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Climbing
in
Climbers in
The general concept of climbing in
Originally, free-climbing in
What could be more exhilarating than climbing steep rock uninhibited by aid gadgetry? Bouldering developed as a separate pastime with its own unique challenges. Some climbers stopped climbing and took up bouldering exclusively, while others used it to develop techniques for harder free-climbing. Short, hard free climbs began to be made and names such as Chuck Pratt, Frank Sacherer, Mark Powell, Bob Kamps, Dave Rearick, and Royal Robbins soon moved into the limelight. Climbs like Crack of Doom and Split Pinnacle Lieback had as much prestige as The Nose or Half Dome interest started to grow. Another, not so distinct, generation began to appear. 1964 started a new era, with Frank Sacherer and Chuck Pratt leading the way. Routes previously done with aid went free. One route after another fell to the bold imagination of Sacherer and Pratt. Ethics started to change, ideas and attitudes underwent reconsideration. More and more possibilities were opened. After the ascent of Dihardral, with its uncanny reaches round blind corners and its fingertip liebacks, the word 'impossible' was used cautiously. A bold style evolved, where aid slings and an extra rope were left in the camp. This involved an attitude of commitment which increased the determination of the attempt. A few younger climbers began to emerge after serving an apprenticeship with the masters of the art. Their energy was added and the brew thickened. Tom Higgins and Chris Fredricks were among the young energy. They brought a few touches of their own to the free-climbing boom. Higgins, a protégé of Bob Kamps, quickly became a genius with tiny holds. Along with Kamps, he put up several tense climbs on Glacier Point Apron, as well as eliminating the aid on the Powell/Reed route on Middle Cathedral Rock.
At about this time physical training poked its magical
head into the Yosemite Scene. Frank Sacherer and Eric Beck started it by
circuit training in
Big walls were still foremost on the agenda for the majority of climbers. Such routes as the Sacherer Cracker, Left Side of the Slack, Bridal veil East, Right Side of the Hourglass and the strenuous, poorly protected Twilight Zone were left neglected while the young gained the climbers confidence.
From 1966 to 1968 the free-climbing symphony had a few
movements added to it. Chris Fredrick's fierce route English Breakfast Crack,
repelled several attempts, while Lloyd Price added the Vendetta, with
its bold, unprotected off-width problem on the second pitch. Pat Ament, a
sensitive young climber from
In 1968 Frank Sacherer's premonition that the Stove Legs on the Nose of El Capitan would go free was realized by Jim Bridwell and Jim Stanton. The Legs section is now done as a climb in itself. This bit of the Nose is today one of the most sustained free climbs in the country. The vertical lines of the cracks make it a most exhilarating route to look at, as well as to climb. Every sort of problem is encountered, from finger cracks to off-widths, with lie backs and chimneys and a pendulum now and then for spice. The Legs are a true challenge, even for the best free climbers.
1969 saw few new hard free routes, but many of the
existing hard problems were repeated. Beginning in 1970 the big boom of
volcanic free-climbing erupted in the Valley. Several young stars started to
shine: Mark Klemens, Barry Bates, Peter Haan, Jim Bridwell and Mead Hargis were
among those shining most brightly. Mark Klemens returned to the Valley after a
two year lay-off and like a lightning bolt became the main motivating force of
the year. The fact that he began completely out of shape didn't seem to affect
his smooth, controlled style. As an opener, he pioneered Absolutely Free,
a respectable route with 5.10 fist and off-width jamming. New routes were his
'bag', and he sacked New Dimensions as his next prize. The climb is very sustained and consistently thin, a real test of finger
strength and technique. In the same season, Klemens mounted two more virgin
crack systems on Absolutely Free, plus routes such as Gripper,
At this stage the hydra of ethics and style began to show its many heads. Fine points normally overlooked assumed importance. The scruples of a first ascent have always been met either with criticism or praise, and unwritten laws have gradually been formulated over the years. But suddenly everything shifted into high gear. Good new routes were, and are, coveted and consequently kept secret from the waiting ambitions of eager climbers.
From 1971 to 1972 some appalling new routes were
conceived. These initiated a new precedence in attitudes, techniques and
equipment. The eye saw lines that were only possible after certain specialised
strengths had been developed. A programme of progressively more difficult and
specialised climbs was devised to prepare for a specific route. Esoteric
exercises as well as unique boulder-ballet problems now elaborated the training
tables of the climbing athlete. Using this system, many fine routes were
composed on sight. Some of the great problems of the past two years epitomize
the best in
New Dimensions, originally done free by Barry Bates and Steve Wunsch, was the first of these routes. Persistently difficult and strenuous climbing leads to the final 5.11 finger-tip crack up a leaning corner.
The Left Side of the Hourglass, a work of genius by Peter Haan, remains one of the most respected leads of the day. One thinks of the potential fifty-foot fall while leading the overhanging, 5.10 off-width crack. This single lead, with its 5.10 hand crack to a 5.10 off-width, all without resting spots earmarks the accelerative pitch.
Cream is a fine demonstration of off-width art. The route was improvised on sight, at the first attempt, by Mark Klemens. Mark is known for his masterful control in off-width cracks. The climb is strenuous and hard to protect. The feeling of security flees from reach on this lead, and you know why when the rope hangs out eight feet at the bottom!
Several of the leads on Basket Case would constitute a crux on most routes. At present the route stands as the most difficult off-width problem in the country. Twenty-foot runouts on four-inch 5.11 cracks, and a 5.10, one-and-a-quarter-inch crack on the lower pitch accent the variety of this climb. The first free ascent was done by Mark Klemens and Jim Bridwell.
The 1973 season is continuing the acceleration of the standards. At present styles and ethics have become homogenized into Spartan austerities. The new ideals have left certain free-climbing ethics passé. All-nut ascents, and 'flashing' a route (climbing on first try) are more desirable than using pitons. Today, few climbs (big walls excepted) are done initially as aid climbs. New ethics now regard top-roping, or placing protection on rappels, as highly undesirable. Unfortunately these styles and ethics form the basis of insidious competition which can prove quite abrasive to the psyche of the climbing community. Is it art or insanity? Will the Law of Diminishing Returns bring a halt to the present progress? How much working-out and how many self-inflicted morals is a section of stone worth? Or does the answer lie deeper, within the very soul of a man? Will the new disciples tend to purify the lust for perfection of the whole being? Maybe the competitive ego will be replaced with an open-minded appreciation of form; ethics may fuse with aesthetics, making practice rather than personality paramount.
The form is defined, the refinements infinite. The
seeds are already sprouting in many devoted practitioners of the art. When art
becomes a way of life, with religious significance to the individual, that art
gains a useful position in the cosmic scene. Aleister Crowley, with his bold
spiritualism, may have been a mutant prototype of a coming generation of
climbers. There are many various speculations, but the future definitely holds
exciting possibilities. The unusual situation presented by
The Future
Yosemite is the home of most equipment advances in
Ethics are also due for alterations. Top-roping will probably be used not only for physical conditioning and confidence building, where bouldering will not suffice, but also as a prerequisite in the case of dangerous unprotected leads by the climbing avant-garde. We may frown at these ideas, but they are likely to become selectively assimilated as part of the future norm.
Difficult face-climbing routes are now being done with the aid of a cliff-hanger in a shallow, which facilitates placement of a regulation anchor. Eventually, aluminium allow dowels may be used as protection, which would preclude the need for cliff-hanger and protection procedures. Siege tactics are being used and will continue to be used on new free routes. As ever more improbable rock is attempted, these practices may become more prevalent.
The decisions to be mad in this respect will be the responsibility of the new generation. These decisions will direct the future of the art and determine whether or not it is to remain an art.
A Brief
History of Friends
Some day we climbers may wear special gloves and shoes enabling us to scale blank walls like spiders. Should we fall off, like spiders our body harnesses may instantly attach safety lines to the rock. If and when inventors develop this technology, we will no doubt consider it clever but climbing wouldn't be as exciting as before. But for now, none of us can envision the details.
And so it was with the Friends 25 years ago when Ray Jardine was inventing them. The need was apparent, at least to him, but the actual configuration was elusive to everyone.
Seeking a device that would anchor itself in a crack, and hold with greater power the harder the pull, he began the inventive process in 1971 with a dual sliding wedge design. Taking advantage of his aerospace engineering background he analysed this configuration and found it mathematically unsound. The internal friction between any kind of wedges reduce their holding power, and in many situations such a device could pull out. He was inventing for his own use, and was not about to increase safety.
The summer of 1973 Mike Lowe tried to sell Ray a few of his new Cam Nuts, which he said his brother Greg had invented. They worked, he explained, on the principle of the constant angle cam. Intuitively Ray Jardine saw that the concept was viable, and felt that here might be the idea he had been looking for. He bought three of them. Unfortunately the first time he used them all three flipped out and went sliding down the rope into his belayer's arms, leaving me running out a 5.9 fist crack unprotected. That was also the last time he used them.
The constant angle spiral is ubiquitous in Nature, from seashells and pinecones to swirling barometric pressure gradients and the great spiral nebulas. Really, it is just an expression of uniform growth. Descartes described the principle mathematically in 1638, calling it the equiangular spiral. Since then, constant angle cams have been used in uncountable mechanical devices. He doesn't know where Greg got his idea of applying the concept to a crack anchoring device. Perhaps it was from the Jumar ascender, which uses a more-or-less constant angle cam to clinch the rope. At any rate we have Greg to thank for introducing the concept to crack anchoring technology.
Configuring a workable device, however, proved to be an enormous task. In retrospect it took someone with aerospace engineering skills, a questing mind coupled with extreme motivation and a passion for climbing - something of a rare combination perhaps. For months Ray worked in Bill Forrest's machine shop building camming prototypes, testing them at the local crags and innovating design improvements in the evenings at home. In the end he filled a couple of sizable boxes with discarded prototypes.
Many of these designs were later backwards engineered on the basis of Friends by other companies, and are in production today. This despite the fact that he found and discarded them. For after all, he did not have to compete with himself, and therefore he had the luxury of moving beyond inferior designs.
Then one day after trying absolutely everything he could think of, and continually straining his mind for ever more ideas, the Creator enlightened him with the concept of a double set of opposing and independently spring loaded cams. Like wheels of a car having independent suspension, each of these cams would be able to adjust to widely varying surface irregularities, within limits of course. He put one of these 'quads' together and took it to the crags for testing. The cams were spring loaded against each-other, and they were held together with a high-tensile steel bolt. But the bolt was wrapped with a piece of ordinary strap iron as a stem, and of course the device lacked any kind of trigger. On a 5.8 route which he called Fantasia, located at Split Rocks, he climbed to a stance where he could almost let go with both hands, and managed to squiggle the Quad into a hand-sized crack. By the way it behaved he knew instantly that it was the solution to the problem he had been working on all that time.
The following spring, 1974, Ray Jardine took his first
set of working prototype Friends to
For the next six years he continued making improved
prototypes. His focus was not in their commercial application, but on the
literally thousands of routes he used them on, mostly in
In 1977 Mark Vallance invited Ray to the
What does Ray Jardine think of today's preponderance of Friend look-alikes and so-called improvements? First, he feels that a certain amount of it is blatantly inferior. In the same vein that people would not go to quacks for brain surgery, climbers would be unwise to entrust their lives to cheap Friend imitations made of inferior materials. If you have something like this on your rack, you might consider getting rid of it. Secondly, there are all sorts of gizmos out there which, in my mind at least, are theoretically unsound. Three cam units are one example. Analogously, three wheeled vehicles were banned from the marketplace years ago because of their inherent instability. Many other gizmos out there are mathematically unsafe, and he certainly would not bet his life on them! Thirdly, there are a number of so-called improvements which in reality are nothing but patent work-arounds. He suspects that they will fade from vogue over time - meanwhile we might be aware of the hype. And lastly, now that the Friend patents are expiring we are seeing virtual-copies by major manufacturers.
The art and sport
of climbing is one of the purest forms of physical activity there is. Using
physical strength and grace, mental toughness, and a tool-kit of aids (see
equipment), climbers ascend steep rock faces to attain their goal, the top
point of a climb. Usually, though not always, this is the summit of a peak or
rock wall, such as the top of the
Although climbing
descends from the sport of alpinism that swept Europe in the 19th century,
today climbing has extended far beyond the
Big Wall Climbing, in particular, relates to the technical ascent of a rock wall large enough to involve multi-day ascents -- though speed-climbers such as Hans Florine have shattered even this once-reliable criterion. Many believe Big Wall Climbing to be the distillation of the climber's skills. Big Wall climbers pride themselves on low-impact climbing, the refinement of established routes or development of new ones, as well as speed ascents and other more esoteric activities.
One of the foremost rock climbing areas in the world is Yosemite valley, and one of its premiere climbs is the ascent of
The first climbs in
In 1957, three climbers from
A notably durable climber, whose stamina had been demonstrated again and again, Harding proved the perfect general to lead the assault on El Capitan. He and his companions Mark Powell and Bill 'Dolt' Feuerer began their ascent of the Nose on July 4, 1957, just days after the successful climb of Half Dome. The climb was the most difficult any member of the team had ever attempted, and after a week they were only a third of the way up. Other climbers, including Wally Reed and Allan Steck, joined the party, but the Park Service called a halt to their attempt with complaints of rubber- necking tourists causing traffic jams.
Returning in the autumn (once the tourists had cleared out), the climbers were hampered by a serious injury to Powell, perhaps the most skilled climber on the team. A compound fracture of his ankle crippled Powell, and although he continued to climb he was unable to contribute as he had. The highlight of the autumn 1957 assault was a Thanksgiving dinner on Sickle Ledge, complete with turkey and wine hauled up from the Valley floor.
The next spring they returned again, this time with Wayne Merry sharing leads with Harding instead of Powell. Bill Feuerer's experimental climbing gear, later marketed under his nickname 'Dolt,' was much in trial on this ascent. Again the team had to quit climbing during the popular summer months, and continue exploring their route in the autumn.
Throughout this assault, the team members would climb for a few days then retreat to the floor, there to rest up and reconsider their routing and techniques. On November 1, 1958, a final team was assembled: Warren Harding, Wayne Merry, George Whitmore and Rich Calderwood, with Wally Reed helping haul supplies on weekends. As the days wore on, Calderwood withdrew from the attempt, while Merry, Whitmore and Harding continued on. The evening of November 11 found the three men on a ledge below the final summit overhang, and with the end so close Harding decided to work through the night.
For hours he drilled holes into the bulging overhang, placed bolts, set line, moved a few inches and began to drill again. At almost 6 am the morning of November 12 he drilled his last bolt and scrambled atop the overhang to reach the summit -- culminating an 18-month assault on 2,900 feet of rock.
Still, the controversy was just beginning. The total time on the face was 45 days; some 675 pegs and 125 bolts had been placed, and some critics labelled the entire effort a 'stunt' and 'trick climbing.' Today, while the ascent of the Nose can be accomplished in a long day by a handful of proficient climbers, it is worth noting that while all the mistakes may have been made on that first ascent over 18 long months, those mistakes make today's success possible.
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