Welsh Rock

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Messages 101 - 120 of total 127 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 28, 2014 - 02:19pm PT

Dave MacLeod & Tim Emmett climbing sea cliffs in Pembroke
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 29, 2014 - 04:54pm PT

Johnny Dawes, who in 1986 became the first man to climb an E9 grade route - 'Indian Face' in Snowdonia, talks to Peter Beaumont
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - May 11, 2014 - 01:24pm PT

Rock Climbers in Action in Snowdonia. A Twenty-First Birthday Celebration, by John Cleare in Mountain 117, 1987.

donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
May 11, 2014 - 04:14pm PT
Marlow....thanks for helping internationalize this forum. Americans are known for being isolationists but climbers tend to be much more cosmopolitan.
Spider Savage

Mountain climber
The shaggy fringe of Los Angeles
May 11, 2014 - 06:17pm PT
Yes! Californians like to climb in other places sometimes too.

It makes us even cooler when we come back to California.

Plus, Wales is a great place to train for climbing in California.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
May 11, 2014 - 06:42pm PT
Oh, yeah, this is sooo California!

Andy Fielding

Trad climber
UK
May 11, 2014 - 08:11pm PT
That second picture (Mousetrap) is still on my wish list. One day maybe.
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
May 11, 2014 - 08:15pm PT
Maybe you need to add a little cheese to your diet Andy.
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - May 15, 2014 - 09:37am PT

Gogarth Renaissance. Andy Pollit in Mountain 117, 1987.

Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - May 22, 2014 - 12:53pm PT

Mountain Rescue Reel 1 & 2 (1949)
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Posted by Mouse on it's own Welsh thread.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
May 22, 2014 - 12:57pm PT
I was at Gogarth in '78 and didn't even know I was a renaissance man. LOL!














I was just skeered.
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Sep 6, 2014 - 11:56am PT

Martin Boysen's new biography: Hanging On.

‘I kicked off my shoes and prepared to climb in stocking feet, aware of an enormous sense of occasion as I laid hands on the rock and stepped up on the first rounded hold. It was not a hard climb but that was unimportant. I felt instinctively at home and at the finish experienced such a surge of happy elation that I knew then I was committed to climbing.’

Martin Boysen’s passion for crags and mountains springs from his deep love of nature and a strong sense of adventure. From his early days on rock as a Kent schoolboy after the war, he was soon among the most gifted climbers of his or any generation, famed for his silky technique.

Boysen made a huge contribution to British rock climbing, especially in North Wales; he discovered Gogarth in the 1960s and climbed some of the best new routes of his era: Nexus on Dinas Mot, The Skull on Cyrn Las and the magisterial Capital Punishment on Ogwen’s Suicide Wall.

For more than two decades, Boysen was also one of Britain’s leading mountaineers. A crucial member of Sir Chris Bonington’s team that climbed the South Face of Annapurna in 1970, Boysen was also part of Bonington’s second summit team on the South West face of Everest. In 1976 he made the first ascent of Trango Tower with Joe Brown. Along the way, Boysen climbed with some of the most important figures in the history of the sport, not just stars like Bonington and Brown, but those who make climbing so rich and intriguing, like Nea Morin and the brilliant but doomed Gary Hemming. He joined Hamish MacInnes hunting gold in Ecuador, doubled for Clint Eastwood on the North Face of the Eiger and worked on director Fred Zinnemann’s last movie. Wry, laconic and self-deprecating, Martin Boysen’s Hanging On is an insider’s account of British climbing’s golden age.

 See more at: http://www.v-publishing.co.uk/books/categories/biographies/hanging-on.html#sthash.lW0ANgn3.dpuf

An interview: http://vimeo.com/98519080

OR

Trad climber
Sep 6, 2014 - 12:59pm PT
When I was a kid reading the stories of Brown and Whillans I would daydream about climbing in Wales and Scotland…. Ending each day at some cozy climber pub drinking with new climbing friends swapping tales of gripping leads. Still sounds nice as I type this.
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Sep 6, 2014 - 01:03pm PT

Climbers from the island are known for still doing that - ending a day of climbing at a pub sharing stories and a couple of beers...
Sredni Vashtar

Social climber
out in front
Sep 6, 2014 - 01:19pm PT
I only climb for the beer and tall stories

Sadly we get few perfect climbing days and lots of wet which makes for better drinking

donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Sep 6, 2014 - 01:29pm PT
Martin Boysen is one of the best natural climbers I have ever seen. I've climbed with Martin and his main ropemate Rab Carrington several times in the last ten or fifteen years in the States, Britain and Australia.
Injuries and an aging body have made the approaches to climbs more difficult for Martin but once he gets on the rock he floats up like Peter Pan. Long, flowing moves with an "occasional" pause to place pro...poetry in motion.
Sredni Vashtar

Social climber
out in front
Sep 6, 2014 - 01:42pm PT
He grew up in Kent, climbing at Harrison's which is the uk equivalent of Stoney point, over used sandstone with glassy smooth first moves

Its such a great spot
OR

Trad climber
Sep 6, 2014 - 01:58pm PT
Climbers from the island are known for still doing that - ending a day of climbing at a pub sharing stories and a couple of beers…

True that. Not that we did not do that here. My first trip to the Valley I was 21. It was spring, the weather was sh#t. Me and my buddy left our soggy tent in Camp 4 and took a seat at the Mountain Room Bar. Place was almost empty. A few people asked us to join them at their table and we drank and listened to tales for hours….got smashed. Only after the party shut down did I realize it was TM Herbert and friends.
The same scenario in a Welsh pub with Whillans or Brown would have been an awesome experience.


Edit…. Sorry, I should stop hijacking this thread. Great climber pubs around the world with relating tales could be its own thread!
Brian in SLC

Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
Sep 6, 2014 - 03:14pm PT


I'd like to get there someday...!
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 8, 2014 - 10:10am PT

James Pearson at Pembroke
[Click to View YouTube Video]

Neil Mawson's Pembroke
[Click to View YouTube Video]
There's an article in the latest Climb Magazine.
Messages 101 - 120 of total 127 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
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