We're Really Up Here

In the spring of 2007, I quit my desk job and set out on a climbing road trip. This is everything that happened after that.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

So long Yosemite, and thanks for all the granite.

Another incredible visit to the Valley. I probably crushed more King Cobras than hard pitches, but that's the way it goes sometimes. Met some new friends, hung out with a lot of old ones, and basically had a blast.

I have a renewed passion for this place, and can't wait to return stronger in the fall.

Till then, it's back to SLC for a few days, then out to Philmont on Monday for Phase II of this adventure...

Here's a night time exposure of El Cap. Headlamps and stars...

Greg on Cookie Monster

On my final day of climbing in the valley, I shot Greg on Cookie Monster - a pretty sick 12a sport line at the Cookie Cliff.

After The Storm Cleared

I ran around the valley taking these shots as the sun was setting one evening...
















Wednesday, May 16, 2007

More Nose Pics

Get it? Never mind. Here you go:

Picture of the topo - photo by Andy.










A little bit of exposure. Photo by Andy again.








Yours truly on the summit. Andy took all the interesting photos, I guess.










Here's Elliot contemplating our situation, with the help of a King Cobra, from Sickle Ledge. And I actually took this one. Take that, Andy.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

The Nose, round 2.

Jugging a free hanging rope 2,500 feet above the valley floor will get your blood pumping. When you swing out from the wall, you realize that you're not often that far away from the rest of the planet.

After getting bouted on our In A Day attempt on the Nose, Andy and I were thirsty for a re-match. Elliot had just arrived in the valley, and he was all psyched up to do some hard aid climbing. I've lost my taste for pure aid over the years, so I convinced him to join me and Andy for a wall style three man ascent of the Nose.

When you go as a team of three, one guy leads, the second guy jugs the lead line and cleans the gear, and the third guy gets to jug a free hanging line. When the wall is steep, which it is for the last few pitches, this leaves you dangling in space. It's exciting.

Overall, the climb was a lot of fun. The team of three led to a lot of laughing at the belays, instead of spending all that time alone. Most hanging belays turned into epic clusters with all the ropes running everywhere, but we managed to stay sane. The climbing was unbelievable and classic, as it always is. Once again, I want to go back and do more of it free.

Standing on the summit was a great feeling. Andy and I had finally ticked the Nose together, and I had climbed El Cap with Elliot, which we'd been talking about for months.

So now I get to recover for a few days, then I get one more shot at something big before it's time to leave. I've got a few climbs in mind, but if anyone had any suggestions, I'm all ears.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

NIAD - We gave it our best shot.

I feel bad when I open my bear box at 2:00 AM in Camp 4 because it sqeaks really loud. But there isn't much I can do about that - and hopefully I didn't wake up too many other climbers as I munched on my pop tarts and canned peaches on Sunday morning. I have a hard time getting breakfast down on the morning of a big climb, and this was going to be the biggest climb I'd ever attempted. Andy and Tony's headlamps were shining over by their bear boxes, and after a few minutes, we silently met up and walked over to the parking lot.

The 15 minute approach hike to the base of the Nose is just steep enough to break a sweat if you're carrying gear, even if it's only 45 degrees out. We had Gnarles Barkley pumping out of our little Big Wall Speaker, which was the luxury item for the climb. Music was going to the be key for our success.

Tony and I had both done the route before - each taking 3 days on our previous climbs. Andy has a few wall routes to his name, but none of us had ever done anything in a push before. Climbing a wall in a push means you don't bivy on the route. You climb through the night, into the next day, and sometimes into the next night too. It's pretty grueling, but you save a lot of effort because you don't have to haul a 60 pound bag with all your food, water, and bivy gear.

My block of pitches was first, so I tied in and started climbing right at 3:00 AM. The first few pitches of the Nose are very polished, awkward, and feature the aid crux of the route. I had us up to Sickle ledge in about three hours, as the sun was coming up. That wasn't as fast as I had hoped, but wasn't terrible. Sickle is 4 pitches up, and the time it takes you to get there is supposed to be 10% of your total route time. 3 hours to Sickle meant 30 hours on the route, probably. So far, so good.

I haded over the lead after Sickle, and Andy got us up the Stovelegs Cracks. They're named after the pitons Warren Harding used to nail up them on the first ascent, which were forged from some old iron stove legs. Fortunately, we free climb them now at about 5.9, which is a lot faster than nailing.

Warren Harding blew everyone's mind when he first climbed the route in 1958. He spent 47 days up there. The second ascent went a little faster - they did it in about 6 days I think. Minds were blown again in 1975 by the first in-a-day ascent by John Long, Jim Bridwell, and Billy Westbay. These days, climbing the Nose in a day, or NIAD, is something of a benchmark for valley climbers. Plenty of people have pulled it off, but it's still an accomplishment. You've really got to be comfortable moving fast, and have your system dialed with your partner.

Unfortunately, we couldn't really get our system dialed with a party of three. The belays were always a mess with ropes running everywhere, it took too long to clean pitches, and we couldn't get the leader off the belay any faster with the third man. I'll try the climb again at some point in a party of two.

We arrived at Dolt Tower right at noon, 9 hours after leaving the ground. Dolt is pitch 11 out of 32, but the climbing gets slower up higher, so it's really only 25% up the route. Our total projected time had slipped to 36 hours, which was a little more than we were prepared to endure. 30 hours is a pretty long push. 36 hours is getting a little crazy. So we ate most of our food, stashed the water we had left for future thirsty parties, and started rapping to the ground.

The climb wasn't a failure - 11 awesome pitches in 9 hours makes for a good day of cragging on the big stone. As a collective first attempt at a big wall push, I'd say we did alright. We learned a lot, and now I have a new objective to keep me motivated. The climb will still be there when I'm ready for it.

Plus, it's always good to get humbled. That way, you know you're trying.

Friday, May 04, 2007

The Weatherman Lied

He said this storm was gonna break, but it's been raining and snowing for the past two days. My buddy Tony took this shot in Camp 4 this morning. Now they're saying it should clear up tomorrow, so the rock should be pretty dry by Sunday...

Our current estimated blast-off time is 12:00 PM on Sunday. If everything goes according to plan, we should be pulling our last rope up the last pitch of the Nose at 11:55 AM on Monday.

Wish us luck.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Going up.

As soon as the rainy weather breaks... possibly tomorrow. Watch our progress here.

K not really, but at least you can watch the conditions, and try to imagine how we're doing. We'll probably be doing well, more or less. So you can imagine that. Us doing well, I mean.

I'll tell you all about it when we're down.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Starting to look up at the walls...

I've been here a little over a week now. We've been having a blast free climbing, bouldering, and partying every night in C4. It's been the highlight of my trip so far.

Now that a few old partners are showing up, it's time to start thinking about walls. Elliot is showing up in a week or so, and is stoked on Zodiac. I walked up to scope the route when I first arrived - here's a picture I snapped of some guys braving the spray from Horsetail falls. It's a lot drier up there now.

But another old friend showed up, and wants to get on the Nose. That's a tempting offer... We'll watch the weather and see how it looks. It's been a few years since I've done that route, I'd love to try it again and see how much will go free.