‘Climbing’ Articles

Shoulder Season Sending: Tips for climbing in the cold

By: Andy Chapman | November 18th, 2011
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Winter is imminent, but you still haven’t done your proj. Don’t despair. Cooler temps are actually quite conducive to “sending.” With a few tricks, you could turn that draw-recovery mission into a productive day of climbing.

What to wear

"Warming-up" on a chilly day at the Motherlode.

The first rule is to bring a lot of clothing for your single-pitch climbing or bouldering session. I typically crag- or pebble-wrestle in cotton as it’s more comfy and less geeky. I rest easy knowing that, since I’m close to the car, weight and moisture management aren’t a concern. If you have a long approach or prefer something up top that wicks, choose a synthetic or merino wool tee. Pack for comfort (and style?), knowing that there’s no harm if extra layers stay in your pack all day. Read More …

Alaska Gear Reviews: Oban 14-Year Scotch

By: Adam Riser | August 8th, 2011
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Jesse testing out a nice 14-year Oban

Since this will be the last gear review from my Alaska trip, I figured I should end with the one item that we got the most use out of. Some trips are cold, and good down jackets are really key. Other climbing trips have lots of steep ice and mixed terrain where the choice of ice tools make a huge difference. On our trip, however, the most important pieces of gear were the two bottles of 14-year-old Oban scotch that we drank to help us pass the time during the endless hours of daylight while we waited fruitlessly for the temperatures to drop and the ice to form.

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Nice Rack II: Put Together Your Climbing Rack

By: Andy Chapman | August 2nd, 2011
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Part 2: Putting it all together

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

The Desert is a cam intensive place to climb

Building a rack is an investment that is best viewed on a lifelong time frame. You’ll have to throw down on the front end, but aside from occasionally cleaning, re-lubing and re-slinging, cams will last many years. If you climb in The Desert or other cam intensive nitch crags like Vedauwoo, then your rack is never really complete.  Don’t despair.  If you frequent these venues, you will probably make friends with other like-minded individuals and have an open door policy of gear borrowing and lending. Read More …

Nice Rack: A Practical Guide to Cams

By: Andy Chapman | August 1st, 2011
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Josh taking his pick of the litter

Josh taking his pick of the litter

Knee-deep in the gear room last June, I was confronted with a major dilemma: what rack to take for the summer? Heading mainly to Squamish and the Bugaboos in the Northwest, I realized that taking the entire arsenal would be overkill. A phone call to my friend Nate in Portland, Ore., quickly sorted things out. “Dude, it’s granite. You probably only need doubles, maybe triples in a few sizes.” And with that, more than half my rack stayed at home. Lest you get the wrong impression of me as a gear-hoarding, over-protecting, grubby consumer, be forewarned that the parallel world of desert cracks leads to a skewed outlook when it comes to the cam department.

Spring-loaded camming devices (SLCDs or simply cams) can become a hotly contested issue among gearheads and dirtbags alike. Safety is a concern, to be sure, but other subtleties such as ease of use, holding power, size range, and cost come into play. Racking preference is largely personal, and as such is laden with bias. People new to trad climbing are often forced to rely on beta from their more “experienced” partners or simply go for the price point. This article will hopefully shed some light on the matter by briefly highlighting major design differences and providing some recommendations for putting together the right rack for you. Read More …

Go Big: How to Dress for Success on Long Rock Routes

By: Andy Chapman | May 2nd, 2011
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What to wear?

What to wear?

Spring is in the air, and many a young man’s (and woman’s) thoughts are turning to rock climbing. Longer days and warmer temps mean it’s time to start venturing off the ground to get some air under your heels. But before venturing onto a big route, you need to ask the age-old question: “What to wear?”

My pragmatic take on climbing clothing generally holds that expensive technical fabrics should be reserved for situations when you actually need them. (The bar, climbing gym, or even single-pitch crags don’t usually count in my book.) For a number of years, I also applied this philosophy to multipitch rock routes, wearing Carhartts up many a desert tower. Eventually, it bit me in the ass. A stuck rope on a cold November night left me wishing I weren’t dressed in a cotton hoody, canvas pants, and a cowboy shirt. Fashion is a bitch. Read More …

The Cutting Edge: 2011 Piolet d’Or

By: Jeffrey Miesbauer | April 19th, 2011
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We’d like to congratulate Ben Ditto and company for winning the 2011 Piolet d’Or this past Friday in Chamonix. His crew, The Wild Bunch (Ben, Nico Favresse, Olivier Favresse, and Seán Villanueva), share the honor with Katsutaka Yokoyama and Yasushi Okada because “these climbs truly represented the spirit of alpinism,” said Jury President Greg Child to Alpinist.

The Wild Bunch received their award for numerous first ascents they named while on an exploratory sailing trip around the coast of Greenland. Captain Bob Shepton convinced the team to help sail his 10-meter vessel, Dodo’s Delight, after he promised the crew a surplus of unclimbed big walls. That’s what they got for the next three months, along with many days on a tiny boat, which made for lots of Wild Bunch bonding time. Read More …

Death By Slideshow

By: Adam Riser | April 13th, 2011
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Make your photos tell a story. Here Alex Meyer and Shingo Ohkawa wait out the settling forest fire smoke with an endless chess session.

We’ve all been there: a few days after your friend gets back from a week-long trip, he invites you and the rest of his buddies over to check out a few photos. He starts up his slideshow, and you know by the third frame that you’re in trouble. By the 30 minute mark, you’ve seen at least a half-dozen fuzzy shots of the same moose, camp from every angle, and even one shot where the camera accidentally went off in the backpack.

You are experiencing the worst post-trip torture there is: Death by Slideshow. Every frame of the entire trip is in your buddy’s presentation, nothing has been edited, and although all the shots are in chronological order, there is no storyline other than the standard, “Oh yeah, I remember that” when your friend is surprised by which shot came up. You don’t want to risk subjecting your friends to this same fate after you go on an epic trip, so put a little effort into your own presentation and get them stoked instead of putting them to sleep. Here’s how….

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The Cutting Edge: The Impossible Wall

By: Jeffrey Miesbauer | April 12th, 2011
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Last week, I had the honor to meet and interview climber and expedition photographer Ben Ditto in Bishop, California, where he currently lives. He (along with Sean Villanueva, Nico, and Olivier Favresse) has been nominated for the IXX Piolet d’Or award for completing ten big-wall first ascents on the coast of Greenland. Traveling on Captain Bob Shepton’s 33-foot sailboat, the climbers began their ascents directly from the deck, as you can see in this amazing video of their first ascent of the Impossible Wall. (It’s part two of a five-part video series sponsored by Patagonia and shot by Ben and his crew.)

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Daisy Chain Dangers

By: Adam Riser | April 1st, 2011
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Not to flog a dead horse, but with rock climbing season coming into full swing, and I’m once again bracing myself to see climber after climber using their daily chains incorrectly and risking their lives. There is nothing wrong with using a daisy chain to clip into anchors, but you must use it correctly. If you use your daily chain incorrectly, you may as well be clipped in with your shoelaces. Here’s a very quick tutorial showing the right and wrong ways to clip in with your daisy chain.

The other option is to get yourself a Metolius PAS, which is essentially the same thing as a daisy chain, but it uses individual and independent full-strength loops, so there’s no way to clip in wrong.

P.S.: I realized when I watched this that I slipped up and said “where you would normally girth hitch your rope” when I meant to say “where you would normally tie in with your rope.” Please do not girth hitch to the rope when climbing.