Monday, September 28, 2009

Sailing Hawks

Oh man, it was tough leaving Moab. I've always loved the red rock country, and Big Bend is such a sweet little boulder field. I could have played there for days. If I had to leave Moab, Durango was the place to split to. A picturesque little mountain town in southwest Colorado, Durango is 21 miles south of the Purgatory ski area, and about 30 miles east of Mesa Verde National Park. With an elevation of 6500 feet, Durango is a great spot for travelling climbers to hang out during the summer months. Late September there felt like Tucson's late fall - sunny but not too warm days, crisp and cool nights. The city, while small, definitely has that mountain town vibe. Lots of young and active looking people walking around town, and every car seems to have bike rack, a ski rack and an Access Fund sticker.

The climbing around town is pretty phenomenal as well. Tons of sandstone cliffs and boulders, plus two limestone sport climbing areas. One bouldering area - Sailing Hawks - had been 'access sensitive' for many years, but the land was recently purchased by the city and the bouldering is now legit. A huge scattering of sandstone boulders minutes from downtown, Sailing Hawks is a lot of fun. Kerry and I went for a few hours one afternoon, and I headed back out solo the next morning. Sailing Hawks has great problems of all grades, and tons of variety - overhangs, slopers, slabs, aretes, etc. Here is a little of what we caught on film.

Warm Up Boulder - lots o' jugs, tons o ' fun:




Petrified Boulder - powerful and technical overhangs:




A weak contribution to the flapper/injury collection:



Video - if you go here you can watch it in HD:

A Day At Sailing Hawks from Joe Kreidel on Vimeo.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Friday, September 25, 2009

Big Bend Boulders

Just outside of Moab, UT, and sitting just a hundred yards from the Colorado River, the Big Bend Boulders are in a pretty sweet spot. Big chunks of Wingate sandstone that have fallen from the towering cliffs above, these boulders are just begging to be climbed. Aesthetic and very geometric -with perfect right angles, splitter cracks and parabolic scoops - these are some of the prettiest boulders I've ever climbed on. Consisting of maybe 10 good boulders, it isn't a huge area, but most every problem is real good, and there are some amazing classics.






Mushroom Boulder (juggy overhangs and fun traverses):




Big Block Boulder (great crimpy and technical problems):




Circus Trick v4/5 (cool dyno problem):




Chaos v8 (slopers into cool dihedral):





Monday, September 21, 2009

Rooooad Triiiiiip!

When I was young, and we were about to cram into the car for a family vacation, my dad would get up early, get all the last minute things packed and ready to go, then head over to the record player to ready his wake up call. Minutes later we would all be stumbling out of bed, covering our ears and heading for the car as he blasted the song "Vacation" by The GoGo's. So that is the song I have in my head as Kerry and I make final preparations for our week long trip to Moab, UT and Durango, CO.

"Vacation, all I ever wanted; Vacation, tryin to get away"

Few things get me as excited and revved up as road trips. Getting out of town, seeing new places, meeting new people, a break from the standard and routine, mishaps and misadventures....these are just a few of the things that make raveling great. Unfortunately I don't get to road trip too much any more, so I've been looking forward to this one for a while - especially so since we get to leave the kids at home. I am also excited to play with my new toy:

A Flip UltraHD video camera. A cheap, no-frills camera that takes excellent HD-quality video - perfect for Team Tuesday bouldering videos. Hopefully I'll get some nice footage of the gorgeous Big Bend boulders outside of Moab and the sweet Dakota sandstone blocs outside of Durango. And this fall and winter we are gonna go on a bouldering frenzy in Tucson. Through some top secret surveillance we have found a handful of (probably) new bouldering spots around Tucson, and I'm pretty sure we will have some great videos of new FA's going down in the desert.

OK, I got out my nervous excitement, time to finish packing. Stay tuned for updates.


Sunday, September 20, 2009

What Lies Beneath


Flappers are climbing's finest injuries. They perfectly embody what climbing is all about-- the application of focused effort to reach a goal. You don't get flappers by yelling "take!" when things get hairy six feet above your last bolt. You don't get them sitting on your crashpad mumbling about that last round of Buttery Nipples. Fact-- you will never get a flapper eating granola. The skin on pads of your fingers will not stretch out, bunch up, and rip open exposing the raw flesh beneath because you provided a perfect spot. A flapper, in all its hemophobic horror, is a direct indicator of the amount of effort you have applied. You have to earn your flappers and, ironically, the longer you climb and the more effort you are able to apply the harder they become to get.

The most horrific flapper I've ever experienced, personally, happened at Hueco Tanks sometime around Springbreak of 2000. At the end of my second of five days of bouldering I lunged for the lip on the now closed Mushroom Boulder . I slapped it with my right hand after more than an hour of attempts and for an instant I held it. But then the momentum of my jump pitched my hips out and away from the wall and I slipped, howling all the way to ground. My hand came off a bloody, chalky mess. The fleshy pad at the base of my middle finger dangled by a crescent of chalky skin. Blood ran into my palm and dripped between the webs of my fingers onto the sacred dirt of Hueco Tanks.

Later, I used a tube of Krazy Glue and several wraps of white athletic tape to make some kind of functioning unit out of my mangled finger. Halfway through the next day I ripped a hole in the pad of my other middle finger and ripped the glue/tape prosthesis off the first flapper exposing a ragged, oozing crater in my hand.

The next best flapper I've seen happened mountain biking with a bunch of Southwestern University students near Bastrop, TX. Generally, I wouldn't lump mountain biking into the same class of pursuit as climbing, but that is different debate all together and this particular flapper merits mentioning. I can't remember the name of the poor sot that it happened to, but he went down hard while really, really going for it on a long, steep downhill strewn with fist-sized, rounded river stones or 'taters' in mountain bikese.

It truly was a valiant effort. He very calmly appraised the situation from the top of the hill and then with perfect determination pushed his front wheel over the edge and dropped into the run.

I hold it to be self-evident that one should engage in one's passions with the single-mindedness of a meteor falling out of the sky. It doesn't matter much if your adversary is a rock, a hill, or atmospheric friction-- to engage it with anything less than single-minded, focused, all-consuming determination is to have failed even before beginning. Pursuits like climbing and, I will grudgingly admit, mountain biking or big game hunting demand that the energy you invest be at least equal to the task of completely destroying you. Like a meteor burning itself into oblivion in its quest to reach the earth a climber should risk being consumed by his own quest every time he sets rubber to stone-- climbing with fierce, focused will to the point that the very flames of your desire might engulf you at any moment and leave nothing more than a fading starburst lingering for a moment after the flash of your annihilation.

I watched this fellow on the mountain bike with no small degree of admiration. Looking down the hill I found myself touching the tip of my tongue to different teeth in my head, imagining how each one would shatter along different, jagged lines erecting inside of my mouth an interesting new topography of agony. I stepped down off of my bike, resigned to ignominy, at the exact moment that the object of my admiration went ass-over-tin-cup right up and over his handle bars and cartwheeled down the slope.

I performed first aid. He had shattered one collarbone which I put in a loose sling before tending to the flapper which had peeled a swath of flesh as wide as my hand starting just below the knee and flung it upwards in the direction of his thigh. The hinge of the flap was about an inch above the knee. The entirety of his knee cap was exposed. A large amount of gravel had accumulated under the flap in his floppings about after the crash and it required extensive cleaning and that was very painful to this young man. The other students hovered around us while I went to my task. My good friend, Jay Frank, in an unusually candid display of his sadistic nature, reminded me repeatedly as I crammed alcohol swabs into the biker's open wounds to "be thorough, not nice, C."

The point of this digression, is that he earned that flapper. And he earned my respect, not least of all because when facing the same the hill I backed down. Backing down, like yelling "take!" is an abominable act because it is a flat-out rejection of the now. Life only presents each individual with a finite number of moments in which greatness or lack thereof can be truly measured. To say no, to back down, to face a moment with imperfect courage is to reject the now. It is to reject your own greatness. It is to bring shame on all your line because as is grammatically and temporally obvious-- the now, once lost, will never come back.

Chew on that.

I'll be chewing on one of the other great pleasures provided by flappers-- flapper skin. After it's been peeled back and hanging around lifelessly dangling from your finger for a few days or weeks that old flapper becomes a true delicacy. It tastes better than betel nut and it won't stain your teeth.

Try it out the next time you've pulled down harder than your skin would allow. Taste that little dangling sliver of your path towards divinity. It will remind you, the same way that gazing into the raw, red maw of your wound, that human beings, like the rocks we climb on, are composed of many strata. Peel back one, chew on it a while, and examine what lies beneath because here, hidden within our layers, is a clue to the puzzle of the interconnectedness of all things.

Here are some of Team Tuesday's recent flappers plus a few others collected from the web.








Monday, September 14, 2009

Cochise Stronghold



How is this place only an hour and a half from my house, and how is this the first time I've climbed a route here? These are the questions that are lingering as I think about last Thursday's trip to Cochise Stronghold, a historic and amazing collection of granite domes up to 700 feet high. This remote and rugged area was once a favorite hang out for Cochise and his band of Chiricahua Apaches between their raids on local ranchers and couriers along the Butterfield Trail. Now it is a world class climbing area, an almost endless maze of high quality granite domes, crags and boulders. I was ready to get my Cochise initiation, and couldn't have asked for a better partner to introduce me to the Stronghold than Geir - an AMGA certified guide, who is also working on a series of online topos for the area.

Kids helping me rack for the day:


Cochise is well known for it's many bold and scary climbs, such as Abracadaver, but the place is far from a traditionalists stronghold - there are many multi-pitch routes that are entirely bolted, and even a few sport crags can be found, such as Isle of You and Sweet Rock. Bouldering? Oh man, there is serious potential on the west side just waiting for someone willing to put in the time and effort, plus loads of great established problems around the east side campground and Cochise Nature Trail.

Our objective for the day was the Sheepshead formation.


The approach to the Sheepshead started off easily enough, as a casual stroll through a grassy meadow. With views of the Huachuca Mts to the west and the various domes of the west Stronghold looming ahead, there was plenty to see. My inner boulderer was also salivating passing all the fantastic looking boulders along the way. Then with the Sheepshead right overhead, the approach kicked in, and we hiked another steep and exhausting mile to the base of our first climb.

A newish route we weren't sure of the name of, we started up the mixed 5.10+ with excitement and without sunscreen. We thought we were going to be climbing in the shade all day, but that theory didn't pan out, and we both got fried. The first pitch was fun, a short slab to a crack to a small roof. I led the second pitch, really fun 5.8 slabbing. It had been a while since I had climbed pure friction - feet smeared, hands palmed on smooth and featureless stone. It reminded me of the early days at Enchanted Rock, TX. Geir led the third pitch, starting with a small roof then into a hard slab, with a few real tricky moves. That left me with the 5.10 pitch 4, which consisted of an arching crack system then a bolted traverse under a large roof. It looked fantastic, except for that 20 foot section of offwidth - but it really didn't look that hard. I mean, sure it's an offwidth, but it's on an 80 degree slab, there must be an easy way up right? Did I just hear an evil laugh???

After about 30 minutes of profuse sweating, groveling, bleeding, whining and hanging on gear, I pulled up through the offwidth and made the sweet traverse. The last pitch was another tough one, and I was especially glad I wasn't leading. Even after a rest while belaying, I was still exhausted, and the opening roof moves on this one were tough for me. But after pulling through that you are rewarded with nice easy slab climbing up to the incredible summit and broad, panoramic views to the west and north. We dunked our heads in water-filled huecos on top, then made the descent back to our packs.

Photos from the summit (sorry, no action photos - the climbing was too sustained to ever worry about that...):





We had both been pretty badly baked by the sun, and as we sat in the shade guzzling water and eating sandwiches, we contemplating calling it a day. Fortunately some clouds were rolling in, and we decided to go for it. Unfortunately, once we hit the rock the clouds didn't last, and we again fried from the suns rays and the radiating heat from the pink granite.

Our next climb was The Climb Too Tough To Die, named for the historic city of Tombstone visible to the southwest, and it's nickname as "The Town Too Tough To Die". This climb is rated 5.10a, but is significantly easier than the previous climb - a welcome relief. A couple pitches have 10a cruxes, but most of the climbing is in the 5.7-5.9 range, with lots of bolts and easy to place gear when needed. This climb was fantastic, and if you can do the few 5.10 moves, probably a good introduction to climbing at Cochise.

The first pitch had a low slab crux, followed by a long and well protected crack up to a nice belay stance and terrific views.

Geir belaying at the top of the first pitch:


The second pitch was my lead, and it was a fantastic and beautiful lichen streaked slab up to a small headwall. The routes crux is on this pitch, a very delicate rightward traverse with nothing but the faintest ripples for your hands, and some small feet to move on. For most routes this would be the money pitch, but Too Tough To Die saves that one for the end.

Pitch 3 went through a cruxy headwall, up to some fun slab above. My lead on pitch 4 was ok, but not great. There were sections of crumbly kitty litter, and overall mostly a walk up. Pitch 5 was fun, with a low crux section on vertical rock leading up to easy but fun slab. Then it was my lead again, and I lucked out - the final pitch was incredible. You move through a blocky overhang up to a wildly exposed arete, making delicate slab moves along the arete for the last 40 feet to the summit. The exposure, the views, the movement and the impending storm made this a truly memorable pitch of climbing. And as I reached the anchors and could look over the summit to the east, I was rewarded with a perfect rainbow greeting me.

Me climbing the final arete:


If you are an experienced Cochise climber looking for a solid challenge, our first route is a good choice. It is sustained and difficult, with both slab and crack cruxes. Be ready to work hard, but the climbing is stellar. If you are looking for an easier climb or something you can finish relatively quick, Too Tough To Die is great fun. And if you are going to swap leads, try and cheat your partner out of some of the fun and take pitches 2-4-6. Pitches 2 and 6 more than make up for the lackluster 4th pitch.

I am glad I finally was introduced to Cochise climbing, and now my ticklist has grown exponentially. Aside from all the super classic established routes I want to do, we spied a few lines on the neighboring dome that we suspect are unclimbed, and look incredible (and hard!). And I will be daydreaming about the massive overhanging boulders for a while. There are multiple lifetimes worth of climbing in the Stronghold, and I look forward to many more days of fine friction on immaculate granite and enjoying the history and mystique of a truly special place.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Hairpin Bouldering

Some photos from a couple of warm afternoons of bouldering at the base of Mt. Lemmon.

First two photos taken by two year old Adelaide:



Clayton on the center topout of the cave traverse:



The fun vertical boulder:




Uncle John providing shade:


Team Tuesday v.2020:


Back to the cave for some shade and overhangs: