With âTropical Linesâ, Felipe Camargo, Brazilian pro climber, shows us his homeland! Felipe spent a good part of 2023 across Brazil joined by his brother Bruno to film and complete 5 remarkable and extreme first ascents, including South Americaâs hardest route, âAuto Retratoâ 9a+. In this beautiful 35-minute video, Felipe takes a look back at the process and these superb king lines, with a great soundtrack. From the sandstone of Pirai to the super-compact limestone of the Cipo jungle, from the gigantic gneiss cave of Passa 20 to the quartzite of Morro do Macaco, Felipe introduces us to the incredible diversity of Brazilian climbing.Watch it below!
Two years after completing the stand start, Janja Garnbret is back on âBĂŒgeleisenâ in Maltatal, Austria. The Slovenian climbing star was waiting for the right moment to take her revenge on the sit start of the problem, and it was this Sunday! Janja made a quick work of the local classic, a big overhang panel with crimps opened 10 years ago by Nalle Hukkataival! After a quick move check, the send was done in few minutes! A boulder sheâll pocket twice in a row! Janja comments via her Instagram account, with a video to share (watch it below).
âCame back way stronger and moves felt a lot easier than they used to. Took me less than half an hour to get the moves dialed in and send the boulder Proud to be the first woman to get this one done!
Funny sidenote: wasnât happy with the video Roman took of my ascent, so I actually went for another go and climbed the whole thing again đâ
With this new feat, Janja once again proves her unique talent and joins the very select club of climbers who have climbed 8C boulder: the Japanese Tomoko Ogawa, the German Kaddi Lehmann and Americans Katie Lamb, Brooke Raboutou, and Ashima Shiraishi.
Les mouvements sont si puissants et impitoyables. Câest un peu effrayant avec une claque Ă lâaveugle et quelques plat dos en arriĂšre. De plus, il y a la peur lancinante de tomber de lâarĂȘteâŠ
British climber Shauna Coxsey (31) is back to her best! Retired from climbing competitions for a few years and now a mother, Shauna just completed her 2nd 8B+ boulder in just a few weeks after the success of âFotofobiaâ at Pedriza (and her 3rd 8B+ counting âNew Base Lineâ 10 years ago). This time, it was back home that Shauna broke through with âThe Bossâ at Yarncliffe in the Peak District. Itâs the first female ascent of the boulder and the biggest female bouldering performance ever achieved on British soil. The boulder is a compression roof with a left-hand arete and right-hand flat rails all in compressions, toe hooks and heels. The problem was opened in 2020 by her partner Ned Feehally, one of the tenors of British bouldering.
âAhhh this one felt pretty magical. Ned made the first ascent of this incredible line a few years back and ever since itâs held a space in my mind. Though only a short drive from our house it took me years to try it. To feel strong enough and more importantly confident enough.
The moves are so feisty and unforgiving. Itâs a little spooky with a blind slap and some back splat landings to be had. Plus thereâs the niggling fear you could fall off the ledge
I pieced this together much quicker than I expected. It feels totally crazy that I can do a climb like this let alone do it fast. There was no escaping its powerful intensity and no room for fear or doubt on the max span slap for me.
Itâs kinda wild to no longer feel Iâm chasing previous PBs or a form I once had. And to feel my body and mind are ready for exploring whatâs possible.â
Mat Wright is a name you may not be familiar with. The British climber already has a number of sport climbing feats to his credit, including a rare ascent of âHubbleâ and âEvolutionâ (9a), from 8C bouldering, but also in trad climbing with âLexiconâ. Mat just completed the 7th ascent of Dave McLeodâs trad classic at Dumbarton Rocks, âRhapsodyâ, a line he first tried in 2022. âRhapsodyâ offers an 8b approach and an 8A boulder as a particularly exposed summit crux. Here are Matâs words shared on his Instagram account after his send.
I remember rocking up to Dumbarton with this smug grin. I was ready take on the world. My entry to trad had so far been smooth. But, âRhapsodyâ would stop me dead in my tracks. I was forced to hold my hands up and admit that I may have bitten off more than I could chew.
Over the next few years, I would find my trad apprenticeship being steered by one goal in particular, to climb âRhapsodyâ.
This insane route is iconic for its immensely difficult headwall thatâs guarded by an exposed runout. What people donât mention is the logistical nightmare that accessing the top of the crag is too. This only adds to the huge challenge!
My commitment to âRhapsodyâ has taught me to respect challenge. Iâve had to be mentally disciplined, and remain focused at all times. Itâs been hard for me, and Iâve never had to work this hard before. Itâs been a roller coaster ride and I doubted myself many times. But the beautiful thing is when these things pay off, you believe in yourself that little bit more. Imposture syndrome must sound crazy given the circumstancesâŠ
Anyway, the good times on this line have been really good. Iâve met some really great friends and itâs given me a great excuse to spend a lot of time in one of the most awesome countries in the world, Scotland.
I feel I should pass special thanks to Anna Taylor and Sam Lay. Anna has belayed me many times, and her commitment and support has been a major element to success! Sam managed to score the E11 belay tick!
I think itâs worth saying that Dave McLeod really was ahead of his time, and put one hell of an effort in to seal the deal on this stunning line. Rumours suggest it was over 100 sessions⊠â
In 2019, one of Japanâs climbing legends, Yuji Hirayama, completed the first ascent of âTime Machineâ 8c+ at Gozen Iwa, Okutama (West of Tokyo), aged 50 at the time. Relive the tries and the process leading up to the free ascent of this project, which took Yuji 2 years to complete. âTime Machineâ offers a furious undercling crux in the upper part of the route. A few months later, Chris Sharma completed the second ascent. Gozen Iwa is home to some of Japanâs most challenging sport climbs, including âMaturityâ 9a+ and âSoulmateâ 9b. Discover the place in the film below!
French climber Nolwen Berthier has just announced the launch of a nature exploration project combining climbing, low mobility, discovery of living things and scientific encounters. Highly sensitive to the ecological cause, Nolwenâs âA route for natureâ project will offer trips to raise awareness of environmental issues, questioning humanâs place in the living world.
â Youâve announced the launch of a ânature explorationâ project. Can you give us an outline? A self-guided, soft mobility itinerant trip? Iâve had the idea of a project combining climbing, ecology and art in the back of my mind for quite some time. Specifically, I plan to carry out 2 adventures, in the form of low-carbon journeys, just a stoneâs throw from home:
At the end of May, 1 sailing expedition in Marseilleâs Calanques, exploring the city and the ocean.
At the end of September, 1 train trip around Annot, exploring the Forests and Rivers. But more than just a climbing trip, itâs a way of learning about life!
â Why embark on this adventure? Whatâs your motivation? My main motivation is to better understand and feel Life. Through this experience, I hope to inspire a rethinking of the relationship between man and nature, to move away from a dominant/dominated relationship towards a more egalitarian one, by cultivating our sense of wonder, and adopting practices that are more respectful of the other living beings around us.
Climbers, like many outdoor sports enthusiasts, we use nature as an object to nourish and consume (or consume?) our passion. But at a time of ecological crisis, isnât it time to put mankind and biodiversity back on an equal step?
â Weâll be working with a number of different players, so whatâs at stake? Indeed, this exploration is also a project for encounters between living beings who protect living things! With experts at the cutting edge of their fields, weâll be tackling societal issues such as light pollution, ocean exploitation, forest protection and river conservation.
Biologist, naturalist, activist, philosopher, photographer, musician⊠my intention is to bring together different points of view to shed light on our relationship with the living world through a variety of disciplines and sensibilities, and to provide inspiration on the different ways of getting involved in environmental protection.
Convinced that emotions are a key element in motivating people to take action, weâll be working with artist and climber Philippe Echaroux on a special project: in each of the 4 ecosystems weâll be visiting, weâll be taking photographs to convey the issues at stake.
â And what about climbing? Have you found any gems to share? In these adventures, each climbing route will give a voice to a living ecosystem. Urban climbing in Marseille, kingline on the waterâs edge in the Calanques, tree climbing in the forest⊠all kinds of beautiful climbing will be on the schedule!
â How do you organize your trips? How long will you be gone? These will be 15-day adventures, and you can follow all my adventures on my Instagram account and on the MAIF Sport PlanĂšte account, main sponsor of the project from May 17!
Invited by Kathy Choong, who wanted him to discover the local crags, Czech famous pro climber Adam Ondra travelled to Switzerland to visit SoyhiĂšres, South of Basel Jura. The plan was to try out a good proportion of the cragâs hard classics in one afternoon, with some onsight burns. The result was a rampage, with 2 8b+ climbed, including one onsight, an 8c onsight and an 8c+ 2nd go. Watch the video below for Adamâs commentary on the climbs, and a glimpse of the style of this beautiful cliff!
This part of the wall has attracted me for a long time. From the ground, âLes Rois du Lithiumâ looked like the perfect line. Straight through the wall with a 20m-long hardcore finish. When I bolted it, I couldnât imagine there would be many perfect holds. But when I first tried it, I was amazed by the moves and the line. âLes Rois du Litthiumâ is basically split in two parts. There is an easy approach around 8b / 5.13d tiring you before the main part. And then, there is this beautiful power endurance section totalling 22 hard moves in a row. The line and the moves are so fun. Every try was a pleasure. Itâs like surfing a wave. âLes Rois du Lithiumâ is possibly my favorite of the 5.15bs I have climbed. The difficulty meets the beauty here. And there is something more: itâs fun. The fun factor is quite important on a hard project. When you like the effort, when riding the rock is inspiring your, you know youâve got the right project. I tried this route during the fall of 2023. I was so psyched to finish the job this spring. I needed time to learn the 22 hard moves properly. There is no room for mistakes. The last hard move is so stunning: From two bad gastons, you have to reach a left-hand sloppy crimp and take a swing from it. I fell a few times up there. There is another hard and inspiring project in Pic Saint Loup : The âWolf kingdomâ. It will be harder than âLes Rois du Lithiumâ. Letâs continue the fight !
â Do you seem to be taking good time at lâAbattoir, your new favorite crag? I discovered the crag last year, I went there twice when I first moved to Grenoble. Ibtried âHannidalle tracteurâ, 9a. I hadnât had a chance to go back, as I hadnât done too many sessions in the area.
â Can you describe âHannigraalâ? What does it look like? I love the style! Iâd already climbed MouriĂšs back home in the South and itâs a bit similar. The rock is really exceptional, with magnificent crimps. It starts with âHannidalle tracteurâ, which is quite bouldery but at the same time resistant: lots of bouldering cruxs in a row without too much rest, with a resistant finish. This is followed by a not-so-great kind of rest on flat crimps, and when you leave the 9a anchor you climb a 7C+ boulder very fingery, with a mantle in the slab, where you can breathe a little before a 2-handed lateral dyno on the cliff arete, really classy. The crux of the route is at the top, to pass through the slab.
â Definitely your hardest route? Compared to the other 9a+ Iâve done, itâs harder and also more in my style. When I did it, everything was perfect. I catched the conditions, I was in shape, my betas went precise and itâs pretty much in my style. I really think thatâs the hardest route I climbed.
After âNordic Marathonâ and numerous sends in the 9a/+ that we didnât mention anymore, Seb Bouin just finished his glorious stay here with the 3rd repeat of âChangeâ at his last try of the trip! Known as the first 9b+ of climbing history with the first ascent by Adam Ondra in 2012 and the downgrade of âChilam Balamâ, the route was repeated by Italian gun Stefano Ghisolfi in 2020. Without giving his opinion yeat regarding the grade, here is Sebâs comment left on social media.
âAfter sending pitch 1 and pitch 2 independently, my goal was for sure trying the entire route. The only problem was I only had four more days, before my departure to come back home.
I didnât know if it would be enough for the entire route. My body started to feel crushed by this cave. I felt tired from the trip. But I wanted to play the game until the very end.
Day 1, the conditions were terrible. It was humid and wet. A lot of the key holds were wet. I decided to not climb and wait for the next day.
Day 2, it was still humid, and key holds were a bit dryer, but the humidity didnât give me confidence. I decided to try the route anyway. It was difficult to wait much longer, knowing I had to leave soon. I passed the first pitch, rested a lot before pitch 2. Then passed the first traverse crux on Pitch 2, and fell straight after that on the second crux. The holds were really humid and almost wet.
Day 3 (August 5th), I still felt really tired from my attempt on the previous day, and I didnât sleep well during the night. I wasnât planning to climb â I wanted to wait until I felt ready. I went up to the cave to check out conditions and belay my girlfriend on her route. The conditions were exceptional! I was torn in my mind. Should I try it and take advantage of the conditions? or should I wait until I knew I was fully recovered? I finally decided to try the route. I was literaly flowing through the holds, due to the good conditions. It was so much different than the day before.
I am happy to say that I made no mistakes and felt the belief that I could make it to the end, and I did! I am not usually a âlast day, last tryâ kind of guy, but this time it happened.
I climbed the route with kneepads, like previous ascensionist Stefano Ghisolfi.
More posts to come regarding the global trip, and comparaison between Change, Nordic Marathon, and Move.â
Brazilian climber Felipe Camargo just completed the first ascent of a very hard multi-pitch in his country, âAvenida Brasilâ 8c, 280 meters. The very overhanging line is located in a huge cave in Parque do Petar (Alto Ribeira, South of Sao Paulo). After 21 hours of climbing, Felipe sent one of the most difficult multi-pitch routes in South America. Here is below a preview of some images while waiting for the full film. Felipe is a fan of the style, who had previously climbed in 2016 the roof multi-pitch in Getu (China) âCorazon de Ensuenoâ, 8c too!
âI made 3 short trips to do it, one of 4 sessions to check the betas, one of 3 days where I started to put some solid goes in and finally a last one of 3 sessions to finish the job! At the beginning, I was doing almost all the moves but suffered too much in terms of finger strength to hope to link them all. Thatâs what I focused on in training to suffer less. Otherwise, I kept doing a lot of bouldering to stay in shape, and I liked to do big days to maintain a good endurance base, ending my days up in âSankukaĂŻâ (a route next to âLa moustacheâ). The route is so called in reference to a sika mustache in SankukaĂŻ, the 8c+ known to Entraygues. For the record, a small crimp had broken and Olivier Fourbet (a local) sculpted this sika mustache to keep the hyper homogeneous effort of this route. There is always a debate on the possibility of removing it in order to keep the route entirely natural (apart from the reinforced holds), it would make the effort much more bouldery, but apparently it would still work. Soon thereâll be a referendum at the crag!â
After âEstado Criticoâ last winter, the young French gun Victor Guillermin ticked his second 9a with âMokshaâ the famous 50 meters king line located at Pic St-Loup cave, France.
âAlready the first time I came to CeĂŒse back in 2014 I had a look at this route, but never decided to actually try. I got busy with Bibliographie in 2017, which took me a few seasons to finish. In 2021 I gave Ratstaman another go and climbed it in three parts on my second day, but didnât go back for it until three weeks ago. Right after the World Cup in Chamonix I headed to CeĂŒse to properly try the route. After five days I got really close to doing it, but couldnât quite piece it together in the end. The World Cup in Briançon came as a welcomed break from hiking up the hill and after a week of competing and training I returned to CeĂŒse. First day back on the route felt really good and already on the second day of this trip I had the perfect send go! Ratstaman is one of those mythical routes for me. Bolted by Chris Sharma a while ago at one of the best crags in the world, tried by a few strong people, but not been done for many years. For sure one of the best routes Iâve ever done or tried in the 9b range.â
Seb Bouin is not the only one to be in good shape in the Flatanger cave! The Swiss mutant Dylan Chuat has just ticked the classic Norwegian cave stamina test, âThorâs hammerâ 9a/+ for 50 meters of climbing! He shares his feelings with us.
âItâs clearly the longest route Iâve done, especially in a roof like that, I lack experience in this level. Iâve worked particularly hard for it. Itâs quite demanding, especially the top part which is the 8c of âNordic Plumberâ and its pumpy flat rail. You can really fall anywhere, even if I never fell after the lower section. For the grade itâs hard to say, itâs clearly harder than the 9as Iâve done before, but Flatanger is a bit of 3D crag and the betas have evolved. However for the level of the route, the requirement, the length, I found it difficult to deal with. I started working the route in tourist mode, I climbed the different sections of the route in the first session, and I had already sent the 8c finish before so I was confident. When I was ready to send I had problems with the lower part which was very wet and therefore it was hard to climb it, with wet holds I needed to dry with toilet paper just before an attempt. I sent the route from the 2nd quickdraw and then had to wait for it to dry to finally redpoint the route.â
After âIron curtainâ, âThorshammer L2â and âChange part 1â, Seb Bouin continues his rampage in Flatanger (Norway) with the first ascent of âNordic Marathonâ for 130 meters of hardcore climbing! The route combines âNordic Plumberâ 8c and âThorâs hammer L2â 9a+. Here is his comment left on social media.
âWhen Adam told me about his project to cross over the cave, and go from the ground to the summit, I was immediately amazed by this idea. The main goal of my trip was to check out this monster. The idea was big, really big. But itâs definitely the kind of challenge which attracts me. As I explained in my previous post, there are three possible starting routes, each offering a different grade. Starting with: âNordic Plumberâ 8c, âThorâs Hammerâ 9a et âMoveâ 9b/+. Whatever the start, it is then followed by a cruxy 9a+ (Pitch 2 of Thorâs Hammer), with a repoint crux at the end (at 80m). My ultimate goal would be to do it by the hardest possible combination: âMoveâ.
In the previous years, I already spent four travels to do Move (9b/+). Imagine starting from this one and finishing by a cruxy 9a+⊠However, I knew this would be too hard for a single trip. So first I decided to start from the easiest line (Nordic Plumber 8c) in order to get an idea of the challenge, and to be psychologically ready for the end when I start trying the harder version.
After first working and sending the second (9a+) section by jumarring into it, I then started trying from the ground, trying to link into it from âNordic Plumberâ.
It changed so much the end. Coming into the 9a+, with my arms already so pumped in the last crimpy crux after 80m of climbing was insane.
I was falling there a few times. And then falling on the previous cruxes as well.
The sheer size of the route makes it hard mentally. You can have one go every two days. Itâs so much climbing, in one intense burst that you simply canât give two goes in a day. Then if you want to be as fresh as possible, you need a rest day in between. So it was quite hard psychologically to only give it one burn every two days. The pressure felt so high in this last crux.
The rope drag was also insane. Even if I had already switched ropes once during the route â I had to untie my knot and free-solo the last 5/10 meters (really easy climbing). âNordic Marathonâ is my pure climbing style. Endurance, big moves,âŠ
The line attracted me by its size. Thanks Adam Ondra for sharing this idea!â
â Itâs your first route of the grade? Whatâs your rockclimbing pedigree? Yes, itâs my first route in the 9th grade, and the only one I have tried! Before that, I only climbed a few routes, an 8c in the Saussois, another 8b in Entraygues and 2-3 8a!
â You worked on it last summer. So you needed 2 trips? What will you take away from this experience? I tried it 4-5 sessions last summer and fell in the second crux 4 times but I was far from the send. This year, I reclimbed the moves pretty quickly and sent it during my first session from the ground!
â The route and its bouldery start seem to suit you. Are you motivated by longer and more resistant routes in the future? Yes, this route suits me well with an 8A/+ start followed by a good rest and a 7B+ boulder problem, so a perfect short power-endurance route for a boulderer. At the moment, my goals are bouldering-related but in the long term Iâll be more psyched about sport climbing for sure.
â Your main goals for the end of the summer? I will stay one more week near Briançon, I want to try âLe Pamphletâ which is a project in Entraygues and then I will leave for Magic Wood in Switzerland, where I want to try a couple of 8C boulders.
Seb Bouin dans âChangeâ part 1 9a+ â Photo: Marco Muller
Recently, the downgrading of two hard lines has been suggested, by Seb Bouin and Malik Schirawski, and it got us wondering about the spicy question: âwhy downgrade?â when a route is adjudged to be easy for a given grade. Here is an attempt to highlight how careful a climber should be when doing so, especially when s/he spreads the news on social media and publicises their performance.
After sending his big project âDNAâ in the Verdon in the spring-which he proposed at 9c- Seb Bouin is back in Flatanger without proper objective, it seems. Nonetheless, the French climber made quick work of two Adam Ondra until-then unrepeated lines, inlcuding that of âIron Curtainâ, a short route opened in 2013 by the Czech, for which he proposed 9b. Funnily enough, the belayer on Ondraâs successful try was none other then Bouin himself, and the line stayed with him all these years. In 14 tries and 5 days of work, the Frenchman sent it and suggests a downgrade to 9a+ due to his use-contrary to Ondra-of a kneepad, which for him renders the route a fair bit easier.
âFor me the route is definitely not 9a (also Alex Megos, the first ascensionist, downgraded it with the use of a pad), it for sure is 9a when you do it without a pad but these days most of the people have a pad and with one I could release both hands (also taped to my leg) but even without that the rest is still really good. And the whole difficulty of the route comes from its endurancey nature because none of the moves are hard but they are all roughly the same difficulty, and clearly a rest in the middle helps a lot. For me it ruins CeĂŒse a bit because in the past if you did one of the harder routes in CeĂŒse it meant that you truly climbed the grade (for example: âDures Limitesâ, âLe Cadre Nouvelleâ). And now having a route which is really soft for the grade (and also the special 9th grade) damages the other 9a routes (like: âLe cadreâ, âLuluâ) because they are way harder and people have to invest more time into them.â
Symon Welfringer, the last repeater of the route before Malik, and proud to have ticked his first 9a, is one of the first to feel raw about this proposition, and brings in some nuance:
âSome think that âPornographieâ is harder than âLe Cadreâ and the route itself feels harder to me than the 8c+s of the crag. âPornographieâ is a 9a for me, and for this I draw on the other 9th grade lines Iâve tried, but I also especially take into consideration that within the same grade some routes are harder than others, depending on the style we like and the effort needed. That is why I think that âPornographieâ holds its place among 9a lines, for me itâs a bit easier than âLe Cadreâ but harder than some other 9as. Iâve also spoken about this with a lot of other climbers and the grade feels right. These days, as soon as we believe itâs a bit soft we think to downgrade, whereas we could as easily understand grades as spectrums. But in the end, this debate is valid for all the routes in the world, most notably certain Spanish 9as that would merit further questioning (note: as well as other easy 9as such as âSang Neufâ, âLa Cabane au Canadaâ, âEra Vellaâ and so on).
Sometimes, dowgrades are proposed because the next repeaters found an easier beta or found the effort easier than proposed, climbing it quickly compared to other routes of the same difficulty. For example, last summer Stefano Ghisolfi proposed a downgrade of âBibiographieâ, thinking his time investment on it was equal to the ones he put into the working of âChangeâ and âPerfecto Mundoâ. The first repeats of âAkiraâ and the controversy about the worldâs first 9b also come to mind, with Martinez, Bouin and Fourteau claiming they climbed a 9a instead. Itâs the game when youâre trying a first ascent alone, you may climb in a sub-optimal way. And of course the conditions for the send are important, as well as the shape of the climber, the possible size-dependency of the line compared to the ape of the climber, a lot of elements to consider when the question of giving an objective grade arises. A difficult art when grades are based on subjective feelings⊠And when youâre a pro climber living with a lot of pressure from the expectation of your sponsors, with an interest in creating a buzz around yourself with extreme ascents even if it means skipping a methodical reasoning around the real level of the routes climbed (even if, we recognise it without difficulty, all the analyses in the world wonât render an individual proposition completely objective).
Itâs precisely one of the hobbies of Lucien Martinez, editor-in-chief at Grimper Magazine, passionate top climber and adept of debates concerning high difficulty and grading.
âItâs quite logical that there are more downgrades than upgrades because in general itâs related to easier betas found. The other way around is not true: if you do a harder beta compared to the opening one, itâs on you, it wonât change the grade. The only way to get an upgrade is if the first climber underestimated the level (or a broken hold but itâs not really the same route anymore). Whereas for a downgrade, a new beta or kneebar rest may be enough. So itâs logical and normal that there are a lot more downgrades. But be careful, a new beta is not synonymous with a downgrade at all, sometimes it makes the thing a little easier but it doesnât change the grade. You have to juggle with these every time. It seems important to me to point out that when we communicate about our performance or when our performance is made public, we have an ethical duty to do some serious thinking about the grade. Out of honesty towards all those who are interested in it from near or afar. Iâve also noticed that even when we try to think about it, the human brain is so good at self-deceit that with very, very rare exceptions, when there are doubts we always find a way to âchooseâ the grade that suits us. I have already caught myself constructing a line of thinking, already knowing which grade this argument should lead me to⊠Gradings are very imperfect as a system, they distort the purity of the climbing and have a lot of flaws. But in my opinion these drawbacks do not matter that much. In fact, itâs part of our culture and even contributes to its richness. I think we shouldnât deny the grades, but we have to remain lucid about their imperfections, put things in perspective and keep their importance in mind so as not to lose our brains.â
The grades of yesterday, more solid? Nevertheless, the old guard also believes that the old grades were tighter than those offered by the younger generation, who may be playing less regularly on rock due to the omnipresence of gyms, and therefore have significantly less experience in actual rock climbing, therefore less references to propose a legitimate grade. This is, for example, what Alex Huber meant in this text, devoted to âAction Directeâ:
âAnd it was up to 1995 that âAction Directeâ was considered to be 8c+. Since then grading became confuse and predominantly it had been created by the proposal of the grade 9b. Ben Moon still was there and he tried to convince the community that the proposal of the grade 9b is destructive as there hasnÂŽt been even a confirmed 9a in the world. But the discipline was lost with a lasting effect. Beginning with 1995, the grading became softer, and softer, and softer⊠It slowly began with the change of the grade of âAction Directeâ from 8c+ to 9a. Today, âAction Directeâ is the most famous of all the 9a-routes and therefore it is the reference for that grade. The funny thing is that today âAction Directeâ, which had been 8c+ originally, is one of the hardest 9a-routes in the world!!! It just shows, how far the overgrading went over the years â I guess that 90% of the modern high-end-routes are heavily overgraded if you compare these routes with the benchmark-route âAction Directeâ. Regarding my personal climbing track record, the softening of the grading had some effects: most of my first ascents of the years got upgraded and amongst all the others âWeiĂe Roseâ from 8c+ to 9a/9a+ and âOpen Airâ from 9a to 9a+. Thanks to todayÂŽs softer grading, âOpen Airâ or maybe even âWeiĂe Roseâ became the first confirmed route of the grade 9a+.â
Indeed, the current standards for a given grade are often historical routes, often skipped by young people due to their old-school and often awkward style, like the routes of Huber or âHubbleâ (now more often repeated after the discovery of a kneebar at the entrance to the crux), âOpen Airâ, âWeisse Roseâ, âOMâ⊠However it is difficult to confirm or deny, because old school routes were generally more fingery and technical but less demanding physically and long. It is however possible that the first extreme proposals like those of Alex Huber are more difficult for the level, because at the time announcing a letter or a plus above the last was not done, judging from the controversies that surrounded the first ascents of âAkiraâ or âChilam balamâ for example. However, there are also iconic routes such as Chris Sharmaâs king lines for example, which are for the most part rarely subjected to downgrading (maybe except âEra Vellaâ and âEl Bon combatâ), and to which top climbers like Seb Bouin often refer to as gold standards for a given level: âBiographieâ, âJumbo Loveâ , âEs Pontasâ, âFRFMâ, âStoking the fireâ⊠Issues to take into account when trying to compare routes of the same style.
The interest of slash grades? If we consider the grades as intervals like Symon Welfringer, the use of slash grades to define a lower and upper limit can be interesting to decide on a difficulty via a more precise scale. But some climbers disagree, thinking that the slash was only introduced historically to cover morphological passages, such as 6c/7a for a route with a reachy move, which meant closer to 6c for tall climbers and 7a for small ones. Lucien Martinez: âWe have the illusion that the slash will save us from the indecision of a gray area between two grades, but in fact, the only thing that the generalization of the slash will do is introduce twice as many gray areas because then there will be twice as many dimension ranges.â
Conclusion Grades are an integral part of climbing, to deny it or not to keep importance to it when one is interested in high level would be to lie, therefore to offer downgrades (or sometimes upgrades), although unpopular, is not not necessarily a malicious act. Extreme climbing offers beautiful routes and great experiences, beautiful life lessons and this is perhaps the most important thing to remember, beyond the controversies and ego battles around a level of difficulty given.Sonnie Trotter resumed this, speaking about E-grades: Personally, I have a hard enough time trying to decipher the vague differences between 5.12d and 5.13a or R and X, let alone what the âcombined effortâ might be for someone I donât know to get up the thing, onsight. Iâm starting to feel that our over-analytical minds are whatâs strangling the beautiful simplicity of climbing.
We need to remember that collecting experience is more important than collecting numbers, because at the end of the day, nearly everything about climbing is subjective anyway; height, weight, foot size, finger size, brain capacity, strength ratio, ape index, determination, fitness, age, survival skills, tenacity and whether or not you have a full time job or a family. All of these things play an enormous roll in our day-to-day climbing life and itâs easy to get obsessed.
The achievement of a unique line is what counts, not the way you combine the letters and numbers at the end of it and certainly not when you try to compare one to the other. Let us remember to celebrate each climbâs unique nature.
âYou cannot understandâ: here is the name of the little movie dedicated to Belgian rockclimber Seb Berthe trying âFight of flightâ famous 9b. Filmmaker Simon Maurissen followed Seb in Oliana at Spring 2021 and documented the process in the route, unfortunately with no cigar. A funny video about the extreme difficulty quest with up and downs.
A new hard MP under the belt of Kathy Choong, joined by her boyfriend Jim Zimmermann : âHattori Hanzoâ 8b+, 7 pitches, located on the North face of Titlis, Switzerland. Here is her commentary.
âSo happy to complete in a perfect no-fall ascent Hattori Hanzo, 7 pitches, 8b+ max. (5b, 6b, 7b, 6c, 8b+, 8a+, 7a) in a day! And the best part is that my partner Jim Zimmermann also sent the route on the same day. Located on the north face of the Titlis this route was a great mental and physical challenge ! I led all the pitches, one after the other. Jim top-roped the four « easy » first pitches and I belayed him on lead for the 3 last.
The route starts with 4 vertical slab pitches which on paper are graded âeasyâ. Only one bolt on the first one, a few more in the following ones, very small holds, the approach is already quite tough mentally before arriving at the start of the crux pitches which follow in a long impressive overhang. We faced many failures, falling in the run-outs of the crux pitches and so unable, the first time we tried the route, to climb to the top ! But the magic happened and day after day, thanks to our mutual support, we could figure out the moves and finally climb all the pitches
I would like to thank Matthias Trottmann who did the first ascent in 2013, for the massive work he did when he bolted this route on this impressive face and for all the information & advice he gave me!â
A few weeks back, we published a dedicated article about how Lucien Martinez and Fabrice Landry gave a hard route called âMemorial GSâ a refresh. They got rid of the sika-glued holds on the route located at Supermanjoc, St-Antonin Noble Val, France, and freed it anew. The result is a new 9a and a renewed extreme challenge on the cragâs wall of death. Check out the video below!
âSonawolfâ is a link between âSonatineâ 8c and the âBlack Wolf projectâ. âSonatineâ starts with an 7b, a total rest with one kneebar where you can leave both hands then there are some moves a bit physical but not very hard and there you arrive at the crux, very physical on underclings with a deadpoint move to a good trifingerpocket. From there you have to continue on a few less hard movements and finally to reach âBlack wolfâ there is a big movement to get a large undercling. This is the ârestâ of the route and you finally arrive at the final crux, the beginning is not so hard you just have to find your right betas, with a magnificent thin pinch, a little crimp, a correct pocket and from there the business starts. My original method was to take a sloper, bring it back to a very small mono of a half phalanx, go again to a small tufa which broke so it makes now a kind of crimp and you ends with a good dyno to get a slopy rail at the lip of the overhang. Normally itâs over, you still do 3 large movements on slopy holds as mantle to the anchor.
I already knew the sections, so I quickly put some tries and I arrived at this big undercling but impossible to rest I was dead and I fell 1 move after. As the goes progressed I managed to make this 8c approach more easily. It cost me less and less but it didnât change much : I still couldnât relax myself at this rest. So I worked on the rest starting from a few moves before and little by little I managed to impose my rhythm on this beginning of the route and at rest, and then one day my try arrived until the final dyno, it was incredible this big step forward and all my following goes went all the way up there. After about ten tries to fall up there, I tried another beta: no longer taking the mono and going again on the tufa from the lower hand, which was therefore much faster. With this new beta it only took me 3 tries to achieve this last hard move. The whole start of the route I was very easy, the 8c hadnât tired me much, Iâve never been so good at rest and when I left I had the anger to go higher for once. The whole crux went perfectly and when I sticked the sloper of the dyno I didnât feel like I had forced a lot, but then I panicked and suddenly felt tired with flash pump and the last 3 movements seemed extreme to me. I couldnât get into position, my body was shaking, my hands opened on its own but I absolutely didnât want to fall and from hold to hold I managed to reach the anchor. Itâs been a long time since Iâve made such a powerful and energetic effort, I was pushing away my limits.
So I think itâs 9a because Iâve never done anything hard like this and I tried a lot and my investment was long. An 8c followed by a 7C+ boulder with an hang- rest on underclings on the overhang canât only be 8c+ in my opinion.â
â12 sessions is not much compared to the grade, itâs only my 3rd route in the 7c/+ range. I worked the route from the top (on top rope) so it went easier and I could do some lead tries very quickly. The style suited me well and I spent 5/6 sessions figuring out my betas in the crux, some âblind betasâ with static and technical moves in order to skip a dynamic move and a swing. Itâs quite typical of my climbing in general. I needed to change my methods a lot in the first 5 meters, which are far from easy. I broke a hold in this section after the send while re-climbing the route to get photos taken, so if I came back on the route I would need to change my beta again.â
Ci-dessous Kathy Choong dans la voie. Photo de couverture : John Thornton
Anak Verhoeven continues to explore European crags with the discovering of Gimmelwald, Switzerland. She climbed a new 9th grade route after a very quick work, âJungfraumarathonâ 9a (video above). Itâs the second female climber to clip the anchor, Kathy Choong also climbed it in 2019. Here are Anakâs comments about the crag and the route.
âGimmelwald is a wonderfully beautiful crag. The scenery is just breathtaking with snow-covered mountains on the other side of the valley, a little waterfall coming from above and an alpine feeling with the green grass and flowers all around. There are lots of hard lines in a style for which quite some body tension is needed. Iâm super glad that local climber Alex Rohr showed me around â itâs a great place!
I enjoyed Jungfrau Marathon very much. It starts off with a sequence on slopy holds, followed by a decent rest. Then comes the crux which ends with the hardest move of the route. The route ends with a very fun-to-climb top part.
I first spent two days climbing with local climbers, discovering the route and working the moves. On my third climbing day I went for the redpoint. I fell twice at the crux move; every time feeling a little better. I climbed through the crux on my third redpoint try and topped the route.â
In March, Adam Ondra did the first ascent of what he called the hardest route in Italy with âWonderlandâ 9b/+ located in Terra Promessa, Arco. Here is the video of the send and his commentabout his âbiggest achievement this year so farâ!
âEven though the crag is called Terra Promessa (Promised Land), I hadnât thought that it would once host Arcoâs and Italyâs hardest route. The hard routes around 8b and 8c were developed mainly by Reini Scherer in the late 90s and since the development of this crag has mostly stopped.
There were still quite a few spots where the rock was untouched, but the question was if it would go. Alfredo Webber, once again, saw this wonderful line, put the effort, and placed the bolts, but the question mark was about the very beginning. I found a detour slightly to the left using a few very slopy pinches and tiny crimps, replaced 3 bolts, and it was obvious that line was possible !
We worked on the route for a few days in the autumn with Stefano Ghisolfi. Eventually, I felt I was quite close to sending, but despite this winter being extremely dry, this crag is not exactly winter crag and the crucial tufa kept seeping. The route dried up in March and after a few days of work, I did the first free no-fall ascent through âWonderlandâ, some of my proudest first ascents.
Regarding the grade, I know it is considerably harder than most of the 9bâs, but if it really breaks into the 9b+ barrier, it is really difficult to knowâŠâ
â You are very discreet, can you tell us more about who you are, what you do in life? Iâm 28, Iâve been climbing for almost 20 years, doing comps in my youth, and my passion for climbing is, to my own surprise, still growing every year. In the last year I have made climbing more of a priority, working part time in a climbing gym as instructor and setter in order to have more time. Recently now, I additionally started to work for a foundation that promotes sustainability and safety in the mountains.
â I know that you are very invested in the environment, how does that translate into your everyday life and your climbing life? Good question⊠First and foremost, it translates in the form of a lot of mindfucks about everyday life decisions. Overall, I am trying to lessen my impact, yet there is a lot of room to do more, and my efforts always ebb and flow. The two things that have reflected my values the most consistently over time are being vegan for 7 years now and not taking the plane in the last 6 years. These feel like they donât demand a lot off me while they have a big impact on my personal footprint. I think it is important to start where it feels the easiest for you personally and from there expand your efforts. It is easy to let oneself be discouraged if you canât do it perfectly and end up not do anything. I still can improve a lot when it comes to getting to the crag at home. I do try to think of whether I need the car or whether it is easily feasible by train (when I projected âPrinzip Hoffnungâ for example, it was easy to take the train, and as a I was going there alone most of the time it often was a no brainer). But now especially at the later phase of my projecting in Speed, I went a lot by car, sometimes even alone, to be there early in the morning which is by any standards quite a drive for a day trip. In any case, I think it is always a tricky balance between motivating people to change the habits in their life and to focus too much on individual actions only. To actually achieve a transition, we need systemic changes on a political level. Individual actions are important to show commitment and to forge new narratives, but we canât solve this crisis only by changing our individual consumer behaviour. Nevertheless, this does not let us off the hook in terms of individual responsibility, we need change on both levels.
Photo: Daniel Benz
â Do you only do sportclimbing or are you also interested in other aspects of our activity? I like getting my ass kicked and expanding my comfort zone, thatâs why I really enjoy that climbing in the wider sense is so varied. I have broadened my skills in the other forms of climbing quite a bit over the last years as a member of the current all-female âYoung Alpinist Groupâ of the German Alpine Club (although I still suck at these various forms of Alpinism). Depending on the season, weather and motivation, I have periods where I ice and mixed climb more, do multipitches or a mountain here and there. At the end of the day, however, my strengths do lie in sport climbing. The day after sending Speed I went on a moderate multipitch, for the first time that season on granit, and I literally had to aid up the entire last 5 meters of the the initial 6c+ pitch, because I was completely spent and couldnât do a single move anymore. I love days like this, they make it easy to stay humble and keep the fire because they are challenging and fun in a very different way than sport climbing.
â What led you to try this route, did you have to train specifically to achieve it? Can you tell us more about how it happened and what you had to put in place to achieve it? I have been to Voralp regularly over the last years because I live not too far away. I always knew that if there was one place I can climb hard, it is here. I think it is fair to say that the style fits me very well for some reason and in addition I have gotten quite adapted to it over the years. Speed impressed me right from the beginning, for obvious reasons: it follows the white streak through the blankest section of the wall and when I saw people on it, it looked incredibly hard. 3 or 4 years ago I had already tried the moves on Speed once and was very surprised that I could do most of them right away since that was so far off my level back then. Since then, it had basically been a lifetime dream of mine to climb this route someday, but I was pretty convinced this was far away, my ultimate goal in sport climbing.
This year then was the first time I actually tried it again. I knew beforehand that that was the thing I wanted to prepare myself for this winter, I had just started at the climbing gym and had big plans for a crazy training regimen with the hopes of getting my climbing to a new level. But I injured a finger and my shoulder even before I could really start with my plan. All my plans evaporated. I was convinced that now the thing I had been looking forward so much, projecting speed, had become totally unrealistic. Over the winter I shifted focus therefore, and got very motivated for ice and mixed. When the season was over my finger was still far from perfect, but I could do more again and got sucked into Prinzip Hoffnung, which turned out to be very good for my fingers and shoulder and was the perfect project, not demanding a crazy physique, but being quite demanding in terms of movement, the required head space and gear beta. When I started trying Speed end of April/beginning of May now both of my shoulders were inflamed from too much steep climbing and my finger was still causing me trouble on some holds, but my climbing felt amazing thanks to two months of almost exclusively climbing on rock. To my surprise throughout the projecting process the shoulders became better, while with the finger it remained a balance act: less surprising, the route was not conductive to healing the finger, and eventually my middle finger on the other hand started hurting as well, but by seeing a Physio (Shout- out to Kathrin Dettling for her amazing support and Klaus Isele for developing the treatment that really helped my fingers!) I was able to keep it manageable and prevent the inflammation from spiraling out of control. Still, it was a major worry as I was getting more solid and solid on the route that I might have to stop if my fingers got even worse. To my amazement the projecting itself progressed quite well. I was making slow but steady progress from week to week. From being maxed out climbing from draw to draw, soon I was making good links to the top. Eventually the boulder section before the third draw became less low percentage and after a few more sessions I found myself suddenly at the last crux of the first pitch and fell. Temperatures were now actually getting really hot and I was starting to wonder whether I had missed my shot. Then the next day I went, just like this, without further slipping of the feet or fumbling I got through the hard bottom part again, did the move I had previously fallen on quite solidly and, after shaking forever, managed to keep it together in the extension and found myself at the anchor. That was really special, and it took a while to understand that everything had actually worked out.
The nagging injuries prevented me from doing specific training for the route as I had envisioned it and forced me to rest a lot more than I otherwise would have. But on the flip side that might have been exactly what I needed to get stronger: more rest. And since doing core was basically the only workout I could do regularly, I did a lot of it and I am absolutely sure this made me progress heaps. Even though the training wasnât what I had planned, itâs not like I did Speed off the couch, of course. I did climb a lot on rock in the last months since I didnât work full time. Furthermore, I think it helped majorly that this freed me a lot of mental space to think about climbing and removed a lot of other stress. I also spent quite a bit of time with visualization and mediation when I wasnât climbing, because so much was about overcoming the giant respect I had for this route and some limiting beliefs around my capabilities.
Photo: Janina Reichstein
â You are the second woman to do this route, do you value female firsts or do you think itâs outdated?Mhm, Iâm not sure I have a strong opinion on this (which is rather rare for me ). I do think that in many cases it still reflects the progress female climbing is making. In this case they have their place in my opinion, at least as long as there is a general difference in grade between the female and male climbing population. There are a lot of female firsts that inspire me, so I guess you could say I value them, even though it is obviously not the same as an FA. But in any case, this doesnât really apply to female seconds .
â I know you like to travel. Where would you like to go in the near future to be able to climb and how do you integrate it the climate issue? I wouldnât say I like traveling particularly. I like what comes with it, the sleeping in the car/tent, being outside the whole day, being able to climb every day. But I donât need to travel to far away places for this, a notion traveling still has to me. The last years I have stayed mainly in the Alps, because it is close and has still so many places I want to go (back) to. But the next bigger thing that is coming up next year is the expedition we are planning with the Young Alpinist Group. We pondered a long time where to go, especially because of the impact flying has. In the end it looks like we agreed on Greenland, because even if you fly all the way, the emissions are still half in comparison to Pakistan. And you do have the option to potentially do a large part without flying, so letâs seeâŠ
â What, for you, makes a good day on a cliff/outside? There are many ways in which a day at the crag can be good. Some days it is because climbing feels amazing, you made unexpected progress, the rock is stellar, the place is special, or the view is good. On other days you made a lot of jokes with your climbing partner or had a good conversation. Sometimes, it is snowing, miserable weather, it was a bit tense the whole day, but at the end you have a good feeling. Sending surely always helps.
Photo: DAV- Silvan Metz
â You are always super motivated and positive, where does this motivation come from? I donât think anyone is always motivated and positive. At least I am certainly not. I think we just often see people at their best and forget that that everybody struggles sometimes⊠This autumn for example I was pretty down and not positive at all when I got injured. But in general, when things are good, it is true that motivation is not an issue. I used to have a period where I climbed a lot less after finishing school and I think this time off helped a lot to see the value climbing had for me. Since then, when I wasnât injured, all I wanted to do was climb. Also, I think it really keeps my excitement for climbing alive to be able to shift the focus to different disciplines like ice/alpine/sport throughout the year. When I only sport climb for a longer period my expectations usually grow, and the danger of frustration and hence low motivation is higher.
â You are not on social networks and it doesnât seem to be a big deal to you. What influence does it have on you and how does it influence you or it doesnât? Actually, I do have Facebook and Twitter if that still counts as social media Instagram, I stopped consuming and posting a while ago when I noticed it made me compare myself a lot and caused constant FOMO. I found that many of the people I respect are very low-key about what they do, they are not on social media and seem to do things primarily for themselves. Thatâs why I started questioning why I was actually posting what I was posting and even though there were other reasons as well, for me it came down to self-presentation and didnât add any value.But that is of course something very personal and can be different for other people.
*** Nomura Shinichiro presents Gakido V16 (first ascent) in a video: Japanese solved this Spring this long time project located in Chigobutai, Fukushima. An intense and powerful climbing for a boulder of this grade, as âFloatinâ opened by Ruichi Murai at the beginning of winter season.
*** Matt Fultz opens âBrace for the Cureâ V16 at âJadeâ boulder, Colorado: American boulderer announces on his Instagram account with a video the first ascent of this V16: his hardest first ascent and his second hardest problem ever done. It starts in âJadeâ then traversing left and going straight the big overhang juste close from the 8B+ classic. A problem which requires a lot of precision in order to stick the hands correctly on the rasor crimps.
âBeyond the dream come true, this day marks the end of a three-year process during which I tried to progress in climbing: tackle a project at my limit, keep my motivation intact despite the sessions that accumulate and frustration sets in.
For two seasons, I tried to train and progress as well as possible to do this route, but it resisted me. I already knew this frustration, the praise of failure as my friend Lucien Martinez would say, I discovered my physical but above all mental limits. I had a lot of troubles managing the pressure and the desire to succeed often tainted my climbing.
Last year, I no longer had the desire to continue trying âLe Cadreâ, so I decided to also work on âPornographieâ, a line recently bolted by Micka Duc which, although quite short, offers a very playful and extremely intense. This year, I didnât know what choice to make between these two routes and I continued to work on both, which allowed me to maintain great motivation throughout the season. After almost 30 sessions in âLe Cadreâ and about 20 in âPornoâ, I succeeded that day in June in climbing my first route in the ninth degree!
Anna Hazlett, climber and social influencer from California (living in UK, Anna Hazelnutt on IG or YT) just repeated the mega classic âThe Walk of Lifeâ E9 6c located at Dyerâs Lookout, Nothern Devon. This impressive face has been first ascended by James Pearson in 2008 with some big whippers before (watch the video below!). A big feat for Anna who doesnât like to fall, but who is fond of slab climbing, and a first female ascent under her belt! Itâs not Annaâs first E9. She climbed the neighbouring route on the left of âWalk of Lifeâ last September, âOnce Upon a Time in the SouthWestâ, the video is just above. She also did her first sportclimbing 5.14 last summer with âGalactic Emperorâ in Ten Sleep, Wyoming. A nice progression, to be continued!
Sad news coming from Catalunya. Due to high temperatures in Western Europe this week-end, Olianaâs crag burned yesterday. According to our informations, the fire started in a field below the crag then went up through the trees, crossed the track and went to the crag. Flames were huge and the ledge above the anchors burnt. Then the fire continued to climb until the top of the mountain (Roc de Rumbau) and went on the other side, the Nord face. We donât know precisely the damages caused by the fire at the crag but considering the images the rock could be touched. Hope the famous classics like âLa Dura duraâ, âPapi Chuloâ, âMind Controlâ, âFish Eyeâ are still doableâŠ
*** âTigris Sitâ 8B+ in Magic Wood repeated twice by women: ALex Pucio and Michaela Kiersch recently added another hard boulder to her ticklist with the long roof problem named âTigris sitâ, Magic Wood, Switerland. Waiting a full video about their stay. Itâs Alexâs 7th 8B+ and Michaelaâs 3rd.
*** Nacho Sanchez frees one of Spainâs hardest boulder: He was trying this problem since years, Nacho Sanchez just freed âDanos con-lateralesâ and gave 8C+ to his first ascent. The main difficulty is to link the first 3 moves. One of the hardest boulder in Spain with âLa teoria del todoâ in ALbarracin, now downgraded. Remeber Nacho opened some years ago âCrisisâ 8C/+ in Crevillente. You can watch the video above.
*** Dave Graham announces a new 8C+ in Switerland this Spring: US bouldering veteran (40 years old) claimed this week having done the first ascent of âEuclaseâ 8C+ in APril. This boulder looks technical with 19 moves, 21 feet moves and 4 kneebars⊠He checked it in 2005 and spent 10 sessions to do all the moves, and 10 more to find the good betas⊠After 10 more sessions, he was close to the send. A new achievement for Dave, and his second 8C+ after âHypnotized mindsâ.
*** Brooke Raboutou opens summer season in RMNP (Colorado): Brooke just needed one evening session to send Lincoln Lakeâs classic âEvil Backwardsâ a compression roof problem (8B). The video of her climb on her Instagram.
âIn 2006 I clipped the chains of an E11 myself, âRhapsodyâ. 15-odd years later, I was wondering if I could still climb at this level.â That is the line of thinking that decided âveteranâ climber Dave MacLeod (43) to treat a niggling tennis elbow by training to bag the 3rd ascent of âLexiconâ in March of this year. The new E11 7a was opened by Neil Gresham in September 2021 at Pavey Ark, Lake District. Another senior Brit got the second ascent soon after (none other than Steve McClure), but a few weeks ago a decidedly underage Mat Wright (24 only!!!) got himself the 4th ascent of this popular line, and intends to spend some time on âRhapsodyâ this summer.
âI tried it a little bit last year, but no cigar, and this year I did around 5/6 sessions. The route is not easy, I was falling all the time in the resistant part after the two-finger pocket, I struggled a lot with this section.â Itâs Nicoâs second 9a+ after âSupercrackinetteâ and from his words his hardest rock climbing feat. You can watch Ghisolfi in the video above.
Strong Spanish gun Beto Racasolano made a post on IG with photos claiming some holds in hardcore routes from Finestra sector, Margalef have been altered. âOver the last few months several holds have been enhanced on some of the famous routes in the sector of finestra, Margalef. To be precise â in Victimaz Perez and Gancho Perfecto. This is generating tension among the local community as nobody knows what is happening. This is disrespectful towards the previous ascents and anyone that invested time and effort into these routes. We would like to raise awareness among the wider community of this situation in Margalef. In the end this just erodes the reputation and difficulty of these emblematic routes.â
A sad news who arrived just after the impressive send of âVictimas Perezâ this week by young Australian Angie Scarth-Johnson (18 years old) for her second 9a (first female ascent of the route). Angie naturly felt involved by the polemic and she just posted a message in order to clarify the situation and sharing her opinion.
âImmediately After sending the infamous âVictimas Perezâ there was a lot of pressure placed upon me by some climbers within the community to talk about the appearance of modified holds along the Finestra wall and its top end routes . On my part particularly about the holds on Perez.
The reason I did not mention any of this in my initial post after ticking off the route was because I was not sure how to go about it all. I also believe This is something that deserves its own post, aside from my ascent of âVictimas Perezâ, at the end of the day it has nothing to do with my send but rather the tragedy of historic routes being altered to fit an individuals personal sequences. The truth is , though never mentioned by anyone before, this has been something thatâs been happening for years along the Finestra wall and its top end routes and Iâm curious as to why things have never been said before Though Iâve Never had a personal experience with this until now , I have heard of these situtions amongst locals before.
As I mentioned in my previous post, the weather this season hasnt been the best and as a result, very few climbers , mostly locals were climbing along finestra wall this season. I left Margalef for a short time to relax my mind, when I returned to try the route, I immediately noticed a difference in one of the crimps, certain dimples in the hold had been removed ultimately making it harder to hold. âPerezâ shares the start with a neighbouring route called âGanchoâ Jorge Diaz-Rullo later discovered, that using this crimp with the other hand to climb toward âGanchoâ was now a more positive crimp. Although it had became apparent this hold was altered for another route, âVictimas Perezâ would still become a victim of this alteration.
My initial response to this was to thoroughly check the entire route, I then discovered the last hold had been sanded down to more of a smooth edgeless pocket, removing the sharpness there once was. This was devastating and I was in complete disbelief. Jorge would then climb after me to confirm my discoveries once again.
After these findings i wanted to bring awareness to the situation, I mentioned it to other local climbers suggesting to try the route themselves. The goal here is really just to stop this chipping buisness by making it public. Though since I completed the route, there has been new discoveries made by other climbers just yesterday about there potentially being additional holds modified. (I have not been in margalef since these new developments so I havenât seen them for myself and I canât speak for it).
As far as what had happened with me and the newly altered holds, I went onto spending the next few several days re-refining and building confidence in the betas I once knew so well, the changes effected my in a very negative way, Recognising that I am the first woman to have really tried this route, my betas are extremely different in almost every sequence to the typical man. This meant I really noticed things when they changed.
Iâm aware there will be questioning as to whether the route was made easier and therefore I sent. Victimas Perez was not made âeasierâ there is no new magical jug in the route. Only changes made were on the sequences, however Gancho may have been more dramatically changed.
Finally, Please respect the honest culture in climbing, all routes, the hard work of others, and of course our sectors and nature.â
Itâs quite incredible and appalling that in 2022, this problem of the 80s/90s with modified hold in existing routes is back. Letâs hope that it remains isolated acts like at the beginning of the 2000s on Fontainebleau with a fool man who hammered some mythical boulders. Itâs really important that the community takes care of the climbing routes and the rock in general (brushing, cleaning with water, leaving tickmarks, cleaning their feet before climbing,âŠ) so as to bequeath to young people generations a playingground the less degraded as possible. It is also urgent that professional climbers, brands, and media actors in our activity set an example and communicate more about good practices, which is not always the case. Donât say you werenât warned!