Skip to content

Why should climbers be exempt from the bolting ban?

General Climbing
15 3 957 1
  • I know a lot of climbers and Hick is certainly representing that group of people.

    But, it sure seems like fixed climbing anchors are a perfect example of "permanent installations,” exactly what's banned in wilderness.

    Why should climbers be exempt? Because they're my friends and have fun climbing?

    Explain to me why it's wrong to ban permanent installations in wilderness or why climbing is special.

    https://coloradosun.com/2024/09/23/senators-hickenlooper-climbing-anchors-wilderness/

    #Colorado #wilderness #climbing

  • I know a lot of climbers and Hick is certainly representing that group of people.

    But, it sure seems like fixed climbing anchors are a perfect example of "permanent installations,” exactly what's banned in wilderness.

    Why should climbers be exempt? Because they're my friends and have fun climbing?

    Explain to me why it's wrong to ban permanent installations in wilderness or why climbing is special.

    https://coloradosun.com/2024/09/23/senators-hickenlooper-climbing-anchors-wilderness/

    #Colorado #wilderness #climbing

    @colo_lee That's a tough ask unfortunately, especially in the Forest area (Parks are separate), since they aren't currently hiring any seasonal employees soon.

    At least not until there is more budget clarity.

  • @colo_lee That's a tough ask unfortunately, especially in the Forest area (Parks are separate), since they aren't currently hiring any seasonal employees soon.

    At least not until there is more budget clarity.

    @louis I don't understand. Please explain?

    Are you saying that the FS doesn't have the staff to ban anchors? And so we should allow them? Or am I just confused?

  • @louis I don't understand. Please explain?

    Are you saying that the FS doesn't have the staff to ban anchors? And so we should allow them? Or am I just confused?

    @colo_lee Sorry, perhaps I misunderstood. It's just to stop a ban.

    I thought it was more about safety maintenance and trail maintenance and such.

    My bad!

  • @colo_lee Sorry, perhaps I misunderstood. It's just to stop a ban.

    I thought it was more about safety maintenance and trail maintenance and such.

    My bad!

    @louis no problem.

    I find this issue puzzling. (I'm also surprised when our senator is making the same arguments as Joe Manchin.)

    Trail maintenance is certainly an issue. And it seems like allowing more fixed anchors would only make the maintenance issue worse.

    When I've asked my climbing friends about this, they've basically said they like climbing and the fixed anchors make that better and safer. And after all, they're doing less damage than those other people. Which I find unconvincing ...

  • @louis no problem.

    I find this issue puzzling. (I'm also surprised when our senator is making the same arguments as Joe Manchin.)

    Trail maintenance is certainly an issue. And it seems like allowing more fixed anchors would only make the maintenance issue worse.

    When I've asked my climbing friends about this, they've basically said they like climbing and the fixed anchors make that better and safer. And after all, they're doing less damage than those other people. Which I find unconvincing ...

    @colo_lee I think it's a tough situation, and like anything, there is a happy medium.

    By encouraging climbing, safety, etc. you can both bring tourism to parks and forests.

    But by bringing too much traffic, you can of course create pollution, etc.

    And just who is qualified to put in permanent anchors is a good question. Cleaning routes of loose rocks is important, but how do you ensure people aren't intentionally chipping new holds?

    Nuanced questions with next-to-no funding.

  • @colo_lee I think it's a tough situation, and like anything, there is a happy medium.

    By encouraging climbing, safety, etc. you can both bring tourism to parks and forests.

    But by bringing too much traffic, you can of course create pollution, etc.

    And just who is qualified to put in permanent anchors is a good question. Cleaning routes of loose rocks is important, but how do you ensure people aren't intentionally chipping new holds?

    Nuanced questions with next-to-no funding.

    @louis thanks -- that gives some useful addl insight.

    I can see why the simplest answer from the wilderness admin perspective is "climbing anchors are clearly permanent installations. Thus banned".

    If that's not what we the people want, then Congress needs to update the law. This seems to be what Hick et. al. are trying to do. Funding must be included.

    I'm still unconvinced that we should modify the definition of wilderness to say "some permanent installations are ok". How wild is wild?

  • @louis thanks -- that gives some useful addl insight.

    I can see why the simplest answer from the wilderness admin perspective is "climbing anchors are clearly permanent installations. Thus banned".

    If that's not what we the people want, then Congress needs to update the law. This seems to be what Hick et. al. are trying to do. Funding must be included.

    I'm still unconvinced that we should modify the definition of wilderness to say "some permanent installations are ok". How wild is wild?

    @colo_lee Great questions all around. To which I have no answers.

    Ideally there would be some sort of a governing body deciding anchors on this area are acceptable this other area, they are not.

    Or limit the number of anchors in a sepecific location, etc.

    But, to your point, funding is necessary for that. And the climbing community isn't exactly the most potent economic force out there.

    Parks and forests always lack the attention they deserve, since they don't generate revenue.

  • @colo_lee Great questions all around. To which I have no answers.

    Ideally there would be some sort of a governing body deciding anchors on this area are acceptable this other area, they are not.

    Or limit the number of anchors in a sepecific location, etc.

    But, to your point, funding is necessary for that. And the climbing community isn't exactly the most potent economic force out there.

    Parks and forests always lack the attention they deserve, since they don't generate revenue.

    @louis thanks -- this has been useful for me trying to think about this issue. Appreciate the conversation!

  • devnullD devnull moved this topic from Uncategorized on
  • I know a lot of climbers and Hick is certainly representing that group of people.

    But, it sure seems like fixed climbing anchors are a perfect example of "permanent installations,” exactly what's banned in wilderness.

    Why should climbers be exempt? Because they're my friends and have fun climbing?

    Explain to me why it's wrong to ban permanent installations in wilderness or why climbing is special.

    https://coloradosun.com/2024/09/23/senators-hickenlooper-climbing-anchors-wilderness/

    #Colorado #wilderness #climbing

    @colo_lee@mstdn.social @louis@indieweb.social your question is a good one, and is one that has many facets that allow for seemingly endless discussion. I won't pretend to know it all, but I will try to explain some of those facets.

    One part is that the updates to the Wilderness Act make it next to impossible to install bolts for climber protection, as it requires the registration and manual approval before bolts can be added. My understanding is that for an already resource-starved agency, this would essentially cause the legitimate process to be so consumed by red tape that bolting would cease to exist.

    Another part is that rock climbing is and has long been considered a legitimate use of recreating on public land. The addition of bolts is fairly minimal and leaves next to no trace on the wall itself. On any given climbing route you'd be hard pressed to locate the bolts unless you knew what you were looking for.

    Allowing bolting to continue won't cause parks and wilderness to overflow with climbers blasting their punk rock and trashing the place, if that were the case it would've happened already.

    Yet another facet argues that the trace left behind by bolts pales in comparison to many other forms of recreation. Equestrian trails leaving mounds of horse poop to rot (definitely not "leave no trace"!), mountain bikers wearing away trails, semi-permanent huts for cross-country skiiers, etc.

    Yet a couple 1"x1" pieces of metal are going to destroy the mountain...?

  • @colo_lee@mstdn.social @louis@indieweb.social your question is a good one, and is one that has many facets that allow for seemingly endless discussion. I won't pretend to know it all, but I will try to explain some of those facets.

    One part is that the updates to the Wilderness Act make it next to impossible to install bolts for climber protection, as it requires the registration and manual approval before bolts can be added. My understanding is that for an already resource-starved agency, this would essentially cause the legitimate process to be so consumed by red tape that bolting would cease to exist.

    Another part is that rock climbing is and has long been considered a legitimate use of recreating on public land. The addition of bolts is fairly minimal and leaves next to no trace on the wall itself. On any given climbing route you'd be hard pressed to locate the bolts unless you knew what you were looking for.

    Allowing bolting to continue won't cause parks and wilderness to overflow with climbers blasting their punk rock and trashing the place, if that were the case it would've happened already.

    Yet another facet argues that the trace left behind by bolts pales in comparison to many other forms of recreation. Equestrian trails leaving mounds of horse poop to rot (definitely not "leave no trace"!), mountain bikers wearing away trails, semi-permanent huts for cross-country skiiers, etc.

    Yet a couple 1"x1" pieces of metal are going to destroy the mountain...?

    @devnull @colo_lee Great points! I tend to agree.

    I’ve only been outdoor climbing once (well, a trip, with a guide).

    I would only go where there are bolts. Trad is not for me.

    So no more bolts would indeed mean no more outdoor climbing for me.

  • @colo_lee@mstdn.social @louis@indieweb.social your question is a good one, and is one that has many facets that allow for seemingly endless discussion. I won't pretend to know it all, but I will try to explain some of those facets.

    One part is that the updates to the Wilderness Act make it next to impossible to install bolts for climber protection, as it requires the registration and manual approval before bolts can be added. My understanding is that for an already resource-starved agency, this would essentially cause the legitimate process to be so consumed by red tape that bolting would cease to exist.

    Another part is that rock climbing is and has long been considered a legitimate use of recreating on public land. The addition of bolts is fairly minimal and leaves next to no trace on the wall itself. On any given climbing route you'd be hard pressed to locate the bolts unless you knew what you were looking for.

    Allowing bolting to continue won't cause parks and wilderness to overflow with climbers blasting their punk rock and trashing the place, if that were the case it would've happened already.

    Yet another facet argues that the trace left behind by bolts pales in comparison to many other forms of recreation. Equestrian trails leaving mounds of horse poop to rot (definitely not "leave no trace"!), mountain bikers wearing away trails, semi-permanent huts for cross-country skiiers, etc.

    Yet a couple 1"x1" pieces of metal are going to destroy the mountain...?

    @devnull @louis Great -- this is the kind of info I was looking for.

    The update Hick & others are proposing would be the one that requires reg & approval of new bolts? So, your worry is that it effectively regulates away climbing bolts because of resource limits?

    That's very different positioning than what I've seen. Namely that this update is supposed to save the ability to place bolts. Would be ironic for it to effectively end it.

    1/2

  • @devnull @louis Great -- this is the kind of info I was looking for.

    The update Hick & others are proposing would be the one that requires reg & approval of new bolts? So, your worry is that it effectively regulates away climbing bolts because of resource limits?

    That's very different positioning than what I've seen. Namely that this update is supposed to save the ability to place bolts. Would be ironic for it to effectively end it.

    1/2

    @devnull @louis Does the proposed update apply just to wilderness areas or more broadly to public lands? My thinking is that those are very different uses: I'm all for climbing, biking, camping, horse infrastructure on FS and NPS land, it's specifically wilderness where I'm questioning "permanent installations".

    And yeah, horses on trail suck. I'm glad no bikes in wilderness. I'd like it if there were also no horses. Poop, trail destruction, a disaster in the rain and mud.

    2/2

  • @devnull @louis Does the proposed update apply just to wilderness areas or more broadly to public lands? My thinking is that those are very different uses: I'm all for climbing, biking, camping, horse infrastructure on FS and NPS land, it's specifically wilderness where I'm questioning "permanent installations".

    And yeah, horses on trail suck. I'm glad no bikes in wilderness. I'd like it if there were also no horses. Poop, trail destruction, a disaster in the rain and mud.

    2/2

    @colo_lee@mstdn.social no, not quite.

    Hickenlooper, et al. are writing a bill to request additional guidance and to protect the ability to bolt in the wilderness, among other things. It's a response to the original issue from the NPS and US Forest service.

    A good summary of the original issue and potential access threat is summarized by the Access Fund here

  • @colo_lee@mstdn.social no, not quite.

    Hickenlooper, et al. are writing a bill to request additional guidance and to protect the ability to bolt in the wilderness, among other things. It's a response to the original issue from the NPS and US Forest service.

    A good summary of the original issue and potential access threat is summarized by the Access Fund here

    @devnull Thanks.

    Reading that article, the analogy that occurred to me is trails. I don't object at all to trails in wilderness areas. And it's ok for the trails to be "permanent installations": with drainage, bolted down steps, etc.

    The climbing infrastructure seems very similar, thinking of bolts as trails.

    And like trails, we should control where they are. Social trails should be discouraged and blocked when found.

    (Again, I'm just talking about wilderness areas, not all public lands.)

Suggested topics


  • Jules Marchaland Climbs 5.14d in Grenoble

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    46 Views
    GrippedG
    His recent ascent of Le Braille 5.14d means he has ascended over 25 routes 5.14d or harder. The post Jules Marchaland Climbs 5.14d in Grenoble appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/jules-marchaland-climbs-5-14d-in-grenoble/
  • The Prescription—Ground Fall

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    50 Views
    American Alpine ClubA
    It’s Rocktober and across the continent climbers are sending their projects. This month we remind you that mishaps in “safe” genres like sport climbing can have serious consequences. This accident occurred in 2019 and was only reported this year. However, in the newly published 2025 ANAC, we feature several similar groundfall accidents. As you’ll also see below, we’re also featuring a human factors post-accident analysis that reveals some recurrent themes and behavior patterns. These are introduced in an article written by Dr. Valerie Karr. On June 22, 2019 B, a male climber was leading Where Egos Dare (5.12a) as a cool-down after a long session. The four-bolt route was easy enough to run a quick lap and as a result B, “didn't take it seriously and was climbing very arrogantly… without careful consideration of the consequences.” Besides being short and punchy, the route also has several hard clips that put the leader within groundfall range. B was, “…cooling down after a hard day of projecting. At the third bolt I pulled a bunch of slack to clip and my foot popped.” He had placed his foot carelessly on a bad part of the hold when it slipped. He had an arm full of slack and, “…decked straight on my butt.” He suffered lumbar compression fractures and fractured sacrum. “I was mere inches away from a shelf that, that had I impacted with my lumbar spine, I would've undoubtedly been paralyzed.” Though in serious pain, he, “walked out under my own steam. Likely due to adrenaline.” B fell approximately 15 feet. A pit/trough below Where Egos Dare created a ledge that one could hit in a fall. He had stick clipped the first bolt but, “Had I stick clipped the third, this accident wouldn't have happened. Back then I considered it ‘cheating’ to clip more than the first, which in retrospect is silly.” He adds, “Sport climbing is flippin’ dangerous! For all the sketchy gear routes I've done in my life it was a 35' tall 12a sport climb that nearly cost me the ability to walk. Unfortunately, I don't think most sport climbers have a clue about this.” Finally, the fallen climber said, “I’d add that one should climb more carefully. Because this route was well below my redpoint level I didn't take it seriously. Ultimately, I put my foot to the right of the actual foothold and that is what did me in. Luckily, I'm physically 100% now, but it was such a close call that I definitely have residual psychological effects. My wife still has trouble belaying me despite it not being her fault. I think the psychological impacts of such accidents cannot be overstated.” (Source: Anonymous Climber.) This groundfall is a classic case of risk normalization in which repeated exposure to hazards without consequence, lowers the perception of danger. Over time, shortcuts—clipping from poor stances, eschewing procedures like a higher stick clip, and a casual approach to moderate climbing—diminish the perceived hazards of consequential terrain. On the day of his accident, B admitted he was climbing “carelessly,” on a warm-down route that was well within his ability. Other distracting factors contributed to an atmosphere of informality and distractions at the base of the crag that compounded a sense of invulnerability. B’s narrative also reveals how cultural values within climbing can magnify risk through what he called the “purity ethics.”Beyond simple overconfidence, B acknowledged an internalized idea that stick clipping beyond the first bolt was “cheating.” This belief overrode pragmatic risk assessment. Only after his accident did he reframe those values, prioritizing safety over style with an understanding that it’s “all contrived anyway.” (Source: Dr. Valerie Karr.) https://americanalpineclub.org/news/2025/10/15/the-prescriptionground-fall
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    70 Views
    IFSCI
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BziRtib9IRo
  • Nina Arthaud Topping a Swiss V14

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    70 Views
    GrippedG
    Compass North was the French climber's first of the grade The post Nina Arthaud Topping a Swiss V14 appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/video/nina-arthaud-topping-a-swiss-v14/
  • Don’t Be A Trad Princess with Mary Eden

    General News climbing climbingzine
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    63 Views
    ClimbingZineC
    To kick off Luke’s summer climbing road trip, he stopped in Moab, Utah for this conversation with Mary Eden, also known as the Trad Princess. Our sponsors for Season 7:  Kilter: http://settercloset.com (email holds@kiltergrips.com for more information) Scarpa: www.scarpa.com Osprey: https://www.osprey.com/ Subscribe/ score some books/clothes/stickers: https://shop.climbingzine.com/ photo by Spencer McKay https://climbingzine.com/dont-be-a-trad-princess-with-mary-eden/
  • Laura Rogora Ends 2024 With Yet Another 5.14d

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    99 Views
    GrippedG
    Since late September, she's sent seven routes 5.14d and above The post Laura Rogora Ends 2024 With Yet Another 5.14d appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/laura-rogora-ends-2024-with-yet-another-5-14d/
  • It’s Not Too Late to Climb Your Summer Project

    General News climbing
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    95 Views
    GrippedG
    Five tips to help complete that route you've been focusing on all year The post It’s Not Too Late to Climb Your Summer Project appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/profiles/its-not-too-late-to-climb-your-summer-project/
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    92 Views
    UK ClimbingU
    https://www.ukclimbing.com/forums/t.php?n=773657