skyclimb Posted February 21, 2005 Posted February 21, 2005 Alright, so here is the question: What arete's have you climbed in the alpine(gear) and or bolts... Lets hear your stories.... This question spawned from a recent arete slapping nightmare at smith, on a little route know as The Blade... Quote
Dr_Flash_Amazing Posted February 21, 2005 Posted February 21, 2005 This question spawned from a recent arete slapping nightmare at smith, on a little route know as The Blade... DFA don't have no alpine arete stories, but the good Doctor has been on Das Blade. The guidebook does such a splendid old-school sandbag job on that one..."surprisingly technical for the grade"...more like surprisingly harder than Chain Reaction for the grade. The Doc almost made it to the second bolt before making L.C. finish it, and barely made it up the thing on TR. Apparently, Slit Your Wrist is pretty horrendous for .13b, as well; little surprise there. Quote
layton Posted February 22, 2005 Posted February 22, 2005 is that Mt Baring? Is there an Arete climb on it? Looks like some slab ice...anyone ever checked it out? Quote
specialed Posted February 22, 2005 Posted February 22, 2005 There is no such thing as an "alpine arete." Quote
IanOutThere Posted February 22, 2005 Posted February 22, 2005 there are many such things.... Switzerland and the Italian Dolomites come to mind first!The whole damn expanse of the DOlomites could be considered one big 'alpine arete' climbing area... Maybe you should get out more Specialed. Quote
ScottP Posted February 22, 2005 Posted February 22, 2005 (edited) is that Mt Baring? Is there an Arete climb on it? Looks like some slab ice...anyone ever checked it out? Oops, sorry, it's a "prow" Dolomite Tower-Prow Route V, 5.9, A3 or "A new route established by Brian Burdo, at considerable effort and expense, ascending the north arete of Dolomite Tower. 13 pitches." Edited February 23, 2005 by ScottP Quote
ryland_moore Posted February 22, 2005 Posted February 22, 2005 So, I usually equate alpine routes with summits. If something has a summit, then typically I wouldn't call an entire route an arrete, but a ridge, like in Dru's photo. Yes it is two faces coming together like an arrete, but I equate arrete's with smaller features of a bigger picture in the alpine. You can have short sections of arretes in the alpine but the route could also have face climbing, dihedrals, and chimneys too. An arrete is much smaller than a ridge, obviously. WHere it gets tricky is places like SMith or places like the dolomites. Red Rocks, Yosemite, and other big walls come to mind as well. Quote
ryland_moore Posted February 23, 2005 Posted February 23, 2005 So I should not have include Smith in that category. I wouldn't classify most of those mentioned as alpine as well. Red Rocks alpine? Yosemite? Zion? Nope......just trying to point out that I don't really see a route as an arrete in the alpine but do at other places mentioned above. Quote
goatboy Posted February 25, 2005 Posted February 25, 2005 Howzabout the SNOW ARETE on Eldorado? Or the upper part of the N Buttress of Fury? Quote
gosolo Posted February 27, 2005 Posted February 27, 2005 I think there is some confusion and rightly so. Arete as websters defines it is a "sharp crested ridge in rugged mountains". Cunning rock linguists started using the term to describe features on a crag so there is the confusion. I think I tried the Blade once too. At the time a friend? said we should try that as he had done the route years ago. I didnt make it too far. An awesome arete is Ionic Strength in JT. Quote
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