt frozen, and yet my feet stuttered and skated on the knobby stance. My left palm dripped with sweat. <br /><br />"What's up?" yelled the Captain.<br /><br />"I, uhh--" came out before I realised, I had no idea. I had bomber gear, loads of it. I had no chance of hitting anything like the deck, a cam at eye-level, loads more gear, a bomber stance, and seven years experience climbing exactly this sort of route, mostly at harder grades. I was fed, rested, fit and psyched. And I was totally fucked.<br /><br />Long story short, I downclimbed and down-aided back to the Captain, and could not explain what had happened. I was paralysed, scared shitless, and what was worse was, there was no reason for this.<br /><br />We bailed. At the ungodly hour of 10 AM, we arrived back in the campground, and I sunk into my chair, dazed, a sick hollowed-out emptiness inside me, and yet I was oddly glad that here I sat, on a perfect climbing day.<br /><br />The Captain went to town to use the phone, and I self-examined. It bugged me. WHAT was going on? I had FREESOLOED the grade I'd bailed off, for Christ's sake! Don't get me wrong-- I am as chickenshit as the next guy. I have bailed off alpine routes, ski tours, boulder problems and all kinds of climbs because I was worred about either objective hazard or my own skill. I am no stranger to wussiness! But this one...this one didn't provide me with an answer. WHY?<br /><br />The Captain returned and said "bad news."<br /><br />His Mom in Vancouver had been diagnosed with cancer. He might have to bail from our Sierras trip and go home. I told him I'd drive him wherever he needed to geta bus or a plane. He said "let's see how I feel in the morning, but I gotta warn ya, I might not be into this."<br /><br />At 4 AM, the Captain said, "might as well" as I shook his tent, and later we trudged through mint-scented pine forest and crunched up onto a snowfield, and won the ridge crest as the sun dawned, pale and clear, into an icy still blue sky. We made our way down to the start of the Harding route. The Captain geared up and led. After placing two nuts, he stopped, hung, and said "I can't do it," before backing off.<br /><br />Now if you are going to bail, the base of Conness is a great place to do it. Below us stretched a talus field, trees, and Tuolmne, and way out West in the haze was what might have been The Valley. The Captain sat, totally still, eyes closed, sweating. I drank in the still and the quiet, and my mind returned to yesterday. Still no answer.<br /><br />It being obvious that we were not gonna get up the Harding Route, I wondered about the West Ridge. Croft gives it four stars and says that, outside of the first ascent of an 8,000 foot 5.11 route he did, in one day, with Conrad Anker in Pakistan, it is his favorite route. The Captain and I loaded the gear into the packs, and ambled off to the west. I wanted to see the ridge.<br /><br />And beautiful it was...a low-angle start, then a cleaner and cleaner, and steeper and steeper line, on beautiful golden granite.<br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvfY7N8W2EasNfpwIpxCcsAvOsX1LesFkOJ-oSQxb8Rt3aRgOToOL8kT8xSa5bJMEbu4ugzNeaHLGvWReQm9wStWb5TPpbi2-xzLNxwdqVfln4XXi8dO4ozCneh63iYtfB1E1Jrc7GZ60/s1600/conness.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvfY7N8W2EasNfpwIpxCcsAvOsX1LesFkOJ-oSQxb8Rt3aRgOToOL8kT8xSa5bJMEbu4ugzNeaHLGvWReQm9wStWb5TPpbi2-xzLNxwdqVfln4XXi8dO4ozCneh63iYtfB1E1Jrc7GZ60/s400/conness.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5504638953364212818" /></a><br /><br />We sat on a lovely clean boulder and munched lunch. And suddenly the Captain stood up.<br /><br />"Fuck THIS," he said.<br /><br />"Wha?"<br /><br />"Let's climb this."<br /><br />"Are you--"<br /><br />"Yeah."<br /><br />I didn't ask any questions. We put on rock shoes and chalk bags, and started soloing on perfect cracks, with endless incuts everywhere. After the arch-bridge-- the part where Croft writes how he tried to make himself feel light-- we figured we'd done about a third of the route, and roped up. I handed the Captain my Tiblocs, and when he'd installed the first started climbing. Cussing not having brought the gri-gri, I decided, what the hell, u8ntied from the rope, and attached myself to the rope using only a prussik.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiMQYMXkZjQnmnrhAqqz4rGAjLh5p0DYUg2U086uO0_k0gaNhVbOdVCsiqTtLojw5WqYdd_JVHts9V97LP4oE5s1jrhOAV_Wow3gUMH0m7P5qYbWqOyK0upTp2o8266n72ClNqSQM5nbdY/s1600/second+conness+pic.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiMQYMXkZjQnmnrhAqqz4rGAjLh5p0DYUg2U086uO0_k0gaNhVbOdVCsiqTtLojw5WqYdd_JVHts9V97LP4oE5s1jrhOAV_Wow3gUMH0m7P5qYbWqOyK0upTp2o8266n72ClNqSQM5nbdY/s400/second+conness+pic.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5504638948575370786" /></a><br />Here's a pic I scavenged online...what the route felt like.<br /><br />With 20 meters of rope trailing below me, I followed the Captain as the rope snaked up into the sky. We did the last two-thirds of the route in three long simul-pitches. The rock flowed, the air was warm, the entire Sierra spread out below us, and at times I waved my right arm over hundreds of meters of still air off the side of the ridge. On top, I found myself high-fiving the Captain with a shit-eating grin on both our faces. The whole route must have taken an hour.<br /><br />Wordlessly, we picked our way down the descent, glimpses of El Capitan and Half Done away, way DOWN, in the hazy distance.<br /><br />Back at camp, we sat amongst the mosquito wail in the sun, and again the Captain said "fuck it."<br /><br />"?"<br /><br />"I'm not going home. You know, my Mom has cancer...but they can't do anything till tests are done. I could go home and worry, and do nothing, or I can climb."<br /><br />Two days later, I began shitting myself on Sun Ribbon Arete when the only gear in the crux was a blue Alien (which is nobody's friend). And then I realised, again-- I was so worried about falling (onto an Alien, and then three bomber nuts, in utter safety), worried about things not going as planned, that I wasn't paying attention to what was right in front of me.<br /><br />And then I understood. I had known what I was going to do, four days ago. The Captain had known that his Mom wouldn't get cancer, and then he'd KNOWN he'd have to leave his trip to see her. We were both wrong. <br /><br />This was the real gift, it turned out: the totally unexpected happened. Failing is a part of climbing...and so is failing when the possibility seems remote. Emotional pain is part of life...and so is looking it in the eye, feeling it, and dealing with it. We got handed what we didn't expect, our plans changed, and what did we get? I stopped worrying about the "causes" of my silent, day-ending freakout. The Captain stopped pointlessly worrying about Mom. And the Universe threw in an awesome route-- the West Ridge-- we hadn't planned on.<br /><br />I swung my right leg out, toed the nubbin, reeled in the sidepull, sunk my hands into a nice deep crack, and smiled.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-35546060231020769652010-08-07T17:00:00.000-07:002010-08-07T18:05:09.108-07:00Butch Makes Lemonade (2)So there I was after my second day of climbing, wandering around the campground, looking for partners. My very limited set of options-- 5.8-- was used up. I now needed to step up, or rope up, and since I am WAY too much of a wuss to step up and solo some 5.9, I went a-partner hunting.<br /><br />Now you gotta love Applebee Campground. You thought that the hottest people in the world were in porn films, or perhaps on America's Next Top Model, or maybe in Napoleon's new SUV, or perhaps lounging about the Gossip Girl set? NOOO! The hottest people in the world are at Applebee Campground, and when the daytime highs are 25 Celsius (that's "freakin' hawt" for you Yankees) what you get is people stripping down to the essentials: clothes that reveal bellies and forearms, and a chance to rock the coolest possible headwear. Ladies and gents alike stood around, sat around, even strummed around-- one guy and his girlfriend, who were not climbers, had hauled in a guitar, some comfy chairs and a mean stock of vodka, and sat while their buddies climbed, wailing away, even pulling some major rock-star moves one evening when dry lightning and Twi-hard clouds brooded. <br /><br />There were so many sexy people around that Butch, your humble narrator, couldn't keep it in his pants. Especially when his spraying Coloradan-- Sprayradan-- neighbours were joined by more Coloradan buddies, this newest batch of whom upped the spray ante by spraying about not mere All-Along-The-Watchtower-esque 5.12-, but 5.13b! ooooh! They turned the spray into a downpour when one of them told me that "yeah, it was a couple of Germans who did it, so it might be easier than 5.13b." Pretty good, but not anywhere near as good as<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">THE GREATEST PIECE OF SPRAY I HAVE EVER HEARD:<br /></span><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">(posted on the V.O.C. bulletin board after a certain climber, well known to the now-14 followers of this blog, returned from their first trip to the Valley)<br /></span><br /><br />"I WENT AND LOOKED AT ASTROMAN. DIDN'T GET ON IT. BUT I THINK IT WOULD HAVE GONE REALLY WELL."<br /><br />After my chat with the Sprayradans, I ambled down to the Smoking Spaniards. En route, I passed the miniature tent which contained the California Girl and her husky boyfriend. I had been dutifully eavesdropping outside their tent every night, waiting, penis in hand (the Sprayradan truck in the Porcupine Lot had had a massive one drawn on it), for their sex sounds, which turn me on ever so much, but none were forthcoming. (I later found out that this was because I had forgotten to remove my earplugs before creeping around camp, which also accounted for the odd breathing sound i constantly heard the next two days of climbing, and how my partner-to-be would resort to sign language and thrown rocks to get me to haul the rope up.) The husky Yankee lay about, reading George Orwell. I said to him "weapons of mass destruction" and he said "yup" and I left it at that. The girl was nowhere in sight.<br /><br />The Spaniards were gone, off to do the Becky-Chouinard, having left behind only the older guy's sick girlfriend, who complained about <span style="font-style:italic;">la grippe</span> and her <span style="font-style:italic;">dolor de cabeza</span>, and in true Spanish style threw cigarettes and whiskey at the virus. The Koreans were eyei9ng their new route-- now four pitches long-- with an array of binoculars, while one of them fried Spam. I then finally hit the jackpot-- I met one Nelson from Nelson, BC, and we had soon hatched plans for doing the Super Direct on Snowpatch.<br /><br />OK now Butch will S.T.F.U. for a bit and show you some pictures.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6T_3UlkWZnyR63xjDPMDm1GP6AwWePVGg3k-TmKMIG6uvPM0CyQ-aweDDkISqnqrYKXBJ0s0ZGa4Ywd6PmJ_9PLUbrqlqFs8ZUgy06X0vSRbNTN9nWGvvW243IV9jyOAZJV8ZkYg2sQ8/s1600/nelson+on+SD+%231.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6T_3UlkWZnyR63xjDPMDm1GP6AwWePVGg3k-TmKMIG6uvPM0CyQ-aweDDkISqnqrYKXBJ0s0ZGa4Ywd6PmJ_9PLUbrqlqFs8ZUgy06X0vSRbNTN9nWGvvW243IV9jyOAZJV8ZkYg2sQ8/s400/nelson+on+SD+%231.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5502829393468563810" /></a><br />This is Nelson leading P2 (5.10c?) of Super Direct. It was somewhat mossy...so...we (I) cleaned it. I spent about two hours seconding this pitch, and when I was done, an enormous shit-stain of moss, dirt and rocks spewed onto the glacier below the route, much like my computer screen drips with my saliva when I spray about my routes.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEmL8eIG2JnN5GYzLlb22jIG280sl4pMuT5zVzPMBi8hLWNLcpnhr1ZFsqA5CZaJ11vceosMR6531MlxgWjUQA_vJBNcYgzityUJdgFqizpSDbQjOH0zo-YVj7MdSRzaFUtBj5HAUa9eE/s1600/DSC03074.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEmL8eIG2JnN5GYzLlb22jIG280sl4pMuT5zVzPMBi8hLWNLcpnhr1ZFsqA5CZaJ11vceosMR6531MlxgWjUQA_vJBNcYgzityUJdgFqizpSDbQjOH0zo-YVj7MdSRzaFUtBj5HAUa9eE/s400/DSC03074.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5502830705822836018" /></a><br />This is the route base when we finished. MMM...but seriously, now the AWESOME P2 is clean<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyuTY4R-IwaC7-RdhWzGwvxvzsYwSTa2izjkmu-pdGFrLm35Urf-JvuHTGRpgnA4xYpl1rh2sh55FRw0RRUYIpM70N_9hlOprVPtLis2n6DPBanHWxxdhOY8jw7qQwVe4Tm8jG98AYKmU/s1600/chimney+view1.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 249px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyuTY4R-IwaC7-RdhWzGwvxvzsYwSTa2izjkmu-pdGFrLm35Urf-JvuHTGRpgnA4xYpl1rh2sh55FRw0RRUYIpM70N_9hlOprVPtLis2n6DPBanHWxxdhOY8jw7qQwVe4Tm8jG98AYKmU/s400/chimney+view1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5502827430955696322" /></a><br />Here Nelson follows P5. Awesome position and very easy chimney/stembox climbing.<br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhLTYimC-lJJ9Db9jy9lRRiYKbYUE99EuiV_eq2o7LlSEcL844FdDQuLS51vd1HgFL_XH6mM50Ax3oHaApZnTCuECCKildWpEpw2-0MorUTfwtC_E0BD8xRwCSMNNk43rAya5b2p_eXjek/s1600/nelson+on+SD+traverse+with+Pigeon+%26+owsers.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 278px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhLTYimC-lJJ9Db9jy9lRRiYKbYUE99EuiV_eq2o7LlSEcL844FdDQuLS51vd1HgFL_XH6mM50Ax3oHaApZnTCuECCKildWpEpw2-0MorUTfwtC_E0BD8xRwCSMNNk43rAya5b2p_eXjek/s400/nelson+on+SD+traverse+with+Pigeon+%26+owsers.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5502827456947682658" /></a><br />This is Nelson ont he scary (but cool) P6, which has a hair-raising traverse, amazing position, clean rock...you know, all of the good stuff you expect of the Bugaboos (except there was no beer stashed on top).<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhy8oKhzMgDdPNwDSs2BQ7uVIZkAtaz1rSFfJ6iwRnRSPjAXnWeYpLeYUq9q-T2RuJhyb5LvC9w5PyOAjbkLrKAR-YxQholG3MaDopB3LgnDgJVB95cT7nn_aaxtAE7fQjn5xxkjbW-12g/s1600/nelson+on+SD+final+pitch+2.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 241px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhy8oKhzMgDdPNwDSs2BQ7uVIZkAtaz1rSFfJ6iwRnRSPjAXnWeYpLeYUq9q-T2RuJhyb5LvC9w5PyOAjbkLrKAR-YxQholG3MaDopB3LgnDgJVB95cT7nn_aaxtAE7fQjn5xxkjbW-12g/s400/nelson+on+SD+final+pitch+2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5502827451041477986" /></a><br />Here, Hardman Nelson follows me on the final pitch, an epic of weird moves, traverses and end-of-route surprises.<br /><br />Well anyway, we had a super day up there on Super direct-- if you are in the Bugs, and there aren't enough smoking Spaniards or Sprayoradans in camp to entertain you, and you don't want to do Sunshine Cracks AGAIN, do this route. If only because Peter Croft (and me) have climbed it, so you can be like him (and me).<br /><br />Back at camp, the young lady Spaniard continued to cough and smoke away. The Koreans were now 6 pitches off the deck, <span style="font-style:italic;">tink tink tink</span>, and as I lay me down to wait for my espresso pot, I closed my eyes for a nap, and the Yankee Girl in the mini tent ambled over and said "I hear you're massively badass, plus I was checking out your rack earlier and you're totally hot, so would you like to hook up tonight-- I'll do anything you like [at which pooint I imagined having her go to the food locker and dig my sugar out of my dry bag]-- and go climbing with me tomorrow?" I then woke from my afternoon nap, but did in fact find the Yankke Girl there. She launched into a tirade about her lazy-assed partner, asked me if I had plans, and I told her sorry, since I was, like Elizabeth Bennet would have said, "firmly engaged," at which point her face fell.<br /><br />The Sprayoradans returned from their day-- "just some twelve-minus, we were tired"-- and then began spraying about tomorrow's big day, where they were sure to onsight the 13- (err, they mean, 12+) and show the Germans what was up with grades.<br /><br />The Ground Crew guitar player had created a song. We sat about and chatted awhile, and discussed music. I, being the old fart in the group, said that I was amazed at how much good music was out there, and what a huge variety there was, and how many artists were selling themselves via the Internet. The guitar player, Dustin, said, "yeah, and a lot of them are really creative!"<br /><br />"Like who?"<br /><br />"Nickleback. Pushing the aesthetic limits."<br /><br />"Yeah. First, the singer was blond, with wavy hair. Second album, even blonder!"<br /><br />"Totally."<br /><br />"Third album...even blonder, a-a-and he STRAIGHTENED it!"<br /><br />"Yeah man. THAT is innovation."<br /><br />On my final day, Nelson and I went to do West Side Story, which was pretty cool...except opposite us, on PAddle Spray Direct, were yet MORE Sprayoradans, who went on and on about what a bummer it was that they were climbing only Paddle Spray, and not The Power of Lard (5.14R, WI7+, M13, A5+, V13, VI). We enjoyed our day, and watched the leading Sprayoradan grunt nd heave through the crux of Paddle Spray. "That," said Nelson, "should have looked easier" and we both laughed. The hardest thing of course was the rappels: since McCrowd Arete shares raps with WSS and Paddle Spray, it was a veritable international village of rap techniques and knots and waits.<br /><br />Back at camp, I soaked up the view, brewed more coffee, fantasised about the Becky, said goodbye to the Yankee Girl, the SPaniard Girl, the Sprayoradans, and went to bed, hoping that Lisbeth Salander would finally corral the bad guys. <br /><br />And now it is time to head BACK to the Bugs...I am hoping that over the next four days I will at least get to check out some more international accents and cooking styles.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-37129628081374495462010-07-30T10:37:00.000-07:002010-08-04T16:26:35.787-07:00Butch Makes Lemonade (1)The voicemail took three rambling, drawling minutes to say "A boulder crashed onto my hand and I can't go to the Bugs." Loreen, after a heli-rescue off Serratus, was out, at which point I started getting superstitious. Last year's partner-to-be, the good Mr Holgate, injured an ankle. Wanna get fucked up? Make climbing plans with Butch. Well, that's what Napoleon would-- and did-- say, after spraying about how he had done an aid climbing course with not just any old person, but with NameDrop, in this case Matt Maddaloni.<br /><br />So I ended up in Golden, shopping like a Korean girl enjoying her last day ever on Robson Street. I bought Landjaeger sausages (the alpinist's power-bar), and of course granola bars (the suburban man's alpinist food). I bought a Stieg Larsson novel about the political failure of Swedish socialism, err I mean, about a bunch of pimps and perverts and murderers, and I bought a guide's tarp. This last I got mainly because I was too lazy to haul a tent all the thousand meters up to Applebee, and cos it made me feel hardcore...like, if I have this, I will consider trying All Along The Watchtower, which is 12-, 34 pitches, and majorly bad-ass.<br /><br />As I arrived, muffler intact, at the porcupine lot, I had an Indian Creek flashback, set off by the assembled hordes of Colorado SUVs, one of which had an enormous grinning penis etched into its muddy back window. The symbolic import of this penis escaped me. I humped my to-me epic pack up to Applebee, and promptly turned into a climbing mendicant. I wandered the campground like the ghost of a long-dead soul, begging for a climbing partner. <br /><br />This was a convenient way to scope out the whole campground close-up...and what a mix of people there were! First up were the Koreans, who were working some massive aid line, siege-style, beside the Beckey-Mather route on the east side of Snowpatch. You could tell the Koreans were in fact Korean, and not (God forbid) Japanese or some other inscrutable ethnicity, from the massive stacks of Spam tins, their shiny new haul-bags and other gear, their radio station, and the occasional blast of kim-chi that spread like a stealthy mixture of ninja and giardia fart through the campground.<br /><br />Beside them were a cluster of long-haired smokers who were obviously Spanish. French smoke too but they go for shorter hair and they don't do the alpine, being pussies and all. Oh wait, that was the Iraq war. Oops, sorry to all the hot French women I have seen over the years, puffing on a cigarette, and saying "I weel climb zees roooote, I sink iss fife zirteen, fife fourteen, somesimg like zat, of course I don't know" then actually sending it. <br /><br />The Colorado flashbacks came thick and fast. I found a spot to throw down my tarp and my Stieg Larsson novel (both about the same size) and heard a donkey-like braying.<br /><br />"Yeah, uh--huhh, we decided that we wouldn't get on the Watchtower, there were some clouds in the morning" sprayed one. Now if you are going to announce how bad-assed you are (Watchtower) you generally don't want to appear frightened by a few hours' worth of cumulonimbal tomfoolery, which is standard fare in the Bugs. The three sprayers stood around like a bad imitation of John Long, Jim Bridwell and Billy Westbay after firing the Nose in a day in 1973 (now THAT is majorly bad-assed...imagine how many cigarettes Bridwell must have needed to keep his shit together on that one, and what a logistical nightmare it would have been to haul all them smokes, and keep The Bird adequately stoked at all moments). <br /><br />Then there were a pair of Russians, <span style="font-style:italic;">da priviert</span>, and a Yankee couple who shared what appeared to be a one-man cycling tent. Oooh-la-la, they are either in total lust, or seriously retarded, how the f&^+$$? could two people sleep in something that looked like a bivvy sack with an aluminum hard-on? There were four medical professionals from Chicago, who (loudly...what IS it with Americans in climbing campgrounds?) discussed I.N.T. insertkions, standards of care, and how the thing they were eating looked something that had recently come out of one of their patients' anuses.<br /><br /><br />Anyway I ran into five groups of three, all of whom said "naw we're OK, we don't need a fourth" which drove me nuts...why would you want to climb in three? Ridiculously slow, etc. I decided it must have been one of three things that was preventing me from finding a partner: I had not shaved for three days, or cut my hair for two months, so I looked like a red-neck version of John Lennon; I had not adequately sprayed to Coloradan standards how bad-assed I was (or wanted to be); or I was not a nubile 24-year-old girl.<br /><br />So I went to bed and a moon of Falstavian immensity bellied up to the horizon and encouraged me to have irrational dreams of foolith things, like freesoloing. As the moon etched the Spires against the pale white night sky I fell asleep, and was at three A.M. awakened by hordes of climbers hissing with stoves and clattering with crampons, getting the good old alpine start.<br /><br />When I awoke the campground was deserted except for a lone yogini and a Korean reading. I drank as much coffee as I could, and when I could no longer sit still, I said "fuck it" to myself, stuffed a pair of rock shoes and my 60om half rope into my pack, and headed for the Northeast Ridge of Bugaboo Spire.<br /><br />i got to the base of the route in about an hour, stuffed my big boots into my pack, and put on the rock shoes. It was noon and above me was a party who were bailing.<br /><br />"We're too slow," said one, "we started at 3:30 but we should have got up at midnight."<br /><br />I launched into this route with barely any thought. On the first pitch, I did a slightly awkward reach-around to sink a stonker fingerjam, and then had to do one dicey move off a slightly loose flake before the bomber locks returned. On the third pitch, a rising dyke traverse that crossed the ridgecrest, I locked off with my left fingers, hiked my left foot, and swept my right across what felt like ten feet into a stem, and then, air brushing my ankles, I pulled myself across. I passed five parties on the route. At the summit, a bit of ridge-fuckery led to four or five rappels, and then the scariest part of the route: downwalking the Kain route past party after party of rock-knockers.<br /><br />I got back to camp at three, made coffee, lit a smoke, and soaked up what I'd just done. My first-ever multi-pitch freesolo. Another of the fifty classics. I wish i could say that I got into some kind of Honnoldian or Croftian zone where everything just flowed, but it wasn't like that. My feet hurt. I had to piss. I wanted a smoke. I got thirsty. I got hot. Above all, I was incredibly breathing hard and had to make myself slow down and take some mental pictures of where I was.<br /><br />That evening KI cooked up some KD, read some more Stieg, and then did the beggar circuit again. Again, I had no luck. People asked me what I'd done, and I told them "I climbed the N.E. Ridge" and when they asked with whom, I had to say "alone," at which point people either said "that's fucking crazy" or "wow," neither of which reaction was getting me closer to a climbing partner.<br /><br />The next day I awoke, drank coffee with the Russians until again I couldn't stop myself from vibrating, and finally said "fuck it" and headed off to do Snowpatch. This one is different from the N.E. Ridge in that the crux is the last 3 pitches. I got lost on p4 or so, and found myself doing what felt like 10- stemming about 100m up a beautiful dihedral, pawing at grass in the crack, having forgotten to exit the dihedral to logical ledges. At the Wiessner overhang-- a 15 meter 5.6 hand traverse-- water poured into the horizontal handcrack, but the jams were so good that the fear didn't hit me. Above, I minced my way up slabs and cracks past the massive snowpatch, rested at the Inverted Pear, and then launched into the cruxes.<br /><br />After about 20m of traversing, I did a 10m 5.7 corner-- perfect hands-- and then a 5.7 undercling, at which point, for the first time, I really noticed how much my ass was hanging out, over the snowpatch and then, a thousand meters down, the talus. Next up was the hand traverse, and finally the dreaded off-width with 5.8 climbing after it. The off-width had huge jugs in it, the 5.8 was bomber crimps and feet, and my only mistake was, at the top of the 5.8, I launched left along the handtraverse. I found myself in a blank, overhanging corner and had to reverse about 10m to the right, after which it was 20m to the summit.<br /><br />As I sat on my second peak, it was the old cliche that hit me. The thing in climbing you worry about is the next move. You do not worry about falling, being tired, how long the route is, yadda yadda. Sure, you need to think about these things when you plan the day, and you better check your route, weather, etc, when you need to. But really, if you focus on one move at a time, things take care of themselves. Freesoloing clears the brain, much as meditation does, by forcing you to focus on the now. While your tiny, 16 bit-per-second conscious mind is heel-hooking or manteling, it is letting your subconscious do its own thing, and so all of those background things you can't really control, but that bug you, either get forgotten, or re-framed.<br /><br />I rapped Krauss-McCarthy and was back in camp at four, buzzed out of my mind. It is no wonder that alpine climbing, and freesoloing, get used as metaphors for spiritual enlightenment. As you climb, you see more and more, and when you top out, your sense of "I am awesome!"-ness is tempered with the reality that you are only a tiny part done with the mountains. Bust out the cliches: it's a process, not a goal. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. My ass is too sweaty.<br /><br />Most of all, the thing I liked about soloing was, sleep in, sit around, drink coffee, carry almost no weight, and back in camp with enough time to enjoy the sun and yet more coffee.<br /><br />And then it hit me: I had just done both of the routes that I could reasonably free-solo, so I had better get off my ass and find a partner\. Round three. More later, including a few pictures.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-55292946062090694462010-07-23T09:39:00.000-07:002010-07-23T10:57:00.093-07:00Alphabet SoupClimbers, like cats, are a territorial bunch. Woe unto them that piss on our territory, unless of course our territory is the Split Pillar on a hot Saturday in mid-August, at which point the Left Side becomes not just the Right Side's evil kid brother but also the route's outhouse. <br /><br />Climbers are also a notoriously finicky bunch. Did it go free? How much aid was used? Did you French-free, fully free, aid, what? Is chalk aid? Yadda yadda. Now, these definitions are pretty clear, after fifty-plus years of campfire debates and Arcing Plot fistfights. There is another set of terms whose meaning also tends to be clear, and today I want to explore the meanings of the terms <span style="font-weight:bold;">FA</span>, <span style="font-weight:bold;">FCA</span>, <span style="font-weight:bold;">FFA</span> and <span style="font-weight:bold;">FCFA<span style="font-weight:bold;"></span></span>.<br /><br />After climbing, for the first time, our route from bottom to top in one go (the 5.11b A0 version), the Driller and I decided to publish the topo. We need feedback, it's dry right now, and hot (good weather for our route), the route needs traffic cos it's new, etc. Well after posting the topo, <a href="http://www.squamishclimbing.com/squamish_climbing_bb/viewtopic.php?t=2842&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0">a bit of a shit-storm started</a>. There was some dispute over the meaning of FA, FCA, FCFA, etc, and how these letters, strung by climbers after their names the way British astronomers hang FRC, D.Ph etc after theirs, should apply to various members of the team who put up La Gota Fria.<br /><br />Well, as we well know, "FA" stands for nothing other than "first ass". This means, the first guy (or girl) to get their ass up a route. Or a pitch. The first time you go up a pitch, if nobody has done it (birds excluded) you get say "yea, I am the First Ass on that." Long-time hardmen (and women) get to say "I've had a lot of First Asses." It's kind of like a pedophile (or zoophile) having at the anus of a young boy or girl or Labrador Retriever (or sheep, if s/he is Scottish or from New Zealand)...ooooohh....mmmmmm...first ass.... <br /><br />Now, the next term of contention is "FCA," which as we well know stands for "First Complete Ass." Now this is a term used when you have a route that includes more than one pitch. So, you could have the First Ass on one (or more) pitches of a multi-pitch route, but when the route as a whole gets climbed in one go, from bottom to top, the person doing that qualifies as First Complete Ass.<br /><br />"FCA" also stands for "First Colorado Ass," which refers to Indian Creek. You are camped at the Bridger Jacks, enjoying an evening of whiskey, bluegrass and pedophile jokes, when you hear the high-pitched whining sound of non-work-trucks in the distance. Then they come-- the Colorado Asses, loosed from their tedious nine-to-fives, and out to slay some 10- handcracks in gangs of seven-- and the first SUV to pull into the Jacks is the First Colorado Ass.<br /><br />The, third but not forgotten, is FFA. This stands for First Full Ass. This refers to when a pitch (or problem) is first climbed in one go, no falls, without using gear to support the climber's bodyweight. <br /><br />The last term of contention is "FCFA." This one, obviously, means "First Complete Full Ass." Now, this refers to the hard-person who first climbs a route, bottom to top, with no aid. You don't just want to be the First Ass, or the First Complete Ass...you want to be the First Complete Full Ass.<br /><br />Just to be clear on this, I busted out Kevin Mclane's trusty "The Climbers' Guide to Squamish" to see how this worked. I asked the good Mr McLane how his book, which keeps track of who climbed what, and when, and how, and how hard, and how much whiskey they needed afterward, uses these various acronyms. <br /><br />In his book, no acronym = FA = First Ass = the first guys/girls to go up a route, by whatever means, including helicopter, climbing gear and magic spells, though to be fair mostly climbing gear. Some routes-- let's take Freeway as an example-- are just loads of alphabet soup. The FA is Tom Gibson and Rob Rohn's, who used "some aid" to get their First Ass. Then, there are a buttload of individual pitches, variations, etc. Then we have this: and FFA (first full ass) of P1-6 by Mssrs. Hart, Atkinson, Eltis and Jones, all of whom had been involved in cleaning and projecting individual pitches. Finally, there is the FCFA-- First Complete Full Ass-- by Atkinson and Hart, where these two gentlemen hauled both their asses completely. and without aid, fully up the route. <br /><br />So as we can see, you can be part of the FA of individual pitches, but not of the FCFA. You could be part of the FA of the whole thing, but not the FFA, or the FCFA. <br />As I contemplated this alphabet soup, I wondered how it applied to our route. And as nearly as I can tell, the First Ass of various pitches of route go 60% or so to Napoleon and others, and 40% to Driller and I and others. The First Complete Ass goes the the Driller and I, July 11, 2010. But the biggest prize of all-- the First Complete Full Ass-- is waiting to be claimed by Napoleon.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-7203881067316824082010-07-19T13:57:00.000-07:002010-07-19T14:03:50.534-07:00The work that remains...What is left to be done with our route? Aside from Napoleon trying to free P5 and P7, here is a list of maintenance-type stuff<br /><br />a) move anchor at top of v-slot to ledge.<br /><br />b) do a minor scrub on P15 (undercling). <br /><br />c) same for P13 and P12-- they need minor moss removal. However as it is, they are perfectly climbable, and no gear or hand will be pawing through munge.<br /><br />d) Possibly clean first few meters of P2.<br /><br />e) Move fixed line from top part of P16<br /><br />f) Finish Upper Powaqatsi-- p17 and 18 of our route go, but we could easily add a few bolts and clean up the line (and belay).<br /><br />g) Look at variations-- P11 and P16 have some interesting possibilities. Napoleon thinks that it would be possible to bypass P7,8,9 and 10 on climber's right...we'll see if he can link the features.<br /><br />So far a couple of parties have had late starts on the route and bailed off P3 or P4. They confirm the grades and say the climbing is good, with one guy raving about how cool the P3 fingercrack is. There is still a bit of munge on P1 and 2, but nothing that will cause any gear or movement problems. So here's hoping that (a) Napoleon manages to send W.L.Y.W. and (b) more parties get on the route!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-81983445250882203572010-07-15T09:50:00.001-07:002010-07-15T10:14:33.041-07:00minor updatesSo yesterday I went on a solo mission, and jugged the first 11 pitches, on Napoleon's epic (and I mean EPIC) fixed line. I drilled a variation (which will remain secret for now), removed the white fixed line from p11 and p10.<br /><br />I added one bolt to P10 (the "munge traverse"). There is a cam placement near the bolt, but when I whacked it with the crowbar, i got that hollow whoomping sound that makes me head for the shitter. So now that 5.5 pitch is no hassle at all. This pitch is kinda dirty, but I left it. It is 5.5, all the trees etc have been chopped, no hassle route-finding, etc. We have this pitch, and the traverse that starts 2 pitches higher, which are "natural" so to speak, and we left these more or less as-is. HOWEVER...rest assured, if you climb the route, all of the technical stuff is clean. You will not be placing cams in muck.<br /><br />I moved Napoleon's epic fixed line away from the start of P3 with one discreet bolt. Once his fixed lines come down, nobody will ever see that bolt again. So if you are up there climbing the route, you will see the fixed lines, but you will not actually be near them (except on the p7 bolt-ladder).<br /><br />On P11, I cleaned up one edge of the wide-crack section and cleaned out a few placements opposite the wide crack (some wide stemming is possible for the tall and the flexible among us). Now, about the wide-crack section:<br /><br />After the first ascent, Driller and I debated adding another bolt to this pitch. As it is, I used 1x #2, 3, 4, and 5 Camalot in that corner, in that order, before I got to the bolts I had drilled. We had installed two bolts, because, if we hadn't, you would have needed 2x #5 Camalot and at least 1x #6 Camalot to safely climb it, making for an epic rack. I am satisfied with our decision, in much the same way that Perry Beckham was satisfied with having put bolts on Perry's Lieback on the Grand Wall: if he hadn't, you would have needed to haul 5 #6s up there, which would have been not only a pain in the ass for hardmen, but a buzz-killer for everybody else. Now, the hard-assed tradmasters might complain-- "hey, they don't do that in the Valley"-- but those people can go to the Valley, and climb the off-width pitch on Freerider (5.11d) at 40m with two cams. <br /><br />As it stands now, you put in a bomber #4, then, six feet higher, a bomber #5 (which you can easily move up as you go) for ten feet, and then you clip the first bolt. After we climbed the pitch, we debated the grade. Compare those 15 feet to Split Beaver (5.10b) in the Bluffs. This is wider, but MUCH lower-angled than the Beaver. Plus, you are gunning for a bolt, and the thing can be liebacked, and you can get a stem rest off the crack to the right. Plus the crux is shorter than the Beaver. So we think 10bish is the grade, and it doesn't need any more bolts. <br /><br />On the ground, I cleaned up the arete that is to the immediate right of the v-groove. I added one bolt to this and knocked off some loose rocks. If the V-groove (a tricky, cool start) is ever wet, you can scramble up the arete (at 5.7), clip a bolt, go 10 feet higher, and step across onto the route and good gear placements.<br /><br />Finally I hauled out most of the garbage, and the 100m of old static line that Ben Roy donated to us. It felt oddly anticlimactic, working on the route after having done the first ascent with the Driller.<br /><br />I am now hoping folks climb it! As of today there is a week of dry weather, the route is shaded so it's great hot-day excursion, even the "wet like your wife" pitch is dry...go do it!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-79341950113396438012010-07-13T11:14:00.000-07:002010-07-20T13:41:02.736-07:00one-page topo for your climbing convenienceSo Jeremy Frimer, aka the Squampton Janitor, is back from Peru. Having spent a month dong alpine routes, he is now something like a Tyrannosaurus Rx, with massive legs, and tiny arms. This also means that he is perfectly suited to making a nice topo of the route...so thanks Jeremy!<br /><br />You can print this out and take it with you-- it should fit onto one computer-printer page. FCA Dylan Connelly & Chris Stolz July 11, 2010. <span style="font-weight:bold;">FA many individual pitches: Mike Blicker, Dylan Connelly, Chris Stolz, Ian Bennett (P1).</span> FCFA (whole thing at 12+(?))...maybe Mike Blicker, Aug 2010...<br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEpTYlHxKax7QqgaFlfW1GHgx6_u5WAboc8bzx_ITuyYS9kBZ2T5dWDcaKI20MEFe0IbnzUdaWOhv3PzTrkf2doQr99qnddPSCpB2D_jdxJFjCWERlcyUphiqzHMnnMiDx0RbgaTSYfZc/s1600/La+Gota+Fria+v4.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 309px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEpTYlHxKax7QqgaFlfW1GHgx6_u5WAboc8bzx_ITuyYS9kBZ2T5dWDcaKI20MEFe0IbnzUdaWOhv3PzTrkf2doQr99qnddPSCpB2D_jdxJFjCWERlcyUphiqzHMnnMiDx0RbgaTSYfZc/s400/La+Gota+Fria+v4.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5496090991938665698" /></a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-19592536270887204432010-07-13T10:25:00.000-07:002010-07-13T10:56:40.373-07:00Pics from the send dayOK...if my computer skills are functional, I should be able to put these into order. get ready to enjoy a LOT of pictures of The Driller. Sorry, ladies, he is not single.<br /><br /><br />Here is the Driller on P1. A this point, you can go straight up, into an 11b lieback (first freed by Ian Bennet, onsight), or you step slightly left and do the 10d bolts + gear undercling. You can also see the v-groove that starts the route. If it is wet, simply scramble up the arete that makes up the v-groove's right side. V-groove was cleaned by Tony McLane. <br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhw1nUGcMXDD-eTgGaOQQECOkiXMrymR_9JajpGNBHPMFGY6Iu-vZIsB8zQqNPzrUYbX2xxFv0OQqatVIy4sRzO-CK3ne_oPIqFJM4ypi9PQr38lox_fBLx3Y4NJ0YvKYmsSK2K8DnwrUc/s1600/start+of+route.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhw1nUGcMXDD-eTgGaOQQECOkiXMrymR_9JajpGNBHPMFGY6Iu-vZIsB8zQqNPzrUYbX2xxFv0OQqatVIy4sRzO-CK3ne_oPIqFJM4ypi9PQr38lox_fBLx3Y4NJ0YvKYmsSK2K8DnwrUc/s400/start+of+route.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493444809318863074" /></a><br /><br />Here, Driller has just finished the fingery 11b crux. This pitch has a 5.8 move to start past a fixed nut. After that, you have about 10m of 11b (bomber gear) which could be EASILY French-freed-- two fingery moves, then a solid handjam or lock.<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEif6epkZVgZgG5xg5qkMS1gvpOlNWkRqvqjjtTWGrkFaZG_gnsucexlZIidwzbGFMksOwEL_F2lku9WOx-0P4dK3YSJOHgr5C1N-gZOlmCZKA94EpuIL3srgZbeNxONpM5ad6ycuZl81hY/s1600/dylan+on+P2.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEif6epkZVgZgG5xg5qkMS1gvpOlNWkRqvqjjtTWGrkFaZG_gnsucexlZIidwzbGFMksOwEL_F2lku9WOx-0P4dK3YSJOHgr5C1N-gZOlmCZKA94EpuIL3srgZbeNxONpM5ad6ycuZl81hY/s400/dylan+on+P2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493444817668938578" /></a><br /><br />After the P5 dihedral bolt ladder, here is Driller setting out across the Green Line Ledge-- at 5.6 or so, easy and has wild exposure. he will then go up the bolt ladder that bypasses the 5.12+ "Wet Like Your Wife" pitch.<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKjaUJsoTXxxKo45ufjLnZk7UkZcjZeEesy13NU_nLCAvG6TqwsX01f9K32e2mZVwemTBdkqzPKRE6R1tBwCLdHrC92C9-Luk8DmL_9pamATNP7pIT4qb5DX5Ne5ZQ9tPicsd2hxkVQDc/s1600/dylan+on+greenline+moving+to+bolt+ladder.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKjaUJsoTXxxKo45ufjLnZk7UkZcjZeEesy13NU_nLCAvG6TqwsX01f9K32e2mZVwemTBdkqzPKRE6R1tBwCLdHrC92C9-Luk8DmL_9pamATNP7pIT4qb5DX5Ne5ZQ9tPicsd2hxkVQDc/s400/dylan+on+greenline+moving+to+bolt+ladder.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493446562609374306" /></a><br /><br />This is the Driller pulling the crux mantle on P8. This pitch features swinging from trees, wild and airy balancing between a rock-rib and a hanging flake, and an exposed mantel-- very cool!<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKQOleJtVuVgNio08ZBV9VMbzLoVPqXOyY3yHglojynoP_tEtCARKJ5uv7j83IVXgBsoLya-Ae9LGXpkh7LYcrnW7IRrYvxHGaII-9wY4DmqidTm6M62Ahoo3-r743LhT4yozpg5Jmwns/s1600/dylan+pulling+P8+mantle.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKQOleJtVuVgNio08ZBV9VMbzLoVPqXOyY3yHglojynoP_tEtCARKJ5uv7j83IVXgBsoLya-Ae9LGXpkh7LYcrnW7IRrYvxHGaII-9wY4DmqidTm6M62Ahoo3-r743LhT4yozpg5Jmwns/s400/dylan+pulling+P8+mantle.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493444823773477666" /></a><br /><br />Here is me atop P8, with the Badge in the background.<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiiJNR4gklUK6fwQslSDwDEXMk8b3HUmT_yxwxY9Q1cCHBfty6eytsuAhHA-Qaz6zsBVflNWikKvUXXaNl1A3T3Q59tWXMfkkNurhGKLU69fh26P_VX2eB8kOU_JP1yDbsc9hGvrQvi32A/s1600/me+from+P9+belay+wiht+badge.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiiJNR4gklUK6fwQslSDwDEXMk8b3HUmT_yxwxY9Q1cCHBfty6eytsuAhHA-Qaz6zsBVflNWikKvUXXaNl1A3T3Q59tWXMfkkNurhGKLU69fh26P_VX2eB8kOU_JP1yDbsc9hGvrQvi32A/s400/me+from+P9+belay+wiht+badge.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493444831554770034" /></a><br /><br />At one point, before the slabby traverse, asked the Driller for a purple Camalot, and he offered me some choices...<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis9MiFdrhFpoVmPCnlZc1U4mtSFlh1l_3aF0psu_4SZpw7YeonayuW8DALt0u1l4AQnzCi4uEO29Ku-OfBQ1Wdf9ay5ZThhqXpX_U9gxSc2-QNPml5-psxFTBcaFkvQBLamYIJ_xBcBks/s1600/so+I+asked+him+for+a+purple+Camalot....jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis9MiFdrhFpoVmPCnlZc1U4mtSFlh1l_3aF0psu_4SZpw7YeonayuW8DALt0u1l4AQnzCi4uEO29Ku-OfBQ1Wdf9ay5ZThhqXpX_U9gxSc2-QNPml5-psxFTBcaFkvQBLamYIJ_xBcBks/s400/so+I+asked+him+for+a+purple+Camalot....jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493446547590411826" /></a><br /><br />Here, in the gathering gloom, Driller finishes P15 (5.8). It was a pleasant surprise: this pitch is only 5.8, and has superb exposure. It's also given us new ideas about other finishes in the enormous v-slot...<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9jUchBg4aGLheSFTNSxXOK3E-tE7aCH8yRbCE5NCUTHnG5wdlDP5jwOdea3j4fs7cypHjvucxNWMmL4HfOTBHbk4zyIaL1fWD5jMnYGgo2XoWXA7G2y2IxE0giYrWAn7wTyzYnQuCRgI/s1600/finishing+p15.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi9jUchBg4aGLheSFTNSxXOK3E-tE7aCH8yRbCE5NCUTHnG5wdlDP5jwOdea3j4fs7cypHjvucxNWMmL4HfOTBHbk4zyIaL1fWD5jMnYGgo2XoWXA7G2y2IxE0giYrWAn7wTyzYnQuCRgI/s400/finishing+p15.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493446574459356354" /></a><br /><br />And finally this is us at the top. We topped out at 10 PM exactly, so 17 pitches took 12 hours exactly. Now...readers...go climb it, and send us some pictures! <br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGz6OZ1nPo4iP0aGRr5IeFBkcFO3w1y2Hjg-dyOv2t7cn5U8QS-is2Coc1kyWPtqQah-YYNxYPKngN2S7mvV9F3jNV89xQeA3cnxpeVdqWP-aDIqMVgq-Io84is9-3bjivSM_wVOZx31I/s1600/done...la+gota+fria!.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGz6OZ1nPo4iP0aGRr5IeFBkcFO3w1y2Hjg-dyOv2t7cn5U8QS-is2Coc1kyWPtqQah-YYNxYPKngN2S7mvV9F3jNV89xQeA3cnxpeVdqWP-aDIqMVgq-Io84is9-3bjivSM_wVOZx31I/s400/done...la+gota+fria!.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493446557796888530" /></a>Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-5089534284159632872010-07-12T12:30:00.000-07:002010-07-12T12:53:13.292-07:00The send!Two years.<br />$1100.<br />65 man-days<br />3 pairs of pruning shears.<br />1 new rope.<br />10 fixed lines of varying lengths<br />1 almost-broken shin<br />Several hundred cups of coffee<br />Three near-death experiences<br />80 bolts<br />7 chopped bolts<br /><br />None of this was in my mind as The Driller and I, at the crack of ten, left our little car on the Mamquam, giggled as we shoved headlamps into pockets, and ducked into the forest. Ahead of us lay more like a set of hypotheses to be tested: pitch X was 5.10a, confirm or deny; there were too many bolts on Pitch Y, confirm or deny.<br /><br />It was a sweltering day, and, well let's not screw around-- blow-by-blows are bring, so here's the highlights. The route goes at 11b A0. You could reduce the grade further by French-freeing the first 15m of P3. We FINALLY sent P3. P8-- the "death block" pitch-- is 11a and may want another bolt. At one point as I was madly grasping at no-falling straws, Driller yelled "LEFT SIDE!" and I realised he was telling me where my chalk bag had rotated to. Now THAT is attentive belaying.<br /><br />P11 went with one #5 Camalot, but may want another bolt. P14 has one hard 11a move (aidable) and may want another bolt. Driller began madly pawing the rest of my precious water as the cedars turned warmish yellow and the skies deepened in colour. The first ascent's great surprise was that P15-- the undercling-- is not only one of the nicest pitches (great position, hanging right over the entire route) but alos the easiest, at 5.8! The final V-slot pitch-- 55 meters-- took everything I had. Dehydrated, exhausted and deeply concerned that we wouldn't make Starbucks' closing time, I injdulged myself with a whole lot of stemming trickery and self-pitying grunts and made it up the awesome 10c pitch.<br /><br />We topped out at 10pm exactly. 16 pitches, one 60-meter 5th-class scramble in the dark, and one utterly quiet Second Summit, wind whistling and stars mixed with glowing clouds, and the first ascent of La Gota Fria was complete.<br /><br />I am still too fried to say anything much...except, thanks to the Driller, Napoleon, Mom, Larisa and Jen, and of course...GO CLIMB OUR ROUTE!Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-67523580742775096172010-07-12T11:37:00.000-07:002010-07-19T13:13:50.149-07:00La Gota Fría 18p 5.11b A0 (5.12d)<span style="font-weight:bold;">La Gota Fría <br />18p 5.11b A0 (5.12+)<br />Deputy Wall, Squamish, BC<br />FCA Dylan Connelly & Chris Stolz July 11, 2010; other pitches FA individually by Ian Bennett, Mike Blicker, Dylan Connelly, Chris Stolz<span style="font-weight:bold;http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif"></span></span><br /><br />This long, mostly free route is characterised by excellent protection, good positions, a wide variety of good climbing and a superb finish. All pitches except #13 have bolted belays. The route is dry May-Sept. <span style="font-weight:bold;">P3 and 5 can be easily French freed; P7 has a bolt-ladder bypass.</span><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9z9SO2Hw3Y519Iq47_6F5GeJ-ASGrsn_BTkBCTHOpEeJ_ZoF1J19EAVp6mIJzTwKKwxFAf-H0SVEGjgXp6XmUXN4XKa31dhd_iOv6GV4M93yNH62EN83FdVFMwlpYl3Z_OeDY8H2FrdM/s1600/New+Route+big+pic+modified+v2+incloudes+mikey.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 266px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9z9SO2Hw3Y519Iq47_6F5GeJ-ASGrsn_BTkBCTHOpEeJ_ZoF1J19EAVp6mIJzTwKKwxFAf-H0SVEGjgXp6XmUXN4XKa31dhd_iOv6GV4M93yNH62EN83FdVFMwlpYl3Z_OeDY8H2FrdM/s400/New+Route+big+pic+modified+v2+incloudes+mikey.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5495712725133749314" /></a><br /> <br />Thanks to Ian Bennet, Jeremy Frimer, Myles Holt, Kevin McLane, Tony McLane, Paul Cordy, Sebastian Mejia, Kasper Podgorski, Rob Owens, Ben Roy, Scott Semple, and our girlfriends Larisa O. and Jenn N.<br /> <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">THE SOUNDTRACK:</span> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yb--YE2x1A0">Carlos Vives sings Emiliano Zuleta's <span style="font-weight:bold;">"La Gota Fría"</span></a><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">GEAR:</span> double Camalots from .3 to #3, 1x #4 and #5 1 Blue Aliens and/or TCU, nuts, long slings. <br /> <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">APPROACH:</span> take the Sheriff's Badge trail. About 30 meters before the Philistine groove area, turn right (cairn and piece of shoelace hanging from tree branch). Head up a faint trail to a slab, go to climber's left up and around the slab, and head past bits of fixed ropes to a short, clean obvious v-groove beside which hangs a blue rope. <br /><br />P1: 35m 5.11b or 5.10d Climb the obvious v-groove. Then, either <br /><br />a) lieback the crack (11b) to the tree, another bolt, and the belay <br />b) go left, past 3 bolts (10d) to the tree, another bolt, and the belay <br />If P1's V-groove is wet, scramble up the short arete on its right side and step over (5.7)<br /><br />P2: 5.9 40m Go up two meters to a ledge, right to a tree tree stump, and straight up into a flake-crack. Pass a tree, step right onto a ledge. Traverse right past bolts. <br /> <br />P3: 30m 5.11b Up the superb fingers-to-hands crack. Easily French-freed. <br /><br />P4: 30m 5.10c Straight up the hand-and-fist crack to a ledge. <br /> <br />P5: 20m 5.9 A0 or 5.12c/d Straight up the perfect dihedral past bolts to a two-bolt belay. Very easily aided.<br /> <br />P6: 25m 5.4 Traverse the ledge right to a two-bolt belay. <br /> <br />P7: 25m 5.12+ Up and left into burly underclinging and jamming with sketchy feet on good gear to a bolted stance by an old fragment of tree. Airy, wild, sustained and superb. often wet.<br /> <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">P7 BYPASS:</span> 45m A0 From the station atop P5, traverse along the Green Line Ledge and climb the bolt ladder that starts about 2/3 of the way across, straight up to the belay atop P7. Bring a #2 or #3 camalot for last move. <br /> <br />P8: 20m 5.11a Use bolts and trees to get to the base of an inverted V-slot, with a hanging flake in it. Then, either <br /> <br />a) do some crazed-ape moves involving funky stemming, put gear atop the flake then wildly mantle over the lip, to two bolts and left to the belay<br />b) do some exposed moves up and left, then pass finger and hand jams <br /><br />P9: 25m 5.10a From an airy stance, up the nice corner. <br /> <br />P10 20m 5.5 Crap pitch: traverse right past a few bolts ans some trees and bushes then up to a belay at the base of a nice corner. <br /> <br />P11 25m 5.10b Climb the fine widening corner past 2 bolts to a ledge. <br /> <br />P12 5.10b 30m Cross to the right side of the ledge, then go up the left side of chimneyish blocks to a bolt. Go straight up past more bolts and gear, exit right, to a ledge. <br /><br />P13 35m 5.10b Straight up to under the roof, then make a slabby traverse (one reachy move) left past bolts and a final short crack to a tree belay. <br /> <br />Traverse left through the forested ledge about 30m.<br /><br />P14 25m 5.11a Climb a blocky right-trending feature to a crack in a shallow left-facing corner, then pass 4 bolts. <br /> <br />P15 25m 5.8 Climb up the left side of the huge yellow flake, then undercling left underneath the enormous roof through an awesome position to the bottom of the gigantic V-slot. <br /> <br />P16 45m 5.10c/d Climb up the right side of the massive V-slot through the steepening crack to a ledge, then up left through a couple of thin crack moves past one bolt to belay off a tree. A superb pitch in an awesome position in a cool feature. <br /><br />P17 30m 5.8 From the top of the V-slot, make your way about 10m to climber's right to a 2-bolt belay. About 3m right of this, start up a very easy left-leaning crack. At the first tree, step up and right onto the slab and go up and slightly right. There is one .4 camalot placement, and just past a tiny overlap there is 1 bolt. Past this move up and right to a dirty crack, and belay off a lone tree on the left. <br /> <br />P18 30m 5.8 Make your way up any # of treed cracks or the slabby face to a two-bolt belay <br /> <br />Alternative end: from the bolted belay at the bottom of P17, follow the wooded crack up in a long leftward arc (58m) to the top-- a couple of 5.6 moves.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">RETREAT:</span> The route can be easily rappeled with one 60m rope from the top of P12. From the top of P8, rap straight down to the Green Line Ledge, then down and left to the top of P4. From the top of P2, rap 30m to a station, then 25m to the ground.<br /> <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">COMBINE PITCHES:</span> Green Line Ledge and bolt ladder easily combine (40m)<br />P9 & 10 would be about 50 m, very easy; use long slings for rope drag at station atop P9<br /> <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">WHAT REMAINS...</span>Connelly & Stolz freed "Fría Lite." "Fría Heavy" will involve freeing the P5 dihedral and the P7 "Wet Like Your Wife" overhanng.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">THE ROUTE NAME:</span> "La Gota Fría" is a song by Colombian vallenato master Emiliano Zuleta, and was famously covered by Carlos Vives. <span style="font-style:italic;">La gota fría</span> literally means "a cold drop." Metaphorically, it means (a) a sudden and unexpected flood or (b) a cold drop of sweat (as in fear). The song, sung from Zuleta's point of view, describes the Colombian version of a rapper's feud: Zuleta and Lorenzo Morales, two famous <span style="font-style:italic;">accordeonistas</span>, have been trash-talking each other, and the song details a musical battle, with the final line-- <span style="font-style:italic;">cuando me oyó tocar, le cayó la gota fría</span> meaning roughly "and when he heard me play [the accordion], he felt cold drops of sweat." You can listen to Carlos Vives' version <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yb--YE2x1A0">here</a> The song is, as they say, based on a true story: Zuleta did have a musical feud with Morales, and did beat him at the yearly <span style="font-style:italic;">vallenato</span> festival in Valledupar. Afterwards, Morales and Zuleta became fast friends and musical collaborators...<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">ASCENT CREDITS for individual pitches.<br /></span> Most were done at various times with different groups of people.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">First Continuous Free Ascent (5.11b A0 version) Dylan Connelly and Chris Stolz, July 11, 2010<br /></span><br />P1 Myles Holt (aid), FA 5.11b version Ian Bennet, Oct 12 2009 (onsight!) FA 10d version Chris Stolz, June 2010<br />P2 Chris Stolz and Kasper Podgorski (aid), FFA Chris Stolz, Mike Blicker 4 Oct 2009<br />P3 Chris Stolz, Mike Blicker (aid), FFA Mike Blicker July 2010<br />P4 Chris Stolz, Mike Blicker (aid); FFA Chris Stolz, Mike Blicker 4 Oct 2009<br />P5 Dylan Connelly, Chris Stolz (aid)<br />P6 Chris Stolz, Dylan Connelly <br />P7 Dylan Connelly, Chris Stolz (aid)<br />P8 Chris Stolz, Dylan Connelly (aid), FFA Mike Blicker July 2010<br />P9 Dylan Connelly, Chris Stolz (aid), FFA Mike Blicker July 2010<br />P10 Mike Blicker<br />P11 Chris Stolz, Dylan Connelly <br />P12 Mike Blicker July 2010<br />P13 Chris Stolz, Dylan Connelly July 11, 2010<br />P14 Mike Blicker, July 2010<br />P15 Chris Stolz, Dylan Connelly, Mike Blicker July 2010<br />P16 Mike Blicker, July 2010Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-54305280491602074652010-07-03T18:31:00.000-07:002010-07-03T19:07:58.973-07:00Chainsaw LoveThe send approaches...a feeling somewhere between circling the date of having a wisdom tooth pulled, and that near-certain feeling you get halfway through the dinner you have made that is going to seduce the object of your affection. The Driller is madly studying for the next part of his Cunthoo-- err, I mean, accounting exams, and I am done work, and so free, for awhile, at least until the RCMP gets the warrant from the judge.<br /><br />As you certainly know, Jeremy Frimer, aside from being a bad-assed Peruvian alpinist, PhD candidate (he is doing his dissertation on the psychology of using climbing as procrastination) and adopter of neurotic, anti-social cats, is a route cleaner. After dealing with the Mosquito area, putting up Optimus Prime (very cool) and cleaning up the Wire Tap area, Frimer turned his attention away from his charming (and majorly bad-- err, I mean, trad- assed) wife, cats, dissertation and photography habit, and cleaned up Milk Run, adding a few pitches. The thing at 10d now goes to the rim of Tantalus Wall and as Borat would say is liek my sister, easy to get onto, and very nice, and give great pleasure.<br /><br />So I met up with my friend Lorreen. Now Lorreen is one of those awesome younger climber girls, in this case 15 years my junior (which makes her ten), who is super-organised and always on time. But not on Friday. I had spent the evening playing bluegrass on Psyche ledge with a bunch of Americans, including a double-bassist, a fiddler, and a singer-guitarist. The hoedown ended at midnight because the band was preparing for a Grand Wall ascent on their final day in BC, and so I drove out to the bivvy boulder, unrolled my bearskin rug, busted out the K-Y and the 12", and prepared myself for the evening. The night passed blissfully.<br /><br />The next day I luxuriated in the sun at the coffeeshop and Lorreen let me know that she would unfortunately be late. When she showed up she was grinning ear to ear. That could only mean one thing, boys...you know what it means when a woman shows up in the morning with that special smile on her face.<br /><br />Yes sirree, chainsaws. Lorreen had just driven out from Abbotsford, where her current lust interest has been working on chainsaws. And them chainsaws gotta be tested before them fallers get 'em back...so my young climbing partner spent our racking session gushing about 375s, oiling up and choke adjustments. Lorreen likes this guy, cos, well...bad narrator fast-flashback...she'd gone to Smith with another younger female climber, and reported that the sport-climber boys, on seeing these two nubile young ladies climbing together, would immediately find excuses for removing shirts.<br /><br />"So were you psyched about that?" I asked Lorreen.<br /><br />"Fuck NO! I need a man, not a bolt-clipper."<br /><br />Not only does this apply to climbing-- where obviously we trad climbers outrank you sporting types, at least in this young lady's eyes-- but more so in real life, where a guy who can fix stuff outranks an iDork, a hipster or a yuppie cunt. Anyway, Lorreen had met Chainsaw Man at a logging camp, on his remarking that her power-spraying of the underside of her engine was un-femininely meticulous, and their romance bloomed around oil changes, cylinder adjustments and of course chainsaws. She was psyched that he could fix things, he let her go climbing, and most of all that, when he DID fix things, she was allowed to watch and ask questions.<br /><br />By the time this was all revealed, we stood at the base of Milk Road and I had that wisdom-tooth pulling <span style="font-style:italic;">cum</span> shot-of-heroin feeling as I stared up at this mass of awesomeness. <br /><br />OK, climbing stories are boring, so we climbed it, I hung on the long 5.10d pitch, we had to pull on bolts since the first crux was totally wet and I was blown away by the amount of work that went into this (26 days for Frimer!) and by the final "5.10c" pitch (could have been 5.11c as far as I was concerned...but the onsight always feels harder). The thing that REALLY got us, though...was the chainsawing! Frimer has done some serious work on that route ands that includes chopping down some big trees. For which he initially caught shit from a few squamishclimbing.com blowhards, but whatever...it's not like the Chief is lacking in vegetation...i mean if it were 100 years ago, fair enough. But there were ramps, chimneys and cracks all made climbable by the Husqua-Varna's tough teethy love, and so we were both warm and fuzzy toward chainsaws when we arrived on top.<br /><br />Afterward I ran into Napoleon in the Starbucks, and he told me all the Valley gossip. After sending Steph Davis, bailing off the Nose due to a snowstorm, dodging tools for six weeks (take THAT, Tony McLane!) and allegedly watching The Filth get in a fight, he found a girlfriend, got a job (in Montreal), bought an SUV (I actualy saw it...it's big and grey and will make a great road-tripping vehicle, at least until that 60 hour-a-week corporate job kicks in) and was doign what we all do best...sitting in Starbucks and talking shit about climbing.<br /> <br />Anyway, we go for the send next Sunday July 11. Until then, the Driller is in accounting recovery at Lake Tahoe, where he will spend some time with The Filth, I am going to Washington Pass with Lorreen, and the Rain Gods will hold off for seven days. Right? Right?Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-69294649386340685092010-06-23T15:29:00.000-07:002010-06-24T14:39:17.310-07:00The World's Worst Climbing Partner (2)"Bones," I said as I heaved my weak ass onto the top of the Buttress crux pitch, grateful for the top-rope "there's this guy I climbed with last year who's totally trash-talking you. His name is--"<br /><br />"Telemark29@yahoo.com?"<br /><br />"Wha? You KNOW this guy?"<br /><br />"Oh yeah..."<br /><br />Bones was out from Canmore for work, and we'd squeezed in a precious day between work and rains. I clipped in, sat down, rolled a smoke and asked Bones to explain.<br /><br />The winter before, Bones-- marginally employed, and on a mixed sending spree of epic duration-- had been living in the Canmore clubhouse of the Alpine Club. In exchange for ten hours a week of scrubbing shitters and shoveling snow, he got a cot and a squat. The Clubhouse was something of a ritual stop for ice and mixed climbers showing up in town. You went there, cooked, and posted a partner-wanted note.<br /><br />One day a couple of signs appeared: "WANTED: ICE CLIMBING PARTNER. I HAVE RACK, GEAR AND LOTS OF ENERGY. PSYCHED TO GET OUT. LEAD WI4, WILL FOLLOW ANYTHING ELSE. <strong>Telemark29@yahoo.com</strong>"<br /><br />Underneath that "FOR SALE: ROCK CLIMBING GEAR. VARIETY OF CAMS, NUTS, DRAWS, GOOD CONDITION. I AM MOVING TO CANMORE TO CLIMB ICE THIS WINTER AND DON'T NEED ROCK GEAR. <strong>TELEMARK29@YAHOO.COM</strong><br /><br />Bones was busy, but passed the email on to a friend. Phone calls ensued and Bones' friend-- let's call him The Psyche-- agreed to meet at the Fireside at 6 AM for brekkie, to be followed by a day of ice-climbing.<br /><br />The Psyche was there at 6. Two hours and seventy-nine cups of coffee later, no telemark29@yahoo.com, so The Psyche went home to vibrate uncontrolably in the comfort of his own house, at which point the phone rang. It was telemark29@yahoo.com, who said "Dude! I'm at the breakfast place! I'm psyched! Let's go!"<br /><br />Against his better judgment, The Psyche drove back to the greasy spoon to find a shaven-headed, muscular-looking type, Les, who-- after no excuse for lateness was forthcoming-- convinced The Psyche that a three-hours-late start would be no impediment to what was sure to be a lightning-quick ascent of Professor's (WI4).<br /><br />Our heroes found themselves at the base of Professor's at about 10:30 AM. Now, Professor's is, if I recall correctly from my own ascent with Bones and The Anus, is about 250 meters, so that's about five longish pitches, separated by short snow slopes.<br /><br />Well, in scene eerily reminiscent of <a href="http://gumbiesoncrack.blogspot.com/2010/06/worlds-worst-climbing-partner-1.html">my own adventure with Les on Vector</a>, Les got twenty-five feet up, put in his third screw, and hung, panting. The Psyche gently urged him on, and, an hour later, Les had aided his way to the top of the first WI3 pitch. The Psyche convinced Les to let him lead the rest of the route, but Les stepped in at the final crux pitch-- WI4+ some years-- and launched into it as that lovely alpenglow, ideally enjoyed from the warmth of a chalet with a beer in one hand and a brunette in one's lap, crept across the mountains and The Psyche shivered into his jacket. <br /><br />Les installed all ten screws within the first twnety meters, climbed up onto a shelf, shook out, and took stock. He had no more gear, twenty meters to go, and the only option for getting out and handing off the sharp end was to downclimb and then lower off his top screw. Les then did the only thing he could think of-- he completely lost his shit. He stood, heels shaking, tools sunk to the shaft, screaming bloody fucking murder, while The Psyche racked his brain for a way to get a weak, freaked-out, in-over-head nutjob who clearly needed another hit of crack (the drug, not the rock feature) to downclimb 5 meters of 4+ before 3 AM in the now fully enveloping gloom. <br /><br />In the end, somehow, faced with spending a night on his front-points, losing his hands and getting hypothermia, Les managed the brief downclimb, and The Psyche fired up under headlamp power to retrieve his gear. Our heroes returned to Canmore exactly thirteen hours after leaving. With two hours of approach and walk-out time, they averaged two hours and twelve minutes per fifty meter pitch.<br /><br />The Psyche got a few more calls from Les, and, when the phone calls petered out, his friends started getting them. Les somehow didn't find a whole lot of partners that winter. <br /><br />"So," I asked Bones, "is he still in Canmore?"<br /><br />"Doubt it," he said, taking a drag on my smoke. In mid-March, a sign appeared on the Canmore Clubhouse bulletin board.<br /><br />"FOR SALE: ICE CLIMBING GEAR. TWO PULSARS, NEWISH MAKOS, 6 SCREWS, TWO SCREAMERS. I AM MOVING TO SQUAMISH FOR THE SUMMER AND DON'T NEED MY ICE GEAR. <strong>EMAIL TELEMARK29@YAHOO.COM</strong>"Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-358732432220961823.post-74622060266958529762010-06-23T09:41:00.001-07:002010-06-23T15:24:48.227-07:00The World's Worst Climbing Partner (1)Since our route is closed until July 11, while we dutifully throw ourselves at rigorous ARC sessions in the gym to try to get strong enough to climb the thing (yesI am aware of the irony, thank you very much), I will (try to) entertain the readers with this true story.<br /><br />Back in the day, when 5.9 was hard and skipping work was easy, I was between regular partners, and was blind-dating a variety of types off the M.E.C. board. I'd had, for example, a climb with Old Slow Joe, who really should have been sitting on a porch in Tenessee, with a jug and a banjo, rather than climbing. I'd been out with The Lawyer, but he was too busy making assloads of money to make it regularly, plus he couldn't crack-climb much, since it trashed his hands, which made his Indian clients suspicious (I shit you not, best pussy-out excuse I've yet heard). I'd been out with a really, really dumb girl. Now, I am not the sharpest knife in the drawer by any means, but this girl made me look like a MENSA member, and when I realsed that I would have to check every knot, cam placement etc that she had, and ever would make, that one ended. I emailed aother guy one Monday afternoon-- telemark29@yahoo.com. So one day I got a call from a guy we'll call Les, who was telemark29 himself. <br /><br />After some palaver, it seemed like Sunday would be a good time, so I proposed to meet at 9 at the coffeeshop. But Les had to go to church, so 11 sharp it was.<br /><br />On arriving, I found a shaven-headed, muscular man, with one of those goatees that hip white guys used to have in the '90s and are now found on middle-aged men with pot-bellies, and waring a Cletic-looking crucifix, encamped beside a rusting dirtbag van crammed with ski and climbing gear. And the guy was HARDCORE in more than looks: he led 5.11. which to me was something only Gods, Sponsored Climbers and Climbing Guides did, and he'd been living in his van all winter, working in Whistler, cooking, and touring as much as he could. His van was full of generally old and filthy junk, neatly organised, with an oddly beautifully new set of touring and downhill skis and boots. I offered to grab him a coffee and he refused-- religious reasons. I had clearly hit paydirt: a ripped, clean-living, God-fearing climbing machine.<br /><br />We headed up to Vector (5.9) and Les loaded up with our rack. I had five cams and a few nuts. Les had a collection that had clearly been entirely pried and yanked out of leaver palcements: a shiny new #2 Camalot hung beside something that had probably been hand-machined by Ray Jardine himself in the back of his van, which was beside a hex apparently slung with a friendship bracelet made of Nepalese hemp, and quickdraws with what felt like steel bieners.<br /><br />Les got about ten feet into Vector, installed every piece of gear, hung, and began to curse. "This God-damed cock-sucking, mother-fucking, ass-licking piece of mother-fucking faggot-assed fucking gayness is mother-fucking gay-assed fucking shit!" he screamed, pounding the rock, his heels just over my head. After many more hyphentated curses, he lowered off and handed me the RPs to finish the 40 meter off-width pitch.<br /><br />I passed his anchor, removed all the large stuff, and headed up. I did some weird moves in the unusually wide crack, went over the bulge, found a bolt, threw in a cam, hauled up and put Les on. I wouldn't know for a few years that I had just climbed what I would learn was an "off-width," and that there were in fact cams bigger than 3". Way down below, Les huffed and chuffed, and then I heard a "FUCKING TA-AA-AKE!" The rope went tight.<br /><br />And stayed tight. After twenty minutes I yelled to see if he was OK. "FUCKING YEAH I'M COMING" came the reply. Fifteen minutes after that, rope still tight, Les appeared at the bulge...jugging. He'd rigged a pair of prusskis and had jugged the low-angle 5.9 pitch. His hands and ankles bled. He was white, and shaking. We clearly should have retreated, but you can't do that off one bolt with a 50 meter rope, so I launched up. <br /><br />Instead of heading up and left, through the bushes, I went right, and found myself freaking out on what I would later learn was a 10b or 10c flake and crack. I made it...and Les repeated his previous performance, prussiks a-go!<br /><br />Back in the parking lot, I decided enough, not gonna see this guy again. Aside from the obvious bullshit factor, there was something oddly unbalanced, plus of course the weirdness of a religious guy cussing like a sailor.<br /><br />Next weekend, on Friday night, at 9 PM, The Lawyer bailed on me, placating a sniffling me with promises of endless patient belays and beers on a perfectly sunny future day yet to be named. Fuck. Argh. Kill. I was still in the full-on addiction phase and had trouble understanding what people who didn't climb actualy did with spare time.<br /><br />Then Les called. Beginners can't be choosers, so we agreed to go to Cal Cheak. <br /><br />On arriving at Peanut's Playground, Les handed me his five random cams. I put them on the ground beside my gear as I was packing. <br /><br />"WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU DOING?" screamed Les. "DON'T PUT MY FUCKING CAMS ON THE GROUND! I JUST OILED THEM!" I picked them up, and haded them to the suddenly hyperventilating Les, and wondered how long the day was going to be. Les put the cams into a small grey stuff sack beside his pack.<br /><br />On the walk in, Les asked me about my climbing background. I told him I'd spent a winter climbing ice around Canmore, and he asked me if I knew Bones. Yes, I told him, Bones was basically my intro to ice climbing and was a longtime friend.<br /><br />"That guy," said Les, "is a cock-sucking, poser asshole."<br /><br />"Do tell," I said, wondering if there were two Bones in Canmore, and whether Les had taken his happy pills that week, or if perhaps Les and I lived in alternate Universes.<br /><br />Les said mixed climbing grades were bullshit, mixed climbing was bullshit, Jews controlled the world, Canmore climbers were assholes, ice grades were generally bullshit, magazines about climbing were generally bullshit, photographs of climbing were bullshit, 9/11 was an inside job, only God could save us, Canmore sport-climbing grades were inflated, and Bones' and my mutual friend The Albino was not only gay, but mentally challenged, a poser, a jerk, a weak climber...the cedars en route to Peanut's make a beautiful short forest trek. Eventually his voice stopped.<br /><br />"Have you told Bones and The Albino any of this?"<br /><br />"FUCK YEA I TOLD THOSE ASSHOLES WHAT I THINK"<br /><br />We started with some 5.8s which Les hung from and I went up to rescue his draws. Same thing happened on 5.9 and 5.10a. Les eventually made it up a 10c, whining like a teenager who's just found out he's failed Grade Eleven English and now has to spend six weeks of precious summer sitting in a classroom.<br /><br />We walked out and on reaching my car les asked me for his cams. I told him I had given them back to him before we'd started<br /><br />"THE FUCK! FUCK! COCKSUCKER! JESUS FUCK! GIVE ME YOUR FUCKING CAR KEYS!"<br /><br />Les had that oddly white face and shook as he threw the floor mats out of my trunk and passenger compartment. "FUCK! THAT'S $300 WORTH OF GEAR!" he howled, and ran back up to the crag. Yelling filtered down through the trees as I debated leaving him there. He had obviously left the cams in the sack on the ground, and some unscrupulous other climbers had taken his mix'n'match rack.<br /><br />As I turned onto the 99 and headed toward Squamish, Les asked me if I had household insurance. "No, why?" <br /><br />"Cos you can say, you got robbed, and give me the insurance money."<br /><br />Have I mentioned he was wearing a crucifix? Anyway, I said no, and found myself explaining the terms "fraud" and "raised rates."<br /><br />"FUCK!" said Les, banging the dash, "let's go to the cops and tell them your car got broken into!"<br /><br />I then explained "fraud" again and told Les that, frankly, I thought he was a bit of a jerk, and I really didn't want to climb with hm again.<br /><br />We pulled into the parking lot of the coffeeshop and Les got out. His pack lay in the backseat and he grabbed a small stuffsack and headed off to the bathroom. He was gone for twenty minutes. I wanted to throw his pack out and bust out of there.<br /><br />Les returned form the washroom, clutching his tiny stuff sack, grinning ear to ear. His colour had returned. No more shaking. Hs eyes were wide, empty pools. He must have taken some kind of epic crap in there. "Are you <em>SURE</em> you don't want to run this through your insurance company?" he asked. I said no, gave him his pack, and started the engine. In seconds, I thought, I would never have to see telemark29@yahoo.com ever again.<br /><br />"Dude," he said, "I'm free tomorrow. Let's meet at nine. No, wait, later. I have church."Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0