Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 40
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

DPS - I hope you get to feeling better. Spoke to Nick and he wants to get together and see the slids of the Bugs and show the slides of your Alaska trip.

What really gets me psyched in no particular order... full time climbing, women, a full time job and the thought of maybe coming close to being as bad ass as the dudes in the below story.

Fast and light in Baffin

Wright and Smith nab second ascent of Charlie Porter Route

October 5, 2001

Though it hasn't had a successful ascent in more than 25 years, the Charlie Porter Route (VII 5.10+ A4) on Baffin Island's Mt. Asgard got the attention of Cedar Wright and Jason "Singer" Smith last August, when they became the second to climb the mighty line. The route, established in nine days by the gifted soloist Charlie Porter in 1975, was the first Grade VII in the world and a line that had been aptly described by Doug Scott in Heroic Climbs: A Celebration of World Mountaineering as “the greatest achievement in Baffin, the Arctic and probably anywhere.” Wright and Smith successfully completed the route in a 38-hour continuous push, logging 54 waking hours from base camp to base camp. On a roll during their visit, the pair also climbed the 4000-foot Scott Route (5.10+ A1) on Asgard in 3 hours, 56 minutes, free soloing more than half the route and according to Wright, marking “the birth of modern Yosemite speed-climbing tactics in Baffin.”

 

Posted

Gill was more inspiring than you credit him for. I once read that he had trained himself to the point of being able to do a one-finger pullup on ANY of his fingers! (yup, all ten of them!!!)

These days, I find my wife and three sons the most inpiring items in my world.

Been training aggressively for thirty years and still can't do a one-arm pullup - but, I am closer now, at age 49 than I have ever been. If I continue to train and improve at the same rate for the next thirty years, I might come close... the trainers and sports physiologist-types that I've consulted all agree that the capacity for a one-arm pullup is genetic - either ya got it or ya don't. An informal sampling of friends and acquaintances who do have this capacity reveals that 100% of them could perform the feat before they ever trained formally... oh well... I'm still training, getting stronger, and hoping I live long enough to prove the experts wrong...

which leads to another phenomenon that often inspires me - tell me something can't be done!

Posted

haireball. I think with hard and smart training, you can do it. I'm tall and lanky, so my predisposition for one-arms is non-existent, yet I've been able to do one, albeit with a lot of training.

How useful is it? Well, it probably isn't, (Dave Graham can't do one) but it's kind of a neat trick.

Gill's pretty amazing. He's in his sixties, and he claims to be able to still do a one-arm doorjamber.

I bet a friend $20 that I could do a one-arm pinkie pull-up in six months. I started training, trying to hang off of webbing with my pinky. Well, I guess I pre-disposed myself to injury, 'cause the next time I went bouldering, I tore up that pinkie pretty good, and now six mo's later, it still sometimes hurts. I better start a little slower next time.

Posted

I did a one arm pull up ONCE. It took a lot of drinkin and a real pretty lady to get me to do it. She wasn't one to be impressed by those sorts of things though. She has soloed el cap a few times and has been to Baffin

Posted

quote:

Originally posted by mikeadam:

5.9 rubble is more like it

True True! 5.9 Dirt is hard [small print] at least for me [/small print]! I can point people at a couple of examples if you like.

The Eiger's North Face is 5.7 right tongue.gif

[This message has been edited by Cpt.Caveman (edited 10-19-2001).]

Posted

Speaking of burly, Mt. Robson has an unrepeated route on it still, at 5.9 A2, no less. (Only a ten-hour drive from here!) The Stumps/Logan on the north face. I looked at it last summer while up there, and I for one have NO desire to repeat it... IT DOESN'T HAVE BOLTS BY MY FEET,HIPS, AND SHOULDER!

Anyone here had thoughts about trying it? Unrepeated, and only ten hours away....5.9 A2.... The glory!

DanielPatrickSmith. Sounds like you're feeling better. Cool.

Posted

sidenote: what's interesting about Charlie Porter's route on the North tower of Mt. Asgaard is that it was originally rated 5.8, A2, WI3. It's an obvious and beautiful line that follows a handcrack for a couple thousand feet. That the route was done solo by Charlie Porter is inspiring (especially given the epic he had on his attempt with frostbite: he crawled 35 miles out to the fijord).

Posted

Lizardbrain,

No, I don't play any stringed instruments. I'd like to, but I don't think I'm willing to put the time and effort into learning right now. Maybe when I'm old and decrepit I can take up a new hobby.

Posted

5.9 A2 in the Rockies is like a5, it is the top of the grading scale. if youthink its the hardest possible thing doable you give it 5.9 a2. of course many old 5.9 a2 single pitches are now m9's... the new sandbag grade is "m6+ and they can choke on that!" (this quote courtesy of Steve House of Mazama, Wa.)

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...