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  • Crag Cleanup Day at Canmore’s Echo Canyon

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    GrippedG
    The local access group is inviting all climbers to join them on a day of crag cleaning and socializing The post Crag Cleanup Day at Canmore’s Echo Canyon appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/crag-cleanup-day-at-canmores-echo-canyon/
  • Simon Lorenzi Sends V16 and Flashes V14

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    GrippedG
    Lorenzi’s flash of Compass North V14 is his hardest flash to date The post Simon Lorenzi Sends V16 and Flashes V14 appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/simon-lorenzi-sends-v16-and-flashes-v14/
  • Google reviews

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    HowNOT2H
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpX0Ujh7n9o
  • Fri Night Vid Climbing Through

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    UK ClimbingU
    Motherhood, guiding, her own counseling practiceprofessional climber Julia Niles has danced between responsibilities for years. Lured by her friend, professional climber Em Pellerin, to go climb the big walls of Cocham Valley, Chile, Julia relearns what it means to thrive. High off the deck, tied together, every action becomes a powerful re... https://www.ukclimbing.com/forums/t.php?n=781387
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    Jesse Huey first tried to complete this objective back in 2018. This winter he teamed up with Matt Segal and Quentin Roberts The post Classic Longs Peak Alpine Route Freed Mixed-Style in Winter appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/classic-longs-peak-alpine-rock-route-freed-in-winter/
  • A Love Letter To Climbing by Ana Ally

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    ClimbingZineC
    In 2016 at the International Climbers’ Festival in Lander, Wyoming, we held a “love letter to climbing” contest. Ana Ally was the winner, this is her letter. Enjoy.  Banner photo of the author by Scott Keating Climbing, my love. As I sit here, I struggle to find the right words to describe you. I am about… https://climbingzine.com/love-letter-climbing-ana-ally/
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    GrippedG
    This became one of the hardest boulders ever climbed when opened last month The post Video for the First Ascent of The Big Slamm V17 Just Dropped appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/video-for-the-first-ascent-of-the-big-slamm-v17-just-dropped/
  • The Line: Exploring Zanskar

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    American Alpine ClubA
    “In recent years, the peaks of Zanskar have seen increasing popularity with mountaineering expeditions. Despite this, there are still plenty of unclimbed summits from 5,500m to 6,500m….” That’s the start of a report for AAJ 2025 from Matic “Matija” Jošt from Slovenia, who has completed four exploratory expeditions to Zanskar, in the southwest of Ladakh, India, in the last decade. Jošt’s detailed, photo-rich trip reports have prompted a lot of recent activity (including three additional reports in the upcoming AAJ). Below, we offer highlights from Jošt’s latest exploration, plus a brief Q&A with the man himself. “Uroš Cigljar, Tilen Cmok, Boštjan Dečman, Nejc Škrablin, Tomaž Žerovnik, and I arrived on July 7 at base camp in the Chhogo Tokpo, the eastern branch of the Haptal Tokpo. [Tokpo is a word for “valley” in this area of India.] While several parties had visited adjacent valleys and climbed a few peaks on the watershed ridges with the Chhogo, the only reported climbing expedition to visit the Chhogo valley was an Indian-Romanian team in 2016 that climbed one peak and attempted another (AAJ 2017). “A very complex 6,431m mountain known as T16 was our main objective. [Peaks above various Zanskar valleys were numbered by Kimikazu Sakamoto, whose teams made exploratory expeditions in Zanskar from 2009 to 2016; Sakamoto published the first climber-friendly topographical sketches of these mountains.] The lower south summit was climbed by Romanians Cosmin Andron and Cristina Pogacean in 2016, but the easiest approach to the main top appeared to lie up the south slopes above the Khapang Glacier, east of the Chhogo valley. The big riddle was finding a suitable passage from the Chhogo to the Khapang, and we decided to devote part of our acclimatization to solving this problem. “Aiming for a col on the ridge south of T16, we hiked up a side glacier, passing the route climbed by the Romanians, and climbed a 300m west-facing gully (300m, D+ 60° M3) to reach the col (5,836m). From there, it would be easy to descend to the gentle Khapang Glacier and traverse over to T16’s main peak. “The whole team returned to the col camp on the 14th, and the next day, in perfect weather, we climbed south-facing slopes above the Khapang Glacier and along the east ridge to the summit of T16 (600m, D+ 60°). Our expedition had been organized by a club from the Slovenian town Šentjur, so we named our route Šentjurka (900m, D+). We later encouraged people in the nearest village, Tungri, to suggest a name for the peak, and they came up with Skarma Mindruk Ri. (Skarma is “star,” and Mindruk is a specific star in the constellation of Pleiades.) Maybe the name will catch on.” Later in this expedition, Jošt and Žerovnik crossed a different col to reach the Korlomshe Tokpo, where a British team in 2015 had attempted what they called a “Matterhorn-like peak.” The Slovenians climbed the east face and south slopes to reach the 6,130m summit. “We named the route Charlatan De Balkan (500m, D+ 60° ice) after an album by a popular Slovenian group,” Jošt writes. “As the peak was absolutely nothing like the famous Swiss mountain, we named it Antimatterhorn.” Team members also attempted the west face of unclimbed Peak 5,435m, close to base camp, and made the first ascent rock tower east of camp, which was dubbed Ibex (5,321m). By July 24, most of the party had left base camp. “Although I’ve been climbing around 45 years, I don’t have much experience with soloing, but I decided to try the north face of T9 (6,107m), which I had seen from the Antimatterhorn approach,” Jošt writes in his report. “I left base camp at 1 a.m. on the 25th, carrying two axes but no rope. The north face became icier and brittle the higher I climbed, but at 8:30 a.m. I reached the west ridge. The upper section of this ridge was rockier, but in one hour I was standing on the summit.” Uncomfortable with downclimbing the north face he had ascended, he headed down a couloir on the southwest face to a neighboring glacier, traversing the mountain, and made it back to base camp by 3 p.m. “The locals suggested the name Spao Ri for the peak. It means “brave mountain.” I named the route Old and Abandoned (700m, TD II/III 75° ice). Why? Because I’m not young anymore.” Jošt’s comprehensive report from the 2024 expedition, in... https://americanalpineclub.org/news/2025/1/21/the-line-zanskar