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Posted

"Dishes are done, Man!"

(pronounced with your best Chong impersonation)

 

a bold FA (turned into a solo) on thin Maple Canyon ice. FAer managed to dinner plate the entire route off the wall as he ascended. zero ice to be climbed for a second ascent that day.

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Posted

This all just evidence that girls should be naming more routes, then there would be less slit and jug puns, more poetry and characters from Jane Austen novels. Doing "Mr Darcy" has a nice ring.

Posted

Well I'm gonna call a route Flapjackrabbit and then no one not a ccsprayer will understand it.

 

"Arnold Grundlewimp Meets Albert Volstrangler" is another good name in the Bulletheads.

Posted

"Battered Sandwich" is a cool route name on Private Idaho at Index. Name didn't make much sense until I pulled myself onto the ledge at the top after an embarassing amount of thrashing in a hand-crack to offwidth to lieback to squeeze chimney. I was the Battered Sandwich for sure.

Posted

The route names at Josh anf Tahquitz get pretty esoterical at time... "Zorro Zucchinis From Alpha Centauri Twelve", "If You Really Loved Me You'd Buy Me A Turkey" etc.

Posted

Static Point has some pretty stoney names

 

"Fluorescent Green Crab Traverse"

 

"Spencer's Spaceport"

 

For shear volume of disgusting names you can't beat the Bill Robins legacy at Vantage sample

Posted
This all just evidence that girls should be naming more routes, then there would be less slit and jug puns, more poetry and characters from Jane Austen novels. Doing "Mr Darcy" has a nice ring.

 

Ya the whole cliff would be called "Heathcliffe" I bet

Posted

yellaf.gif and all routes would have to have "and" in them as in:

 

chain reaction and reduction

snaffles and snufflupuguses

etc.

 

it would also inspire the gruel-flavored clif bar

Posted

English 304: Heathcliffe is from Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre is from Jane Eyre, but these were written by the Brontes (Charlotte and Emily).

Someone should name a route Wuthering Heights though, it's an excellent name--not entirely sure what wuthering means, but it's so fun to say!

Posted

I think it comes from the location where the story is set, Top Wutherns (Withens?) outside of Haworth in West Yorkshire. It's a little shack of stone, not much there.

Posted

Wuther is a word, means "to blow with a dull roaring sound." There was a Genesis album from the 70's called "Wind and Wuthering" that made reference to Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights book.

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