mini-TR : P1 of Quicksilver (Middle Cathedral North Apron)

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nutjob

climber
Berkeley, CA
Topic Author's Original Post - May 18, 2009 - 03:41pm PT
Folks,

This was yesterday 2009-05-17, the day after Grack/Marginal.

What is the deal with the dark North Apron on Middle Cathedral? That stuff looks so inviting, but it's a whole 'nother thing to be up on it. I tried to do the easiest thing we could find there... "Quicksilver".

The topo shows a 3rd class approach, with a 5.8 pitch that looks pretty mild from the ground, and then some run-out 5.9 face climbing up above.

We started from the top of the little pedestal. I was a little sketched placing my first (and unfortunately only) piece of gear in the 3rd class approach. And then the mild 5.8 shaved a few years off my life.... I had paired down my rack in anticipation of a mostly bolted run-out face climb. There were good spots for bigger pro that I didn't have, but overall there were some long sections where you just can't put anything. Climbing involved friction, face-climbing on polished non-positive edges, hand-jams, arm-bars & chicken-wings, and fingertip liebacks.

At one point, I had pulled through the mini-chimney/offwidth that had a few helper footholds, teetered up onto the outside of the pillar onto a face with good features but no positive edges, and my belayer yells up "10 feet of rope" when I'm about 40 feet from the anchor and 15 feet above my last pro. We had 60m ropes. I hung out there for about 5 minutes in a relatively good spot, hoping my belayer didn't fall while scampering up the "3rd class" section to give me more rope.

As I continued up the pillar, the holds thinned out and I swung back into the corner on a lower-angled foot friction spot. The corner was pinched shut, maybe could take a knifeblade, and a little grass grew up the length of it. All along the route, dirt-residue from the preceding winter made things interesting.

I remembered from the book/movie "Dune" this little chant that Paul used to ward off fear.

Fear is the mind killer...
Fear is the mind killer...
Fear is the mind killer...


I had some small nuts and one small cam and a double length sling left, a blank seam, and belay was still about 20 feet away. A fall was not acceptable at this point, and the options were looking grim.

I was relieved to discover a few feet up a little finger pocket in the seam... I delicately stemmed up to it and got in my last cam while sharing part of it for my finger. From there I launched to another pocket about 4 feet up, was about to place some pro, then remembered I had nothing left that would stick. My survival instincts kicked in and I launched into the widely spaced fingertip lieback holds to the top, breathed a little relief when I grabbed the finishing jugs, and slowly decompressed as I clipped into the bomber anchors.

5.8 my azz. Maybe old-school 5.9, or supertopo 5.9/5.10a R.

I looked 30 feet up and right to the first bolt (with a bail carabiner on it) on the otherwise unprotected face of the next pitch. Not a chance.

So what the heck did you old dudes eat for breakfast to become so hardcore? Wheaties can't make that happen. Folks just starting out can't appreciate really how good you had to be, and how big your balls/ovaries had to be. Damn. I continue to be humbled and amazed.
Russ Walling

Gym climber
Poofter's Froth, Wyoming
May 18, 2009 - 03:45pm PT
Do "Cat Dancing" instead. You can run pitch one and two together with a 70m rope.

Casual..... for mortals.
scuffy b

climber
Bad Brothers' Bait and Switch Shop
May 18, 2009 - 03:47pm PT
First pitch of Quicksilver is more intimidating than anything
on Freewheelin.

Lots of people have backed off that pitch, and that includes
folks who have previously done it, and who have led things much
more difficult.
Mike Bolte

Trad climber
Planet Earth
May 18, 2009 - 03:54pm PT
nice little report nutjob-way to get out there. Quicksilver is oldschool for sure. You can actually get used to the middle rock apron style of climbing if you do a bit of it, and it doesn't seem quite so bad. As you discovered, stuff shows up if you look hard enough (holds that is, not necessarily pro). Was it pretty clean? Do people climb these routes anymore?
hobo_dan

Social climber
Minnesota
Dec 14, 2009 - 06:57pm PT
I did that first pitch when I was a solid 5.10 climber (in other words I let my 5.11 partner lead the other three pitches!) That 1st picth was about as sustained a 5.8 as I ever did. I don't remember if any moves were harder than 5.8 BUT I do remember that none of them were easier. It was tough A-Z!
I was climbing with these Orange County guys and they used Quicksilver as the barometer to prove you were solid on 5.10.
Following it is easier but it's still tough because of the traversing nature of the route and the very long distances between pieces
nutjob

Trad climber
Berkeley, CA
Topic Author's Reply - Dec 14, 2009 - 07:38pm PT
Lack of right gear was clearly a factor, but I can tell you I felt better on Lunatic Fringe, Stove Groove, Sacherer Cracker, Gripper, Midterm, etc. than I did on P1 Quicksilver (5.8). My panties aren't big enough to try the other 5.9 pitches yet.

But having different kinds of rock, different kinds of climbing techniques, keeps it interesting. I'll be back for this one day (but I won't cry too much if I don't get around to it!)
hobo_dan

Social climber
Minnesota
Dec 16, 2009 - 09:04pm PT
Warbler:
It is a great route and very unique for Yosemite. I think about half the photos fromYosemite Climber are on that route. What was the first ascent like? Was it sketchy going so far between pieces? Or was it your plan to stretch it out?
Fat Dad

Trad climber
Los Angeles, CA
Dec 16, 2009 - 10:49pm PT
I don't remember it being that bad (though memories can change reality when its been some 25 yrs). But then I cut my teeth at Suicide (grew up in OC), so despite the lack of gear at least it didn't feel too hard. Definitely not 5.9. Get solid and do the whole route. It's awesome.
mongrel

Trad climber
Truckee, CA
Dec 16, 2009 - 11:45pm PT
Fabulous, totally classic route. Beautiful rock with really interesting holds and moves, five-star job by the FA party to find the line and bolt it just right. Seems to me I recall having to downclimb about 12-15 feet at some fairly runout spot, having decided I hadn't got the line right, or wrong foot or whatever. But the holds are perfectly adequate to do that - not a popular skill anymore, in the Age of Take. I also recall getting a few sketchy pieces like a Lowe ball and an RP in here and there, but they just fell out. Oh well. Great route. Love to do many more in that area.
wstmrnclmr

Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
May 21, 2012 - 04:29pm PT
Climbed this last weekend. What a beautiful place. No-one around. Great story nutjob and spot on. We did deduce ahead of time that we needed to set up the belay higher and did so to start. The guidebook does not show two pitons on the route. There is one on the face above the crack (approx. where the crack narrows to nothing)on the first pitch. It sounds like if you would have stayed on the face above the crack, you would have found the piton and stayed on the face to the belay but the climbing is still tricky. Your right about the rating. Pretty stiff compared to other climbs (the previous harriest 9 for me was "nerve wrack point" in Tuolumne which I thought couldn't be topped, but both Jaywood and I agreed that this was the harriest 9 we've climbed and one of the harrier climbs period). There are new bolts at the belay which may not have been there when you climbed (the whole climbs been retro'd. Roger or Clint may have done the work, bless 'em).
Then there is solid 9 traversing to another piton not shown on topo. It's true what Mongrel says, there are decent holds through out the climb but the rock here is special. It's all rounded (much like the first pitch of "sweet Jesus", another sketch 9, in TM) and doesn't feel as positive as other slab areas. And the climbing is sustained 9 for the whole climb with a couple of 10 moments way runout (I was pulling what I thought were 10 moves about 18' above said piton and about 5' from the first bolt. if I would have blown there, I would have penjied into the crack of the first pitch). Then you get to the first bolt and wonder why you got on the thing in the first place. Then repeat for the rest of the climb. As Mongrel says, there is also a good flake between the first and second bolt. You can get two good small tri-cams in and feel good to the second bolt. Oh, and by the way, there is some loose rock after pitch two. A rock about a foot by half a foot came down, hit a ledge, and split in two with both pieces going either side of my head by inches. I will wear a helmet from now on.

An awesome climb! I didn't know who had done the first ascent until today and now I get it. Makes sense what Warbler says about few doing that sort of climbing back then and why the length of the bolt placements. Would be good to hear from Warbler but I suspect (based on other climbs I've done of theirs) that they were incredibly skilled at that sort of climbing and the thought of future climbers wasn't really on the radar. Threads dissing bolting lately keep talking of how bolts dumb down climbing or take away from future climbers. These climbs had only enough bolts necessary to keep one alive. It seems to me that those who put these climbs up were way ahead of the times and still are if the current climbing skill of the current climbing population as a whole is any indicator. Sure, top level climbers can do this stuff, but the younger generations coming mostly from the gym world (not denigrating, just trying to observe neutrally) seem to take to crack climbing where protection is good and upper body strength is helpful. Slab climbing doesn't seem to have advanced much beyond what those climbers did back then and the rate these climbs are done seems to bare this out. Slab climbing seems to have been left out of the so called 'traditional' picture to the current generation. I always wanted to be a well rounded climber but I do love the slabs. Mental strength and balletic grace is the game and there isn't a rating system for what it takes mentally to get through these climbs. I've climbed fairly run out 11+ that did not scare me as much as this climb because of the nature of the falls. So I would rate this climb a 10 for technical and a 13+ for the mental aspect and (conservatively as I can) give it an r/x. I felt like I had a dull headache the whole climb and much of the rest of the day after we got off. A very beautiful and serious climb at any level. It's a climbing experience very unique to the place that you can't find anywhere else in the world. Pictures will be posted soon.

edit: go back and do it nutjob. As the saying goes, "fear is temporary, regret lasts forever"
edit: And my thanks to Jaywood for putting it on the list and climbing it with me. Good job on lead my friend....
nutjob

Gym climber
Berkeley, CA
Topic Author's Reply - May 21, 2012 - 06:04pm PT
I started getting a little pain in my chest just thinking about it again!

I think North Butt of Middle will likely fall to my efforts this summer, but I wouldn't make any bets on Quicksilver.

I can definitely see how practice/familiarity on that rock type changes things, but my life choices haven't included the time on rock necessary to make that endeavor sane (yet!). I can see this as an item to revisit in early retirement. But hopefully by then I'll talk myself out of caring :)

But I am drawn to that apron, and that rock type, but I might as well be a mosquito drawn to a pretty orange light ZAP!

Congratulations for getting it done wstmrnclmr. I'll try to live vicariously on this one.
Captain...or Skully

climber
May 21, 2012 - 06:13pm PT
Dude. If I can climb Quicksilver & live, then you certainly can.
That route is etched into my me(soul,essence,I dunno, I just call it me) , in a big way. Most terrifying 5.9 in the world. Again. The Valley is littered with these 5.10 5.9 climbs. So? That's how it goes.
Give it your best, man. You're all over it. As usual.
Cheers.
nutjob

Gym climber
Berkeley, CA
Topic Author's Reply - May 21, 2012 - 06:18pm PT
Alright maybe I was a bit peremptory in discarding it without a second effort. Maybe my biorhythms were low that day? I'll try again.
looking sketchy there...

Social climber
Latitute 33
May 21, 2012 - 06:33pm PT
As stated by Kevin and others, the key to Middle climbing is doing a lot of Middle climbing. Traversing the base is an excellent way of honing your skills.

If I were to jump on those routes today without any preparation, I'm sure I'd be quite scared.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
merced, california
May 21, 2012 - 06:36pm PT
What is this Age of Take of which I hear?
gimme. what's your take on it? N. E. Wunne...

I'm sstill climbing in Fires.
wstmrnclmr

Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
May 21, 2012 - 07:07pm PT
Ya mouse...that's what's so great about it. There is no 'age of take' on these climbs. And the Fires would be great. The great thing about slab climbing is there are great climbs with no one there in beautiful settings. The aprons of Middle Cathedral, Glacier Point, Royal Arches, etc. are empty, scenic, quiet. Just like when they were first climbed. And they are passages of the mind more then the physical. One can climb them well into the middle ages......
wstmrnclmr

Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
May 21, 2012 - 08:42pm PT
Warbler..thank you for a beautiful piece of art in any medium..painting across the rock....
Roger Breedlove

climber
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
May 21, 2012 - 09:04pm PT
Nutjob,

Some practical observations. Quicksilver has always had a fearsome reputation for being run out, and while 5.9 may be the right rating, it probably is not a good route to start climbing on the Apron for the first time. The 5.10 routes are easier.

To get started on Middle climbing, you could climb the first two pitches of Freewheeling to get a feel for apron climbing at 5.9; the first pitch is 5.7 with one bolt for protection and the second pitch is just regular Apron 5.9. The runouts are long but, it is not like Quicksilver. The rest of the climb is really good too, but the pitches above are all 5.10.

While the angle and rock are somewhat different on the NorthEast face of Middle, the first few pitches of the routes between CPoF and DNB are great places to hone your skills. You can climb up the first two pitches of the Powell Reed and drop a long top rope for the first two pitches of Stoners. The second pitch of Paradise Lost is a good 5.9 pitch with little protection, but the rock quality is good and it is close the ground. The third pitch of the DNB, off the top of the little pedestal is hard, but there is bolt right a eye level.

The North Buttress is a good alpine type route, and it is worth doing. But it will not prepare you for climbing on the slabs. If you haven't done the Flakes on the wall above the Gun Sight, it is worth doing. Is really is only 5.8 and can be well protected, but you have to figure it out.

Once you have your legs under you, you will probably get the bug and want to climb all of the Middle routes.
nutjob

Gym climber
Berkeley, CA
Topic Author's Reply - May 21, 2012 - 09:10pm PT
Roger, thanks for the Rosetta Stone to deciphering Middle :)

le_bruce, homework time!
Jay Wood

Trad climber
Land of God-less fools
May 21, 2012 - 11:22pm PT
Fixed pin on the first pitch- not from FA?
Clipping the fixed pin- 2nd pitch. If you came off, you might save your ankles by jumping out to miss the belay ledge 15' below, and take a factor 2 fall on the anchor.
2nd pitch. pro so far is fixed pin, a bolt, and a couple of micro cams behind a flake.
3rd pitch. I almost backed off just before the point of no return, but downclimbing seemed almost as scary as continuing.
You no longer have to worry about falling onto one of these:
And of course the classic scenery:
Messages 1 - 20 of total 34 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
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