Skip to content

Karakoram Climbing Season in Jeopardy Due to India-Pakistan Conflict

General News
1 1 128 1

Suggested topics


  • Red Bull Creepers looked sick this year

    Videos climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    97 Views
    EpicTVE
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=huEl0V4pVQc
  • Dean Potter’s Crazy Yosemite V10 Highball

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    231 Views
    GrippedG
    King Air is one of America's most iconic tall boulders, watch the first ascent below The post Dean Potter’s Crazy Yosemite V10 Highball appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/profiles/dean-potters-crazy-yosemite-v10-highball/
  • New Moderate Mixed Route Above Chamonix

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    220 Views
    GrippedG
    Climbers found good conditions on a new line in the Mont Blanc massif The post New Moderate Mixed Route Above Chamonix appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/uncategorized/new-moderate-mixed-route-above-chamonix/
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    148 Views
    American Alpine ClubA
    It’s hard to find a route quite like Stoned Temple Pilot: a steep, beta intensive masterpiece hidden in Rumney’s Northwest Crags. And appropriately, it's hard to get people to want to walk to The Prudential crag. Most climbers flock to more classic crags, such as Main Cliff, Waimea, and Bonsai. However, if you can talk someone into trekking out there, you’ll most certainly secure a projecting buddy once they experience the epic kneebars, throws, and intricate boulder problems.  I’ve always described the Rumney scene as a culture of beta. Often regarded as one of the most cryptic major sport climbing destinations, Rumney routes are rarely sent on raw power alone. Most climbs can feel a full grade harder until you know the trick to climbing them. The result is a really supportive projecting culture. Once you send, you become part of the crew that can now pass the beta down to the next inquiring aspirant.  Before Stoned Temple Pilot, I was more of a trad climber. I was accustomed to the practice of climbing lots of different routes, and very slowly pushing my limit. Conversely, most people I met hanging out at Rumney had longer term projects they came back to every session.  I first climbed Stoned Temple Pilot while project shopping for my first 5.12a. I was getting to that phase many of us enter in climbing, when the 5.11s start going faster than before and your friends encourage you to get on 12s. I’ve never considered myself much of a grade chaser, but 12a always represented a blockade for me. For years the idea that my body would be capable of that level of climbing seemed outlandish. Finally in spring of 2022, I decided it was time to find a route that inspired me and throw myself at it like never before. I tried a few different classic 12as, but Stoned was the one that captured my imagination. The route begins with a jug haul through spongy rock, culminating with a double knee bar rest at a monumental hueco. Next comes a bulge, nothing too bouldery, but it saps your energy before the crux. A bad crimp allows you to set your feet and throw. If not for a common tick mark, you might assume you need to make a desperate upward stab into the fat undercling, which is certainly big enough to distract you from the key crimp right above the lip. One more committing move gets you to a sneaky corner rest. If not for meeting a local who showed me this rest, I might’ve abandoned this project a long time ago. As you exit the corner, all the holds seem to face weird directions, but some knee bar wizardry lets you cross to a jug otherwise just out of reach. Made it this far? It’s in the bag.  As I started projecting Stoned Temple Pilot, I didn’t feel like things were going swimmingly whatsoever. On my first burn I did all the moves, then proceeded to never be able to do the top sequence again. I expected to climb the route better with each attempt, but each burn slowly whittled away my faith. Optimism is something I struggled with a lot my whole life, and climbing forced that reality closer and closer to the surface. Finally I had to acknowledge that somewhere deep down, no matter what I accomplished, I still didn’t believe in myself. Coming back to this route multiple times, somehow getting worse with each burn, was easy evidence to justify the pessimism in my brain.  Two things haunted me. The first: every time I tried to clip from the undercling, I struggled to reach it and pumped out. The second: ever since my project shopping burn, I had not been to the top of the route. Each time I reached the top crux, even after resting in the corner, I failed to recollect how I had climbed it on my first attempt. I would try different sequences that left me hanging on the permadraw over and over, until finally opting to lower. Good links aside, how was I supposed to bring optimism to this route, if I couldn’t clip the crux draw, or even top it out? One day in June 2022, I discovered the complex relationship between embracing optimism, and letting go of expectations. My friend Mike, and Allyssa, who I had met that morning, walked up to Prudential Wall with me. I had very low expectations. I already had aided my way through a bouldery 11c and my forearms felt fried. The previous day I tried Stoned multiple times and got shut down at the clip in the big undercling. I’d been trying to reach above my head to fear-clip it, ultimately pumping out.  As I pulled onto the wall this time, I already planned on falling. I looked down at Mike after th... https://americanalpineclub.org/news/2024/10/10/learning-the-power-of-low-expectations-on-a-rumney-classic
  • Sam Weir climbs Hazel Grace sit, 8C/8C+

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    124 Views
    UK ClimbingU
    Sam Weir has made the fourth ascent of Giuliano Cameroni's Gotthard Pass boulder, Hazel Grace Sit-Start (8C/8C+). https://www.ukclimbing.com/forums/t.php?n=774835
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    152 Views
    climbingC
    https://www.climbing.com/competition/olympics/womens-sport-climbing-semifinal/
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    160 Views
    climber-magazineC
    Innsbruck closed with Janja Garnbret with double Golds whilst Sohta Amagasa and Jakob Schubert get the Gold in Men’s Boulder and Lead and Toby Roberts gets Bronze in Lead and 4th in Boulder https://www.climber.co.uk/news/innsbruck-double-gold-for-garnbret-whilst-roberts-podiums-with-a-bronze-in-lead/
  • A Letter To The Zine by Tavish Hansen

    General News climbing climbingzine
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    230 Views
    ClimbingZineC
    Dearest Luke, I have been meaning to write to you for some time, but I have Zine 23 fresh on my mind and some spare time, so here it goes. I don’t even know where to begin with this. My name is Tavish, and I’m a twenty-three-year-old climber from Seattle. I managed to end up… https://climbingzine.com/a-letter-to-the-zine-by-tavish-hansen/