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eric8

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Posts posted by eric8

  1. 100% agree with Newest Industries

     

    Most of the right side of the country is hard to onsight. Phone Calls from the Dead absolutely flailed on the onsight. Pulled the rope and hiked it...

     

    Chimp Dip at Squamish was consistently onsighting that grade at squamish when I tried it. Massive flail session on the start

  2. It is not clear to me why this rappel route is necessary and it makes me question it's validity (see Sol's response). Adding bolts to save a tree is one thing, that is not the case here. It seems all of the spires have established descents and none of them have a high level of objective hazard for the range and style of climbing, heck this descent adds two rappels. It wouldn't be appropriate to add a rappel line down the east face of liberty bell because I don't like walking down the scree gulley currently used on the descent.

     

    I realize this is sort of a no good deed goes unpunished thing but the work Kurt Hicks is doing to upgrade old hardware up there seems like a much better use of a drill.

  3. The inner walls at index get all day shade and are good climbing on hot days. Earwax wall is okay too.

     

    The no name crag is good on a hot day. Maybe you have to hike or bike if the road is gated?

     

    Equinox has one very good 11+ maybe more I was only there once, the 12- routes seem to be more endurance than power so those are good to work.

  4. Like everyone has said there is no real camping that time of year. The ski station by the brevant lift is the cheapest hostel and a good place to meet people. Plus you can leave your gear there for free when you go out to play on a multiday trip. There are some free unmanned huts that time of year. Which makes the price of the lift tickets and paying for a hostel not so bad if you can go spend 3-4 nights in the mountains at a time. Depends on the weather.

  5. Hey P,

     

    I will just add a few comments, having mentored a few friends through this same hurdle. First of all the fact that you could not do one route means nothing. Your trying to break through a 20 year plateau there is going to be a lot of failure a long the way. Learn from it. You can lose 10 lbs, hangboard, boulder in the gym, do every thing right but your still going to fail while out on real rock trying to learn the technique to climb at a higher grade. Those things will just shorten the learning curve. IMO, breaking into 5.10 is all about volume. When I was trying to break into this grade I was trying to 10 pitches in 5.9-5.10 range in a day. This was obviously something I had to work up to.

     

    Its probably going to take a couple years before you can do any 5.10 anywhere. I believe it was in Alpinist where Topher Donahue that said

    "real 5.10 trad will always be hard"

     

    So embrace the process if climbing was easy you would do something else fun for instead right?

  6. Read Will Gadd's "Ice and Mixed climbing". It will tell you everything you need to know, focus on tracking your tools, and the "putting it together" sections.

     

    Practice these techniques early and often on top rope, 5's will feel easy. You will learn more technique in 1 day top roping then 10 leading.

     

    Most ice climbers in pnw have horrible technique. The ones that have good technique climb quite hard. That is literally all you need to know. Climb ice with good technique and its easy, unless the ice is brittle and shitty but there is the fun in it.

  7. Boston, unfortunately

     

    No good climbing in Boston?

     

    Ah, actually there is a great variety of rock climbing around. The gunks, north conway, and rumney are all great crags. There are a bunch of smaller crags around, too. Just no big cool routes like they have in the pacific northwest unless you count cannon...which I don't really...

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