Skisports Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Yesterday a friend and I went to Exit 32 looking to climb in the 5.10s mainly. Knowing 32 quite well we stroll up to Human Foot the 5.8 on the corner of Blackstone crag. Minding my own business I continue to flake out the rope so Holly could lead. I glanced over to the left of me, only to find myself double taking. Like what hell is going on. I felt I was at the circus. The man was belaying someone in the mid 20s with a dulfersitz, with out hesitating I exclaimed “ Do you need a belay device?” “No”, the man said “I don’t like using them it is just extra weight.” I turned my head shaking going back to what I was doing. At first I wanted to get the hell out of there I thought shit was going to hit the fan soon. Holly started to climb, as she was working her way up the right I took a look at the man's harness. It looked older than my grandfather who passed away in the 80’s. I ask him, “ Do you know who Todd Skinner is?” he reluctantly said, “Yes,” then I pressed on “yeah he died of a harness failure.” He went on to say “I made it myself,” my upchuck reflexes couldn’t keep up with my ears. Eager to move on Holly made it to the top of the climb and I lowered her. I pulled the rope to pink point the fun little 5.8, as I climb up this 5.8 I hear a bantering going on from, well from the father and son combo ekkkk. I dance up the 5.8 the son is still on the 5.9 just to the right of me taking his leisurely time with his father belaying him with a dulfersitz. I just approach the chains to the 5.8 to hear the son yelling, “lower,” then a pause from below. “I can’t I am going to have to build an anchor.” The father yells up. I am at the chains quickly trying to get off the route so I can be at the bottom just in case I need to be a runner or assess the sons trauma. The son then asks to be lower five feet to a small bench and yells down, “off belay”. Before I go on rappel I ask him can you anchor into a bolt. The son looks around and says “no, I am fine.” I gulp and rappel. The father and son are now yelling at each other about how far the rope end is off the ground, with shear luck the kid made it to the ground. Now the father son team start acting like they are packing up, but they don’t. They continue to climb a little more on this 10b top roped, which is the chains that I plan to use next. I start racking up to lead the 5.9 and look down the crag to the north to see this old man pounding in a bong in the crack. No, no, not the type you smoke out of the type you climb with. I don’t know maybe in the 70’s you did smoke out of them, whatever he was doing it was messed up. I ask the father with the messed up harness, “is he with you.” He shakes his head and his eyes open brightly to say, “No”. I look closer now at the man pounding the bong in. At first all I could see was he was setting up an anchor to solo lead this 5.10a. But he had a canvass tarp setup with tricams, knife blades, angles, big wall hammer ect. I ignore him thinking wow I have another oh shit head to the left of me. I normally don’t wear a helmet sport climbing but I put it on just so the father and son team don’t pull the rope on top of me on this traversing climb. The father and son pull the rope respectively as they ask me for permission. I continue up the climb and Holly lowers me down. As I am lowered down, I am staring at this old man pounding in another bong. I walk over to our stuff ignoring the old man at this point still minding my own business. Holly follows the 5.9 because of the traversing nature of the climb. She cleans the draws and gets to the top and yells off belay. I walk over to the old man and introduce myself just to find out what he hopes to do. “Excuses me sir what are you climbing over here?” He responds, “Oh I am going to do this first ascent on this aid line.” I hold my breath in laugher, FA what, yeah right. I take a closer look at his gear now. Yeah, he is serious; I look at this thin seam two feet from climbing bolt lines left and right. “You know this is a sport climbing crag?” I ask him. “Yes’, he answers, ‘but how do you think these climbing routes where put up he asks” I go on, “not by aiding, they are free routes, go to index if you want to go aid climb the rock is crap here and you are just going to ruin the rock,” The old man got uber defensive, “ are you the climbing police what right do you have to tell me what to do. How old are you? I have been climbing longer then you have born.” He adds, When you pound in pin it make new holds.” I exclaim, “Well you have been climbing longer then I have been born, but I am a climbing guide I do this for a living so I believe I know something about this sport,” I say sarcastically. “Well do you have a card or some thing to prove who you are, well it doesn’t matter.” He goes to say. “You don’t even know how to place gear that’s why you are sport climbing.” “Well, I am climbing and having fun clipping bolts I don’t need a rack here. If I wanted to trad climb I would have gone to index. And how many mountain guides do you that don’t know how to place gear?” “Even so the line you are climbing is two feet away from a bolt line how can you call that a first ascent? Go to the Pickets if you want to get a FA.” “But that’s a 4 day hike in just to get there,” he adds. By now both of us are heated and about ready pop. I wanted to knock him. I had to leave and get away before I did something I regretted. The old man continues to yell at me, how about Royal Robbins and Harding how they pined and chopped routes and apologized latter. Trying to ignore him I pack my stuff up and leave to another crag. It was so hard belaying and hearing the hammer pounding away. I shirked in despair. On the way out I asked him how his climb went and his name he refused to give me his name. I thought about this if he thought what he was doing was right why wouldn't he give me his name? I never knew that exit 32 would be so scary to climb at. Quote
G-spotter Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Well fuck you man It is gonna be a good A3 lead when I'm done the FA and 32 will become an aid destination just like the Fissure Towers! Quote
dberdinka Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 (edited) No need to get all menstrual on these dudes. They got old gear. Big deal. It's cool they're still out there climbing. I can't imagine anyone getting to worked up about a few pin scars on that pile and maybe he didn't want to give you his name because he thought you were a douche bag. Edited September 17, 2009 by dberdinka Quote
Dirtyleaf Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Maybe somebody finally got a time machine in working order. Just some doods from the early days climbin' them rawks. Quote
cstemley Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 which guys left with the girl? and got you so pissed off? Quote
Off_White Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Perhaps you mean he was using a hip belay? Dulfersitz is a rappel set up, not a particularly great way to belay, but I suppose you could work it that way. Personally, I've always wanted to engage in a little living theater along the dihedrals at Smith: knickers, little white cap, tricouni nailed boots, gold line, and a rack of pins, perhaps a new fangled machine nut on a piece of hemp rope. I think I'd have to work on an impenetrable quasiSscottish brogue. Quote
Skisports Posted September 17, 2009 Author Posted September 17, 2009 No hip belay it was a Dulfersitz, and as far as pin scars go, it was rock chunks do to the nature of Rock it was not scars. Quote
Dane Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 People giving me shit about my harness again First, when has Exit 32 ever NOT not been a Circus? Might help you to remember that long before your mommy thought about giving you your wasted little life, there were actual guides succeeding with clients on real mountains with even less technical gear than the guys you are ragging on. Too bad you didn't open your mind a bit. You might have actually enjoyed yourself and may even learned something if you had bothered to talk with either of them. At least the old guys are still out doing it and dragging the kids along. As a "guide" your tirade is embrassing. The obvious list of what you don't know is astounding. Quote
pope Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Oh my goodness, Father Time pounded a pin within three feet of a bolt! And he employed a "dulfersitz" belay! As if that weren't enough, he had the audacity to show up at your stupid-assed sport cliff with a hand-crafted harness. Allow me to summarize: Ignorant sport climber suffers culture shock and indignation when confronted with a party climbing in an alternative style. Quote
Skisports Posted September 17, 2009 Author Posted September 17, 2009 Sorry Pope, Father Time and Dulfersti where two different people. I might not explained that well Quote
Dane Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Oh you explained it just fine....dumb ass. Quote
Rad Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Allow me to summarize: Ignorant (insert adjective) climber suffers culture shock and indignation when confronted with a party climbing in an alternative style. Pot kettle black. Pot kettle black. Quote
Dirtyleaf Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Just two weeks ago my partner gave me a hip belay while I clipped a couple bolts. I didn't mind. I've also forgotten my harness and shambled my own together. I've also given someone a hip belay as well. Shit, I even pounded a piton in once or twice. It was all done with the same even flow as flushing the toilet. You know what I flushed down the toilet? Ok. I'll tell you. It was crap. Quote
mountainsloth Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 different stokes for different folks... i would definitely think it was weird seeing all this at Lil Si, but I would have kept my mouth shut and helped out in an emergency. climbing is an activity that is deeply rooted in freedom. I have my opinions of what climbing in good style is, but that doesn't mean everyone else should follow my beliefs, especially climbing. Quote
Pete_H Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 How do you know the guy climbing next to you is a guide? Don't worry, he'll tell you. Quote
Pilchuck71 Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Pretty judgemental buddy. If you don't like it don't do it. Live and let live. Let thee without sin cast the first stone. I am sure by now you are getting the gist. Quote
DonnieK Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 You all are sure trashing skisports. And maybe he deserves it - i'm certainly not going to defend him. However...if those dudes with their tat-harnesses and hip belays had gotten hurt, you'd all be talking shit about them and how f-ing stupid they were to climb in that particular "style", instead of defending their "freedom". Quote
toproper Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 well said Donnie, I agree with the original post that it is generally bad form to be pounding and nailing at a sport crag, even if it is at crap ass little mt sludge. Quote
KaskadskyjKozak Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Oh my goodness, Father Time pounded a pin within three feet of a bolt!... Allow me to summarize: Ignorant sport climber suffers culture shock and indignation when confronted with a party climbing in an alternative style. You have got to be kidding? Since when did you start to accept "alternative styles". Quote
Choada_Boy Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 How do you know the guy climbing next to you is a guide? Don't worry, he'll tell you. Being a guide makes you righteous, correct, and fully knowledgeable in all things climbing. I saw this old timer and his young partner rapping off Prusik with the most fucked up knot tying his ropes together. I can't even remember what it was called, it was so obscure, and looked like it would get stuck in or on just about any rock feature. He said he was a "knot aficionado". Whatever. The ends looked tied together. Who cares. Quote
Dane Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 You all are sure trashing skisports. And maybe he deserves it You think? However...if those dudes with their tat-harnesses and hip belays had gotten hurt, you'd all be talking shit about them and how f-ing stupid they were to climb in that particular "style", instead of defending their "freedom". First no one died. And no one got hurt. Some knicklehead starts threatening an old guy for nailing at a practice area? What is up with that?, By now both of us are heated and about ready pop. I wanted to knock him. I had to leave and get away before I did something I regretted. Think about it for a minute these guys have been climbing longer than the igit posting has been alive. So far what they have been doing has kept them safe and sound. They are over 21 and still climbing.... We should be celebrating what they are doing instead of ragging their asses. Think about their experience that day and the "guide" who really made an impression. Ever seen Becky out? Take a look at the TR with Jim Langdon in the the Stuart range last week. And then we get to techniques....if you don't know how to do a hip belay or any belay that doesn't require a piece of gear to accomplish it you should be sticking to TRs and practice areas like our "guide". Quote
RuMR Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 (edited) Dane... since it's just a "practice" area, i'm now advocating taking my drill up there to create a line of two finger pockets...you know, to "practice" cuz its a "practice" area and all...no reason to nail up there at all... Edited September 17, 2009 by RuMR Quote
t_rutl Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 Dane said 'igit'...i love that word i'm still amazed at the shit you guys accomplished at the birth of the ice age with gear you did that and the FA's all across the world before goretex and capilene i feel spoiled being able to head into the hills for 2-3 days on a 35 pound pack... i think it'd be a feat for some of todays cutting edge alpinists to put together a vintage rack and aunsamble and repeat some of the hardman routes in a tribute to those that pioneered the way Quote
Pete_H Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 I exclaim, “Well you have been climbing longer then I have been born, but I am a climbing guide ...” Sorry, but this one's just fucking classic. Quote
RuMR Posted September 17, 2009 Posted September 17, 2009 maybe he's a ski instructor too?????? WATCHOUT!! Quote
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