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Shocking Upsets at Both Men’s and Women’s Semi-Finals

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  • The Line—From Bozeman to the Baspa

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    American Alpine ClubA
    Since 2010, climbers have been exploring the mountains, cliffs, and boulders above the village of Rakchham in northern India’s Baspa Valley, drawn by varied, high-quality climbing and relatively modest elevations in this quiet corner of the Himalaya. Last fall, two Montana-based climbers—Ryan Griffiths and Seth Timpano—spent several weeks in the area. Here’s their story. In late October and early November 2025, Ryan Griffiths and I climbed new routes on two unclimbed peaks above the Baspa Valley. We were based out of the village of Rakchham  at around 3,150 meters, with a small advanced camp on the Rakchham “plateau” at 4,100 meters.  After a week of acclimatizing, we spent October 21 and 22 climbing the northwest face of Peak 5,400m. This gave quality moderate ice and mixed climbing, but was not particularly sustained, as the route was split by a small pocket glacier, which we used for a bivouac. The 800-meter ascent had difficulties up to WI4 M5.  We next tried the east ridge of unclimbed Daboling (ca 6,050m) at the head of the valley. Starting from a high camp at around 5,400 meters, we climbed 13 pitches on mostly good granite, although at times the climbing was tedious and the terrain felt like stacked Jenga blocks. The line was classically alpine in nature, and it is difficult to assign a rock or mixed grade.  Our high point was around 5,850 meters. Four or five more pitches would have taken us to the summit slopes, but without bivouac gear, and knowing the descent would be complex, we made a conservative call to retreat. Our descent involved a dozen rappels (exclusively on rock anchors), first down the ridge then onto the steeper south face.  After a short rest in town, we ended the trip by climbing a 200-meter granite tower that tops out at about 5,100 meters. This is the Fourth Pillar of Ray Peak, as defined by the Austrian team that visited the area in 2019 (AAJ 2020). Ryan and I climbed the south face of this tower in five pitches, four of which were 5.9 or 5.10 and composed of perfect granite. We rappelled our route.  Overall, we found this to be a beautiful area with impressive boulders and excellent alpine rock potential. However, the alpine ice will require very specific—perhaps rare—conditions, as the mountains are losing their perennial snow.  Modern climbing in Rakchaam and the Baspa Valley has a somewhat unlikely origin story for an alpine zone: It began with bouldering. In 2010, well-known European climbers Elie Chevieux, Frederic Nicole, and Bernd Zangerl explored the Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh and discovered the Baspa Valley, “a veritable Shangri-La for the rock climbers,” as Chevieux wrote in AAJ 2012. Their stories about the climbing near Rakchham prompted a steady stream of visitors over the next decade. (Spanish climber Silvia Vidal was another early visitor—she soloed a 1,000-meter wall in the area in 2010.)  No one was more infatuated with the area than Zangerl: He has traveled from his home in Austria to Rakchham more than ten times. Zangerl also is one of the driving forces behind community efforts aimed at making climbing a sustainable activity that benefits and is welcomed by local residents. He recently published the first guidebook to bouldering in the area and helped spearhead a bouldering festival this past October, along with the locally led Rakchham Mountaineering & Adventure Club. A community website, rakchham.com, is a great resource for climbers considering a visit, providing beta, information on permits that support the local community, and an offer to help alpinists avoid peaks that the local people consider sacred. In 2022, Five Ten produced a beautiful 20-minute video, directed by Ray Demski, showcasing Rakchham and the efforts to preserve its beauty and culture while the Baspa Val... https://americanalpineclub.org/news/2026/2/18/the-linefrom-bozeman-to-the-baspa
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    GrippedG
    Lincoln Hall narrowly survived a 2006 ascent of Mount Everest thanks to four climbers who abandoned their summit bid to save him The post The Rescue of a Climber Left for Death on Mount Everest 20 Years Ago appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/profiles/the-rescue-of-a-climber-left-for-death-on-mount-everest-20-years-ago/
  • Alex Megos Repeats an Adam Ondra 5.15a/b

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    GrippedG
    Iron Curtain is a rarely repeated Ondra route in Flatanger that's made a little easier with kneepads The post Alex Megos Repeats an Adam Ondra 5.15a/b appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/alex-megos-repeats-an-adam-ondra-5-15a-b/
  • New Six-Pitch 5.14 Climbed in Austria

    General News climbing
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    GrippedG
    Jacopo Larcher and Babsi Zangerl recently completed the first free ascent of The Next Generation The post New Six-Pitch 5.14 Climbed in Austria appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/new-six-pitch-5-14-climbed-in-austria/
  • The Legal Anchor

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    Access FundA
    https://www.accessfund.org/latest-news/the-legal-anchor
  • Jules Marchaland Ticks a Seb Bouin 5.14d

    General News climbing
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    GrippedG
    The send comes a few days after completing a 5.15a on his second go The post Jules Marchaland Ticks a Seb Bouin 5.14d appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/jules-marchaland-ticks-a-seb-bouin-5-14d/
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    ClimbingZineC
    https://climbingzine.com/climbing-through-the-fog-by-colleen-tirtirian/
  • New Spicy Trad Starts up Hard Boulder

    General News climbing
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    GrippedG
    Matt Heliker has extended a V11 to the top of a cliff up some run-out terrain in the U.K. The post New Spicy Trad Starts up Hard Boulder appeared first on Gripped Magazine. https://gripped.com/news/new-spicy-trad-starts-up-hard-boulder/