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2024 BMC AGM Results and New President Announced

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    GrippedG
    Despite several attempts, the Hummingbird Ridge has not been repeated in over 60 years The post Climbers Spent 34 Days On This 12,000-Foot Route In 1965 appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/profiles/climbers-spent-34-days-on-this-12000-foot-route-in-1965/
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    jay_climbsJ
    This is a really unexpected flash! I'd seen a few people struggle, especially on the top section (the one I end up campusing). I almost swung off right before that fun 360 (I didn't really need to do that, but was easier than to wait to wind back the other way)#bouldering #climbing #bloc #escalade #totem #totem_meyrin
  • World’s First 5.15c Sport Climb Gets Sixth Ascent

    General News climbing
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    GrippedG
    Leo Bøe has sent Adam Ondra's Change, the hardest route in the world when it was established in 2012 The post World’s First 5.15c Sport Climb Gets Sixth Ascent appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/worlds-first-5-15c-sport-climb-gets-sixth-ascent/
  • Jurassic Tortoise Test

    Videos climbing hownot2
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    HowNOT2H
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BREvQK_2Mxc
  • Stirrups for rope ascending

    General News climbing alpinesavvy
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    AlpineSavvyA
    Aid climbing requires lots of fixed rope ascending. The traditional way to do this is using your ”lead” ladders. However, an adjustable, comfortable and lightweight stirrup is a superior tool. Premium Article available https://www.alpinesavvy.com/blog/stirrups-for-rope-ascending
  • Staša Gejo Steps Away From Comp Climbing

    General News climbing
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    GrippedG
    A familiar face on the IFSC scene, moving forward the top Serbian climber is going to focus her efforts on the rock The post Staša Gejo Steps Away From Comp Climbing appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/indoor-climbing/stasa-gejo-steps-away-from-comp-climbing/
  • Guidebook XII—Rewind the Climb

    General News climbing
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    American Alpine ClubA
    By Hannah Provost If you had to tell the story of the evolution of climbing within the history of one route, your most compelling choices might be The Nose of El Capitan or The Naked Edge in Eldorado Canyon. In this way, The Naked Edge is a time capsule containing within its memory: the much dreamed-of first ascent finally climbed by Layton Kor, Bob Culp, and Rick Horn; a period defining free ascent by Jim Erickson and Duncan Furgeson in the early 1970s; and one of the few battle- grounds for speed records in the United States. In 1962, Kor and Bob Culp were diverted attempting to aid the steep final edge, and today, climbers have speed climbed the route, bridge to bridge, in a little over 22 minutes. What is it about this climb that has allowed it to be the sketchbook for climbing legends to draw out the evolution of our sport? Anecdotes and artifacts from the American Alpine Club Library and archives provided the answer. Perhaps it was all aesthetics—the compelling imagery of a climb that could divide dark- ness and light. Or maybe it was the fact that The Edge tends to rebuff many of its suitors. But whether The Naked Edge was dishing out a good humbling, or whether, as Jim Erickson famously argued, his free ascent style “humbled the climb” instead, The Naked Edge might live so prominently in our collective climbing memory because it encapsulates one of the great questions of each climbing endeavor. Who holds the power here? The climb or the climber? At first, the route held all the cards. Layton Kor, known for his hulking height and wild, almost demonic, drive, could usually weaponize his determination and fearlessness to get through any hard climbing he might envision for himself. Yet when Layton Kor and Bob Culp attempted to aid the route in 1962, having each been turned away in 1961 on separate occasions, they still had to deviate from the original vision and finished the climb via a dihedral slightly to the left of the stunning final overhang. It wasn’t until Kor came back with Rick Horn in 1964 that The Edge, as we climb it today, was first done in its entirety. Jim Erickson, a young gun with a knowing grin, hadn’t always been a hotshot. However, by the early 1970s, he had gotten into the habit of proving a point—freeing the old obscure aid lines in Eldo put up by Robbins, Kor, Dalke, and Ament the decade before. After several failed attempts to free The Naked Edge, repeatedly retreating from the first pitch finger crack due to a strict avoidance of hangdog- ging and rehearsing, freeing The Naked Edge was his foremost ambition. By 1971, The Naked Edge had been ascended 30 or so times using direct aid. Erickson was envisioning a new phase of the route’s life. Yet his first moderately successful attempt, with prolific free climber Steve Wunsch, was yet another humbling. As he wrote for Climb!: The History of Rock Climbing in Colorado, the fourth pitch was daunting to the point of existential: “Steve dubs it impossible. I give it a disheartened try, but it is late so down we come, pondering the ultimate metaphysical questions: ‘Is there life after birth? Sex after death?’” When Erickson and Duncan Ferguson returned a week later, things went a little more smoothly. Though The Naked Edge was the last major climb that the two would ascend using pitons, it wasn’t the use of pitons that haunted Erickson and sent him off on his staunch commitment to only onsight free -climbing. Rather, when Erickson reflects on the effort and technique of pitoncraft, and the incredible added effort of free climbing on pitons, he seems almost to be creating something, tinkering. Describing nailing the crux of the first thin pitch in an interview for the Legacy Series, a project of the AAC to preserve the history of climbing, Erickson painted a picture of immense toil: “You’re in this strenuous fingertip layback, with shoes that didn’t smear very well...You had to first of all figure out which piton you were going to place, you had to set it in the crack, you were doing all of this with one hand while you were hanging on. Then you had to tap the piton once to make sure you didn’t lose it... because if you missed it and dropped it you’re back to square one, so you had to tap the pin, finally hit it in, test it to see if it was good, then you’d clip a single free carabiner, and a second free carabiner into it, and then you would clip your rope in, all while you were hanging on with one hand in a bad finger lock.” In the 1960s and 1970s, once a route was freed, it was not ... https://americanalpineclub.org/news/guidebook-xiirewind-the-climb
  • How we pack for sport climbing #climbing

    Videos climbing hownot2
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    HowNOT2H
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6b0IPT2sO8