Showing posts with label Lead Climbing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lead Climbing. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Road Trip Pre-TR

Busy, busy, busy...I have photos to edit, catalog, email, and post for the Goddesses on the Rocks event I talked about here.

So, instead of making an all-inclusive "here's what happened" report, I'm breaking it down into segments.

The plan was to Amtrak to Boston, where my friend Cheryl would pick me up. We'd stay the night at her place(a very nice little arts& crafts-y bungalow she's got, though I'm not sure if technically it's a bungalow. But I love built-ins and simple, beautiful wood trim, and the place had the original in place.). The next morning, we'd pick up person #3 from he airport, head to a campsite near North Conway, and get in a day of climbing on Friday.

Then, the Goddesses event for the weekend. And, as you may recall, I had no plan as to my transportation back....but obviously, it has worked out, and I am back home, being bombarded with the anxieties and troubles of city-living in the age of advanced technology. yesterday, my AOL service was FUBAR - that should be in 96-point type, by the way - yesterday. SO messed up that I spent more than 6 hours in attempts to diagnose/repair, with less than 15 minutes of that involving human tech support(an epic unto itself, but luckily I saw the route would not go early on, and bailed before committing past the first few moves..... GRRRR).

The train ride - This was stylee mass transport, in my book. I had a few options. Take the Acela, which is supposedly that ultrafast ride.... But at twice the cost, with only a half an hour shaved off in transit time, I felt it was a rip-off, and declined. Maybe there is something I missed that makes it worthwhile....I couldn't say.

They also offered an upgrade from coach class to business on Amtrak. Now, I consider myself a luxe dirtbag, so I automatically rejected the "upgrade" without even checking the price.

Locally, I'm used to taking Metro North to the Gunks, with my dog. I get the stink-eye if I take a seat(they're for 2-leggeds only, apparently) and so I ride in the open section for baggage and bikes, using my cooler for a seat, with Teddy curled around me somewhere nearby. simply having a SEAT is an upgrade for me, so I didn't think I'd mind the coach class train ride.

Well - Let me tell you something! I don't know what business class Amtrak offers, but Coach service has butt width seats and leg room enough for the biggest touron venturing cross country. Plush, clean better than any airline seats, in my experience. I settled in comfortably, and the only distasteful item was that the guy across the aisle was yammering into his cel phone for he entire first hour of the trip. Funnily, his big, oft-repeated topic was how "so and so" suffered from narcissistic personality disorder....

Finally, he got off the phone, and soon after got off the train, and I was left to the quiet of my inner thoughts while I watched the northeast corridor glide past as the sun headed round the horizon.

The drive up next morning, from Boston to New Hampshire, was a highway cruise, but since it was my first trip in the area, I was very happy enjoying the changing scenery as we entered mountainous ranges. Very pretty land, and as we drove the smaller roads the next few days, I saw many wonderful old homes, barns and outbuildings. Another few weeks and the foliage color-shift will make such a trip one to relish.

We camped at Covered Bridge campsite in the White Mountain National Forest.. The campground seems nice, I think, though I don't know what other options are available in the area. It had large, quasi-secluded sites that were clean(in fact, it appears someone comes in with a rake in-between tenants), fresh, cold water that comes from a hand pump down the road(there's something to be said for manual labor in exchange for subsistence). Best of all - there are huge logs set across the roadways, at about 8 feet off ground level, thus stopping any RV or monster-tired truck in their tracks.

Apparently, we were pegged as undesirables from the get-go by the campsite host though... Within a few minutes of our choosing a site and unpacking, he drove up in his golf cart and told us to slow it down in our driving. When we returned from our climbing session in the early evening, a form-letter list of Rules to be Broken was tacked under an item on the picnic table. I'd tented on foliage, it seems, although what I'd actually staked my claim on was the same surface that covered the rest of the tent area(gravel). It did have a carpet of dried leaves, but I honestly wasn't anywhere near putting up on the forest dirt ground. Ahh well... I am not one to piss off the guy in charge of my accommodations. So, I quickly moved my tent.

We then set out to begin our evening meal, and as we were doing so, a car that happened to be the same make and model as ours came careening down the road(that means they were going a little faster than the posted fast-idle posted speed limit). As I saw them pass our site, I told the girls "Watch - we're going to get blamed for that one!"

Sure enough! The host came Barney-Fifing down the road in hot pursuit! Off course, he'd had to get off his chair, call his wife/deputy and into the golf cart beforehand, so it was a few minutes later that he screeched to a halt in front of our site.....

I called out an apology for my tent, but was cut off with an officious "I TOLD you not to drive so fast in here!"

Well! My site mates weren't having any bully bullying them around, and they let him have it! Cheryl EVEN pointed her finger at him while declaring "That wasn't us!"

Luckily, she deflected the situation by explaining the look-alike vehicle and adding something like "We get into enough trouble on our own without having someone else's trouble added!"

He laughed at that one and that was the last we saw of the sheriff while we were in his town....

Climbing - Cheryl took us to a lesser-known crag to climb that day, so as not to lessen our experience with the Goddesses event if we'd be going to Cathedral or Whitehorse Ledges the next few days. She chose a slab area called Lost Horizons, which was just a short ride away from our camp area.

The hike in was...vigorous. At least it was for me... The heat and humidity added a level of exertion, but nobody else in the group(we'd met up with some others of Cheryl's friends) suffered as I did.

I don't know what happened, but after a few minutes, I was having some difficulty in my hike. I had stupidly left my full rack in my pack, not wanting to leave it in the car, which was parked along a busy-enough roadway. I fell back to the rear, and later took a short rest. Continuing on, I felt overheated again in another few minutes and had to stop.

By that point, we were a few minutes away from the crag, and Cheryl(enduro-woman, as you'll see in the photos below) had already gotten there, dropped her pack and returned. She offered to take the rope I was carrying, and I gave no resistance.

I decided to take it easy for the rest of the approach, no matter that everyone else was moving more quickly. But then, a steep section came up, and I found myself feeling a little light-headed. I sat down on a log, thinking it would be a short rest and suddenly I was accosted with a full on attack of dizziness and nausea.

Wow! It was bad. I truly thought I was going to pass out and throw up. So, I put my head down between my knees and waited as wave after wave rolled through my body.

Not sure what was causing the thing, I came up with the idea that I must have had my first menopausal hot flash, and when I tried that excuse out on the others(most of whom had already been there/done that) they didn't buy it..... But, they were good-natured about me and my excuse for physical unfitness. It WAS, I will admit, "that time" of the month, and it was generally agreed upon that the humidity, the semi-stiff approach, my pack weight, and the iron loss probably was what did it. Kindly, the "maybe a few sit-ups once in a while" suggestion was not offered as a remedy for repeat occurrences....

So - I survived, though I didn't feel so great, and was careful to be safe once we began climbing. The crag is a slab that rises into routes that range from 5.4 to about 5.8(so far as I know). The trail at the base is simply a footpath where rock meats dirt, and the angle of the slope continues downward, so any trips or stumbles mean down you go, only to be stopped by the forest of trees.

We climbed about 5 routes, with everyone getting a shot on all if they desired. The easiest routes were simply walk-ups, where no real route-finding is required other than the obvious(Go upwards). But the first bolts were up there, and then there were some run-out sections.

I chose to lead a route that was purported to be 5.6, a grade I'd stand by. And that first 25 feet of slab definitely did keep me on my toes(well, actually not, for I pasted as much rubber as I could get). The thought of coming off, and the awareness that the fall wasn't simply to the cliffside trail but onward and into the woods.... made for a sporty feel.

The first bolt passed and I breathed my relief sigh and continued onward. I don't recall feeling any worry about runout on the route, and the climbing was not too difficult(I lead Gunks 5.5). But the anchor! Oh my.....

I have heard of suspect anchors, but this one was definitely a runner for the title of Miss Manky Anchor. Not bolted, by the way. It consisted of a natural bridge-like bit of rock, with a shallow tunnel under it. The width of the bridge was maybe 8 inches or so, but the rock quality was pure, disintegrating as you watch, choss. It had the consistency of sandcastle material with some pebbles added for texture.

At any rate, the climbing was fun; I do like slab. And the route did require some skill in finding the best path, plus it had two crux-y spots(the first before the first bolt).

Still - I nicknamed this crag the "Green Acres Crag." It seemed every route had something....."off" about it. My lead was the awful anchor. There was a route that appeared to have a HUGE run out with groundfall potential from 60 feet up. It was an illusion....The missing bolt was actually in situ. It just happened to be several feet off the natural course of the route.

Another line had anchors placed at a point where a 60-meter rope meant the belayer had to climb 15 feet off deck(easy 5th class moves) to gain the belay stance. It WAS a nice little dish, although the space was tight for leader/belayer to start out on. Nowhere to anchor the belayer, so the leader had best not come off....

And it seemed that someone had made some effort to clear the slabby face of years of lichen. Except the clear spots tended to be in between where the bolts were placed! The routes tended to go straight through grainy lichen patches, making the routes feel as if peppered with a little local spice.

At any rate, it was a fun day, out climbing with a group of women in a quiet setting. We saw no other people while we were there.

As we drove back to camp, Cheryl stopped just after passing through the campground's namesake covered bridge. She wanted to show us what she called a Party Trick. Now, before you peruse the pictures, I should mention that earlier in the day we had been talking about training regimes (Of which, I volunteered I had none).

Cheryl, on the other hand..... did tell us that one of her endurance exercises includes doing repetitions of pull-ups to exhaustion. The thing is to do 5 pull-ups in a minute, and repeat each minute until incapable. So, you do 5 and then have the "rest" of the minute to rest.... Next mintue, same thing. Supposedly......one starts out with lots of rest time, which lessens as the reps build up.

Cheryl does this for.....45 minutes.


....I know.


So - the party trick consists of climbing, hand over hand, up this iron guyline, and then exiting through the pretty window on the bridge.

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket


She did it in one shot, taking probably about 10 seconds, fully locked off the entire way.


What a sicko!


ADENDUM: 9/14 - I just remembered.... When I climbed with this hardwoamn the first time, it was in JTree on April of this year. She had told me that the day before she and some other chicks had gone to the legendary Gunsmoke to do some bouldering.....

She, having never been there before, and being newish to rock climbing, looked at the traverse(from the overhanging end) and....seeing no feet.... had one of the others boost her to the holds. And she proceeded to CAMPUS the traverse fully to the corner. Clean. Onsite.

ummm...yeah.
~~~~~~~
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Saturday, December 17, 2005

When the Going’s Run-out, the Tough Keep Running

Note: This was an essay I wrote, about a climb I did on 9/3/05.



By the third move on the climb’s starting pitch, I had an inkling as to why her first ascentionist might have named her “Bitchy Virgin.” For a 5.5, the holds were no gimme and I could practically hear the rock resisting peevishly.... “No. I won’t be an easy conquest. You make the effort. Think that foothold would be better if it were just a little closer? Tough! Work for it if it’s so important to you. I don’t feel like giving it to ya….!”

Before I’d even reached the crux, I let my partner, Chris, know how glad I was to have chosen to take the second pitch. Though confident I’d have mustered through this one, I knew it wouldn’t have been pretty. I was glad to avoid the risk of showing my whiny side, a part of my personality with a reputation for coming out punching when I feel possibly not up to the task.

The first pitch crux was a bitch, for sure, though for different reasons. Purely a power move, it consisted of a quail egg-sized conglomerate pebble welded to the wall to hold onto with one set of digits, and a micro ledge to mantle over with the other. I don’t recall footholds being existent, but at least the line went up a corner, so opposition was possible.

Gravity nearly got the better of me during the sequence, but I pasted my feet as best I could. With my first day on the job, board-lasted LaSportivas imbued with all the flexibility of a two by four, I stood my ground and pulled through. How glad I was that I had found a way to navigate the rock instead of yarding on the poor little sapling that, through no fault of its own, happened to have been born in such unfortunate geographical circumstances, growing out of a crack dead center in the crux. Especially after “suggesting” my partner would feel better about his lead if he considered the tree off-route. No doubt there had been those before us who had accepted a helping hand from that thin wisp of wood.

Breathing a heavy sigh of success, I announced my relief and my partner congratulated me on a job well done. Continuing to the belay, he said “I’m not so sure you’re going to want to lead the second pitch of this climb.” Intrigued, I asked why that might be. “Wait until you get up here; you can take a look and decide.” He replied.

Wondering what the situation could possibly be, I quickly passed through the rest of the pitch with easy climbing and reached the belay anchor he’d constructed.

I looked up to see a set of double ropes from a party ahead, with all the protection still in place, and the second on his way toward the top. The first piece, a small TCU, was easily 20 feet into the pitch.

“Why didn’t he place something sooner?” I wondered. “Must be some ballsy 5.10 leader bringing up a second who is challenged at this level. Well, I know that I’ll certainly be placing my first piece a hella lot sooner than that!”

My eyes traveled along their line, consisting of sparse gear placements the entire way, and an unsettling feeling began to creep into my gut. As my eyes came back to our own anchor, I focused on the one-inch wide, and probably just about as deep, horizontal channel Chris had used to build the belay. He had equalized the anchor using a red and a brown tricam, along with a small cam. A second leg consisted of another smaller cam. They were all in one solid but shallow groove. And that was what was available. It suddenly dawned on me why I was feeling irked. The rest of this climb consisted of similar shallow grooves, and not really an awful lot of them, until about 15 feet below the cliff top. Remembering the guidebook description of “some loose rocks” in the second pitch, I took a look at the section. “That must be they.” I thought to myself.

“Oh.” And after a long pause, “Yeah, I think you’re right. This seems a little bit scary to me.”

Chris told me he understood if I didn’t feel up to the lead, and that he would be happy to continue. I was off the hook. Or was I? When it comes down to the heart of things, there’s always oneself to contend with.

Taking stock of myself, I asked the questions in need of answer. Was I backing off out of an automatic response? Was I, in fact, technically capable of leading the route ahead?

Only my second season climbing, I’d taken my first lead just a few months previous. Toproping and being on the cleanup committee was fun but I’d found, and as I had heard so many times, the games really did begin when standing at the front of the line. Until that moment, I’d led only G-rated routes, too.

Doing what I supposed a good leader does when deciding how to proceed, I looked at what I felt to be the route ahead of me, eying up potential protection points and the stances that would support me as I placed them. My eyes went, step by step, along the path that led to that first gear placement, and the climbing clearly was doable. Not really challenging, actually. Maybe as easy as 5.3. The difficulty was ethereal because of the sparse protection; it was all the head. “Can I manage that facet of the route?” I asked myself. In the moment of truth, the answer was yes.

Telling Chris I was going to do it, I reiterated the reasons I felt capable. He smiled, proud of me, I think. No doubt he even said as much. Then he offered to take one of the legs form the belay out, so I would have the exact piece we spied as protection above; the Green Alien…. He said he’d placed it as a backup after creating the anchor anyway, that it would not compromise the belay integrity. Instinctively, I understood he was speaking the truth.
That didn’t stop “Mr. Wonderful” from voicing his opinion.

Before telling you what Mr. W. said, I should introduce him. We met last year, when I was toproping a climb called “First Day” over at Peterskill. The climb is rated 5.7, and not only was it the hardest route I had ever been on at the time, it required the use of hand and fist jams, a technique that I had never used but had read about. Unfortunately I hadn’t yet read John Long’s suggestion that “once you set the jam, don’t let it budge!”

Not confident in my jam, I was thinking about what might happen if it failed. Mr. Wonderful chose that moment to step right out of the deepest recesses in my brain and answer my query. With all the gore he could muster, he sent me a telepathic vision. I’ll leave it to your imagination, the painful possibilities he showed me, should my jam not hold.

It’s been my experience that Mr. Wonderful is never in my corner, when it comes right down to it.

Anyway, there I was, about to cast off on this second pitch of Bitchy Virgin, and Mr. Wonderful chooses to tap me on the shoulder, saying “You know, if you fall, wouldn’t you rather have that piece in the anchor? After all, Chris knows what he’s doing better than you…..”

I swear to you I rolled my eyes and sighed. The conversation I had with Mr. Wonderful went something like this…..

“Shut the fuck up, asswipe. Do you really think I can use this anchor the way a boulderer hits a crashpad? I am not fucking going to be relying on it, with or without the green Alien, in case you didn’t realize. Don’t you get it? We are in a ‘Do Not Fall’ situation here.”

Shaking my head at the sheer inanity that Mr. W. always seemed to have, I again understood he just was not really my friend. His comments were never helpful and since I had noticed long ago that there was another, more reliable little voice inside, I sort of shrugged my shoulders and gave Mr. W. the old heave ho. If you are ever climbing Bitchy Virgin, wipe your boots off before you step up, because I think he landed down there in the gully somewhere.

So…..I racked that Alien, inhaled deeply and took one last inventory of the feet sequence. Letting out that breath, off I headed. My first note to self was the realization that, though the feet were practically micro ledges, they didn’t seem to match up with the handholds I was finding. On top of that, I may have had handholds, but they were a far cry from being buckets I could crawl into.

Climbs in the Shawnagunks are well-known for sheerness and overhanging features, but the beginning of this pitch was, thankfully, nowhere near plumb. However, the sense of exposure was a valid concern. One false move and I’d be launched on a maiden voyage like the legendary lead zeppelin. The thing to do was get my feet in place, balance and to forget about the comfort of clingy holds to hug like long-lost friends.

“Get a piece in.” I instructed myself. “There must be somewhere to slot protection before that spot so far away it seems to reside outside of Ulster County.”

“Aha, there it is!” I coaxed myself into believing, just a few steps into the pitch. Flanking what seemed to be a glop of rock cemented to the wall, I kept my eye on that shallow fracture lest it get away and blend into the surroundings. With the self-congratulatory air of Barney Fife, I flicked the biner holding small nuts off my rack, flung them into view, and eyeballed them confidently.

“No, that one’s too big. Nope, that’s too big, too.” One after another I went down the line, the nuts shrinking in size like a melting ice cream cone, until finally there was but one nut to try. I felt like the inept deputy at that moment, but dammit – if there was a bud to be nipped, I was going to nip it.

The rack belonged to Chris and it occurred to me that maybe some of the nuts were not rated for free climbing. I myself kept the three smallest DMM Walnuts on my rack to puff it up like a wild dog does when confronting hostile…er, I mean, to use in opposition against a more beefy piece…..

“Hey Chris,” I implored from my towering perch, standing about five feet above belay. “Are your smaller nuts only rated for aid?”

With a little laugh, he assured me they were as full strength as industrial Drano. He sounded convinced I was capable of the work though, and that seemed to help me feel more self-assured in turn. I separated that littlest nut from the forest of wires and guided it towards the hollow. In it sort of crunched….not smoothly, in the manner of what I refer to as a “Yummy” placement, but….it slotted nonetheless. At least I had a piece in off the anchor, even if it were just a little nut. Setting it as tightly as possible, I hoped the tiny acorn would stay rooted like a mighty oak if I fell and wrenched its wire branches.

With a deep breath and a sigh, onward and upward I went. A few steps more and I found another placement, though I don’t recall what I slotted. With a sense of fair certainty those first two pieces amounted to no more than psychological pro, I thought it best to bank on staying solidly on the rock. Next, I came to what I saw as a fine place for my little green friend, the alien.... Like a junkie with their works, the moment I drove it home, I found relief.

At last I had the courage to face the day. Down I looked, to find my place in the scheme of things. Dismayed, it appeared the belay station below was located a shorter distance away than the other party’s first piece had seemed when I spied it from below. I asked Chris if he thought I had placed in the same horizontal, and he told me it was a ways up. “Que, sera, sera,” I thought. “There’s no way I’m pulling that plug. I will find another placement.”

And so it was to be. I kept climbing, and came to another stance. Looking for a protection point, I came up empty, and did what I knew I must; put one foot in front of the other and continue climbing. Another stance, another chance to see I had no pro. And so it went, until finally Chris hesitatingly asked the question I did not want to hear.

“Do you think you can get something in there?”

My initial reaction was not relative to what he meant. I heard “You’re going for a wild ride if you peel.” but in actuality he meant I’d passed up a spot to place gear. I looked to my left. And then to my right, and then up above, and it seemed to me there was no room at the inn. There was only one direction left to look, and the hell if I wanted to do that! If all the world’s a stage, Chris was precisely on cue as he called out “Maybe at your feet?”

“Dammit” I thought, chiding myself for having run blindly in fear. I gulped, and looked at the horizontal I was standing above. I felt that I’d been had; that the cardinal rule I had agreed to that day was to climb without falling. Not focused on going anywhere but up, here I was, face to face with a glaring loophole. Round one was over and the game had advanced to the next level. To play, I’d have to downclimb and how I wanted to avoid that. The exposure was just so…so….so visceral.

Whatever I said or did, or didn’t do, must have gotten the attention of the party who had topped out above and was preparing to rappel. The leader yelled down some beta, something about small cams, and asked what my smallest piece was. I believe I called out “A Red Friend,” and the look on his face told me I’d not supplied the answer he was looking for.

In turn, I must have looked sketched, for he offered to come take a look as he rappelled down, and though my prideful reaction was “This is my lead!” the words came out of my mouth were something like “Hey, thanks. This is no time for me to be worried about pride. I’ll take whatever help you can give.”

He slid down the rope and as he arrived I handed over my piece. Finger on the trigger, he poked it into a spot just below and to outside of my right foot. While he jiggled the thing, I watched his face and it was apparent he felt a bit menaced. Slotting it further to the left, then moving it again, he remarked that the next bigger cam would be a better fit.

I didn’t have the next size. So, he worked a bit more, and gave me his best look of confidence. I didn’t feel it, but I thanked him and said I was fine. Why he had to then mention the crux coming up was beyond me. I suppose he just wanted to be helpful to a sketched, slightly in-over-her-head new leader. Or maybe to remind me to stay safe. At any rate, he gave me some sort of beta/pep talk which I cannot recall, and off he went, rapping down the wall, past a roof and out of sight.

On the ground, he called “off rappel.” Looking up to his partner, I signaled him to follow. He seemed to be waiting on me and I didn’t want to keep him there, on the clifftop without water and with daylight fading, while I slow-moving-vehicled my way to his side. Perhaps they had discussed the ethics of rapping down over a leader; it seemed as if he were awaiting my permission to pass. I was glad that I had been aware enough to notice this subtle climber’s etiquette, for I had breached protocol before. Twice, I’d finished a pitch and left my poor partner waiting, and waiting, and waiting some more, until they finally asked if I had anchored and they could take me off belay.

Not that I was consciously procrastinating, but once he went by, I realized I had been glad to have the respite. With no obstacle preventing me from proceeding, it was time to continue. The moment had come to entertain approaching that crux.

Moving upward through the horizontals, I could see footholds every step for quite a way. The handholds appeared easy enough; I was climbing a series of parallel channels, after all. But, as had been the case below, they weren’t really comfortable. There were none of those “mmm-mmm, good” grooves I was always just so happy to hang on to. Still, it was just a matter of standing on my feet and walking my way up. The path lay open ahead of me, meandering gently through an indirect course. Even without a breadcrumb trail of chalk to follow, route-finding was not complicated.

At this point, the climbing was not difficult, and I was looking several moves forward, linking sequences, and enjoying the state of flow in which I was climbing. Then things shifted, and the highway I’d been hiking started sputtering to a standstill. The terrain altered as the channels shifted from first and second knuckle-deep grooves to a short section of undulating face climbing. Devoid of positive features, both feet and hands would have to toil through crystals and nubs as I crested the wavelet. I could see where my left foot went, and though it wouldn’t have been called a campable ledge by anyone I’d ever climbed with, I knew it was serviceable. I’d stood up on much smaller features many times before, just not as my primary point of contact.

Of course, by now my last gear placement was in another time zone, and to gain elevation the position for my other left foot was a damned near vertical smear. The good news was that I had an incredible sidepull for my right hand. The opposition worked. Yet, the place I had to place my other hand was just…. simply…. not really within reach. “This would be the crux, then.” I told myself.

Thinking that perhaps I’d simply missed an obvious stance, I took a look around. Nothing. At that moment I felt as if marooned on an island; adrift in a rocky sea. I knew what I had to do. Even as the thought occurred that Mr. W. would suggest an all-out dyno, I was fairly certain that wasn’t the right thing. It was a more simple solution. I just had to grow a few inches.

Hanging off that powerful pull, I checked to see that my feet were still pasted. Next I replaced the smear, just a little bit higher, but not enough to put me off balance. And I reached as high as I could.

It wasn’t enough.

Returning to position, I drew a deep breath, exhaled and made another attempt, only to come up short again. This was aggravating, but I had to make it happen. The next time, as I went for that reach, I insured my “ledge” leg was fully extended. Pressing the pedal to the mettle, I ground my toe down and stood nearly on point. I ratcheted up that smear angle…..not too much; I couldn’t risk losing friction. Then, stretching the vertebrae in my back, practically one by one, my fingers found their way to something sort of solid. It was a shallow contour in the next undulation of rock.

My tips were typing on a keyboard of Gunks conglomerate and I started hunting and pecking but good. Searching for a “Thank God” hold, the thesaurus was coming up blank, and I understood the task would be fruitless. I would have to make do with a scornful “thanks a lot” crimp, if I could even find that.

Settling upon a patch of crystals that I could smear with my fingerpads, I bit down like I was wearing sticky rubber mittens. Pressing my palm into the wall for torque, up I pulled, fully on those fingers, with the heel of my hand camming the wall below. Hard.

I gained altitude.

What happened next, I don’t recall. Apparently I’d gotten past the crux. Finding myself amongst more comfortable terrain, I kept moving. Even though I was scared witless, there was something going on inside that guided me, and I found myself conversing with that unknown entity that has saved countless an ass before mine.

Up I went, scoping placements as I climbed. Fully aware I was running it out, I knew if there was a placement to be had I’d get it. The simple fact was, there just weren’t spots to place the gear I had with me. I hope I found a few more protection points in the next 40 feet, but I have no memory of doing so. My next recollection was coming upon the flaky section I’d seen from the anchor below, tapping on it, and hearing the disconcerting hollow answer of unsound rock.

I thumped other sections, and somewhere I hit pay dirt. Not only was it solid, but there was a spot that accepted gear. I dropped something in, added a tripled two-footer, clipped the rope and headed onward. Not upward, mind you. There was no way I was wiping my feet anywhere near the Heaven’s Door I’d been knocking on, even though there appeared to be gear slots galore on the thing. Off to the left were more of the all too familiar barren horizontals, but by now I had come to terms with their bleak prospects and was no longer shocked by their cynicism. I had become desensitized.

Like a prospector with an eye out for that tell-tale glimmering gold, I panned for a nugget that might be camouflaging a small crevice. Finally I spied it off to the side, about fifteen feet away. I still had that little tricam, Pinky, on my gear sling. Now I’d found his home. Traversing over, it looked like the fit would be tighter than a full-size sofa in a New York City studio, and truth be told, it was. With much finagling, the piece went. Had the space have been the least bit smaller, it would not have gone.

I love tricams, and at that moment I rejoiced in their glory. I was damned glad to be alive, and just about as happy not to be one of those pitiful folks who despise the humble gear. As with my last piece, I clipped a tripled two-footer and was on my way. It was now just a matter of traversing back to the right and over what appeared to be an easy enough bulge to the top out.

As I began to make my way back, I noticed a sensation of tautness in the rope. Assuming this was the result of my partner giving a tight belay, I was appreciative of the attention, but irritated. Concern was one thing, but I could barely move! Besides, I was traversing; the last thing I wanted was a tight line. Unwilling to slow the hell down and take a look around, I was just about to holler for slack when it occurred to me to check what was holding me up. Maybe the rope had snagged a flake somewhere. My eyes reread the passage, and to my embarrassment, noted a perfectly formed “Z” in the rope. My own unextended slings had penned it.

Amused at myself, I told Chris what I had been thinking, which brought laughter from both of us. When we wore down, he asked if I wanted to go back and extend the slings or face rope drag. By now, I just wanted to cuff my arms around the ledgetop tree less than twenty feet above and give myself up. The end was so near, it seemed; what difference could a bit of rope drag make? Tugging on the luggage I had unwittingly packed, I gathered a fat bustle of rope and took off. The tare weight of my excess baggage became quickly apparent and I vowed never again to travel so hastily that I didn’t take the time to plan accordingly.

I edged back toward the line which I knew was the route to the top, playing a game of Tug ‘O War along the way. Once I got directly below the anchor point I found a good stance, relaxed and let go of that damned safety line that had been taunting me. Looking at the rock I easily recognized the route; up and over a gentle bulge in three or four moves of 5.5 climbing. Nothing more, and nothing less. The sequence was obvious, but as had been the case for the entire pitch, there had to be a bit of added intrigue. When I had released the rope I’d been dragging, it naturally regained equilibrium. Now, even so much as shifting my weight in anticipation of a foot placement exerted a tax on the line. In order to make the final exit, I’d have to bustle that heavy train again, and keep a clenched fistful of rope that I’d be able to let out as needed while moving through the sequence. On top of that, the climbing seemed a bit crux-y.

If I’d been following someone, that bit of climbing would have been cake. Even on lead, with solid gear I’d have simply sucked in my gut, saluted the force and sent myself into the skirmish. But my piece was that pink tricam, and though technically it was solid, I had traversed away from it. Attempting to calculate the equation of a pawful of cord plus rope drag added up to difficult climbing. Multiplied with a pendulum fall onto the gear, I had no idea what forces might be applied. I never was very good at math. In school, equations boggled me and I always sort of guessed at answers. Usually I came up with passing grades. Looking at the wash of information I presently had in front of me, I had a pretty good idea of the outcome. I did not want to risk failing, even if it was only 5.5, by drawing a line directly through the bulge.

Like a criminal looking for another way out, I nervously glanced to my right and saw a dead end. “Up is the way it’s supposed to be.” I whispered to myself. “Why, oh why had I not fixed those slings? I should have extended them in the first place!” I gulped and reviewed the sequence again in my head. So clearly laid out, it should have been no more than a small discomforting moment in time. Hands there, smear at that spot and push up. Realign my core to get ready for the next move. Balance….. balance….. breathe….. Release the left hand for the next hold and ….aaaahhhh…..I imagine the rope reeling like a fishing line with a swordfish taking the bait, and I get pulled into the drink!

Calming myself down from the imaginary epic, I regain my senses. Looking to the dead end again, I knew it wasn’t an option. A glance up reminded me of what could happen if I chose that route and I cursed the damned game I was playing. Then I turned my head left, to the only other option, and took in the view. There was a lichen field covering a gently angled face of rock.

I like lichen. I am fond of it because it keeps mum what people haven’t climbed. Like the wrappings on a present, parts of the Gunks cliffs still have patches of the stuff. Often as I walk the cliff base, I gaze up into them, wondering what sorts of gifts they behold. Usually it’s unprotectable turf, but not always, and I fantasize about the day that I can be so bold as to venture forth into these new realms. Climbing uncharted territory is fun stuff. That much I can tell you without a shadow of doubt, even though I’ve done only a small amount of it so far.

But, back to my problem at hand. This lichen off to my side felt comforting to me; reminding me to look closely. Gently. Let my mind relax and see what I can see. And so, I did. Then, as in a fairly tail, a path emerged, and it was much, much easier climbing. A bit circuitous, it is “obviously” off route, but the moves are plainly evident; a pathway to the top that would be, were it just off the ground, barely 5th class work.

Meanwhile, Mr. W. seemed to have found his way to the clifftop and was taking the opportunity to chide me for being a baby. I could practically see him pointing to the route’s more difficult part. Extending his hand over the bulge, I imagined him telling me to ‘buck up and do the climb the way it’s supposed to be done, dammit.’

I looked back at the lichen and, if lichen could talk, it seemed to be giggling. Seriously. As clearly as I had perceived Mr. W., now I heard “Why risk killing yourself, when you can simply take a walk through the park?”

With a bit of shame, I explain my predicament to Chris below. I can’t remember what his response was, probably because I already knew what course I was going to take, but I am sure whatever he said was supportive and positive. One more look at my lichen-covered passage and a thought occurred - “If this is the path of least resistance, it really should be the way the route goes anyway! I’m taking it.”

And so, I did. I still couldn’t fall, of course, and the lichen was a bit disconcerting to grasp and step on. It’s much more fun to spy potential holds and peel the stuff off to see what you’ve won, but I wasn’t cleaning a route. I was getting to the top so my partner could come on up.

Feeling like a hiker skipping through the woods, in short order I was on solid ground with a sling wrapped round the tree. I’d made it; I hadn’t fallen, ripping all my gear along the way. I hadn’t experienced what I dreaded most and worried about the entire pitch – coming onto the anchor below, and catching a slight bit of resistance before hearing/seeing/knowing what I imagine could only be an awful, horrifying moment in eternity. I hadn’t taken a single misstep the entire time. My acts were calculated, cautious and deliberate. And at the moment where I needed to decide whether to follow the trail everyone else had taken or go my own way, I had chosen to pioneer. I had truly led the pitch.

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Monday, June 27, 2005

My Virgin FA Lead

I've been helping my friend a little bit with his first ascents, down in Georgia, and it is something I really, really enjoy. Going to an area that is quiet, where I might see no one but my partenr during the entire day, clearing away brush from the trails to be, pulling dirt and vines from the cracks, dodging runaway rocks that, though my partner warned were on their way, and tossed in the opposite direction as my stance, seem to willfully alter their trajectory once hitting ground.....maybe this is not for some people, but I find it exhillerating.

The thought of following a line that nobody else has gone up, not knowing how the thing will turn out - no Hansel & Gretel trail of breadcrumb-like chalk to follow should I find myself lost - and the real questions.....Will it go, and how will I get there?.....this, to me, is climbing at it's best.

I think it became clear to me I'd be wanting to go for FA's last year, when I'd been about 3 months climbing outside, and my friend gave me a tour of Peterskill, a part of the Minnewaska Preserve in New York. We were walking the cliffline and he said "Here is where the climbs end." Something inside me clicked. I looked ahead and saw the cliffs continued. I knew the climbs that had been climbed may end where we stood, but that there were drfinitely more climbs. How could there not be - the cliff was still there!

We continued out walk; he was going to show me some old signs of the community that had once made home there. At a point, it seemed we noticed something in the rock. We both stopped - and we knew what we saw. A weakness; a line, a climb to be climbed.....

We both made exclaimations and went closer. Then my friend said, with a bit of disappointment, "Oh. There's loose rock. Too bad....." and he began to trundle along his way.

I stayed behind, just a minute, while thinking "So - loose rock. So? Get it out, or go around it! Why would loose rock stop you?" I have to admit - I kept this thought to myself, because I knew that I would be coming back. To work that line. Some day......
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The next year came, and I haven't yet gotten that climb looked at. I don't get out with people interested in doing reconn much. With my FA partner down south, and out of commission for now with a broken elbow, I climb with people I meet online, or have climbed with before. We bring our guidebooks, and have a tick list in our minds before we even meet up for the day. Well......I don't have a list; I still have so many climbs I've not been on available in the area that I am happy to climb whatever my partner wants. I like to go along for the ride. It makes for a better day, when I don't have expectations.

One day, in early June, I had a weekday available, and though I posted for a partner, no body was available. So, I went out myself, thinking "I'm gonna look for my line." I knew that was my mission. But I told people I was going to boulder and practice gear placement.

I walked the cliffline west, and tried some of the guidebook boulder propblems that day. Couldn't pull a V0. (That's changing, though.) Then I started to walk the cliffline east, an area I was fairly familiar with.

....to be continued - gotta go do some work.....



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