Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Sun Spots Crag - Twilight Zone Edition

Arriving at the Sun Spots Crag on Tuesday, I had the odd feeling of being somewhere familiar, yet somehow completely different. With a recent spate of actual weather, Mt. Lemmon had somehow turned into a Bizarro version of Mt. Lemmon. Looking across to the north slope facing us, there was an odd coating of powdery white stuff covering the ground and the scrubby desert plants. In the bottom of the valley between the crag and the powdery white slope, was a torrent of liquid flowing mightily across the landscape in a serpentine path. What were these Bizarro phenomenon we were observing?

Ignoring the eerie backdrop, we commenced climbing. Mike and I started up English Breakfast Crack, a nice 5.9 tips crack. It was nice plugging some gear again, something I always resolve to do more of, but then end up scaring the crap out of myself and giving up that crazy ideal. Mike is usually an instigator for my trad climbing, but he usually picks out awful choss piles for us to try...fortunately this was a great climb. Very aesthetic with great climbing - a mix of finger tip jamming, laybacks, and using the arete out left. The rest of the crew - Geir, Christian and Eric - warmed up on a short and bulgy 5.10 around the corner.

After warming up, the other guys joined us near the base of Breakfast Crack, where there are two other great climbs next to each other. Solar E-Clips is a fantastic 11b/c sport climb, and next to it is Rehearsal of Fortune, a powerful and difficult 11+/12- gear climb. I headed up E-Clips, a pumpy and interesting climb I had tried once last spring. Hoping for the redpoint today, I started up the initial chimney. This route is one of the most varied single pitches I have ever done - it truly has a little of everything. Finger locks, gastons, technical laybacks, feet-cutting-pulling-through-the-roof moves, CHIMNEYS!, powerful press moves, high steps, underclings under a roof to a blind reach for a crimp, awkward rests in a chimney, two short sections of jug hauling, foot jams!!!! Sadly, I don't think I utilized a single heel hook, but other than that, this route is amazingly diverse for only 80 feet, and one of my favorites on the mountain. It will also pump you silly, which resulted in some serious hangdogging trying to flush the lactic acid from my forearms. After figuring out the moves, and some key rest beta from Eric, I sent next go.

Solar E-Clips:




Meanwhile, Geir was attempting to finish off Rehearsal of Fortune next door. He'd been projecting the route, hoping today would be the day. This is a really quality climb - except for one bolt down low is all gear protected, but has dynamic and sporty moves. Geir looked super solid down low, but fell on the upper crux on both redpoint attempts. Next time!




And continuing the Bizarro theme, all of a sudden some dude was climbing in leopard print tights and a tiger striped helmet. Whether he was trying to conjure animal spirits in an attempt to send, or just pick up girls, I will never know. But the damage done to my corneas will never be undone.



Tuesday, January 26, 2010

A Day at The Dry

Mondays. Mehhhh.....

I mean, MMMOOONNDDAAAYYY!!!!

This semester Mondays aren't so bad for me. Last semester I had class at 9:00 am. Now I don't have class until 5:00 pm. This means I can leave in the morning, around eight or so, be climbing by around nine, hiking out by 3:00 and back to the house with plenty of time to finish homework and drink a beer before class... Or so I thought, leaving my house yesterday morning, headed for a south facing limestone crag just an hour and a half outside of Tucson called The Dry.


The day started out slow but interesting. We'd been told the road is passable in a capable 2wd vehicle. But with the weather we've been having recently the road was coated in thick, slick mud. The road isn't terrible, but it includes some steep very steep slopes. Luckily we were driving Beto's dad's trusty old Jeep. We slid down hills so steep the road would disappear from view beyond the hood. Finally we turned around a hillside and saw this:



That's right, it's snow.

Neither Beto or I had been to the Dry before, but I had heard a lot about one route in particular named Spinal Twist. A steep and fun 12a that includes an over sized spine-shaped tufa and a steep roof. Unfortunately the rock on a lot of the steep stuff was shiny, wet, slippery and most importantly, too weak to climb on. We still managed to get on a few vertical climbs that were amazing and tricky.

Broken Biscuits (10d) includes fun climbing up to a juggy roof, finishing with a short layback.



The roof makes for a fun free rappel coming down.


We also did Last Call (11a), which goes up a shallow dihedral to a thin, white face, and then finishes on an awesome 20-foot crack/dihedral. The pictures just don't do it justice.


Stella is part Mountain Goat.



By the time we left the crag it was 3:40, and by the time I got back to the house it was 5:20. I was 40 minutes late to class. The best part: it didn't matter at all. I love community college.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Down in the Basin

Friday found us enjoying a perfect January day at the boulders of Molino Basin. Dustin and I were joined by Pete (a strong sport climber trying to rebuild some strength after a few months off recovering from a broken foot) and Jonathan (an aspiring pro cyclist, here in Tucson for the winter for training). The weather was warm, 70 degrees, but absolutely perfect conditions in the shade of the canyon for gripping onto the water polished boulders of Molino.

It was nice having a few pads and spotters, as there a few problems here I've been wanting to get on, but have always put off climbing them without good protection. So after a few quick warmups, it was nice finally getting on Moonboard (v4, or v7ish from the low start) and Battle Tackle (v4). I had hoped to work a bit on Hammer of Hate (v8ish), but a headache slowly building up throughout the day cut my climbing a little short.

Molino is one of my favorite places on the mountain to boulder, with great rock, fun problems, and an idyllic setting. I only wish there were about 10 more good boulders down there. Here is a short video of some of the problems we did:


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Sixty Megaton F-Bomb

The City of Rocks, New Mexico sprouts up out of the desert like a gaggle of tumescent warts on an otherwise pristine cheek-- unexpected, disturbing and fascinating all at the same time. The volcanic bulges, pockmarked with huecos and pockets, are as pleasing to ogle and photograph as they are to climb. The rocks sing with a straining, tenuous energy that embodies the uncontrollable forces that made them burst out of the earth in the first place, millions of years ago, like some kind of terrestrial ejaculate.

Deming, New Mexico, twenty-five miles away and the jumping of point for exploring the City of Rocks houses a similarly seminal epicurean experience-- the green chile-salsa-smothered, tortilla-wrapped delights of Tacos Mirasol (309 East Pine St. Deming, NM) Located less than fifty miles from the green-chile capitol of the Free World, Hatch, New Mexico, the flat-grill artists at Tacos Mirasol miss no opportunity to bathe their wares in green fire. The tacos al carbon swim in chile, cilantro and lime in a kind of mystical goulash that will open doors in your mind to other, as-of-yet un-glimpsed dimensions. They are the perfect fuel for scaling the tumultuous blobs at the City of Rocks.

On our most recent trip, en-route to Deep East Texas for Christmas celebrations, Katie and I found ourselves dabbing green-chile salsa from our chins around four in the afternoon. We were aware of the existence of the City of Rocks but had never visited and it seemed an ideal spot to stop off for the evening. By five o'clock or so we were pulling into a campsite at the City of Rocks and with a few minutes were off exploring the boulders.

Wind and time have sculpted the thumbs of volcanic stone at the City of Rocks into rounded, bulbous nodes supported by thick columns. Many problems overhang slightly to a lot and in often times down-climbing a problem proves as cruxy as scaling it in the first place. Unimpressed with the sketchy down-climbs, Katie left me to dabble with the problems in the fading light and went off to shoot some beautiful sunset photos.

As night settled in I finished off a handful of problems-- just enough to whet my appetite for the place --and wandered back into camp where Katie waited with a bottle of wine and expectations of veggie chili. I was more than happy to oblige.

When we settled into the crashpad in front of the fire happily clutching our dinners and libations the first, cold stars had begun to pierce the fabric of night. The only sound other than the crackling of our fire came from a lonesome coyote somewhere out on the plain.

And then, from nowhere, a great, rumbling green behemoth lurched out of the darkness and into the campsite just adjacent to us. It smelled of fried potatoes, pot and patchouli and when it opened its maw it disgorged as ragged a bunch of hillbilly hippies as has been seen since Willie Nelson's last picnic in Lukenbach, TX. Their first move was to find the singular, dead oak tree up amongst the boulders and stomp it brutally to the ground before dragging it, in its entirety, back to their fire pit. They carried on loudly in a overly-gregarious way like people going through the motions of having a raucously good time for the benefit of outside observers. I recognized the paces because I have been through them before, myself.

The wine and the fire and pleasant warmth of Katie beside me on the crashpad as we gazed up at the stars kept the edge of irritation I might have felt from creeping to far up on me. The band of modern-day Merry Pranksters lit up their oak tree and produced a guitar and several drums and commenced to hammer out every David Allen Coe tune that the grizzled old bastard ever turned out. In a display, too perfectly apt for words everyone joined in on a rousing, howl-at-the-moon sing-a-long of "My Long Hair Just Can't Cover up My Redneck."

"Maybe we should wander over and introduce ourselves," I mused to Katie, but she remained unconvinced, sensing the slight undercurrent of discord that the wine had made me forget. A girl in the group whose voiced stood out amongst the din had popped up several times over the campfire bacchanal to snipe at one or another of the menagerie. They covered it well, but there lingered, like an aftertaste, the sense that life on the road might be unraveling a little bit.

We went to sleep, though, on the ground under the stars and the hippies quieted down to a low murmur of voices behind a wall of rocks from us. Falling stars scored the night's sky and we drifted off as a layer of frost began to descend on us.

When the girl began to yell she sounded like a fourteen-year-old boy-- quivering, voice cracking, and enraged.

"I hate this f@#$ing bulls#$@!" She screamed. "F@#% you! Just get me the F@#$ out of here!"

Owls hooted from the rocks when she yelled. Other owls answered from far away.

"Shut up you evil f@#$%@g c@#t! Get back in your bed!" The man had a voice like a hibernating bear being dragged from his cave by the balls.

They did their verbal sparring right there in front of the stars and coyotes and everyone. Sixty megaton F-bombs detonating in the atmosphere burned up all the oxygen even in that cold air and the only things left to breathe for those of us in the blast zone were hate and vitriol.

"You're an evil f@#$%#g bastard! I hate this f@&#$*g crap!" she wailed. There came a scuffling sound and then the man roared.

"Why would you do that? That's my f@#$%&g life! My f@#$%&g is in that backpack! You evil f@#$%&g b@#$h!"

Still interred in my mummy bag, like a blind grub searching for food, I lifted my torso and craned my neck to peer around the boulders that separated us. The man danced around their fire that was now burning with a strange color and intensity. His hand snaked out into the flames several times but came back empty until finally he snatched the flaming backpack from the fire. He stomped it out and, strangely, that seemed to be the end of it. He climbed back into the school bus where, presumably, the whole band huddled together for warmth.

The girl stayed outside weeping in the night. I settled back onto my sleeping pad and gazed up at the stars hoping for sleep to return. Then she began to puke-- long hard, retching horks that sounded like they rent her body completely apart. The splash of her guts on the rock was the last sound I heard that night.

In the morning, I made every effort to create as much racket as possible slamming doors, bouncing loudly in the bed of my truck. No one seemed to notice from the school bus, which in the daylight I could see had been painted green and from which hung all sorts of hippie adornments and bicycles. It had been converted to run on vegetable oil and painted above the windshield in black lettering it said: "The Green Team." I resisted the urge to walk over and a put a few pistol rounds through the engine block while they slept off all their David Allen Coe-inspired good cheer.  It seemed a moot point, anyway, I didn't think the Green Team, in its current incarnation, would be rolling on too much longer.

Instead, I treated Katie to a grand-slam breakfast at Denny's with lots of extra coffee and bacon. And then I drove us to Texas.


The City of Rocks at Sunrise



The City of Rocks at Sunset



The campsite where F-Bombs cauterized our sleep synapses.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

In Search of Cochise

After a great day of climbing at Milagrosa Canyon today, I am frantically trying to find all the warm coats, hats and mittens that get neglected here in Tucson as I pack for a trip to St. Louis. I am also questioning my sanity, leaving Tucson at it's finest for the sub-arctic weather of the midwest. When I get off the plane tomorrow, the high will be about 15 degrees, not factoring wind chill. Holy crap.

Yesterday Clayton and I took advantage of the amazing weather and headed out to the east side of Cochise Stronghold for some bouldering. Scattered around the campground, and a short hike away, are a good number of fantastic granite boulders. We got worked pretty hard on these granite eggs. While they are not steep, the climbing is very physical, with lots of powerful squeezing and pressing involved. Every problem we got on was great, with a variety of interesting features to keep things interesting. I could go on and on about how cool the place is and how much history the place has, but I gotta keep this short to finish packing....so here's the video....enjoy!