stevetimetravlr Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Its my belief we need routes of all caliber and ratings. If everything was a sport climb how boring would that be. Reversely people can talk all day about how rad big runouts are....until they fall. I'm still healing. Myself, some days I feel like getting burly and throwing down and some days I just feel like going casual and clipping bolts. Thank the good lord for diversity. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tyson.g Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Its my belief we need routes of all caliber and ratings. If everything was a sport climb how boring would that be. Reversely people can talk all day about how rad big runouts are....until they fall. I'm still healing. Myself, some days I feel like getting burly and throwing down and some days I just feel like going casual and clipping bolts. Thank the good lord for diversity. Â I like that way of thinking. Â Especially people can talk all day about how rad big runouts are....until they fall. Â Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pink Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderhound Posted October 26, 2010 Author Share Posted October 26, 2010 Â thank you!!! totally wouldn't have posted this if I knew I was going have to read the last six pages. If you want to debate the merits of bolts, runouts,saftey, ands balls ect....go to some other countless boring thread on the subject. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ivan Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 can i go back to previous sections now and change my answers, or go ahead to the next section? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
denalidave Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Drederek Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Its easy to have an opinion about how to bolt (or not bolt) a particular line, its not so easy to defend that opinion. People go out and put up routes in whatever style they think is best at the time. We will judge them as we see fit. They may not be happy with our judgements. These discussions are important so future routesetters will have an appreciation of the spectrum of styles and their reception by our small segment of the climbing community. And then they'll do whatever the fuck they think best as they always have! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JosephH Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Its easy to have an opinion about how to bolt (or not bolt) a particular line, its not so easy to defend that opinion. People go out and put up routes in whatever style they think is best at the time. I'd say your latter sentence is the perfect defense for the former. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kevbone Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Best thread ever? I think not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlpineK Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 can i go back to previous sections now and change my answers, or go ahead to the next section? Â That might place you on the list for banning Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billcoe Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Last time I was out at Beacon, Jim and I were going to do a corner lap. We stopped and looked at the East Side overhangs mostly to catch our breath I suppose. Jim says: "You got 3 routes here"... Â I'm like "Really?" "Yup"... Â "Well I don't remember any"....he kind of chuckles and goes "Remember The Alan Lester Memorial Hiking Trail"? ... I was going to say no, what a dumb name. Then I remembered Gary and Bob letting me lead it (ground up, no bolts although I left a Leeper Z piton fixed on it somewhere) and naming that right after Alan Left the area. Â Good guy. Nice to see he's still a Mensch. I couldn't get up it today. Unless Alan led and I followed. Funny how his name has come up twice in such a short time. Southern Belle, that's bad assed on a whole nother level. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Drederek Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 Its easy to have an opinion about how to bolt (or not bolt) a particular line, its not so easy to defend that opinion. People go out and put up routes in whatever style they think is best at the time. I'd say your latter sentence is the perfect defense for the former. Yah, ignorance is bliss. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stevetimetravlr Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 oh shit, I just let it slip out I'm a sporty! I'll never be able to lift my head high again at Beacon....oh man. I did see Jim out there last week, of course. and Larry was top rope soling some wild thing to the left of Blownout with one mini pro. Talk that boy into investing into one more, I read where someone grounded out using just one. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markwebster Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 back to the original post about Southern Bell and the awesome thread over there. I was looking for pictures of Scott and found this website for the actor Jackie Chan where Scott Cosgrove(the stuntman, former climber) talks about how he no longer climbs hard because 30 of his climbing friends died. Â http://jackiechan.com/scrapbook/206231--Interviews-with-the-Rush-Hour-3-Crew--Part-Three- Â food for thought... Â Â Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JosephH Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 What is the food for thought - that gravity kills? It's the old Philly street saw - "fuck around, fuck around, lay around and bleed" or the venerable "if you can't do the the time, don't do the crime" at work. Sanitizing climbing isn't the answer - owning and adjusting your own behavior, needs, and choices is. Scott has clearly adjusted his. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billcoe Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 There's room for bolted routes and X rated routes and everything in between in this game. Diversity is good. Cracks. Face. Knobs. Friction slabs. It's all good. Except for thin chimneys and offwidths for fat people like me. They suck. Bad. And steep sharp painful cracks, those suck too ........... unless you are in shape and then they rule. Â Â Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
summitchaserCJB Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 (edited) Ya let's face it- climbing is freaking dangerous. In my opinion winter climbing is generally tue most dangerous. Here's to a safe winter season. Edited October 26, 2010 by summitchaserCJB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
denalidevo Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 In the interest of leave no trace, I don't believe there is need in this day and age for the further development of any new routes outdoors - the advent of indoor climbing has made climbing on real rock obsolete and so barbaric . Â /sarcasm off Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markwebster Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 jtree for xmas baby! Be there or be Square. Sunshine, lots of trad, run out sport, drunken campfire parties, it's all there. Commence thread drift. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
summitchaserCJB Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 that sounds cash! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stevetimetravlr Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 actually I love all climbing, except for that really mossy chossy scary stuff Bill Coe does. The only thing is when I climb runout minimally proteced stuff, my nards shrink up and it becomes very uncomfortable so I have to place gear. Joshua Tree at Christmas sounds great! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
num1mc Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010  back to the original post about Southern Bell and the awesome thread over there. I was looking for pictures of Scott and found this website for the actor Jackie Chan where Scott Cosgrove(the stuntman, former climber) talks about how he no longer climbs hard because 30 of his climbing friends died. http://jackiechan.com/scrapbook/206231--Interviews-with-the-Rush-Hour-3-Crew--Part-Three-  food for thought...   Odd quote by Scott Cosgrove there at that link. I assume that both Scott Cosgrove's are one in the same. The stuntman looks a little different from the Scott I knew, but the quote by Scott Cosgrove the stuntman is almost entirely about himself, and have little to do with little Jackie    Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G-spotter Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 If this thread was taken off of life support, how many points would America's IQ increase by? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
summitchaserCJB Posted October 26, 2010 Share Posted October 26, 2010 probably a net neutral. You would be released upon the world and we would have our free time back. So that's a net neutral. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billcoe Posted October 27, 2010 Share Posted October 27, 2010 We read the posts to that link. Stop it Drew: "abdirahman posted on Friday, Jul 09, 2010. my name is abdirahman i am7 grader next year i will be 8 grader so can you teach me kung fu i live in seatle in takwila iwant to be actor like yuo" Â We see right through this. We may be Americans, but we're not as stupid as you think. _________________________________________________ Â actually I love all climbing, except for that really mossy chossy scary stuff Bill Coe does. The only thing is when I climb runout minimally proteced stuff, my nards shrink up and it becomes very uncomfortable so I have to place gear. Joshua Tree at Christmas sounds great! Â Ha ha Steve! When your eyeballs start hurting cause the nads are pressing up there it's probably time to re-appraise the direction of your life. That is, they've up gone up into and and past your throat and are then trying to hide in your eyesockets or your brain.... it's bad. I gave that shit up and am looking for solid rock to get my head back. Even Smith seems sooooo solid. LOL! Â ps, anyone want to see some empty bolt boxes? AKA, how I spent my summer vacation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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