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Awesome and Inspiring Thread...


RuMR

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When I was teaching my 4.5 yr old how to ride a bike without training wheels, my 2.5 yr old insisted on the same. Except that she would not let me help her at all.

"Leave me alone!"

She would get on, crash, pout, get on, crash pout,..... on and on.

By the end of the day both were riding pretty well.

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Back to the topic then,....

Who was that guy who hung out at Devils Lake in Wisconsin until he was 90 something? I met him once. Frayed old purple rope with way too many years on it. He was top roping a 5.8 without any problems. It reminded me of mountain goats that live their entire life in one square mile.

They do the same moves so many times it is, like riding a bike.

Bwaaaaa ha hah haa

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Back to the topic then,....

Who was that guy who hung out at Devils Lake in Wisconsin until he was 90 something? I met him once. Frayed old purple rope with way too many years on it. He was top roping a 5.8 without any problems. It reminded me of mountain goats that live their entire life in one square mile.

They do the same moves so many times it is, like riding a bike.

Bwaaaaa ha hah haa

 

 

Could be you refer to Dave Slinger but he skiied winters in Aspen. He was an onion farmer who made money in pea futures and took up climbing at 46. He had his own little black book in which he recorded the sequences of climbs. Last I heard, in the 1980s, he could still climb 5.10 but had trouble recalling his name.

 

It is good to acknowledge and respect longevity. It is less defensible to make comparisons, though I see the rc.com thread did take that direction. Along with adding your age to your years in the game (the way pension plans do!) you should crudely integrate the area under the curve of your technical rockclimbing career. Time x grade. The biggest penis is the one having the most fun.

 

Then consider the difference between shooting for the top versus staying in the game. The strategies don't exclude each other but if you peak early it's downhill after that. If you take it easy you can get better every year until your actual performance meets your ideal best on its way down with age. Then there is a small poof and you disappear.

 

 

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