Search
Go

Discussion Topic

Return to Forum List
This thread has been locked
Messages 1 - 334 of total 334 in this topic
Norwegian

Trad climber
dancin on the tip of god's middle finger
Jun 20, 2014 - 08:48am PT
like a liquid batholith,
which adheres to adjacent domains
and coheres within its matrix,
and which dutifully surrenders
to the forces of differential pressure
in its attaining a pause along its journey,

we, as climbers, are are geologic-like:

a biological force chasing low pressure
through ascent, only to
be eroded down by other fluids
seeking their own stasis.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 08:51am PT
Ed I think of myself as staunchly traditional and have put up routes in the best possible style that you describe above, but I also have to admit that there has been many many great crags and whole climbing areas that have been developed in the complete opposite of that style. Personally I like to do both. Furthermore, I think there is room for both styles in this world. Most of the places that have been developed are in areas where the ground up style did not work very well and there were vast resources that have been untapped. Commanding that your particular style is the only way simply is not going to work out in the places where there is much more rock than people and the wild has not been ruined by the NPS with their roads, hotels, pay for everything amenities. I personally think the bolting has gone way too far in many places, but the staunchly traditional crowd takes it too far as well. Go to a place like Ten Sleep and you will see tons of bolted beautiful cracks with bolts less than body length apart than you can shake a stick at. I for many years just drove through and never climbed there, but last year Jack and I went and we had a great time and most of the bolted cracks could be climbed but rarely or almost never would be and they could have a junk, obscure climbing area, instead what they have is world class loved by almost everyone that goes there. I think most of the staunchly traditional areas have been well defined and respected for the most part at least in the lower 48 and will continue to stay that way. Hey even some of the biggest rap bolters in this area have been putting up ground up traditional routes in the needles lately to great applause. Just my two cents.


If everyone would have only done things one way we would be lacking a lot as a climbing community.
couchmaster

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 08:58am PT
Only trying to get in on the first page so that later, when I have something of value to add (don't hold yer breath that me or anyone else for that matter will have anything of value not already said and vehemently argued 30-40 times previously), it will be here via edit instead of 500 pages back in some vitriol.

IN BABY!!! ANOTHER BOLT DEBATE HURRICANE IS FORMING!!!


SicMic

climber
across the street from Marshall
Jun 20, 2014 - 08:59am PT
My best first ascents were free-solo first ascents.
scuffy b

climber
heading slowly NNW
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:01am PT
Couchmaster, when there are 500 posts, does anybody read the first page?
Will anybody know that you have changed your post?
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:03am PT
When did many belays get fixed in mostly tradtional area? At Devils Tower and many other "trad araes" belays are fixed on crack routes and it makes the commitment level to go wwwwaaaay down. Many the first pitches on routes become ultra classic because they are good down low and allow one to only do a pitch or two with out having to commit to finishing the route which may be long or chossy above.

Why no outcry on this?

I have friends that will chop bolts if not done in the style they like but they would never chop the anchor bolts on El Matador which were installed in a way not much different.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:05am PT
It is not the best style with which to establish sport routes.

you're saying it is not possible to put up sport routes in this style?

or that no one has figured out how to do it in this style yet?

you're making a statement about possibility, I think, or are you defining sport climbing as requiring a particular style.

If someone put up a sport route in this style, would it be a sport route?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:07am PT
The interesting thing here is whether or not we will admit to putting up routes in less than best style....

I've participated in many first ascents, some of them adhere to the "best style" definition, but many do not.

I aspire to doing first ascents in "the best style"




I AM NOT SAYING THAT EVERY FIRST ASCENT MUST BE DONE IN THE BEST STYLE


but I am saying that we know what the best style is...
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:09am PT
If someone did put up a sport route ground up, on stance drilling...what do you think the bolt spacing would be? This spacing is what makes for some of the fun moderates at J tree like Walk on the Wild side. Not that I've ever placed a bolt or ever will, but I can't imagine the time it took to place the bolts put on just these routes much less really hard routes.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:09am PT
When people talk about the First Ascent experience and style, I often see some bring up the argument that when people rap bolt a route, they take out the fun out of first ascent experience. I’d like to disagree with that. Even though all the FAs that I have done were GU, I would not mind at all to rap bolt some amazing face pitch that I know I can’t bolt on lead. Especially if I don’t think other climbers have the ability as well (lack of stances/edges to hook etc) and if it is at some roadside crag I can walk to the top of. But I have not done FAs on those. I really like remote walls with more than a few pitches of climbing, but that’s not the place where you gonna start finding beautiful face pitches to rap bolt, you take the path that looks good and hopefully take it to the top. I think as I get better at rock climbing, I will concentrate more on shorter and harder climbs. Seems like it could be really fun to “project” something, if you can make really difficult moves.

SO...If BEST CLIMBER IS ONE HAVING THE MOST FUN, than THE BEST STYLE IS ONE THAT ENABLES THE CLIMBER (one doing the FA) TO HAVE THE MOST FUN, BE CREATIVE, PUSH PERSONAL LIMITS WITHOUT RUINING THE AREA/OFFENDING OTHER CLIMBERS/RESPECTING THE LAWS.
altieboo

Social climber
Das Blase
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:09am PT
Sharma bolting Ground-Up on steep over-hanging limestone in Ceuse.

https://vimeo.com/48791021

pyro

Big Wall climber
Calabasas
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:10am PT
way tooooo much thinking going on!

it's only rock climbing!


edit: the B&Y would be a pretty popular root if more bolts were added.
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:13am PT
I'm off to go bouldering, so I'll have to check back in latter, but I'm wondering why the first ascent style has to be the absolute measure of good? Someone puts up a rappel-bolted sport-climb that hundreds or even thousands of climbers can try and in doing so they can personally confront all manner of different experiences (for some it's a challenge or even impossible, for some it's an easy warm-up, for some it's scary, for others it's mellow but for the huge majority who climb it I doubt it represents the loss of a possible pure first ascent). Why are these not "goods" to be valued every bit as much a first ascent done in impeccable style? IMHO sport climbing has made climbing infinitely more interesting, of course not because it improves on the first acsent measure of value, but for the many other benefits it has brought to the activity (and anyone who thinks sport climbing is all about "convenience" simply has not taken advantage of the many possibilties, challenges and benefits to climbers that have been opened up this style). That's why I think the best way to approach these questions of style is regionally and not globally: areas like the gritstone, etc are great for people who like deadly heading-pointing or want to try a death-defying onsight, but I don't see any reason why every area needs to have the same measures of good and bad.

Tim
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:14am PT
I have likewise participated in both styles. For me it is dictated by the area which I am at. Much of it depends of the rock, but not always. I would not rap bolt in the needles but have done so at Mt. Rushmore. In Spearfish Canyon a place that sat there for decades around many climbers and was basically never touched we have used top town tactics with heavy cleaning and it is seen as the best way for that area. I personally dream of finding this unkown crack utopia where I need no anchors, but Spearfish Canyon aint it.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:15am PT
the B&Y would be a pretty popular root if more bolts were added.

I was thinking of adding about 10. I think addition of a few more would make it a really fun route.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:17am PT
I personally think that it comes down to the amount of climbers per square mile.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:21am PT
I loved putting in sport routes. Cleaning a cliff into a beautiful climb, but it got too expensive and I suck at it so I pretty much just trad climb.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:22am PT
rap bolted routes use aid to establish on a First Ascent...

this is not the best style for a first ascent

I know that good routes get established this way, but what part should the eventual use of the route (ascents after the first) play in the choice to do less then best style on the first ascent?
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:26am PT
Ed, I think you are assuming that everyone agrees with you that ground up is best. In many areas it is not best.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:30am PT
So another 2 cents…I think unless you are doing really runout routes that cater to a specific audience, the style does not matter much if YOUR PURPOSE is to make a QUALITY climb. I think there is a lot of joy to be taken in having other people climbing and complimenting you on a good route. Even though some FAs you can test your composure and get really scared, I think it is ok to dedicate some routes to others and take great joy in it. Whatever the individual is excited about should be the best style, for that individual…hopefully done now.

Those easily accessible/top ropable routes that people bolt on rap, could go ground up as bolt ladders too, but to me that’s just stupid because you damage the rock more and waste a lot of energy for something pointless. Just TR the crap out of it, think of where the bolts should go, let others TR it and see if they agree with bolt placements. Place bolts, enjoy your rock climb. Or just keep to TRing it if it offends other people in the area.

BFD, its just rock climbing.
dee ee

Mountain climber
citizen of planet Earth
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:34am PT
Naked free solo, no chalk, without damaging any lichen or plants and all animals left unaware of a human presence.
Evel

Trad climber
Nedsterdam CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:43am PT
Years ago a good friend summed it up as this:

1. Ground up, all clean.

2. Any other way.

Seems a bit much, but also makes some sense.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:43am PT
I am tired of finding animal feces in the wilderness, while I am trying to leave no trace.
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 09:46am PT
I am tired of finding animal feces in the wilderness, while I am trying to leave no trace.

Not me. Lets me know that they are around.
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:03am PT
"Complements affirmation with limitations and humility".....,this hasn't always been the case. Routes have been altered when the first ascenionist assumed they couldn't be done without.

It's hard to believe today that in the 70's several Yosemite routes had holds chipped in to make them doable...they now check in at a whopping 5.10.

First ascenionist should never alter rock architecture....once done, it's irreversible.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:03am PT
What's with this "naked" obsession? The best FA is free solo wearing animal skins killed and tanned on sight.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:08am PT
The great thing about having a superior style of putting up new routes, is the inner smugness of a pure soul.

Best to be kept private so as not to come across as an a-hole.
HJ

climber
Bozeman, Montana
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:13am PT
Seems to be two different discussions going on here. One has to do with what is the best style of a first ascent. Other seems to have to do with what is the best way to put up a routes in a given area, rock type, etc. that will prove to be good quality, fun, well used, etc. routes. In my mind these are different.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:20am PT



Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:44am PT
Henry still climbs plenty. He's still solid on 5.10, still uses a one inch swami, just stoppers and hexes.I don't think he needs this one route as a testament to his boldness worldwide. My guess is that like many of us, he just doesn't accept retrobolting.I don't either.








donini


Trad climber

Ouray, Colorado

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:17am PT
Hard to believe that Henry, at this date, would fly to the Black Hills to chop the bolt. Henry has put on weight and has evolved into a recreational climber who does not resemble the Hot Henry of lore. He also has other activities (notably fly fishing) that occupy him.
I will say that if you put him on a necky, technical, not too steep route you can still see a master at work.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:18am PT
More likely Jim, he went to visit friends and climb there...just sayin'.










healyje


Trad climber

Portland, Oregon

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:06am PT

Yes bolts were added...but who cares?

Clearly someone and there's no short of people who care quite passionately about retrobolting...








Todd Eastman


climber

Bellingham, WA

Sep 15, 2011 - 12:36pm PT
First ascents are competitive, you lost. Now you can go back and do it as the FA was done...








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 15, 2011 - 12:58pm PT
Interesting! As for "HOT" Henry, my group all had the nickname of "Henry". His style and boldness commanded such things.








Dingus Milktoast


Gym climber

And every fool knows, a dog needs a home, and...

Sep 15, 2011 - 01:03pm PT
If it bothers you so much Dingus, just go replace them. With a 35-year chop cycle you should only have to do it once!

Imo, if you were gonna do that, no thread no publicity, just go do it and never mind about Henry. How's he gonna know unless someone tells him.

Just my two cents - never even been in the state, myself (the Dakotas are the only states I have not set foot in, weird)

DMT








Brandon-


climber

The Granite State.

Sep 15, 2011 - 01:12pm PT
I've got money that says Sarge won't drive to SD to chop a bolt.








TwistedCrank


climber

Ideeho-dee-do-dah-day boom-chicka-boom-chicka-boom

Sep 15, 2011 - 01:31pm PT
I got money.








Mighty Hiker


climber

Vancouver, B.C.

Sep 15, 2011 - 01:33pm PT
Story now has it that he flew out in August and belayed Eric Sutton to do the chopping.

Is the story from a reliable source, i.e. is there a named witness, or has Barber admitted to doing it?








Jaybro


Social climber

Wolf City, Wyoming

Sep 15, 2011 - 02:24pm PT
Hhhmmm, he (Henry B) was at Devil's Tower July 30th....

Probably just something he did while he was around rather, than coming out specifically for the 'deed'.








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 15, 2011 - 03:13pm PT
Horning ,Lee, Clevleand, Barber. Who did what when?








Largo


Sport climber

The Big Wide Open Face

Sep 15, 2011 - 03:33pm PT
Many climbers have repeated the route with bolts. Many more climbers are now deprived of one of the Needles most unique summits due to Henry's need too be a legacy building egotist. Nothing good was accomplished by the senseless chopping of these bolts especially after 35 years.


------------------------------------------------------------------------



That's a modern view of things. The classical view is that a route was the creation of whoever put it up and everyone after was honest and sporting only if they took the route on its own terms. That didn't include "fixing" the route to fit your fancy. You don't go into the Met and start in on the canvasses with a Sharpie.

Why so?

The notion was that there were plenty of routes to climb and that only a cheat dumbed down an existing route so they could do it. Ragging on someone for running the rope, claiming that they deprived people of "their" experience is to shift ownership of the route from the first ascentionists to whatever poltroon walks up to it now or next year and decides he has the right to climb it however he so chooses and never mind the fist ascent. Die, Henry Barber, and all that jazz. It's all about me and mine.

That's the hardcore line. Both the bold dude who runs the rope and the panty waste who adds bolts to a 35 year old route can be seen as selfish, depending on perspectives. Any way you look at it, adding bolts to old classic routes is a slippery slope.

JL








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:33pm PT
DMT,

ah yes I could go up there and modify, the story is quite amusing, but i say let's permit a placard at the base of this climb commemorating how H Barb got the second ascent of this spire and we'll all forget about Cleveland's much more spectacular unsung first effort (and success).

If every first ascentionist could get one and only one placard at the base of what he thought was his greatest accomplishment and Superpin were in my bag I would not wish the placard placed on it. But WTF I could be bought for $10,000. I suppose I would give my placard to Henry and he could have two as permitted by the donor rules. After all this guy once wrote in a register on the boulder Scab, "All these B1's are bullshit[Gill's]". An anonomous reply followed that read, "Then go try Gill's Thimble route." Can we put Henry's second placard at the base of Scab reading the words that he wrote about the B1's ?? A legend is known by his deeds and words and he will be judged by his words also.








Toker Villain


Big Wall climber

Toquerville, Utah

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:38pm PT
If I had a dollar for every bolt that has been added to a route I put up (and no doubt subsequently credited to "me"), they would make me little richer but far poorer.

As they have,..








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:41pm PT
a legend is judged by his words??? Really? hmmmmmmmmmm








Rokjox


Trad climber

Boys I'dunno

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:49pm PT
EDIT: to remove vile slander I have heard ever so many times around campfires, as being un-personally substantiated. Who caree?









Replace the bolt, and shut up about it. HB will be "happy" and all the other climbers who are actually there will be safe and alive at the end of the day.



And you can bet I almost never support bolting a route down to the LCD.

(Doesn't sound like me at all. I wonder who stole my sign on?)











Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:51pm PT
Excuse me Ron Anderson,

some of us have the ability to judge by words.......








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 15, 2011 - 04:56pm PT
so then by your words its a good thing to retro bolt any climbs one deems risky or dangerous?








bhilden


Trad climber

Mountain View, CA

Sep 15, 2011 - 05:02pm PT
The time for Henry to have taken action was when the bolt was first placed. Now, after 35 years of ascents, 'history', as well as Henry, have a say in the condition of the route.









Rokjox


Trad climber

Boys I'dunno

Sep 15, 2011 - 05:17pm PT
No, my thoughts are similar to the above.

My solution is to stay off of routes I think are dangerous and leave them alone. Retreat. But unfortunately, ever so many don't seek to take that path. And I hate that.


But in the end, you are not going to be able to enforce that. Climbing is SO NEW! Friggin BRAND NEW! What do you think is going to happen in 200 years to the climbs you "put up"? Is anybody REALLY going to remember your ascent and its "style" when 200 years of tech and feet have completely rewritten what you did? (and 200 years is a BRIEF instant in the history of a rock)

NOBODY is going to be able to really get in tune with what you did, it would be like your doctor admiring the work of a Civil War surgeon as he hacked off legs and arms, or admiring the navigator of a Spanish Bark as it wends its way around marginally charted reefs. Impressive? Maybe. Relevant? No.

A better model than the "climber is an artist, his route is his canvas and he CREATES the route", is "a route is DISCOVERED and you're responsible for giving it it's greatest expression".


If we had the second, more advanced consideration of the routes, a lot of what we argue over as "FA/SA ethics" would disappear, to be replaced by what is best for the route and the community that surrounds it. I think a lot of bolts is seldom what is really best for the route, but occasionally it is.








jstan


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 05:26pm PT

The time for Henry to have taken action was when the bolt was first placed. Now, after 35 years of ascents, 'history', as well as Henry, have a say in the condition of the route.

In a perfect world - yes, certainly.

But in that perfect world the bolt might well not have been placed at all.

We also don't know when it was Henry learned of the bolt. We also do not know for a fact Henry was involved. For that matter, is the bolt gone?

More generally, over the last forty years many have maintained that no matter how offensive we think artificial protection may be, it should be left alone. We felt this way because isolated persons carrying on a war, serves only ill.

A lot has changed. When a bolt is chopped we quickly get threads drawing attention to the fact there is a problem. When there is an already existing coordinated effort by climbers to manage an area, events like this may be needed to get some attention.

I don't think I have changed how I feel. Certainly when self-righteousness is on the scene what should be a success - can become a disaster.

Righteousness is our problem. We will have an answer when we get rid of that.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 05:27pm PT
Ron Anderson,


so then by your words its a good thing to retro bolt any climbs one deems risky or dangerous?

do you have any reading comprehension skills?? Where have I said this?








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 05:30pm PT
jstan,

we do know precisely when Henry learned of the bolt. After belaying the bolter Mr. Ed Sklar headed to the payphone and made a call to Henry. yes, Ed was laughing all the way to the booth. Oh, how I enjoyed his sarcasm. I am the person who conceived the method and did the rescue of Mike Todd. While Mike was rappelling he ask whether he could borrow my bolt kit. Ed said Mike would have fun putting it in and Henry could have fun chopping it. This was 34 years ago.








jstan


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 05:50pm PT
Dingus:
So really. This is not about the bolt at all?

People just wanted to poke at Henry?

They wanted to do that so badly they were willing to retrobolt a Cleveland route?










Gilroy


Social climber

Boulderado

Sep 15, 2011 - 06:03pm PT
Henry makes himself a big target, as donini alluded. Pretty sure he cares little about the slings and arrows of public opinion. Seems as though the gauntlet was laid down long ago. He just waited awhile before picking it up, perhaps...








FortMental


Social climber

Albuquerque, NM

Sep 15, 2011 - 06:11pm PT

Over the years, what I have read about Henry, if all true, pretty much supports the theory that he is a complete dick.

Ouch....










Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 06:14pm PT
jstan,

"this" your words--what are its referents??

The bolt means different things to each of us and so does its chopping. Ed Sklar has just won a bet with Mike Todd that he would have to place a bolt on Superpin.


Pokes at Henry? I would think you know this guy? Some of us have an inside story that reveals character enough so that we can understand their motives.

The Cleveland route has no bolts, had no bolts. there are 2 routes on Superpin.

I do no control what goes on after posting a new thread.








jstan


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 06:27pm PT
Dingus:
You seem to be a reasonable fellow. What's happening here?

Pete Cleveland did absolutely incredible stuff and never gave even one thought to taking a bow. I can think of only one or perhaps two other people who have set a equal example for us.

Now we have people who think it a joke to modify publicly owned property, on a Cleveland route to poke at someone they apparently don't like.

Is this really what is happening?

You have been upfront. My props. If it is, just say it.

I need to know.











Fat Dad


Trad climber

Los Angeles, CA

Sep 15, 2011 - 07:37pm PT

we'll all forget about Cleveland's much more spectacular unsung first effort (and success).

I don't think anyone is advocating that. Let's not attribute any false motives or desires to what appear to be something of a personal issue.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 08:32pm PT
jstan,

to my knowledge no one has ever tried to repeat Cleveland's Superpin route and it remains in total respect. The lead is impressive and on par with Gill's Thimble route. Perhaps you reap what you sow. There are no stances for drilling. It looks like climbing vertical 40 grit sandpaper. Barber's route "took over" the time constrained workings of several locals on a line distinct from Cleveland's line.

In dealing with people we can pass good and bad currency. Henry may be a banker but he has little skill in passing "good currency". If Henry had passed only good currency to me I may have argued to not place the bolt on Superpin but as the state of poor currency was with him I did not interfere with any decisions of Mike and Ed. Also I had just rescued? SOME ONE -- that also started working the route sometime before Mr. Barbs put his fangs on that rock. Oh, we have tradition here but some of you do not want to ask for it and pay little respect for a project when told it is in the workings? So to me, MIKE could decide what he wanted to do. Was this his route or the route that Henry stole?

Now, to other people this bolt meant infringement, safety, violation of tradition etc.

Oh, Henry take what of our tradition you like and make your sacred monument. I hear Eric Sutton ask the Black Hills Climbing Coalition to put this on a list of "sacred climbs"

Well jstan who will ask the community for us to preserve our sacred monuments? Please do not waste the time to ask me if I give a damn.














Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 08:35pm PT
Try this on for good currency, before anyone retrobolts a route, how about YOU lead it first without. That's the way to determine the value of a currency.










Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 15, 2011 - 08:37pm PT
so Clevlands route has been left alone as bold testement, but Henrys route gets bolted out of spite for being "stolen".. Ok maybe the stealing wasnt the best course of action but not knowing the conversations i shant guess, but will say that retro bolting Barbers line in spite lowered the bolters below a level from Barber. IF it was just a safety issue wouldnt Clevlands route also have bolts? just curious








chill


climber

between the flat part and the blue wobbly thing

Sep 15, 2011 - 08:46pm PT
Rokjox - Maybe the stories you heard about Henry are just spew from gossiping old ladies. I made a short trip to the desert with him years ago, he didn't seem like a dick to me.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:25pm PT
Oh Tomcat,

how you live in the land of YOUR rules. This is South Dakota not New Hamshire. We do not want your ways out here. I say if some one steals the route you are working on do it over in your style and let the bully know what he has done.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:26pm PT
It's not your route until you sack up and do it dood.










labrat


Trad climber

Nevada City, CA

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:28pm PT
I keep checking to see if Henry has chimed in on the latest chop thread. What are the odds?








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:31pm PT
Tomcat,

there is no possession for each climb is not the same route.

But Henry got what he sowed. Problems

And DUDE, Mike Todd got a bolted route to lead when he wanted. He was not the loser.

Oh, you can't aways get what you want, but you just might find you get what you need.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:35pm PT
All climbs are different,the rules of the game, not so much. You can't lay claim to a route because you nipped around the base of it. People do that every day and never climb sh#t.

The story of the bolt placement is a sad testimony to someone's weakness, sorry.

You are totally blowing bullshit here. two posts up you claimed to own the route by virtue of trying it, now you say there is no possession.










coondogger


Trad climber

NH

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:37pm PT
So... Henry stole somebody's route? Someone's property? It was a piece of f'ing rock on public property. That makes it everyone's property. Which is it?
Many of you are slinging mud and you don't even know the guy. Have never met him. You are not even certain of the basis for your position but you're pretty sure if what you read is close to accurate you don't like him or his actions.
That is crap.
You guys are pointing the finger in the wrong direction to suit your desires. The route went up without the bolt.











Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:47pm PT
Oh Tomcat,


here you go again "blowing bullshit" huh? Please read me carefully if you have the skills. One aspect of possession is about the Needle's tradition and another is my view of possession. They are not the same.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:49pm PT
I'm thinking the tradition on Superpin was established by Pete Cleveland,and Henry Barber just honored it.

Try again.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:50pm PT
coondogger,

be careful of your accusations. I was there. Henry clipped a fixed piton.








ruppell


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 09:52pm PT
His style his route?

If the above holds true and he just got around to chopping the offensive bolt I would say that the route has been returned to the original condition. Everyone who has done the route in the last 34 years did it in an altered state. Because that is true does it mean the bolt needed to stay? If so why? Maybe to make it "safer"? There are other lines on it with no bolts. Clevelends ascent is proud. So was Barbers. If someone added bolts to Clevelands line would it cause the same uproar? I think it would be even worse. The case here is that a first ascionist came back to clean up a bolt that had been added to his line. Period. The summit will know be less attainable because of it. So sack up and see the summit or don't.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:54pm PT
Tomcat,
get this clear: Henry did not do Cleveland's route.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:54pm PT
Really I'd say Henry shouldn't have had to go back and chop the bolt, locals should have done so themselves.Have some dignity, something to aspire to.

F*#k sakes, I know he didn't do Cleveland's route,nor did I say he did.

Try again.








sethsquatch76


Trad climber

Joshua tree ca

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:58pm PT
Needles ethics make JT look like a sport crag..... Even with the bolts that route is scarrrry............ No where near a sport route......

Henry barber, you are selfish.

Glad I got to climb the thing when I did, way cool summit!

I have only had really good experiences with Erik Sutton, but what the f*#k???

You old guys and your bolting wars, what a waste.....










Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 09:59pm PT
I like you guys pretzel logic. A route can be yours but a project to be a route cannot be yours. Then neither can a route except by the contrivances you make.








Tomcat


Trad climber

Chatham N.H.

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:02pm PT
Like stringing a line from point to point to place a bolt on an established climb? That kind of contrivance? Or just climbing something ground up, that sort of contrivance?

Funny how Henry's friends are "henchmen" while your buds stringing lines from summit to summit are what?....extras?








couchmaster


climber

pdx

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:08pm PT
Please, make it stop. We already have the Wings of Self Righteousness thread over 3000 posts. Henry chopped the bolt and then he led it in bold and grand style. RIGHT Henry?

Please, we can just stop this now.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:10pm PT
Tomcat,

there you go again, You have applied NH standards to what the locals of SD "should" have done. I think we measure dignity different than you folks do down east.

BTW a control freak "should" count each day how many times he uses the word "should" to get a measure of how much of a control freak he is.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:28pm PT
Tomcat,

gee, how your idle mind can imagine?, "extras". There were no extras I third classed these summits dragging a rope around them while this guy hung on a ledge with Ed holding the rope.








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 10:36pm PT
It was a piece of f'ing rock on public propertyIt was a piece of f'ing rock on public propertyIt was a piece of f'ing rock on public property








coondogger,

I follow your logic,


It was a piece of f'ing rock on public property
But I can not believe your statement quoted here means Henry has recourse.

It seems we would all know more if we understood the Tragedy of the Commons? One steals to make his lot better at the expense of the group.























ruppell


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 10:40pm PT

One steals to make his lot better at the expense of the group.

What was stolen? Barber has "stolen" a lot of lines. If stealing means that a better climber comes up to a NATURAL line and climbs it than your right it was stolen. Sound like the only thing stolen was a bunch of egos from 34 years ago.








MH2


climber


Sep 15, 2011 - 11:00pm PT
Dingus McGee you are welcome to your views but they don't seem likely to moderate Henry's attitude. I don't know what actually took place, but it sounds like Henry. Some respect him and others don't, but stirring up the local scene is not new for him. Please let the climb stay the way it was when first done.

http://www.henrybarber.com/categories/media/media_1-1.php



edit:

After reading the ethics/style interview in the above, I see that although Henry does not approve of retrobolting, he also says he is against an individual chopping a bolt before getting approval of the local community.








rgold


Trad climber

Poughkeepsie, NY

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:01pm PT
I must admit that at the time I thought the bolt was complete bs. Henry did the route without the bolt. (The fixed pin at the start of the route he clipped was also clipped by Pete Cleveland and has nothing to do with the issue.) Then, I don't know, ten or more people repeated the route without the bolt, including John Bragg and I. The route without the bolt was totally within the realm of competent climbers who knew how to deal with the mental issues of runout climbing. I've heard 5.8 mentioned; Bragg and I thought the upper part was 5.7. Whatever the grade, the Needles already had a number of climbs with seriously runout 5.7-5.8 climbing, and this route, although surely a brilliant bit of climbing, was not a major breakthrough and was fully within Needles climbing traditions going back to the Conn's.

Now I hear some guy who made the route his "project," a guy who was not capable of doing it---as events clearly proved---who had to be rescued while failing on it, and who placed the bolt only after being protected by the rescue lasso, apparently in retribution for having a route that he couldn't do stolen from him (how exactly do you steal a route from someone who can't do it?) then flaunted his incompetence by calling Henry to brag about his "accomplishment."

So now I know that any doubts I might even conceivably have had about that bolt being bs are more fully justified than I ever realized. It should never have been placed. The climb was not a "museum piece" as the Cleveland route has become, a bunch of people had repeated it, and it should have been left as Henry did it.

As I said in another thread, it's not as if there is some terrible scarcity of routes in the Needles, so that the climbing public would be deprived of one of only a very few opportunities to climb. There are lifetimes of routes left to do, and sport climbing galore at Mt. Rushmore for those who want bolted climbing. The only people deprived in this case are those who might want to experience Henry's ascent under the conditions Henry faced.

So yes, the bolt was an outrage and should have been chopped immediately, in my opinion. And it shouldn't have been Henry who did it, it should have been local climbers who respected the traditions and accomplishments of their own area.

But whatever. The bolt has been there for what? 35 years? Wasn't even a second bolt placed? The climb became something else, a symbol of the fact the the climbing world does not always move in the direction of greater achievement.

Personally, I think the time for chopping passed long ago, generations have grown up with the bolt in place, the climb has moved on to a new if less glorious reality, and those new generations feel entitled to the protection they grew up with.

Climbers are bolting routes in the Needles right next to or even coinciding with routes that were done years ago without any bolts. It's a new world, and the climbers who inhabit it are now in charge of either preserving or befouling their nests, as they see fit. The older generation is certainly justified in mouthing off about it, but I think their time---our time---for any kind of direct action is way past.

And now, pardon me while I dodder off to a newly epic adventure on a nice well-protected 5.8.








donini


Trad climber

Ouray, Colorado

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:09pm PT
This too shall pass. I trust not too many of the brethren will suffer thru a sleepless night because of the demise of that lonely bolt.








Gilroy


Social climber

Boulderado

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:18pm PT
Good to hear from rgold as always but significantly here since he repeated the route in its original configuration.

Henry certainly has an acerbic side to his personality and occasionally got on locals nerves especially when he ticked the current projects. Yanks loved it when he showed the Aussies what was up, soloed good Brit lines and soloed new routes under the Rooskies noses but it's hell when it's your home crag.

The rest of us just get to criticize the art of those who set the standards in our passionate pursuit.

KG








Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:21pm PT
Hey Rich,

the use of the word "should" screams 'control'. It seems that these local Dakotans using the self same sovereignty we like when we make decision, have chosen a different course than what some of us would have done in our local area. When can we accept their sovereignty?

They may have a different measure of achievement than you apply to them and you may be their laughing stock. You do seem to acknowledge this near the end of post.

Paul Muhel placed the bolt we are talking about and as I understand it Cleveland's route was to the left of all this--on the rather bare buff face.















rottingjohnny


Sport climber

mammoth lakes ca

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:27pm PT
Sleep less night..? I was snoring as soon as i noticed this was another bolting controversy...








Fritz


Trad climber

Choss Creek, ID

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:41pm PT
As another old climber with some boltless new routes to his (ancient, Cretacious, Guide-book-less) credit:

I did follow this thread with some interest.






I believe RGold and Henry hold the (bolt-less) high ground here.








HJ


climber

Bozeman, Montana

Sep 15, 2011 - 11:46pm PT
When I climbed Superpin for the first time back in the early 80's it had a pin near the bottom and a bolt higher up. My belief was always that Pete Cleveland had placed the pin. Dingus has described how the bolt got placed. (Which was completely out of character for the Needles ethic of placing bolts only from stances on lead on first ascents, period.) For those of you who have not been on Superpin, the upper bolt was placed in such a way that it would not be more that ten feet away from you no matter where you chose to climb. Dingus talks about Pete's route being "totally independent" from subsequent ascents. This is a little misleading as all the lines people have chosen to climb have the same start. Pete has always been a hero of mine, and when I finally was able to climb Superpin and Hairy Pin it was important to me to try and emulate his style, (if not his exact route), so I didn't clip the bolt. I've been on Superpin many times since, and never did clip the bolt. It is bold climbing, but hardly out of character for the needles to climb Superpin without clipping the bolt on the upper face. Sometime in the last few years (maybe even a decade ago, or longer? My aging dottering brain doesn't do time that well anymore) the pin got replaced by a bolt. With modern camming gear, this was hardly necessary. I'd been backing up the pin with small cams for years. So, Superpin is doable without bolts. Plenty of ascents were done before a bolt was placed. I won't miss the bolts, although, I suppose they will probably reappear. It saddens me that it is seemingly ever more acceptable to bring climbs down to ones own level. This thread seems to expose the long history of this as well as some of the (in my mind) suspect ways it is justified.








rgold


Trad climber

Poughkeepsie, NY

Sep 16, 2011 - 12:10am PT
Dingus, how're things?

No, "should" doesn't imply control, it just expresses my opinion about the behavior I would have hoped for. And although I'll admit, upon rereading, that my acceptance could be called ungracious, I believe I made it clear that we should indeed accept their "sovereignty," like it or not.

As for measures of achievement, I'll certainly agree that my standard is not the same as locals bolting, say, the Kamps-Powell route and Sandberg Peak or the Kamps route or something right next to the Kamps route on the Bell Ringer. I'm also quite sure, as you say, that those Dakotans couldn't care less about what I might think.

Indeed, if they cared about any kind of public opinion, they wouldn't be drilling next to or on top of existing routes. And if other climbers find that acceptable, the Cathedral Spires will become one of an expanding list of mediocre sport-climbing areas. (Some would say it isn't much more as a trad climbing area, but for the most part, the naysayers haven't actually tried the climbs...)

Let's be clear. Old and washed up as I am, I'm climbing well enough to go and chop those routes by myself. But I'm not doing that or even thinking of doing that, because, as I said, my time for action is well past. In any case, loud squawking notwithstanding, I've never chopped a bolt. So I'll keep trying to carry the flag a little while longer verbally---I think that is a responsibility the older generation inherits---but I'm not going to start bashing up the rock in some quixotic search for bygone days, most certainly not from a home base 2,000 miles away from the day-to-day action.

Much more importantly Dingus, I hope all is well with you and yours.








Mighty Hiker


climber

Vancouver, B.C.

Sep 16, 2011 - 12:34am PT
If I remember correctly from moral philosophy courses, the correct word to use in the situation may be "ought". Meaning mainly that some action has some moral force, but perhaps none other - but also allowing lots of discussion as to whether "ought" is an imperative, and if so in what circumstances.

The WoS debacle resurfaced after 29 years, and this one after 34. Do I detect a trend? What long-forgotten sins, real or imaginary, may I soon be called to task for?








ruppell


climber


Sep 16, 2011 - 12:42am PT
Mighty Hiker

You may be called to task for your sins. It's up to you whether you answer or not. I do see your point though. Hopefully some of the responsible parties actually answer that call to task.








Ol' Skool


Trad climber

Oakhurst, CA

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:59am PT
On this whole issue of "ownership" of routes-

I've heard of a number of first ascensionists that have been approached for "permission" to add bolts after the fact- Most of the time, they give it reasonable consideration, if the route has developed a reputation. But once the route is up, do they really have the right to? After day 1, does the route have a life of its own?

Is a route supposed to be more like a snapshot in time, or a video?

One could argue that, even with permission of the FA-ists to alter by retro-bolting, death-wish masochists have been deprived of duplicating the original experience-








ruppell


climber


Sep 16, 2011 - 02:07am PT
Ol'skool


One could argue that, even with permission of the FA-ists to alter by retro-bolting, death-wish masochists have been deprived of duplicating the original experience-

The death wish masochists that you speak of don't care. Just because a bolt is there it does not mean you have to clip it. So you can do a route in the style it was first done. The problem is that after a bolt gets added to an existing route people do clip it and EXPECT it to be there. Without that bolt they freak out. Probably something the guy on the FA was doing as well, but he had the mental toughness to finish the route. Sometimes that mental thing is what really counts.








Mighty Hiker


climber

Vancouver, B.C.

Sep 16, 2011 - 02:08am PT
http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/447487/Museum-climbs








ruppell


climber


Sep 16, 2011 - 02:29am PT
Mighty hiker

thanks for the link. didn't have time to read all of it but browsing it seems to be the same line of thinking. Climbs get put up in the style of the day. Get repeated in the style of the day. Then that style changes to embrace a new day. So fU?k the old day and get on with climbing? BS. If someone added a bolt or twelve to Bacher-Yerian people would chop them in a heartbeat. Why is this any different? Some museum climbs need to be there for the simple pleasure of the head space it take to climb them. Isn't that what it's all about anyway? Pushing yourself as hard as you can mentally and physically?








Ol' Skool


Trad climber

Oakhurst, CA

Sep 16, 2011 - 02:34am PT
Ruppell-
Absolute agreement. However, I'd argue that the mind game would be far more intense leaving the ground knowing that the bolt wasn't there (as opposed to having an "optional" clip, ace in the hole fallback)- therefore not the same experience.

Mighty Hiker- enjoyed the link- another reinforcement to the idea that any route is ever changing and bolts aren't as fail safe as the day they were done- another variable that takes us away from the "original" experience.








Rokjox


Trad climber

Boys I'dunno

Sep 16, 2011 - 02:36am PT
Chill, you are right. I only read the gossip pages. I have revoked my critisism upthread, despite what I've read...

And OK, I change my position on the issue, also. While still having the opinion I expressed above on the unlikelihood of a route staying as a FA did it over the long haul, I simultaneously support the action of chopping the bolt. If there is something close enough for survivable pro, let the foul bolt be gone.

Never miss a foul bolt. Let the standards of the future rise above the bolt. Its not like new shoes haven't made the route ever so much easier anyway in the 30 years. The relevance has changed irregardless of the bolt, and the reduction in difficulty supports the irrelevance of the bolt.

If he wanted it, he can have it.


Let the bolt wars begin.








ruppell


climber


Sep 16, 2011 - 02:49am PT
Ol' skool

Yeah totally different mindset leaving the ground KNOWING that bolt is not there. That's why it becomes in issue in the first place. Fact is Barber never agreed to have that bolt placed. Someone did it to make themselves feel better about the fact they couldn't do the route in it's original style. Without that added bolt a very select few climbers do the route. Simply because they KNOW it is not there. Now people feel robbed of an experience that wasn,t the true experience.

rokjox


And OK, I change my position on the issue,

I know it's out of context but holly shiit? Never thought I'd here those words from you.








mike m


Trad climber

black hills

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:01am PT
some dakotans care what you think. I have not done the route and now am sure I never will.








rgold


Trad climber

Poughkeepsie, NY

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:04am PT
Ol'skool, a climber really ought to know better than to refer to other climbers as "death-wish masochists." There is hardly a trad climb in the world that doesn't have a potentially dangerous runout somewhere; and every such instance is as much an invitations to death-wish masochism as anything on Henry's Superpin route. It follows that the entire sport could easily be characterized as death-wish masochism, and surely is by those who do not understand it.

As for "snapshot or video," a climb is nothing like either. It is a piece of stone, that ought to be left alone as much as possible, in my opinion. And really, is a climb supposed to sprout a bolt at every place someone not up to it has an epic? Is that really the "video" modern climbers want for their resources?

Mighty, I anticipated the link to the museum climb thread in my previous post. The "museum climb" on Superpin is Cleveland's original route, which has never been repeated and which no one has ever considered bolting.

The Barber variation goes at a reasonable grade for runout climbing, and, with multiple repeats, was not destined for museum status when the climb was in its original unbolted state.








ruppell


climber


Sep 16, 2011 - 03:17am PT
rgold


As for "snapshot or video," a climb is nothing like either. It is a piece of stone, that ought to be left alone as much as possible, in my opinion. And really, is a climb supposed to sprout a bolt at every place someone not up to it has an epic? Is that really the dynamic evolution modern climbers want for their resources?

Is that what modern climbers want? For the most part yes. Safe = Fun. The issue again is that this bolt sprouted up 34 years ago. Everyone who has done the route since then has done it in an altered state. They probably didn't even know it was altered. Take that bolt away and people feel a right of intitlement to have it there. I think this may be the real issue. You did it in it's original state. PROUD. Now I have a chance to do it in that same state. Will I take up the challenge or will I be one who cries the bolt should be replaced? That is the modern climber.

Edited to add this

http://www.dynamicfitnessonline.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/i-can-do-anything.gif








steveA


Trad climber

bedford,massachusetts

Sep 16, 2011 - 06:23am PT
I remember sitting next to climber, who I didn't know, in a crowded room, discussing the ethics and tradition of climbing. There were perhaps 120 climbers gathered there.

This guy leaned over to me and seriously said that he felt that he had the right to put a bolt in anywhere he wanted--even on an established route!

Obviously, this climber's opinion is in the minority; to the extreme. It is rare to see a bolt placed on a well established route and I hope the tradition continues.









David Groth


Trad climber

WI

Sep 16, 2011 - 08:55am PT
Don’t forget Barber did not do the first assent of super pin! The pin he clipped to get on the route was put in by Pete Cleveland. The Cleveland route starts at the Barber route and wraps the spire by some 5.11 variation done in 1967. I have done the route several times and think it possible Pete climbed the Barber route; it is the obvious path of least resistance. Barber adds a bolt to the spire. The third assent added one more, the story I have always heard is a local climber got freaked out and friends swung in a bolt kit. Yes the rules were broken back in the early 80’s and that bolt has been replaced at least once allowing tons of climbers to enjoy the classic spire. I am not saying I agree with what happened and when I did it a few years later thought it was lame. But the damage was done why add to it!
In my humble option he would have right to chop the added bolt but not the whole route. But 34 years later it just seems like it should left alone. In addition the history in my option is not completely clear which should give Barber reason to leave it alone. I asked Pete to chime it but admire his silence.
Adding fix gear to an established route is wrong with out the First ascent permission we all know that! This one fall into a little different category in my option and I think a lot of climbers feel that way. I wanted to defend my cut and paste of “who cares” it is a complicated debate.
DG









Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 16, 2011 - 09:01am PT
Rgold and others,

Rgold where is your spine? You seem to brag about having never chopped a bolt yet you want others to do the chopping. Is this a sham?

Mission Accomplished-- A friend of mine from the Black Hills ask me to argue their case of 34 years of autonomy with the Superpin Bolt on Super Topo site because there was not much input coming from the Mountain Project site. I have tried to express some of the locals points of view having grown up some 40 miles from the Needles. Mike Todd may have put the bolt in for the safety of others. I do not know what his motives were--kind of a quiet fellow.

What I have argued are not my concerns over this bolt. My attitude about route issues is quite private but I will say I do what I want to after some thought. I would rather be putting up routes and that is what I have been doing the last 34 years. What happens to others' routes is of little concern to me and what happens to the routes of my bygone days is of little concern to me. Top priority to me is redpointing the last few lines I have been working on. I will let others manage my past efforts as they please.










Dingus Milktoast


Gym climber

And every fool knows, a dog needs a home, and...

Sep 16, 2011 - 09:01am PT

I've heard of a number of first ascensionists that have been approached for "permission" to add bolts after the fact- Most of the time, they give it reasonable consideration, if the route has developed a reputation. But once the route is up, do they really have the right to? After day 1, does the route have a life of its own?

Is a route supposed to be more like a snapshot in time, or a video?

There is never going to be willing consensus on this. Revel in it. Do we really want a National Register of Historic Routes? Where you need a Federal permit to alter one of the gems of American climbing?

Yall think that would be preferable to the wild west model we use now?

I don't.

DMT








tradmanclimbs


Ice climber

Pomfert VT

Sep 16, 2011 - 10:12am PT
After 34 years it seems a bit like an attempt to get back in the spotlight......








Jaybro


Social climber

Wolf City, Wyoming

Sep 16, 2011 - 10:17am PT
Why yes!








Kris Gorny


Trad climber

Rochester, MN

Sep 16, 2011 - 10:51am PT
Dave G, so help me get two things straight here, Henry Barber had all bolts chopped, including the one he used himself on his ascent? And second, it is actually Pete Cleveland who may have got the first ascent on what is now known as Henry Barber's route?








Hard Rock


Trad climber

Montana

Sep 16, 2011 - 10:58am PT
I solved the Chalk Wars back in the 80's -
see CLIMBING - April 1984 Issue 83 so I might have a
couple of ideas that will help here.

1) Have a bolt war with yourself.
See http://millcreekreport.blogspot.com/2010/12/bolt-war-of-one.html

2) As I've told friend who were in Boulder when they were having bolt wars - Just come to Montana and we will give you your own piece of rock. Then you can just go with you own ethics.










survival


Big Wall climber

A Token of My Extreme

Sep 16, 2011 - 11:00am PT

This too shall pass. I trust not too many of the brethren will suffer thru a sleepless night because of the demise of that lonely bolt.


I know I won't.

Good one Jim.








rgold


Trad climber

Poughkeepsie, NY

Sep 16, 2011 - 11:49am PT
Wow, wish a guy well and he calls you spineless and a sham. I guess its a good thing I didn't insult him, eh?

Dingus, I've done a lot of routes in the Needles. But I live in New York, 2,0000 miles away, and have always thought of myself as a visitor. I would never chop a bolt in the Needles, that option is up to the locals.

I'm really sorry you felt the need to take a cheap shot. I do obviously have opinions about the situation, which I have recorded here, perhaps immoderately. If that makes me "spineless" and my opinions a "sham," then so be it, but a person who now says he is only arguing as a proxy for others and that his own opinion is "private" might pause and reflect on his own authenticity and courage before publicly proclaiming those qualities to be lacking in others.

A number of responses to my posts seem to me to misunderstand what I've said. So let me try to be as clear as possible.

1. My opinion is that the locals should have chopped that bolt the day after it was placed, most especially in view of how it got there, as recounted by Dingus. (I saw Paul Muehl do exactly that on another route, by the way, so there is certainly local precedent for immediate action.) Do the current locals have "autonomy" in this situation? Yes. Did they do they right thing? Well, not in my book.

2. Now that the bolt (or bolts) have been in place for 34 years, they have become a feature of the route for more than one climbing generation and ought to have been left in place.

From everything I can tell, the Barber variation on Superpin is one of several routes with moderate climbing that were climbed for years in their natural state and then were bolted one day by a self-appointed guardian of public safety. One cannot help but marvel at the collective resolve of the climbing communities in the UK and Dresden for their abilities to preserve their routes, in some cases for a century, in the same state as the first ascenders encountered. It is clear that the locals in the Needles have decided to leave a very different legacy.

Kris, Pete's route and Henry's variation diverge after the initial moves; Pete did not stay left on the blunt arete where Henry went. There was initially a fixed pin that both Pete and Henry clipped. It may be that Pete placed the pin, but I doubt it. He was not the first person to consider a route on Superpin, and indeed some famous and very accomplished climbers had had a look before Pete's astonishing success. I think the fixed pin was replaced by a bolt later on as the placement deteriorated, with no one on any side of the various issues complaining about that.










Brian in SLC


Social climber

Salt Lake City, UT

Sep 16, 2011 - 11:52am PT
Things that make you go, "hmmm...".

Interesting.

I've always wondered if climbers have more rules to follow than golf...








Dingus Milktoast


Gym climber

And every fool knows, a dog needs a home, and...

Sep 16, 2011 - 11:55am PT
Brian we have conventions and schools of thought, and very, very few rules. A few of our 'golf courses' (climbing areas} have some stout rules but at least out west here we still have a big sky to play beneath. I hope it stays that way for a few decades more...

as always its conflicting ethics and disagreements over personal conduct that create the friction. Dueling pistols are always an option!

DMT








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 16, 2011 - 11:58am PT
not really Brian,, only one rule applies. LEAVE established routes as you found them. Its JUST common courtesy...








couchmaster


climber

pdx

Sep 16, 2011 - 12:10pm PT
Well the rest of us still luvs you Rgold. Maybe even more now.

They say "opinions are like as#@&%es, everyone has one and they all stink", but yours doesn't, it's only true for the rest of us as#@&%es:-)

Thanks!

BTW, it looks like the locals want a bunch of non-locals to weight in on this issue, you, more than most here, should have serious weight on it. Henry, were here here, would weigh more than the rest of us. In fact, I believe he does these dayz. LOL








Brian in SLC


Social climber

Salt Lake City, UT

Sep 16, 2011 - 12:22pm PT
Yeah, rules.

The one I've always appreciated is honesty. Just report what happened, "right" or "wrong". Can be fairly murky. I tend to sort things black or white, but, that can be hard to do from a distance (and even harder from close up sometimes!).

Even though it doesn't seem so at times, spraying about a topic on the 'net, isn't nearly as personal as either adding a bolt, or, removing one.

We do tend to go the rounds on this stuff. Glass half full, I suppose, but, its part of our passion of this "leisure time" activity. Its good.








tradmanclimbs


Ice climber

Pomfert VT

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:05pm PT
DMT, Unfortunatly I think you are wrong on this one. We have and entite asshat full to the brim of unwriten rules many of which are completly assanine. Just because these rulze are unwritten does not in any way shape or form mean that they are not Rules and enforced rules at that. heck you can even get shat appon for breaking our damn rules.........








blahblah


Gym climber

Boulder

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:16pm PT

not really Brian,, only one rule applies. LEAVE established routes as you found them. Its JUST common courtesy...

Ok, I agree with you.
Now does that mean that Barber was right to chop a bolt that had been there for 1/3 century, or not?








donini


Trad climber

Ouray, Colorado

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:18pm PT
Didn't I read that Henry's partner, not Henry, chopped the bolt.....hmm.








Dingus Milktoast


Gym climber

And every fool knows, a dog needs a home, and...

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:20pm PT

DMT, Unfortunatly I think you are wrong on this one. We have and entite asshat full to the brim of unwriten rules many of which are completly assanine.

Most of those unwritten rules don't apply to me.

You're free to toe their line though!

DMT








tradmanclimbs


Ice climber

Pomfert VT

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:31pm PT
I have gotten pretty good at ignoring the ethics police in my old age.








ec


climber

ca

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:50pm PT
Barber doesn't waver from how he likes to climb; bamboo shafts with a sling to 'no cams.' Bravo to him. If someone 'changed' the character of YOUR route what would YOU do? I think most of you would be f*cking pissed. Sometimes it takes time to take care of unfinished business and without all the press, which the OP just sprayed all over the world for our uninvited opinion...
ec








Dingus Milktoast


Gym climber

And every fool knows, a dog needs a home, and...

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:52pm PT

I have gotten pretty good at ignoring the ethics police in my old age.

Much if not most can be avoided with:

"What's the first rule of Fight Club?"

DMT








ec


climber

ca

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:55pm PT
DMT,

Thx...








Silver


Big Wall climber

Nor Nev

Sep 16, 2011 - 01:58pm PT
EC

I have not put up that many routes but a couple I have done both got bolts added to them. The one in the new Donner Guide reads as follows.

"The two bolts that were added will be removed soon"

The other route was bolted by a ST regular here without asking. I would chop it but it has become the most climbed route on the wall and there has only been one accent of the line in the style I did it due to the fact it will break yer legs and kill you if yer not paying attention.

Do I care? Not really I did them for me not you and you get whats there now.










Dingus McGee


Social climber

Laramie

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:07pm PT
Rich,

my comments and my overt actions of accusation are the ways I have chosen to get the most out this discussion for the purpose of (I hope) the Needles crowd to read and think about what action they may want to take.

Especially your comments are pertinent because I know you have climbed here and put up routes. Many others have to but I do not know them personally. Your late entry into this post made me wonder whether you would log in on this. Most of your ideas seem quite thought-full, and so either way none of it is intended as a cheap shot. Thanks for the effort.

Dennis

done for now, going to country








couchmaster


climber

pdx

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:27pm PT
It looks like the locals want a bunch of non-locals to weigh in on this issue. As there is already a long line of poseurs, I'll go get to the back of that line, although most of the poseurs don't know that they are poseurs. Henry, were here here, would weigh more than the rest of us for weighing in on this issue. In fact, I believe he does these dayz. LOL

Until then, let the spit fly at the monitor by a bunch of posers who've never been to the area, (interspersed by a very few actual Needles climbers like Rich) since you invited us all to do this very thing.

SPEW ON MY POSEUR BROBHAMS......








ec


climber

ca

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:40pm PT
Like I said, "...uninvited opinion."








Ron Anderson


Trad climber

USA Carson city Nev.

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:47pm PT
well guys this IS the internet. And yes i'm a poseur in the fact i haven't done jack diddly in the needles..(although i did help in keeping it from burning once upon a time). But I have met Henry and he was a very cool person to me, hence my interest in this topic. But I would caution that bringing this to a popular internet site may not have been the best course of action if unwanted opinion was not desired and or expected...








couchmaster


climber

pdx

Sep 16, 2011 - 03:49pm PT
Doesn't matter Ron, as long as anyone HAPPENS TO HAVE A KEYBOARD AND AN OPINION , bring it on. Even non-climbers are welcome to weight in, land managers, everyone. They asked

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:25am PT
Shet! How many forum topics are we dealing with?!
Ksolem

Trad climber
Monrovia, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:26am PT
You start at the ground and climb to the top without resorting to any aid, and making the minimum possible alteration of the route from the state that you found it.

Not able to maintain this style, the first ascent attempt is abandoned in a manner that leaves it as unaltered as possible making it available for future attempts.

Like many things in climbing I think this is somewhat situational.

(I can't blieve I'm saying this as for years I was a fierce advocate ground up style and thought that rap bolters were vandals.)

The fact is that most sport climbing crags are usually best established on rappel. However I take exception to rappel bolting in areas where climbing ground up has been the tradition, and provides an excellent adventure. IMO climbers who set up routes on rappel in places like this are cheating themselves of a great experience. I have solved this dilemma for myself by deciding never to rap bolt a new route, so I've never established a sport climb (although I sure enjoy climbing them.) With no experience in such work I'd probably suck at it anyway.

edit: Man,look what happened while I was thinking...
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:28am PT
The exception to this, of course, is chipping, gluing, and manufacturing which is simply unacceptable.

If you don't like the holds that I chipped, DON'T USE THEM! Fk...people are sooooo annoying at times.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:49am PT
U chip, U die.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:55am PT
no re-editing

maybe this topic is induces a raging blindness that any one would presume to define the best style.

Please note that I purposely said best style for FIRST ASCENT

it is interesting to contemplate what the purpose of the first ascent is and how it affects the choice of a less than best style

what we would agree on, I believe, is that given a high quality route, that we are more impressed if the first ascent was conducted in the best style than if it were put in with less than best style.

We might not care at all about the first ascent style on any subsequent ascent.

But I think that the first ascent is special.


If Dingus Milktoast wants to accuse me of being a troll to invalidate my definition he's welcome to the ad hominem argument, but he hasn't provided a counter...
...and the discussion of bolts comes later, I think.

MH2

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 10:59am PT
Climb the route however you like. Leave no trace. Don't report it. If others climb it and decide it was done before, you lose style points, but your soul can stay sorta smug because no one will know who the a**hole was. Unless they get DNA confirmation it was you.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:04am PT
if you read my definition it actually doesn't say anything about buck naked, shoes, chalk and on sight...

those are elaborations of the meaning of "aid," but I think that there is considerable less debate there...

I've climbed in Elbsandstein where you have to rub the sweat off your hands on your pants, the rock I was climbing on was very dark, and heated up in the sun... so it was a real bitch and chalk would have been great... but it is true that going without the aid of chalk definitely made those climbs different.

When the East German climbers couldn't get good western climbing shoes, they adopted a shoeless climbing style too, so once again, you could put shoes in the category of "aid"

I think this is open to discussion, future technologies may be even more enabling.

The point being where technology enables anyone the ability to get up anything.

Once that happens, climbing as we know it ceases to be.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:04am PT
from my daughters birthday lunch 5 minutes ago
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:05am PT
OPINIONS DON’T ESTABLISH FIRST ASCENTS!

AMEN TO THAT!!!!!

More climbing, less beating around the old topic!
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:09am PT
Holy sh!tshow, batman! But predictable .....
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:09am PT
Ed,

Aid climbs are disallowed from the "best style" category by definition?

Just verifying what I think I'm seeing in your proposed definition.

Any insights on or clarifications of that?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:11am PT
It is not unexpected that people who put up routes are reluctant to agree that there is a best style, as they do not often put up routes in the best style.

That leads to the requirement to justify why...

I find it strange. But you could take the OP definition of style and describe it...

An example of a climb put up in "best style" is Fireside Chat that Shippley and Middendorf put up on Fireside Bluff, a cliff frequented by few others (though they have posted here)...

abelgabel and I put up a route Natural which probably follows the same line, we didn't advertise it, but we also didn't alter it...


I think Clint and partner may have done it, or seen it too... and maybe Sean Jones who had been up there...

A natural passage up the cliff's weakness with so few alterations that the "second ascent" thought it was doing a first ascent. Here alteration is extended to include knowledge...

I still maintain that we all would agree that a first ascent in the style I had stated in the OP is "best style"



JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:12am PT
Are we confusing style with ethics again? I question whether an objective best style exists. To declare any particular style "best" has as much validity, to me, as my saying that Beethoven's piano music is the best. I find it that, but why should anyone else?

I do, however, agree that the best ethic would be to leave the route in such a condition that the next climbers can have the same experience -- with all its uncertainties -- that the first ascenders had. I guess that means do it without altering anything on the mountain and then don't tell anybody.

To me, the unique thing about a first ascent is the uncertainty of whether the route will go in the style [there's that word again] in which I am attempting it. As soon as the climbing community knows that a route goes, say, free with natural protection, that uncertainty disappears.

My own feeling on style owes a lot to Lito Tejada-Flores in "Games Climbers Play." We start with bouldering and work up to expeditionary tactics. Maybe because I started climbing by bouldering, that remains the purest -- and therefore best -- style to me.

John

Edit: Ed, I read your last post after I posted mine. We seem to agree in our outlook.
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:13am PT
The point being where technology enables anyone the ability to get up anything.

And that IS the point, and the point has ever been with us. The minute a mountaineer puts on plastic boots or a parka, it's "aid."

Climbing shoes are "aid."

As you said, chalk is "aid."

You seem to want to back up from the buck-naked, onsight, unroped solo of all first ascents as the sole or pure exemplar of your definition; but but that is precisely what your definition entails.

The minute a "climber" changes the game from that standard of "purity," they are doing "aid" climbing, and all bets are off. Then we're just playing around in the realm of preference.

Or, there's something fundamentally wrong with your definition.
Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:16am PT
You start at the ground and climb to the top without resorting to any aid, and making the minimum possible alteration of the route from the state that you found it. Not able to maintain this style, the first ascent attempt is abandoned in a manner that leaves it as unaltered as possible making it available for future attempts.

I would agree there is pretty good consensus that GU FAs are the "best" method to establish a route.

However the lines get fuzzy, especially when it comes to establishing harder climbs. Lots of people will climb a new route on TR, but don't consider the FA to occur until it is lead clean (which by definition I believe is untrue). Conversely lots of great free routes were often FA'd on aid. Often is the case on shorter routes, people will sanitize the line prior to sending it (cleaning, trundling, etc.).

I'm wondering if staunch GU FAists feel these are violations of the "best style" principle. Also, I wonder how much the sport would have progressed (or not progressed) if these ideals were strictly adhered to by all. For example, many of the big Valley climbs might still be undone.

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:16am PT
consider an aid climb that becomes a free climb (like many of the routes on El Capitan today)

think what climbing might have been had we waited for our craft to have so advanced that Lynne's FFA of the Nose would have been the FA

what would we have lost, what would we have gained, had that style prevailed?

so aid climbs are established with "less than best style"

that doesn't invalidate them, or say they shouldn't have been done, but it does define the FA




it is fascinating that climbers feel threatened by this discussion, especially those doing first ascents.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:20am PT
Lol!


Best!! What's best?!


There is no best!!


Only perceptions!!


Shame on you Ed!



Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:21am PT
Simple answer to the question...

To me the best style would be hiking in somewhere far from the road, spent a night below a giant rock face that makes me want to sh#t myself, than waking up and picking a line up the middle. Climbing at my limit for majority of the day, doing it on gear (just because putting in bolts is a lot of work and requires extra gear), no falls/no hangs/no aid, topping out, getting to the top with someone I enjoy climbing with, getting back to camp with just enough time to have an awesome dinner, reflecting on experience and passing the f*#k out after a jug of hot chocolate. That is what I would like the most. I would have the most fun this way.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:22am PT
I could have replaced "best" by "global minimum of the cost function" and proceeded to lecture on what that means...


but I'll stick to my guns, you are all being intentionally argumentative

I have stated what the consensus "best style first ascent" is...
...you all know that.

What you are arguing over is why you don't always do a "best style first ascent"

Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:25am PT
if the style of the first ascent requires fixed gear (thereby making style an ethical issue), then best style needs to appeal to some other principle?

no? (honest question)

remove the fixed gear question, and all you have is style. As such, style is limited to the best style... for you. Else style is a comparative. If comparative, is it then competition? Does that motivate the 'race to be first?' As such, the race to be first informs the style and ethic?





madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:28am PT
that doesn't invalidate them, or say the shouldn't have been done, but it does define the FA

I'm glad Harding did the Nose when he did it, and I think it's undeniable that the climbing community has vastly benefited from what he did when he did it.

What definitions like yours, Ed, struggle with are the intangibles of climbing that cannot be captured by such austere definitions of "best style." You cannot effectively objectify "best style" as a one-size-fits-all analysis. What people gain from climbing is so varied, and what counts as "best" for the climbing community is so tied to what many/most are seeking when they climb, and that subjective valuation changes so much over time and with technological changes themselves, that even the attempt at objectivity is a profound distortion of value.

it is fascinating that climbers feel threatened by this discussion, especially those doing first ascents.

What evidence do you have that anybody is feeling threatened?

I, for one, simply think your definition is mistaken and that it loads the discussion toward "objective assessment" of "style," when I deny that this can be done.
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:30am PT
it is fascinating that climbers feel threatened by this discussion, especially those doing first ascents.

Interesting observation. I think it reflects our underlying desire to beat somebody (Again, I borrow this from Lito Tejada-Flores). If there is a "best" FA style, then I must be better than someone else if I do my FA in a "better" style than that someone else.

I'm still pondering your discussion about the Nose, though. I'm applying that to a different FA, namely that of Higher Cathedral Spire. By the end of WWII, the Spire was climbed all free. Was the FFA done in better style than the FA? In one sense, yes, because it involved no aid, but it also involved a lot less uncertainty and pushing into unknown territory. Using 1934 California climbing technology to climb the Spire was, to me, an amazingly bold feat. As great as the FFA was, it just doesn't seem as bold a thrust as the FA.

I suspect that the set of climbing styles may not be well-ordered.

John
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:35am PT
I have stated what the consensus "best style first ascent" is...
...you all know that.

Read: "I'm right, and you all know that."

What you are arguing over is why you don't always do a "best style first ascent"

Read: "The very fact that you are arguing with me demonstrates the moral turpitude that disallows you from doing anything valuable in climbing."

LOL
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:35am PT
I, for one, simply think your definition is mistaken and that it loads the discussion toward "objective assessment" of "style," when I deny that this can be done.

so you advocate that there is no style? or that there is no definable style? or no definable "best" style?

I think you would be wrong to assert any of those. I think your ideas have more to to with intention then with style, and we climb with many different intentions, intentions often justify the style we climb with...

I also think you feel that you would be held to a "best style" definition, but that is not my intention... it is not a matter of judging good or bad... but a comparison with what is "best"

jstan

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:35am PT
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYG0ZuTv5rs

Those interested in why we climb and why we climb the way we do, might consider watching the above study of levels of stress found among monkey cultures and among human societies. Very strong parallels exist. So strong I expect their language will immediately become understandable once we identify the vocalization that translates as "you f*#king as#@&%e." ST like even as to the practice of banning.

Enjoy.
Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:47am PT
I don't think doing it in the best style really matters to the climbing community as a whole, but to the individual. If I put up a route in the best style possible, it feels better than a TD FA. But over time those feels fade and what is left is simply the route itself. So long as it is a good one, I'm happy. But then again I'm just a average dude with nothing to prove. I'm with V on this one - girls just wanna have fun.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:49am PT
I'm just teasing Ed.


But seriously, if there was Bosch bulldogs in 1955 we wouldn't even consider having this conversation.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:49am PT
a first ascent usually "takes" the route

once taken, it is not available to anyone else in the community to do a "first ascent" on

so it is a matter of concern to the community.

further, the style with which the first ascent is done in may trigger other consequences, e.g. climbing bans by land managers

it is not just an "individual matter" it has consequences for the entire community
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:50am PT
I also think you feel that you would be held to a "best style" definition, but that is not my intention... it is not a matter of judging good or bad... but a comparison with what is "best"

I'm now confident that I don't understand you fully, because the passage just quoted seems contradictory to me.

Are you treating "good" and "bad" as absolutes and "comparison with what is 'best'" as on a sliding scale?

Climbers do judge the "style" of first ascents. My contention with your definition and even approach has to do with the fact, not supposition but fact, that the evaluation contemplates a vast array of "variables" that are not objectively quantifiable (intention being just one tiny one).

You seem to want to isolate "style" according to your definition, but that then co-opts that term in a way that literally makes it unavailable in its otherwise WIDELY used contexts! What term would you then put in its place in such contexts? "Ethics?" (Oh, please, God, no!)

We DO mean by "style" a host of intangibles that your definition simply does not and cannot capture. And that fact is what makes the inevitable "judging" of first ascents so fraught with controversy. The "judges" are using varying and moving targets of "best."

I certainly understand the desire to quantify "best," but your stab at it reveals exactly why the effort is doomed.

No, instead, climbers will continue to passionately talk past each other, as well they should, because they are often not talking about "the same thing" at all.

No problem. Most of the time we work our way closer to understanding of each other, which is the point of discussion in the first place.

Reminds me of a quote from somebody: "The biggest mistake in communication is the belief that it is happening at all."
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 11:56am PT
I disagree,
and I think you are arguing from a position of anticipating being judged for FAs you've done...

that isn't my intention, however, defining "best style" doesn't have to include any "law" regarding adherence to that style... I'm not advocating that....

you could then ask, legitimately, what is the purpose of defining a "best style" if not to beat everyone into submission... but there is where we discuss why we use "less then best style"




Vitaliy M. gave a description of a climb that fits all of our ideals of a first ascent, it is done in "the best style"

you disagree?
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:06pm PT
I disagree with it being universally best. Because each climber is unique. Each climber can seek different experience from their FA on a different day too. Maybe some day what I described is best, but on some other day he feels like rap bolting a beautiful face pitch, or putting up a bolted slab death route. Moods change. There is no universal best. I don't think there is at least. Just my opinion.
rbord

Boulder climber
atlanta
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:10pm PT
In a culture who's heroes leave their families behind die free soloing, leave their friends behind die wingsuiting, risk their dogs life taking them a ing suiting, a debate about "best style" seems uniquely human.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:19pm PT
For me, "best" and "style" just can't reasonably go together, no matter how badly we'd like them to. Whether it's climbing, fashion, or surfing.
Just too subjective.

But since we're talking climbing, I'd agree with you Ed if "best" was replaced with "lowest impact" and "style" with "method".

For me lowest impact is preferable.

Ed, I don't envy you for starting this discussion!!!

Edit
The "style" of FA is the least of my worries right now...
I've got nanometers to worry about! And where the last few bolts should go, hand drilled on rap, of course!
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:19pm PT
The best FA style is obviously on sight free solo. Hard to top that without contrivances.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:21pm PT
The first point to be kept in mind is the preservation and maintenance as exactly as possible of the natural scenery; the restriction, that is to say within the narrowest limits consistent with the necessary accommodation of visitors, of all artificial constructions markedly inharmonious with the scenery or which would unnecessarily obscure, distort, or distract from the dignity of the scenery... in permitting the sacrifice of anything that would be of the slightest value to future visitors to the convenience, bad taste, playfulness, carelessness, or wanton destructiveness of present visitors, we probably yield in each case the interest of uncounted millions to the selfishness of a few individuals.

Frederick Law Olmstead, 1865

We can't or don't always decide to leave no trace, and sometimes we decide it's worth what is lost, but more often I think people like to think in terms of what is created or gained, which is probably a bit of arrogance on our part.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:21pm PT
if you could do the route without Red Pointing, wouldn't it be better?

what considerations should the First Ascent take into account when choosing a style?
no one answered (I think, but I can't read that carefully) regarding why subsequent ascents matter TO THE FIRST ASCENT?

my "best style" basically leaves open the possibility that, having failed at a first ascent attempt, that other first ascent attempts are possible


in fact, the idea of an "attempt" leaves open the possibility of failure,

is there no longer a sense that failure is an option? that all first ascents must succeed?

interesting if so
Stewart Johnson

climber
lake forest
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:25pm PT
No oxygen Solo no Sherpa
Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:25pm PT
I see your point, Ed, about the impact to the climbing community and I do feel GU FAs are the style in which to strive for. However I don't feel someone who aided something 50 years ago or even did a new route TD yesterday “took” anything away from me. In fact, I feel they provided a good for me. With so much rock out there, FAists have inspired me to find my own piece of rock and get after it.

As far as access goes, I think that is not a debate on style but rather an issue of property rights and other external factors such as ecologic issues set by land managers. Bolting and excessive cleaning of a route (before or after the fact), damage to the land by new trails, etc., can be cause for loss of access regardless of the style in which a route was put up. However I do agree adopting the GU FA ideal minimizes the risk of access loss by slowing the growth of new routes but it does not eliminate the risk.

Great OP, Ed!
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:38pm PT
my "best style" basically leaves open the possibility that, having failed at a first ascent attempt, that other first ascent attempts are possible


do you only get ONE first attempt? or can you fail to pull the move, and then downclimb and still be first? Isn't that a failure of 'best' style as a univocal principle (as opposed to a subjective experience)?


like the questions Ed!
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:42pm PT
Ed,

I think best can be impossible to quantify with such a broad range of opinions.

But if you asked me "most respected", "preferred", or "favorite" style of FA I would be able to give you an immediate and definite answer:

































Depends.



:-)
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 12:53pm PT
if you could do the route without Red Pointing, wouldn't it be better?

I think that question gets us back to your original post in which Oppenheimer tries to set down criteria for ordering styles. I have a hard time with the concept of "best," but I would have no problem if your sentence substituted "a more difficult accomplishment" for "better." The best "style" depends on what I want to accomplish by that FA. Since I usually want adventure, which requires uncertainty (if not incompetence), doing a FA ground-up, on sight, with natural protection that leaves no trace, creates more unceertainty than any other style with a risk that's acceptable considering my obligations to my family. Accordingly, for me, that's the best style. For someone else, it may be a free solo. That's why I question the existence of an objective "best" style.

John
Chief

climber
The NW edge of The Hudson Bay
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:10pm PT
Hard to do better than on sight, no rope, barefoot, no chalk.
It's all shades of grey after that.
eeyonkee

Trad climber
Golden, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:11pm PT
I agree with the well-stated position by Warbler.

Sheesh, Ed, I feel for you. I'm sure you didn't see this coming:) But, as I suspect you know, neither me nor any of the posters really could help themselves in their responses. We all have only the illusion that we are actually in control of our next actions. In reality, they just "bubble up" based on who knows what. "Forgive them Lord, for they know not what they do (me included)". This is one of a very few passages in the Bible that resonates with me (I added the last part).
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:15pm PT
I disagree,
and I think you are arguing from a position of anticipating being judged for FAs you've done...

Let's not personalize this. I'm not. You shouldn't. I've been judged for decades on my FAs, so I'm not "anticipating" anything. LOL

Actually, those decades gave me lots of time to think about the fundamental nature of climbing evaluations in general. One overarching feature comes through every time.

When one uses terms like "good," "bad," "better," "worse," and "best," such terms have two features: 1) they are evaluative terms that are vacuous without logically presuming an evaluative context and employment; 2) they are typically treated as objective, when in almost all cases their referents are subjective features of reality.

So, the overarching feature of such evaluations is that the "judges" employ such terms AS THOUGH they have THE handle on the "proper" referents of such terms, which "empowers" the "judge" to "critique" climbs according to how they ("objectively") "measure up."

The problem of such "evaluations" is two-fold: 1) the mistaken belief that such a level of objectivity exists in the first place; 2) the employment of such "standards" to critique routes.

that isn't my intention, however, defining "best style" doesn't have to include any "law" regarding adherence to that style... I'm not advocating that....

But the whole history of climbing demonstrates that people DO impose law-like contexts on people. From Robbins' infamous chopping onward (there were other such events, but Robbins' popularized the Valley Christian syndrome), those self-styled (pun intended) zealots HAVE held other climbers to THEIR (purportedly objective) definitions of "best."

By simply claiming that you have "arrived" at THE definition of "best style," you not only invite but by definition insist that these very sorts of evaluations must take place.

Of course "evaluation" is one thing, and "enforcement" is another; and I don't take you to be supporting any sort of "enforcement."

But the problem is that people naturally become zealots for those "standards" that they believe are objective and that put them into an elite camp. Enforcement inevitably follows. (And I do mean inevitably, even if only subtly.)

you could then ask, legitimately, what is the purpose of defining a "best style" if not to beat everyone into submission... but there is where we discuss why we use "less then best style"

So, see? You recognize the problem I just addressed above. The problem is actually more subtle than you are saying, though.

Even if "the purpose" is NOT to "beat everyone into submission," the best of intentions have a sick way of flailing themselves against the ragged rocks of human nature.

If there are objective standards, enforcement WILL necessarily follow. And all sorts of arguments will be trotted out to justify such enforcement: Limited resources that must be self-policed, damage done to the whole climbing community, etc., etc.

Robbins championed such arguments bitd, and they've been echoed ever since. All a huge mistake when coupled with arguments about style!

The idea that you can go back in history and impose a "what if we waited for Lynn Hill" sort of standard is ludicrous, as it is CAUSALLY absurd! Climbing evolves (I use that term carefully, rather than "progresses") BY appeal to what has come before.

IF a near-nude free-solo is "better" than the FA of the Nose, it is only possible because of rubber and shoes developed over time and based upon the NEEDS of people seeking that "higher standard" as a RESULT of what came before. As each generation contemplates the accomplishments of their elders, they keep asking the SAME question the elders asked: How do we push the edges of the envelope even further?

But "further" is meaningless without the context laid down by the elders. The Nose is what it is today BECAUSE of the boldness and vision of Harding. And that vision has been INCORPORATED into the "standards" of today. Our present "standards" would not have developed in a vacuum.

So, in every time-slice the idea that we should "hold off" until somebody can "put the thing up right" is just ridiculous, and that is BECAUSE "right" is perpetually a moving target.

Just so, the idea that some "standard" or another IS "the right" is the very basis of enforcement and the seed and root of it.

Vitaliy M. gave a description of a climb that fits all of our ideals of a first ascent, it is done in "the best style"

you disagree?

Yes! See above.

The biggest problem your putative definition has, Ed (seriously, with all due respect), is that it is logically predicated on some definition of "climbing" itself. There can be no "best style" of climbing, unless you can provide an objective definition of "climbing."

But that reveals the fundamental problem with your whole approach.

Has there been no "best style" FA of Cerro Torre? Everest? K2? El Cap? Half Dome?

And the list of such questions is literally endless!

So, to define "climbing" in such a way that almost ALL of climbing history is far, far below the "best style" you define, just means that you have foundered on the classic "ought implies can" principle.

Anything you OUGHT to do must be something that you CAN in principle do.

Let's say that I argue conclusively that you OUGHT to lift the Empire State building five times each day by yourself with your bare hands. You would immediately and correctly respond: "That is impossible, so it can't be something I ought to do." In short, you are saying: "That CANNOT be the standard because nobody can rise to that standard."

Ahh... you are thinking now: "But people CAN rise to the standard of my definition, because it HAS been done. Rarely, but it HAS been done."

Really? There HAVE been nude solo first ascents on K2, Cerro Torre, El Cap, Half Dome, etc., etc., etc.???

Sorry. Not once. Not ever. Nobody is even remotely contemplating such ascents, even with the "standards" of our present day!

So, you are effectively taking "the standard" of, say, bouldering and treating it as "the standard" for big walls and big mountains. And now the ridiculousness of "the standard" becomes blazingly apparent!

Your definition literally pushes "evaluations" to conclude that ascents of big walls and big mountains don't constitute "climbing" at all... so FAR they are from "the standard!"

But if these exemplars are not truly CLIMBING, then the "climbing" to which you apply your "standard" would not ever have emerged in the first place.

Rock climbing emerged as a crucible REFINEMENT of mountaineering, and bouldering, sport-climbing, etc. all emerged as yet more fine-grained crucible activities as refinements of rock climbing.

And thus the "wait for Lynn Hill" argument is revealed as entirely ludicrous. Lynn Hill NEEDED Harding's accomplishments (and I would expect that she would agree).

And what "climbing" IS cannot be captured by the sort of "objective" definition you are seeking! CLIMBING is made up of countless intangibles that concern subjective values and in-time contexts that are not laboratory-repeatable!

You can't discover the "physics of standards," like you appear to be seeking, Ed.

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:17pm PT
if you could do the route without Red Pointing, wouldn't it be better?

Good question. But at times failing repeatedly could make it SOOO MUCH more sweater than getting the onsight. I was bouldering at the gym yesterday and onsighted one bouler problem, which was same grade as the other boulder problem that I had to work for several days to get. It was SUPER sweet to finally get it. So sweet I flew up to the ‘finish’ jug from the last hold I finally stuck. I think if one has access to a climbing area without a giant approach, redpointing is probably a lot more fun than onsighting a long route.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:42pm PT
it will take me some time to read madbolter1's response, I've still got work to do today...

Dingus, I accept that you might have many reasons for doing a route in a particular style, but I maintain that we know what the "best style" is, and even though we might not choose this style, it remains a fixed point.

There may be many legitimate reasons, tradeoffs, but the idea of the "best style" remains the best style in all our feelings.

Oddly, being accused of a physicist's precision is interesting, because that initial statement is really very broad, and intuitive, but it captures the essence of climbing first ascents that all of us have experienced.

And that statement is a supposition. But one that I feel very safe in making.

Brian in SLC

Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
Jun 20, 2014 - 01:54pm PT
Sucks to be next...

Interesting thoughts. Lower angle, stances available when viewed from below, perhaps an opportunity for protection when viewed from below...yeah, ground up, on sight...sign me up.

Steep, no stances, some loose rock, razor blades in pockets and cracks (ie limestone)...out of self preservation...top down clean, maybe addition of fixed pro. I usually don't suss out the moves too much on a pre-inspection, although, will fiddle about if I place a bolt to make sure it can be clipped comfy through a range of height and reach options.

Best first ascent style might be difference for steep, sport climbing. If you solo at a very high level, then, doing an "FA" per se, and, reporting it as such on terrain that's steep with no options for traditional gear...I guess that's good style at some level, but, also might take the route off the table as a nice sport route. Depends on point of view.

Hard to articulate, easy to ramble about for me.

Oh well...here's to unclimbed rock and new adventures, unclimbed or no!
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:03pm PT
Dingus, I accept that you might have many reasons for doing a route in a particular style, but I maintain that we know what the "best style" is, and even though we might not choose this style, it remains a fixed point.

There may be many legitimate reasons, tradeoffs, but the idea of the "best style" remains the best style in all our feelings.


Fixed point? In this context, there is so much contingency of value that a fixed point would be impossible without consensus, agreed to freely.

Perchance are you trying to create consensus, or identify the principles around which consensus should be obvious? Either would difficult, even for reasonable minds that were interested in the topic to begin with.

whitemeat

Big Wall climber
San Luis Obispo, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:03pm PT
Ground up... FA of salethe seemed legit...
Bullwinkle

Boulder climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:19pm PT
The problem with a "Fixed Point" is that Climbing ethics have evolved over time. What came before this Point and what happens after said Point is part of this process. The one thing that I've noticed in over 42years of Cimbing is, nothing is true, therefor everything is permissible.

As you have stated Ed, this is an old debate, from a bunch of Old Guys. . .
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:29pm PT
Oppenheimer's statement is beautiful, complex, and thought provoking. It is no surprise that Ed would post it as a position statement for what he believes to be the ideal of style. No surprise either that Steve Grossman first posted it on ST.

I do think there has been a muddling of ethics and style. To clear things up, I hope, are the definitions we are working with for each.

Ethics
the principles of conduct governing an individual or a group

Style
a way of behaving or approaching a situation that is characteristic of or favored by a particular person.

Style is a personal issue. It concerns what we do in terms of what validates our values and makes us feel good.

Ethics guide our conduct to be beneficial to ourselves and others.

First ascents have both aspects. The style of a first ascent refers to the expression of vision, will, and ability of the climber making the first ascent. The ethic of a first ascent has to do with it's benefit to the individual and the group (climbing community).

The sticking point here in climbing discussions is the ethics of climbing resource impact. Here is where the community is split. Some in our group value a wilderness "leave no trace" ethic and some don't.

When no one can tell I was ever there I have satisfied my personal climbing ethic and I have contributed to a group ethic of supporting others to use the same resource into the future. That ethic also shows respect for other user groups to also respectfully enjoy our common natural resources.

Melissa's submission of Olmstead's quote concerning a wilderness resource preservation ethic is brilliant. It is also authoritative and proves that particular ethic has history. It is so good I have to include part of it here for all of us to ponder....

...in permitting the sacrifice of anything that would be of the slightest value to future visitors to the convenience, bad taste, playfulness, carelessness, or wanton destructiveness of present visitors, we probably yield in each case the interest of uncounted millions to the selfishness of a few individuals.

drljefe posits a more effective way of addressing the ethics issue, IMHO.


For me, "best" and "style" just can't reasonably go together, no matter how badly we'd like them to. Whether it's climbing, fashion, or surfing.
Just too subjective.

But since we're talking climbing, I'd agree with you Ed if "best" was replaced with "lowest impact" and "style" with "method".

For me lowest impact is preferable.

Ed, I don't envy you for starting this discussion!!!

Edit
The "style" of FA is the least of my worries right now...
I've got nanometers to worry about! And where the last few bolts should go, hand drilled on rap, of course!

drljefe has proposed that reasonable lowest impact is a viable standard for our climbing ethic.

Here are some issues concerning ethics taken from previous posts.

Convenience bolts at belay stations
When did many belays get fixed in mostly tradtional area? At Devils Tower and many other "trad araes" belays are fixed on crack routes

mike m has a good point IMHO (it pisses me off, too, mike!).

Bolted rappel routes
did you object to the rap route down Royal Arches?

Couch master has raised a solid question here. This is solely an issue of convenience superceding the ethic of minimizing impact.

Power Drill Bolting
This was alluded to by drljefe. Here's my rant - power drilling bolts is too easy (not easy, just too easy). Drilling bolts should be hard, bitter, distasteful labor because it makes the deed self-limiting. You'll think long and hard about its worth before drilling that bolt and you'll have time to consider the deed before your ego gets you to do it blindly.

Below is some stuff I'd posted elsewhere and seemed appropriate here.

On ethics and style.
I was speaking to the lack of wilderness and environmental ethics that we as a group tend to have. I still stand on the idea that chalk, tape wads, rap sling nests, bolt stations on long climbs where natural anchors are available, bolting routes that could be top roped, packing another bolt line between all the others, and bolting next to lines that take natural gear is lousy outdoor ethics. We could stand to clean our house.

Style is a different thing altogether. That other stuff about my personal preference to gear just lines up with my preference for single speed bikes, long bows, open oar locks when rafting, hand tools, and generally choosing the simpler technology. I just feel more connected. Just a personal preference. That doesn't mean I'm taking hexes to Indian Creek!

I find inspiration too when I limit my tools to expand my experience. It also inspires when I see others do it. I innately respect their artful and internal pursuit of climbing. Think Jim Erickson not returning to a climb he'd fallen on, Henry Barber pulling the ropes between attempts on a pitch, or the high and, hopefully, internally driven art of free soloing. It's cool when people raise the bar and inspires me even when the bar is too high for me cause it gets me to raise my personal bar.

On style only.
In hunting, the tools you use will show how skilled a hunter you are. Use a long range rifle with a high powered scope may bag you a buck, but if you're good you can do it with a muzzle loader. If you're really good, you can do it with a compound bow. if youre better, you can do it with a longbow, and if you're really a badass you can jump out of a tree with a Bowie knife and get it done.

Having less technology between us and the experience forces us to be more skilled, more trained, and more conscious. So much of what we do in climbing has become just another consumer culture sport where all that matters is who has the bigger.....numbers. It doesn't matter how hard you climb. It matters what you experience and who you become from doing it, IMHO. If you do a given climb racked to the nines with all the modern gizmos and chalked to the elbows, that's cool. If you do the same climb in a two inch swami and a rack of old hexes sans chalk, that's really cool.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:49pm PT
Ed wrote: but I maintain that we know what the "best style" is, and even though we might not choose this style, it remains a fixed point.


Only in the minds of those that can't see the other ways.
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jun 20, 2014 - 02:50pm PT
I guess my point was, if the route is a rappel bolted sport route, the first ascent "style" isn't important. It's not the measure of value for a sport route. In fact, unless the route is 5.15 or has some historic value, I think most people could care less who got the first ascent.

On the other hand, I would personally say the best first ascent style is doing a route and leaving absolutely no trace. No spray, no grades, no topos, no reports. Just climb and leave the route completly virgin for the next to come along. And when someone comes and repeats the route 10 or 20 years later and claims the first, smile to yourself knowing the truth. Bouldering and some kinds of trad are conducive to this kind of first ascent. Obviously this style of first ascent is not conducive to establishing good quality sport routes, which are also great to have around.
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 20, 2014 - 03:16pm PT
Oddly, being accused of a physicist's precision is interesting, because that initial statement is really very broad, and intuitive, but it captures the essence of climbing first ascents that all of us have experienced.

I'm not granting "precision," Ed. I don't believe that physics is nearly as precise as most physicists think it is.

I'm saying "objectivity," and I'm saying that you don't have even that in your definition. This is, interestingly enough, something that you now seem to admit. You are now calling it "broad and intuitive."

Now you seem to back away from objectivity and replace it with something like inter-subjectivity, but then you treat "inter-subjective" as though that gets you everything you want from "objective."

But even that doesn't "capture the essence of climbing first ascents that all of us have experienced." That statement wildly begs the question!

The first ascent of K2 was a wildly different experience, with wildly different goals and standards (even regarding agreed-upon "best style") than the first ascent of Half Dome or El Cap. The first ascent of a really hard boulder problem has a wildly different target in every respect than the first ascent of Cerro Torre.

And you ARE getting pushed into recognizing the many intangibles I referenced earlier. These are intangibles that your definition entirely ignores, yet they are indeed definitive.

Again, if you start by defining "climbing" (good luck), you'll have an easier task of defining "best style." At present you have the cart before the horse imho.
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 20, 2014 - 04:19pm PT
"Best" is a hypothetical ideal. For climbing it would have to be free solo. Clearly a rope is a compromise.

Your ideal Ed, could be read as accounting for that, but it's unclear. Otherwise doing an fa of a free route in the manner you describe, but with a rope, is shall we say, less than best, and every other incremental step away from that ideal, somewhat less than best, but hopefully, as best as can be, in a given circumstance.

But this really is about the 'quality' of the first ascent. It may say nothing about subsequent ascents. Sometimes the manner of the first ascent is to the detriment of subsequent ascents. Free solo FA's could be viewed that way.

But dicey ascents of sparsely protected routes, ascents that force ascentionists to climb in the style of the fa, provide as uniform as possible an experience for every ascent team. The Bachar Yeran is not for everyone, but having done it carries a certain meaning.

Is that better than making a fun route safe in the first place? I don't know. And I think it's situational

Modern pro has made many sorts of routes less sketch than was the first ascent. Sometimes they make it a different climb altogether.

In the first Phoenix rock guidebook, Jim Waugh listed first ascents, first free ascents, and "best" ascent. I really liked that.

think what climbing might have been had we waited for our craft to have so advanced that Lynne's FFA of the Nose would have been the FA

I think we would have been poorer for it. It was the thousands of ascents before, on aid that made that ascent stand out, even though it's not really a free ascent because it was done on Jardine's chipped (ie aid) holds. Still by Ed's definition I think it counts as " best" at least as of '94, or whenever it was.

Grug, I think Ed knew Exactly what to expect when he started this thread!!
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 04:20pm PT
actually Bob, I don't think of it as totally black and white, and I am accepting of other styles...


I'm just saying that Vitaliy M.'s story of a great day is at least a romantic example of "best style"

it isn't from some dogma, and I don't think it is a peculiar cultural position, either, unless that is a human culture in general.

an on sight solo first ascent is a really pure form of "best style" but not necessary

I'm not backing away from it...


objective, subjective, I think in this discussion our esthetic certainly is an important factor.

why is "leave no trace" an objective style? I don't think it is even though I think it is important

why is minimizing aid an objective style? I don't think it is, but one has to wonder what we derive from the experience of climbing if we overcome all of our physical limitations with a technological solution. Why is one technology acceptable (e.g. chalk, sticky rubber, high tech clothing) and others not acceptable (e.g. bolt ladders, etc) and what about the "in between stuff" like hang dogging (definitely aid), bolting from hooks (definitely aid), rap bolting, previewing, rehearsing...

I've been climbing 40 years and certainly while some of these questions are old, the climbing had to develop long enough to put these issues into perspective.

The "California Rules" are derived from the realization by Frost and Robbins and others that you could just bolt your way up something. So there was no risk, no way you wouldn't succeed in doing a first ascent if you used all the means at your disposal to do it.

Harding's retort as a question "what's the difference between a $100 a night hooker and a $300 a night hooker" has an interesting inferred answer, you pay more and have a better time? (I don't know... but it isn't just about the relative morality I suspect).

But we did have to get to the point when this issue formed. Before those walls were attempted and done we couldn't even formulate a style.

And climbing is still changing in many ways, but the styles of doing first ascents have become very mature, with very little new in the past decade. Maybe I've missed something (but I think not).

So yes, things change... what is more interesting to me, at least, is to wonder what could have been done had the likes of our best climbers today tackled climbing problems that we did in "less than best style" in the past, in particular, if we had only insisted in FFA as the definition of a first ascent.

I know that is hypothetical, by hypotheticals as fiction are a way of exploring a question. And they do inform us on style.

When determining a FA would be impossible using the "best style" and choose a less than best style, are we properly taking into account the future climbers that may actually be able to do it in the best style, and maybe we should defer to them the FA.

Just a question.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:07pm PT
Ed wrote: When determining a FA would be impossible using the "best style" and choose a less than best style, are we properly taking into account the future climbers that may actually be able to do it in the best style, and maybe we should defer to them the FA.


Well time has told us no...head-pointing, pre-placed and excessive top-roping are all accepted in trad climbing now.

Things change, climbing has evolve and in my mind really not risking limb or life for.
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:23pm PT
When determining a FA would be impossible using the "best style" and choose a less than best style, are we properly taking into account the future climbers that may actually be able to do it in the best style, and maybe we should defer to them the FA.

Just a question.

Good question ED. But what's "best style"? I'm having a hard time figuring it out from everything I've read so far. Until I'm sure on what "best style" is I cant see my self deferring.

Would an X on the end of a rating make it best style?

Ed you got me hook line and sinker, nice troll.
jstan

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:31pm PT
When determining a FA would be impossible using the "best style" and choose a less than best style, are we properly taking into account the future climbers that may actually be able to do it in the best style, and maybe we should defer to them the FA.

As long as one does not change the rock and its environs one can do exactly as one pleases, afterwards quietly going home. No claimed FA, no problem. The whole issue evaporates.

How can we have such huge arguments about something that can be done 100 different ways. Mind you with 12,000 other similar climbs within a fifteen minute walk.

Our heads have to be seriously out of whack.
Ksolem

Trad climber
Monrovia, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:34pm PT
Lower angle, stances available when viewed from below, perhaps an opportunity for protection when viewed from below

Bachar "stance drilled" Pick Pocket, Owens River Gorge.
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:40pm PT
Serious question here?

I'm heading out to do some top rope soloing and I need to put some bolts in to hang my rope so I can climb. This climb has never been done so it would be an FA and possibly a FFA if it goes free for me if I'm strong enough.

Can I clam an FA or a FAA even though it was a top rope?
Should I just defer and just go climb in a gym?

I really want to climb outside but it might be to hard for me, and with in the next 50 years some one could just come along and on sight solo it possibly. And there will only be 2 bolts left when I'm done unless I decide to rap bolt it too.
jstan

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:48pm PT
Just boulder up on it till you don't feel comfortable going higher. Down climb. Keep trying it.

It is great fun and you can very clearly see you are learning. Go lead some other roped climbs. Even on those you will be able to sense you have learned something.
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 05:51pm PT
As long as one does not change the rock and its environs one can do exactly as one pleases, afterwards quietly going home. No claimed FA, no problem. The whole issue evaporates.

Jstan: have you ever clipped a bolt before? Or have you ever placed one?

Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:03pm PT
As long as one does not change the rock and its environs one can do exactly as one pleases, afterwards quietly going home. No claimed FA, no problem. The whole issue evaporates.

I may have read this wrong, because the issue sure would evaporate.
But when I go climbing I seem to clip a lot of bolts.
So I'm trying to figure out what's going on here?

Are bolted climb's of any kind not ok?

I'm confused.
StahlBro

Trad climber
San Diego, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:07pm PT
Walk up to something you know nothing about, climb it, leave no trace
jstan

climber
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:10pm PT
I'm actually trying to help.

Watch that NGS documentary on Stress I recommended. Then use it to establish exactly what it is
you seek from climbing. Expect doing this to be difficult. Everyone is different and you are no
exception. Climbing can be pretty dangerous. If you are taking risks, you owe it to yourself to know
why you are doing it.
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:23pm PT
I'm actually trying to help.

Watch that NGS documentary on Stress I recommended. Then use it to establish exactly what it is
you seek from climbing. Expect doing this to be difficult. Everyone is different and you are no
exception. Climbing can be pretty dangerous. If you are taking risks, you owe it to yourself to know
why you are doing it.

ok, I see.

Then use it to establish exactly what it is
you seek from climbing

I have been asking myself the question lately, why do I climb?
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:37pm PT
You don't already know? Then you're not really a climber.
StahlBro

Trad climber
San Diego, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 06:42pm PT
^^^^^
yep
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jun 20, 2014 - 07:11pm PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 07:32pm PT
You don't already know? Then you're not really a climber.

Donini, coming from you that means a lot. And that's exactly what I needed to hear. The more climbers I meet or people who consider them selves climbers the less I would ever want to be one. So I'm really glad I was never one to begin with.

Jstan: Just checked out that documentary. I had actually seen it before..
Rudbud

Gym climber
Grover Beach, CA
Jun 20, 2014 - 07:35pm PT
Not very nice!

Actually super stoked, Im glad Donini said it, it holds a lot of value.
Thanks Donini!
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 20, 2014 - 07:53pm PT
I want you to want me, I need you to need me...


I am going to do some of the best climbing this planet has ever seen with the greatest climbers that exist. You can put all your money on it.

mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 20, 2014 - 08:51pm PT
No debate if the premise has already been decided.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 12:06am PT
did you object to the rap route down Royal Arches?

when I look at the Royal Arches rap route the first thing I see is a convenience. It allows climbers to avoid walking down the North Dome Gully.

I actually don't think it is much faster (it is slower actually), and it is probably not safer.

Like a lot of things we do, we make climbing convenient... rap routes, belay anchors, etc.

But for the most part these aren't a consideration of doing a first ascent, these are considerations regarding subsequent ascents.

Installing sport routes is largely a consideration of subsequent routes, not first ascents. We justify doing a sport route in less than best style because the primary intention is to put in good sport routes for others to climb.

The routes can be very good climbing to those who come to climb them, certainly employing less than best style on the first ascent helps insure that the routes are installed well.

But the first ascent is not done in best style.

One might ask, "who cares?" but once again, if sport routes could be put in using "best style" then should they go in using other styles?



I think that defining "climbing" takes us off topic, and I don't actually think there is much of an issue. The "best style" definition I proposed in the OP works for big mountains, small mountains, boulders, etc...

we don't chip boulder problems when we do those problems in "best style"

we don't use aid

we don't rap and pre inspect

we might not send the problem the first time, so we do rehearse moves on our way to the send... compared to someone flashing the problem on sight, first ascent... that's better style than projecting the problem no question about it.

it is still a proud send, just not in the best style possible.


If I go to climb a big mountain I still can apply the definition. In some ways it is what super alpinism is all about. That is best style. Sieging a peak isn't best style, fixing and carrying loads, etc, isn't best style. Using aid isn't best style.

Interestingly, using ice tools is probably within the realm of best style...

guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
Jun 21, 2014 - 12:24am PT
Vitality seems to have described it best to moi in a simple but concise paragraph:


To me the best style would be hiking in somewhere far from the road, spent a night below a giant rock face that makes me want to sh#t myself, than waking up and picking a line up the middle. Climbing at my limit for majority of the day, doing it on gear (just because putting in bolts is a lot of work and requires extra gear), no falls/no hangs/no aid, topping out, getting to the top with someone I enjoy climbing with, getting back to camp with just enough time to have an awesome dinner, reflecting on experience and passing the f*#k out after a jug of hot chocolate. That is what I would like the most. I would have the most fun this way.
Todd Eastman

climber
Bellingham, WA
Jun 21, 2014 - 12:34am PT
Depends whether the style judges prefer difficulty or minimal impact to be the determining factor...

... egos tend to drive FA parties towards the local style judges preferences.
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Jun 21, 2014 - 12:48am PT
I do alot of FAs.......in all sorts of different styles;...people "discuss" (argue over ) FA style;...I am not too concerned at this point/time in my life......as I get older........I am just happy to wake up each day, hug my wife and children, not be dead or have colon cancer, not be in jail or in a wheel chair, or kidnapped in Iraq or Columbia....... and be able to still get out there and get some exercise at the crags........It's different for seniors than it is for youngsters......At least it is for me anyways.........I appreciate the fact that I get to do FAs PERIOD...in ANY style........I truly appreciate that........each time I do a new route ...I say...."Cool;...there goes another one;.....I am amazed!".....I am appreciative and thankful.......I know I am a lucky sucka....


tradmanclimbs

Ice climber
Pomfert VT
Jun 21, 2014 - 04:22am PT
OOOpsi. I think I am altering the rock a bit here.. At least i am on lead;)
tradmanclimbs

Ice climber
Pomfert VT
Jun 21, 2014 - 04:25am PT
The most inportant factor of all in an FA is that you either create an amazeing climb that folks who come after you can enjoy or you leave no trace. the absolute worst is to take a great line, f*#k it all up and then not let anyone fix it.
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:16am PT
Thanks, X15X15;.....I'm on it.........
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:19am PT

Your 'best style' is not best.

DMT, Please share an example of the "best" that is not the same "best style" that Ed is stuck on(he is not the only one).

Intermission, there are food and drinks in the lobby.

clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:32am PT
Give a description of a redpoint FA? Play by play as you see it.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:46am PT
Thankyou.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:57am PT
Oh snap!!!
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 21, 2014 - 08:25am PT
You can't reason with purists, they are like the Taliban. This is dead horse that has been beaten a thousand times over.
StahlBro

Trad climber
San Diego, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 08:49am PT
Difference of opinion is what makes the world an interesting place. If all agreed all the time we would be bored to tears.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 08:57am PT
DMT, Bob and others have some worry that my definition of "best style" is some religious dogma to force people to climb first ascents in some particular manner.

I'm not advocating that at all.

What I am saying is that we can all agree that a first ascent put up in that style is a good first ascent. In some ways the description of that style of first ascent is constructed to obtain that consensus.

That construction is misconstrued as a religious doctrine, which is absurd. I've given plenty of examples where other considerations come into play in a first ascent that happens not in the "best style." You can interpret that as a negative comment, but that is not what I intend at all.

My intention is simply that having constructed a definition of style we would all agree with for a first ascent, how do we justify other styles? Its a question, and an important one for planning first ascents.

I would ask DMT what climb, put up in the "best style" as described in the OP, would he object to the first ascent style?

It's a simple question, really. Would you object to a climb put up in that style because the possibility existed to red(pink)-point it? Maybe I'm confused.

jstan

climber
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:27am PT
It seems to me we are all confused.

I have argued if we merely give up the idea of "first ascent" while also preserving the environment for ourselves and others

there is no problem.

What is with the "first ascent" concept? Possibly it is based upon Whymper's trip up the matterhorn. Whymper intended that trip be translated as "Look at me! I am a Brit!" Or so some historians tell us.

I would suggest it could also be translated as "Look at me! I am one of those Brits with the free time made available to us by our habit of robbing the people in our colonies."

There is an alternative to the invoking of sheer personal ability/merit.

For example, one very difficult FA was done in the Gunks years ago because the leader

got lost.

That event led me to formulate Stannard's 53'rd law.

Without humor, all humans would be insane.




Another example describing the modern paradigm. Arguably the most revolutionary accomplishment anyone could obtain today is the discovery of the "First supersymmetric particle."

The paper announcing that discovery will have

600 authors listed.

And rightly so.


What do we conclude from all of this?

We climbers have our eyes fixed immovably upon



the past.


Edit:

I stand corrected. Tx.

Edit2:
When you think about it with age people become less interested in first ascents. It's intriguing to think that if we just hurried that change along a bit, all kinds of problems would disappear.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:42am PT
Arguably the most revolutionary accomplishment anyone could obtain today is the discovery of the "First supersymmetric particle."

actually it is the BICEP result, though super symmetry would be up there... BICEP is a grand unification result, which trumps supersymmetry




but point taken... however there are a lot of problems in not declaring routes, and almost all of them are environmental

if everyone that went up the Royal Arches route came down the North Dome Gully, then that whole area would be a mess and a formal trail would have to be put in to support the traffic. In some ways the existence of the rap route reduces the climber impact.

standardizing approaches to and descents from climbs greatly reduces impacts, and can be engineered to avoid sensitive plant species

and then describing a route specifies the installed hardware on that route, so that no additional equipment need be installed

whatever the nature of "first ascent" evolved from, in our highly populated climbing environments we find it necessary and important to systematize route descriptions

clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:44am PT
I would suggest it could also be translated as "Look at me! I am one of those Brits with the free time made available to us by our habit of robbing the people in our colonies."

The Jstan decimal system, divide the difficulty of the climb by the number of hours(free time available) the individual climber has climbed/trained in the previous three years for the JDS rating.

This will prove I am much better than Honnold, Croft, Sharma...

There is nothing confusing about it.

jstan

climber
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:57am PT
Thank you Clink.


I must have been down that gully once. Seneca had a really bad descent like that. It was so bad I expect the trail they put in needs continual attention. Which is good. The best in us is reinforced.
all in jim

climber
Jun 21, 2014 - 10:26am PT
Take a trip to Europe. Climb at a bunch of different spots and sample a bunch of different routes. Do a sport climb in kalymnos, a trad climb in Meteora, a long route in the Verdon and a short route in Volx. Notice all the people having fun and enjoying the diversity of styles. Each area has it's own fa style. In many cases routes are "opened" by one person so that others can try for the first ascent. Both the "opener" and FAist are appreciated in equal measure. But mostly, it's the people who come after who count, and routes are established with all tastes considered: safe routes, scary routes, ground-up routes, hard routes, easy routes, clean routes, dirty routes.

Many of the new climbs in America are being established in a similar manner these days. It's only in the older areas like Yosemite and the Gunks that FA style is dogmatic, with older climbers clinging to ideals of "good" or "best" style. And that's a good thing. You'll be happier, though, at other areas or when interacting in the broader climbing community if you can open your mind a bit to differing styles.

I'm thankful that climbers come in so many styles - it guarantees that there will always be a great diversity reflected in our choice of rocks to climb up.
StahlBro

Trad climber
San Diego, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 10:46am PT
stew·ard·ship noun \ˈstü-ərd-ˌship, ˈstyü-; ˈst(y)u̇rd-\
: the activity or job of protecting and being responsible for something

Full Definition of STEWARDSHIP

1
: the office, duties, and obligations of a steward
2
: the conducting, supervising, or managing of something; especially : the careful and responsible management of something entrusted to one's care <stewardship of natural resources>
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 21, 2014 - 11:23am PT


all in jim

climber

Jun 21, 2014 - 10:26am PT
Take a trip to Europe. Climb at a bunch of different spots and sample a bunch of different routes. Do a sport climb in kalymnos, a trad climb in Meteora, a long route in the Verdon and a short route in Volx. Notice all the people having fun and enjoying the diversity of styles. Each area has it's own fa style. In many cases routes are "opened" by one person so that others can try for the first ascent. Both the "opener" and FAist are appreciated in equal measure. But mostly, it's the people who come after who count, and routes are established with all tastes considered: safe routes, scary routes, ground-up routes, hard routes, easy routes, clean routes, dirty routes.

Many of the new climbs in America are being established in a similar manner these days. It's only in the older areas like Yosemite and the Gunks that FA style is dogmatic, with older climbers clinging to ideals of "good" or "best" style. And that's a good thing. You'll be happier, though, at other areas or when interacting in the broader climbing community if you can open your mind a bit to differing styles.

I'm thankful that climbers come in so many styles - it guarantees that there will always be a great diversity reflected in our choice of rocks to climb up.

Great post regarding this topic.
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 21, 2014 - 05:22pm PT
DMT, Bob and others have some worry that my definition of "best style" is some religious dogma to force people to climb first ascents in some particular manner.

I'm not advocating that at all.

As I said above, what you are or are not advocating is not the problem with what is in fact a kind of dogma. The problem with all dogma, yours included, is that people DO become religious zealots about it as soon as they become true believers and get a few like-minded people with them, and they DO become "forceful." I can tell you first hand.

The problem is with dogma in the first place, and your OP definition is as unsustainable as is dogma. This is not just a "difference of opinion." It is really getting at the core of what climbing is (regardless of your ignoring of that fact), and people literally put their lives on the line based upon what they think "climbing" is all about. Some of us literally risk our lives upon what we think the game entails!

If you think you don't need to define "climbing" first, then I'd ask you how you can even get your OP definition off the ground without presuming that everybody knows what it is....

You start at the ground and climb to the top without resorting to any aid, and making the minimum possible alteration of the route from the state that you found it.

Not able to maintain this style, the first ascent attempt is abandoned in a manner that leaves it as unaltered as possible making it available for future attempts.

Let's parse this out....

"...climb to the top without resorting to any aid..."

You are using "climb" without definition. If you think there is some well-understood, uncontroversial understanding of this word, then I would respond that the very fact you think your overarching definition is needed belies that claim.

And what does "aid" mean? You have refused to touch my mountaineering counterexamples. You seem to think that "aid" is well-defined to mean strictly "aid climbing" in the narrowest possible sense. But that's patently ridiculous.

There is no principled difference between hooks used in aid climbing and ice-axes, ice-tools, and crampons. What is cutting steps in snow? What is the digging of a snow cave? What is a parka to "keep out the environment?" What are plastic boots?

What do you think that rock-climbing shoes with sticky rubber are, if these are not aid??? They ARE something between "you" and "the elements" that HELP you cope with the elements in such a way as to make an ascent EASIER than it would be without them!

Your "lines" regarding "aid" are entirely arbitrary, and that is the fundamental problem with your blithe use of "climb to the top."

What about "to the top?" Why is that a necessary condition of style? Seriously, please explain! I find that one particularly confusing in the context of the rest of the definition.

What I am saying is that we can all agree that a first ascent put up in that style is a good first ascent. In some ways the description of that style of first ascent is constructed to obtain that consensus.

No, we can't all agree. I for one can't agree because I literally (I mean this) can't make sense of your definition. I literally do not know what you mean by it. And there is NO consensus as you say.

I would ask DMT what climb, put up in the "best style" as described in the OP, would he object to the first ascent style?

I'm one of "the others" you refer to, so I'll be happy to answer.

You are asking the wrong question. The question is NOT whether we object to first ascents done in the way you cite as "best." This is because you don't falsify a putative definition by asking if anybody can find an exemplars of that definition they object to.

You falsify a definition by finding exemplars that people would agree fit the terms being defined but are counterexamples to the putative definition.

I have repeatedly done that.

Mountaineering constitutes "climbing" and is in fact the longest-history form of it. Thus, all first ascents of big mountains certainly qualify as fitting the terms you attempt to define. But they ALL act as counterexamples to your definition. ALL are not "best style" by your definition, as ALL fail your "use of aid."

If you deny this notion of "aid," then your definition is utterly arbitrary or utterly vacuous.

Big wall first ascents around the world are also paradigm examples of your terms, yet virtually all act as counterexamples to your definition of "best style," as, again, virtually all rely heavily upon "aid."

The great irony is that some of the most wildly applauded and respected first ascents, ones in which the "style" are unquestionably BEST, include the FA of Cerro Torre, which is a FAIL by your definition. Real climbers know that Cerro Torre is NOT something that Bridwell "should" have waited until it could "go free" or that he did something "less than the best" because he did it "using aid."

And even your "go free" idea has countless counterexamples in the form of climbing shoes, as there are NO completely-nude free-soloists doing major first ascents. Period. None.

Yet, you can't convince anyone that Honnold's big free-solos are even SLIGHTLY "less than the best" because he wears climbing shoes with sticky rubber when he does them.

If you don't want such shoes to count as "aid," then, again, you are being entirely arbitrary.

It's a simple question, really. Would you object to a climb put up in that style because the possibility existed to red(pink)-point it? Maybe I'm confused.

As was said just upthread, we are ALL confused in a sense. But, despite your last comment, YOU apparently don't think that you are. And that's the problem with your definition. It IS confused, arbitrary, and standing outside the context of what many would count as climbing itself. It imposes a sort of sport-climbing-informed "ideal" of what "climbing" is all about, which utterly distorts "the standard" and hence the methods of legitimate and even BEST first ascents down through history.

Couple all those confusions with the built-in DOGMA to "leave that crap alone until it can be done in the BEST style, as defined by me," and you DO have "religious dogma" that is both incorrect and dangerous.

I'm vehemently opposed to your definition because I see in it both dogma and danger. And the fact that you still apparently think it is something like self-evidently correct is actually quite shocking this late in the thread.

Or, you are the MASTER TROLL!

In which case, hats off to you, and I stand (or bow, or curtsy) in awe! :-)

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 05:25pm PT
i'll ask you too, madbolter1,
if someone does a first ascent in the style I defined in the OP, would you have any problem with it?

madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 21, 2014 - 05:56pm PT
i'll ask you too, madbolter1,
if someone does a first ascent in the style I defined in the OP, would you have any problem with it?

Again, I deny that this is even the relevant question when it comes to evaluating a definition. You are asking the inverted question from the one you should be asking.

You should be asking, "Are there any first ascents that are clearly and undeniably 'best style' that act as counterexamples to my definition?" And the answer is that there are. I've cited many counterexamples to your definition.

Regarding your actual question, yes, I just might.

Let's imagine a nude free-soloist who is literally third-classing... on third-class terrain. They take no risks (other than perhaps sore feet or a scratch or two) in their "ascent." They can't "fall" other than perhaps "over," and the worst "tumble" they could take would amount to sliding a bit on the exposed, uhh... gluteul tissue.

Wow... BEST STYLE first ascent indeed! Completely complying with your definition. Completely ho-hum and irrelevant, both to the "climber" and to "climbing."

Yup, I have a big problem with calling such an "ascent" even climbing, much less "best style." Yet it 100% satisfies your definition.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 06:19pm PT
aid is aid, if you can do the route without aid you do it that way...
you have options once you get to a point where aid would be necessary:


you can retreat, declaring a failed attempt

you can retreat to a lower point and find another way to continue without using aid

you can use aid and continue



in the event that you retreat declaring a failed attempt, it is entirely possible that a future attempt might be able to do the route free, without resorting to aid

it is an interesting process of deciding what to do, "best style" of the OP is a cynosure
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 21, 2014 - 06:27pm PT
Bachar used aid on one his most famous routes which has become the "holy Grail" for trad climbers. So really what are you looking for? Try to separate the romance of climbing from the reality of it.
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 21, 2014 - 06:30pm PT
aid is aid, if you can do the route without aid you do it that way...
you have options once you get to a point where aid would be necessary:


you can retreat, declaring a failed attempt

you can retreat to a lower point and find another way to continue without using aid

you can use aid and continue

"Aid is aid."

That's a crucial part of what's up for debate in your definition. You conveniently leave "aid" undefined.

By your lights, big mountains and big walls have never been climbed in "best style." In fact, by your lights, there has NEVER been a "best style" first ascent of a major formation.

That ridiculous implication falsifies your definition.
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Jun 21, 2014 - 06:47pm PT
So much of this is on the personal level Ed, as you said...YOU decide.
If I can't do an FA of a rock climb free I'll bail and let someone else try it.
If i am on the first ascent of a big alpine route and have to resort to some aid, I'll do it and let someone else claim the first free ascent.
That's me, i don't really enjoy aid or even big wall climbing but i love the exploration and adventure of serious, remote alpine climbs. I try to pick routes that have a free climbing look to them but will resort to some, always minimal, aid to bring them to fruition.
That said, I haven't placed a bolt on an alpine FA since Torre Egger in 1976. I make it easy on myself, I don't bring any.
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 21, 2014 - 07:28pm PT
Too much muddle about style. I don't care what style anyone else uses to climb. OK, I like to be inspired by exemplary style (Bachar or Barber or Grossman or Donini (see post above) come to mind).

Ethics are the meaty and tangible issue. What is the impact?

What is your impression of this picture?


How does it compare to this ethic...

"The first point to be kept in mind is the preservation and maintenance as exactly as possible of the natural scenery; the restriction, that is to say within the narrowest limits consistent with the necessary accommodation of visitors, of all artificial constructions markedly inharmonious with the scenery or which would unnecessarily obscure, distort, or distract from the dignity of the scenery... in permitting the sacrifice of anything that would be of the slightest value to future visitors to the convenience, bad taste, playfulness, carelessness, or wanton destructiveness of present visitors, we probably yield in each case the interest of uncounted millions to the selfishness of a few individuals."

~ Frederick Law Olmstead (1865)

The words above represent Olmstead's ethic with regard to using public natural resources and the action by the climber above represents his ethic with regard to using public natural resources.

Which ethic has the least impact from use on the integrity of the resource?
Which ethic represents the highest level of stewardship of the public resource?
Which ethic respects the rights of other individuals and user groups?
Which ethic preserves the natural resource for future generations to use?
Which ethic appears the least arrogant, selfish, and ego-driven?

All individuals and all user groups have responsibilities with regard to their use of the public domain. What are our responsibilities?
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 21, 2014 - 08:24pm PT
Mark...you are posting opinions, not law and no way are they ethics that all should adhere too.

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:22pm PT
Bob, did you ever put a route up in the manner described as "best style" in the OP?

I presume you have... so maybe not so far from reality.

If you haven't, well, I can understand that, I guess, I haven't ever installed a "sport route"

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 21, 2014 - 09:49pm PT
I think people are confused about just what my opinion is...

...I totally agree that drilling from hooks, drilling using a power drill, etc. may all have their place in FAs. My opinion is not that these things be forbidden.

I doubt that I would want to spend the time putting in sport routes, right now it's not where I'm at. But I totally understand others do it.

I don't think that Bridwell should or shouldn't have pushed ahead in Patagonia, he did what he did, his decision.

I'm not even all that worried about your rap route down Super Nova wall where you were exploring a possible line. Though the anchor bolts for the rappels do confuse some who are going ground up, they wonder if they missed the route.

But all that being said, we can all agree that the "best style" described in the OP is something we'd be comfortable with on anyone's FA anywhere.

The "best style" represents something we can keep in mind when deciding what to do on a FA. Obviously if you are installing sport routes you've already decided on a style. And you have a justification for it.

For the record, not all of the FAs I've participated on have been "best style," they have all been ground up. Sometimes the second put the bolts in at various places (the leader went without). And sometimes the moves have been worked out and bolts put in on subsequent ascents.

So I appreciate the bolting of a route with the consideration of all those who might climb it later. The first ascent style might still be "best style" but route re-equipped for the masses.

all in jim

climber
Jun 21, 2014 - 10:24pm PT
FAist = Fascist

No matter what the style.
MH2

climber
Jun 22, 2014 - 06:40am PT
I've heard that in some euro guides there isn't a reference to a first ascent but they will say, "route opened by so-and-so." It sometimes happens that several climbers are involved in opening a route. That is usually the case for new routes at Squamish where large-scale vegetation and dirt removal take place. A first ascent is a very different matter when you have been over the terrain already, for days or months. In earlier times and to a lesser degree today, launching into the unknown was a part of what led to a first ascent being well-regarded. Today the uncertainty comes from how hard the route may be, not whether it will go.

There is a lot of rock in B.C. where people can still do FAs in excellent style, if they survive the approach.

Very few if any climbers today are going to do new routes in best style at a place like Squamish. In compensation for that, there a lot of climbers to share the blame for creating routes in less than best style.
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 22, 2014 - 05:38pm PT
Mark...you are posting opinions, not law and no way are they ethics that all should adhere too.

Bob D'A, attempting to have a conversation about ethics is much different than making law. Yes, we all have our own opinions and ethics. Some serve just us, some serve a few, and some consider and serve the many. Liberte', egalite', fraternite'.

Yes, Bachar considered hanging from a hook so that he could use both hands to hand drill a bolt aid.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 22, 2014 - 08:46pm PT
Mark...he didn't just consider, he did hang off a hook. I have nothing bad to say about what he did. My point being that through my 40 plus year of climbing I have seen people doing things that we're consider bad style/ethics that later became acceptable and the norm/style/ethic.
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 22, 2014 - 09:07pm PT
Yes, Bachar considered hanging from a hook so that he could use both hands to hand drill a bolt aid.

The translation is that Bachar considered hanging from a hook to drill a bolt to be aid and made sure to own it when he did.

Again, I don't really care that much about others style; that's personal. I care about impact; that's communal.
MH2

climber
Jun 22, 2014 - 09:34pm PT
Best impact? Best impact style?
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 22, 2014 - 10:08pm PT
Least impact ethic.
Chiloe

Trad climber
Lee, NH
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:22am PT
Whether first ascents are a private experience or performance art, they are not the end of the story. It's been interesting for me, watching how climbs are changed long after their first ascents -- to meet the needs of climbers with other goals including lower commitment, higher standards of comfort, and both higher and lower skills.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:36am PT
Chiloe, that's certainly a kinder and gentler way of putting it.
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Jun 23, 2014 - 05:15am PT
FA of what? Boulder, sport climb, trad, multi-pitch, alpine rock, desert tower, frozen waterfall, mixed, iconic mountain.....etc. There is a situational component that hasn't been addressed. Climbing has become segmented and the adherents of the different disciplines seem to have divirgent ideas of proper style.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 23, 2014 - 05:42am PT
Mark...do you work on access and trails etc...
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 23, 2014 - 06:09am PT
Have done; am not currently. Member of the Access Fund.
Mike Friedrichs

Sport climber
City of Salt
Jun 23, 2014 - 07:38am PT
Like several others have posted, I am having a difficult time understanding the concept of "best." I would agree that the style suggested by Ed in the OP is the most organic style.

But what does best mean? Is it best in that it creates the most satisfaction for the first ascentionist? Or is it best in that it establishes a precedent for some higher way? Or is it best because it defines how subsequent climbers will have to (or get to) climb the route? Or, as some have suggested is it best because it has the lowest impact on the environment?

I can easily dismiss the the leave-no-trace argument. The only way to leave no trace is to stay home. The impact from roads, cars, trails, dogs, multiple ascents scraping up and down the walls makes the impact from protection - fixed or otherwise - insignificant. Not only that, if route A is not climbed because of perceived risk, route B usually takes up the slack.

The precedent argument has the problem of relativism. I'm sure that in each domain (sport, trad, ice, alpine, whatever) there are conflicting ideologies of what constitutes the most supreme way.

For me personally, I've gotten tremendous satisfaction from all styles. I've done ground-up, hand drilled ascents that I found satisfaction in. I've also done routes where I cleaned, inspected, top-roped, and power-drilled where I've gotten a lot of satisfaction from knowing that it was done right. That all the clips were in the right place and that the climber could focus on the movement.

All this brings me back to subsequent climbers. In my simplistic way of thinking, what I want more than personal satisfaction or a precedent setting statement is for future climbers to acknowledge that my route was fun. Maybe it's because I have no children; my routes are what I leave behind and I do think of other climbers when I establish routes. I would be devastated if someone got hurt on a route that I did because it was unnecessarily dangerous. It's only climbing. So to me anyway, the "best" style is the one that ensures that future climbers have the most fun.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 23, 2014 - 07:47am PT

Why pretend it is important to modern climbers?

Pretend is fun, little miss DMT
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:21am PT
Perfectly right about "leave no trace." It is an ideal. Using the ideal you achieve less or least trace. This is a useful ethic to allow all user groups the right to enjoy public lands without one user group effing up the place.
MH2

climber
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:26am PT
The only way to leave no trace is to stay home. (Mike Friedrichs)


I seem to remember that argument being easily dismissed, too. ; )
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:57am PT

Arguing about best style of climbing is like arguing about best style of f*#king…no?
Mike Friedrichs

Sport climber
City of Salt
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:10am PT
Thanks Kevin,

As one of the voices I respect the most from this forum that means a lot to me. I know you have experienced the myriad of styles, emotions, and just plain hard work to have an informed perspective on the whole argument.

mike

One other thought that I had and then mostly dismissed -- is the "best" style the one that holds closest to local autonomy?
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:21am PT
What is local autonomy?
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:43am PT
Really doesn't seem all that complicated or difficult to understand.

People are reading too much into this thing, and thinking about what's important to THEMSELVES.


Old debate indeed. And even then there were fights about it.

My personal opinion:

On sight solo, best style, too dangerous for me.

On sight, ground up, clean pro, 2nd best.

Ground up, Pitons, bolts etc, not as good.

All rap bolting, aid, power drills, undesirable to me personally, but I understand that it yields the hardest routes, which I can't do anyway, so I don't care for them. That said, I have climbed sport up to the 5.11 range, had fun, and appreciated the protection.

And yes, it does affect others. Smith Rocks sprouted hundreds, possibly thousands of bright glinting bolt hangers during the Alan Watts era. The chalk lines up every buttress and arete, and accompanying fixed ropes on everyone's project are truly eyesores.

Edit: Ever hear of Pruess, Dulfer, Robbins, Chouinard, Harding etc etc?

Carry on.

Mike Friedrichs

Sport climber
City of Salt
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:44am PT
Melissa,

That is a good question. Many think that local rules apply and that styles should remain consistent within an area and that it is important to keep local tradition. The reason that I (mostly) dismiss this notion is that in the age of the internet people who have never been to an area and have no intention of ever going to an area seem to be experts on local conventions towards style. I'm not sure who the community is anymore.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 23, 2014 - 10:02am PT
I think when a 5.11 slab climber chooses a really good line and puts up a 5.8 R X route, it is bad style. Skipping obvious stances for easy drilling to make it more runout than it should be. 5.7-9s are usually good routes for beginners to climb on and if you are a 5.11 slab climber and end up putting up something runout and dangerous you should not have trouble stepping over your ego and allowing others to add several more bolts to make the line safe for the public. Example of the opposite is the Bachar Yerian. Badass climbers put up a badass climb, ground up. It is a test piece now and there is not argument about it.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:13pm PT
the title of this thread is

"Best First Ascent Style"

and it was really meant to pertain to the first ascent.

I'd say it really can happen only once, but that would be wrong since once we know that a first ascent has been done it's been communicated to the community, and as such has passed from the first ascent team to the "public domain."

Often, when this does not happen other first ascents of a route are possible, and more people experience that FA feeling.



There are many reasons for doing a first ascent, and that is why FAs are not always reported. There is generally a lot of animosity generated when an unreported FA gets done, then someone else does the "FA" and reports it, and the original FA party claims the FA.

I find that reaction strange but revealing, there seems to be a lot of ego involved in an FA (no surprise) but even more, instead of getting praise from the community, the first FA team is often dismissed. However, what they did was extraordinary.

Our intention of doing an FA so that other climbers could climb the route seems noble, but once again I'm somewhat suspicious of the "service to the community" argument, though it may exist at some degree or another.

When an FA is done with the intention that other climbers are expected to do the route, less then best style is often employed.

Many FAs get put up as test pieces at various grades. Those routes are sometimes criticized for the requirements they make on subsequent ascents. But that is the point of putting up a test piece. Some climbs become accidental test pieces... some are intentional, and once again, they may not be put up in "best style."

When I propose in "best first ascent style" is a style that we all agree is unquestionably good style. We can quibble about defining "aid" and "climbing" and all that, I don't think it is an issue to most climbers who somehow manage to climb without a solid philosophical foundation defining the activity. The definition is practical, it can be recognized by all climbers.

I don't by the "it only matters to me" because of the limited resources the cliffs represent in climbing possibilities. Anyone who's done work getting a line ready to climb (not "best style") and had some other team do the FA before they get a chance understands that it isn't "just me."

The community "standards" matter, ethics and style in this example.

The first ascent denies anyone after from doing a first ascent (where we include in the definition of "first ascent" that fact that it is disclosed).

For almost all modern climbers this doesn't matter because they aren't doing first ascents. All they care about is having more climbs that are available and accessible to them.

But leaving first ascents for future climbers to do because an attempt fails, which is a part of the "best style" definition leaves open the possibility that some climber with the skills could do the FA in "best style" (there is, of course, no guarantee that they will).

So the decisions very much affect the community.

The way this is currently settled is the first climbing team in an area develops the area as completely as possible for them, employing all styles, before revealing the area. In particular, any "really good line" is worked to death to try to get an FA...

My own opinion is that it might be better to allows someone the opportunity to do the FA in "best style" that would be less selfish and much more community oriented than the competitive drive to "be first."

Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:28pm PT
What I find interesting given the comments regarding the mountaineering roots of FAs, Mallory himself felt at the time bottled O2 was not the best style to summit Everest and only conceded to its use once it became evident it was necessary to the task. So even back then they had a notion of best style. Sticky rubber and chalk are now fair means though they likely caused push back when they first came about. My conclusion is "by fair means" and "best style" evolve over time as various technologies are adopted and become the norm.

As pointed out previously, I think Ed should have made "best" well-defined in the OP. If "best" means "most badass", onsight GU FAs are it (omitting onsight naked solos). If "best style" means it will always produce a well thought out route, it is clear that is not always the case.
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:51pm PT
Whatever happened to Bridwell's ethic of " the standards will be pushed and slowly raised and those not honed to the fine edge will take the dreaded groundfall" ? I see the increased body count, but I also see the percentage of supposedly safety engineered routes compared to bold and dangerous routes has increased. Whats up? Is safety a false ethic when applied to the forces of gravity and failures of human judgement?

EDIT: Bravecowboy nails it just below.
thebravecowboy

climber
in the face of the fury of the funk
Jun 23, 2014 - 01:57pm PT
Ground-up multipitch with a rack of tricams, hexes, a #4 Bigbro, and a thin short cord. Pins and bit in pocket, no drill holder or hammer, with a heinous 98 degree 11 mile deathmarch approach. Uranium roads by cycle and sketchy routefinding to climb a short, very exposed piece of Kayenta perched on a 700 foot scree cone. The Second Longest Day of the Year, 5.4, III. Burrowing to the summit through rubble piles is so much better when your ears are clogged with gnats.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 23, 2014 - 02:36pm PT
So best possible style FOR A TRAD CLIMB seems to be onsight, GU ascent free solo or team on clean gear (no bolts/pitons involved). No fixed ropes. No pre-inspection. No cleaning. You show up, see a possible route, go up features following a natural line to the summit and do it without altering the rock in any way. Leave the area clean as it was.

For alpine team it is similar with a big emphasis on not using help from the outside and taking your things out after the ascent.

For a sport/slab climb I guess it would be drilling from hooks/stances GU and making all the moves free to the next stance/hook.

This seems fairly obvious. Ed, what made you start this thread if the answer is obvious to you?
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 23, 2014 - 02:47pm PT
One more thing Vitaly, no report so the next party can also enjoy the adventure of a FA.
Nate D

climber
San Francisco
Jun 23, 2014 - 03:02pm PT
I should add that I do savor the experience of first ascents employing the minimalistic ethic far more, but sometimes the fact that the product isn't shared by others makes me feel ...

Selfish?


Interesting. On the other hand, some would say that it's selfish or egotistical to desire/seek the praise or validation of others (hopefully many) who later climb the route.

Selfishness is definitely a word that comes up often in the FA discussion department.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 23, 2014 - 03:04pm PT
I think reporting your ascent is fairly important for keeping the history of a cliff straight. It provides accurate info for guidebook authors and avoids the soreness some experience when another team reports their old line as a FA.

Rick Sumner, how come you did not keep your FAs to yourself and actually wrote a guidebook if you are against reporting ascents? I am a little confused here.

In this thread I think the question is the style and not how you report it. As long as the report is accurate and contains no lie, I think it goes together well with good style.

Anyway, Ed, quit wasting time on this thread, I really want to see a TR about that thing you guys climbed by Tioga pas!!!! : )
jstan

climber
Jun 23, 2014 - 03:34pm PT
Ed has posted a quite complete description of what happens when FA's are not reported. If my
memory serves me, it increasingly does not, I remember no case where I reported any new routes
to a guidebook author. Freeing of aid routes I would have.

In the early 70's, just as I am now, I was arguing not reporting ascents would be very beneficial in
the long term. At that time I focussed my efforts on selling this idea to a half dozen specific
people. Ed discusses what happens when a person who did an unreported ascent later tells
someone they did a second ascent. With the specific group of friends I was targeting, I did this in
two or three cases. I thought it might increase my ability to persuade. It did not of course and the
climb rating DYABS got generated.

My attempts to persuade were getting so little traction I was willing to court the illogical, to no
avail. More generally, not reporting kept only perhaps 10% from going into guidebooks right
away. Some 40 years later you have only to look at routes drawn on El Cap to discern the logic for
this is getting only stronger. I am guessing I will be dead before the idea begins to gain some
traction. That's OK.

Working with ideas is just as enjoyable as working with the rock. Where there is no chance for
failure, there is also no reason to try.




Now I will demonstrate I have not learned a thing in the last half century. On Netflix I found an
encomium for single gear bicycles. To prove my point I extracted the photo below. For the last
half century I have been working on litter removal and find it just as interesting as climbing was.


I see two possible conclusions:
1. We are so used to seeing litter it has become invisible.
2. A population that is drawn to litter has come into existence.

Either way, cleaning it up will be great fun.
Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 23, 2014 - 04:20pm PT
What's the point of maintaining the best style if not to report the deed?

Say a climber sends a route in perfect style (naked onsight solo). She, being true to her style, does not report it and later finds out Joe "The Drill" Smoe did the "FA" of what he thought was an unclimbed line in a less than the best style. Now she's peeved by the use of bolts by Mr. Smoe, he feels cheated out of his FA and guilty for altering someone's else route, and everyone hashes out the matter on the Taco demonizing Mr. Smoe.

Reporting would be key to maintaining best style and ethics within an area. In fact, the history behind routes is one of the most interesting parts of this sport IMO. If you believe style matters, being a role model of your style is just as important as maintaining said style.
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 23, 2014 - 04:54pm PT
Laine does it really matter, when many reported ascents are subsequently bolted over then removed from mention in guidebooks ( the predominate source of climbing history)? A long long time ago I was doing a regular free solo circuit and found several parties clogging Corrugation Corner. No matter, I took the left sidewall to wide crack and chimney, only sharing the line of the regular route for twenty feet near the chimney belay. Well below this I found a single old FP. I never reported the line and interestingly enough at least parts of it were reported as FA's in later guidebook additions complete with protection bolts. Preserving adventure for later generations in whatever style they saw fit.
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
Jun 23, 2014 - 05:00pm PT
...FA in "best style" that would be less selfish and much more community oriented than the competitive drive to "be first."


Is that what I was saying upthread?

Laine

Trad climber
Reno, NV
Jun 23, 2014 - 05:12pm PT
If you are referring to the wide crack/chimney I think you are, well done. Quite a bold solo and a contender for best style. I agree some climbing history is incorrect or rewritten but does that mean we should simply stop trying?

Is that not one of the biggest benefits of this site? Communication of information regarding all things climbing, passing on history, ethics, debating matters of contention.

You've just reported the FA which I find useful and interesting. Now go chop them bolts ;)
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 23, 2014 - 05:51pm PT
Yes,the very same offwidth crack /chimney which followed a long section of moderately difficult dike hiking, but remember I found an old Fp. So you see that parts of this line provided the adventure of a FA in three very different styles. Climbing history preservation is pretty spotty, usually in guidebooks derived from earlier additions. Errors get magnified when "select guides" are used in reference for future additions and compilers deem modern variations of old routes as superior, then lacking space drop the old. Eventually the error rate will be such that old routes in pristine condition will once again provide FA's.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 23, 2014 - 06:38pm PT
Vitaliy M :
"Anyway, Ed, quit wasting time on this thread, I really want to see a TR about that thing you guys climbed by Tioga pas!!!! : )"

http://www.supertopo.com/tr/Great-Googley-Boogley-Tioga-Pass-ablegabel-Ed-Hartouni-July-9-2011/t12341n.html

this was on-sight, ground-up, no bolts, single push, pretty close (if not spot on) "best style"

we saw it and we climbed it
MH2

climber
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:23pm PT
Just my humble opinion, but slightly better than best style: you think you are doing a route that was done before but it turns out you were wrong. In that case you get no flack for not reporting a FA.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:45pm PT
Ed, what made you start this thread if the answer is obvious to you?

that's what intellectuals do... they discuss an idea to explore it. What wasn't obvious, but something I suspected, that climbers actually all know what "best style" is for first ascents. They may have reasons for doing an FA in "less than best style", and those reasons are probably all valid to some extent within our natural feelings of anarchy, or perhaps libertarianism..

the other point I wanted to make, and I've made it before, elsewhere, is that climbing today is dominated by climbing established routes, not by putting routes up. There is a huge emphasis on making the route fit for those consumers by the producers.

no one wants someone to get hurt on a climb they have reported an FA on, on the other hand every climber has a responsibility to make a choice for themselves whether or not to do a climb.

and there is an issue of the future, now that we know what climbing is about, we can pronounce what "best style" is
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 23, 2014 - 08:56pm PT
Ed wrote: this was on-sight, ground-up, no bolts, single push, pretty close (if not spot on) "best style"


Go do an overhanging crack less limestone wall and see how far you get.

This best style thing is totally absurd when it comes to climbing.
jstan

climber
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:06pm PT
no one wants someone to get hurt on a climb they have reported an FA on

Never assume this.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:13pm PT
This best style thing is totally absurd when it comes to climbing.


Not when it comes to areas where clean protection and anchors are useable, safe and desirable. No, not absurd at all.

When you have overhanging crackless limestone, I leave it to others.
ruppell

climber
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:17pm PT
Survival

Then it's not a climbing ethic. It's an area ethic. Each one has it's own "best". To try and call out one as superior to all others because the OPs area lends itself to it is short sighted at best and egotistical at worse.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 23, 2014 - 09:17pm PT
For me the ideal trad FA is a pretty simple proposition: eye a line, get on it with no pre-inspection, no pre-cleaning, lead it onsight with no dogging and no fixed pro. How often has that happened? A handful of times over forty years in my case. But every single FA I do starts there and then suffers varying degrees of deprecation and taint in my mind as I back off of any and each of those attributes in turn, which I do with varying degrees of reluctance depending on the attributes and circumstances forcing the compromise (I'll also just walk away).

Coming from a small backwater, I was lucky enough to have experience the luxury of everything we touched being an FA and my climbing has always been a self-interested matter driven solely by an obsession with successive lines. I don't climb for you and don't really give a f*#k what you or anyone else thinks of my FA's and never 'reported' them (and in fact tried to keep the more recent ones out of the guidebook revision).

And to each his own, but frankly I find the concepts of 'community service' (in a route context) and 'crag development' both a wee bit nauseating. But hey, don't get me wrong, I fully understand the predominant aural landscape in places like Eldo long ago transitioned from 'Falling!' to 'Take!' in the wake of an expansive, commercially-driven demographic powered by the growth of gyms and climbing's progressive media integration into suburban pop culture; I've just never really seen where that has f*#kall to do with me or what drives my climbing beyond having to avoid cluster f*#ks and what are essentially outside climbing gyms, but at this point I'm cool with that.

My dad who just passed started flying in biplanes and retired a 747 captain - he liked the newer equipment better, but the earlier pre-FAA flying more. So too, I really appreciate how lucky we were in the beginning to have had our little untouched hollers to ourselves.

P.S. A couple of years ago a quite pragmatic female friend from Chicago startled delicate Portland sensibilities when - a bit sloshed at a party and having overheard something about yet another bridge suicide (we have a lot of them here) - she quipped, "life isn't for everyone". I have to admit feeling the same way about climbing despite concerted efforts on multiple industry fronts to prove the contrary. Does that make me a bad person or just an as#@&%e? (I'm completely fine with either...)
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 23, 2014 - 10:49pm PT
Go do an overhanging crack less limestone wall and see how far you get.
This best style thing is totally absurd when it comes to climbing.


I agree that given today's equipment and climbers that the only way to get up your overhanging crackless limestone wall is by "less than best style"

and if some climber is determined to climb that, they will

but who's to say that that climb could not ever be done in "best style"?

the concept is absurd to us, but the idea of someone soloing El Cap, Half Dome and Mt Watkins in a day was absurd just 5 years ago... in whatever style.

healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 23, 2014 - 10:53pm PT
Go do an overhanging crack less limestone wall and see how far you get.

Which is easier: figuring out the moves on an decently overhung wall on TR / DWS where you can't rest or on bolted lead where you can?
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:22am PT
Ed..you are stuck on best style thing to point of obsessing. Most climbers would disagree with you.

Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:28am PT
Joe wrote: And to each his own, but frankly I find the concepts of 'community service' (in a route context) and 'crag development' both a wee bit nauseating. But hey, don't get me wrong, I fully understand the predominant aural landscape in places like Eldo long ago transitioned from 'Falling!' to 'Take!' in the wake of an expansive, commercially-driven demographic powered by the growth of gyms and climbing's progressive media integration into suburban pop culture; I've just never really seen where that has f*#kall to do with me or what drives my climbing beyond having to avoid cluster f*#ks and what are essentially outside climbing gyms, but at this point I'm cool with that.


It is all about you Joe and how you climb.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:46am PT
Testify
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:13am PT
All things being the same I don't judge free climbs to be better style than aid climbs.

If you have a beautiful soaring line that can never go free, that you can do, ground up, minimal impact, blah blah... Why would that be less than best style than the climb next to it that is featured enough for free climbing? Aid climbing rocks!

Case in point; the roof pitch on the Shield is as cool as any pitch on Astroman. Both are stellar, world class, climbs that have received similar impact, each in their own vernacular.

Also, I think that the original premise should be amended to acknowledge quality/aesthetics of line, though that is subjective to some extent, but still it has to be considered. It is simply better style to put up routes with stunning lines than choss heaps that get done merely because they are within the abities of an ascenctionist and have never been done for lack of appeal or close proximity of other routes.
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:54am PT
What is the best religion, political view, or flavor of ice cream. Best is only in the eye of the beholder.


Maybe we should have a vote on what best style is.

Where is the empirical evidence that the style advocated in the original post is best.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 10:39am PT
"Where is the empirical evidence that the style advocated in the original post is best."


There is none, which quite strange coming from Ed.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 11:44am PT
It is all about you Joe and how you climb.
Absolutely and exactly, I don't climb for you or anyone else and couldn't care less what, where, when, why or how you climb unless how you climb impacts or degrades the experience to be had at any given crag. It's just not a group, team or social activity for me, mainly because I'm too busy climbing and that's not why I climb.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 12:14pm PT
Oh my indeed...
MH2

climber
Jun 24, 2014 - 12:18pm PT
Get so worked up and prepared that in your mind you've already climbed it. (Randisi)


I like it. A best style accessible to all. I've done that. And not reported it.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 24, 2014 - 12:45pm PT
Bob Walton's style is to always manage to have a cold beer waiting at the car after a FA. That being at the Pinnacles is the best style of all.
jstan

climber
Jun 24, 2014 - 12:48pm PT
Excellent thread.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 12:54pm PT
we could vote, but the only eligible voters are people who have been involved with first ascents...

I'd be happy to do that, the question would be interesting though, and not the one you think it would be... and it has been answered (though Bob D' hasn't said if he had put up routes in the "best style" described in the OP, not that that is a requirement).

I'm not obsessed with it, but even if I were, on the STForum, isn't it at least a bit refreshing to hash out climbing issues rather than the other political choss? After all, we could actually be effective in resolving, or at least defining the issues.

In spite of the fact that the major objection to my OP assertion is that it represents the obsessed thoughts of a person who advances a definition that was termed "absurd" by a number of people, I think we've actually come some way in this discussion.

I love to hear the tortured reasons why it is not the "best style" by people who actually know it is... so I'm not only obsessed, I'm delusional.

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 01:19pm PT
isn't it at least a bit refreshing to hash out climbing issues rather than the other political choss?

It is awesome to argue about climbing related things than political shiet! But than I realize we are arguing about the way we prefer to climb some rocks. : ) It might be as important as anything else in our life, but than still..it is climbing on rocks.
There is a cool TR out about weekend warrior climbing a bunch of routes. He had really good style for 4th of July : )
As someone who usually puts up GU ascents, I would say FOR ME there is not much difference in the way the route is put up, as long as I get a final satisfaction from the product/challenge. There is one particular pitch I top roped that I am planning to rap bolt in the future. Super excited about it actually, that pitch is epic. If I could ever lead it, I think I would be as happy as I was after climbing any of my awesome GU routes.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 01:37pm PT
Ed wrote: I'd be happy to do that, the question would be interesting though, and not the one you think it would be... and it has been answered (though Bob D' hasn't said if he had put up routes in the "best style" described in the OP, not that that is a requirement).



Ed...I have done many FA's of trad routes drilling/gear on lead up to 5.12, I really don't want to call it the "best style". I just did them.
looking sketchy there...

Social climber
Lassitude 33
Jun 24, 2014 - 02:07pm PT
Ed earlier stated:
a first ascent usually "takes" the route once taken, it is not available to anyone else in the community to do a "first ascent" on
so it is a matter of concern to the community. further, the style with which the first ascent is done in may trigger other consequences, e.g. climbing bans by land managers. it is not just an "individual matter" it has consequences for the entire community

Interesting subject. When we were younger, we didn't always consider the full implications of what Ed stated above. And, with much more unclimbed rock and far less scrutiny on climbing activities and impacts, the concept of the best "first ascent style" was heavily influenced by our peers. The route was going to be "judged" worthy (or not), and by extension, so were we.

In the past, a bold lead was considered both a good ethic (less alteration of the rock) and style (look how cool we are). The mental and physical aspects of climbing were given more equal weight. Where the balance point moved too far toward the cerebral, routes requiring a high commitment and risk sometimes did not serve the community (or perhaps the limited rock resource) well.

The balance has obviously changed over the last 20 years, now the physical aspects generally are of prime importance -- for the good in some ways and for the worse in many others.

There seems to be a lot more focus of the end result -- what the resulting route will look like and whether it serves the community of aspirants well. This is a good trend, but subject to abuse at the risk of the loss of any adventure, mental stamina, using natural features, balancing impacts, and the overall "rich experience."

And, realistically, we are climbing harder, steeper and less featured terrain these days. As a result, there are practical limits on ending up with a good climb by blindly adhering to a minimalistic, ground up FA style.

In fact, I'd argue, that such a style may be poor style for a FA (or maybe the best for another FA), particularly when one wants to also advocate for the FA having any influence on the how the route should be climbed (or the nature and extent of fixed protection) thereafter.

Like so many things in life, it depends (on a lot of other factors).

___

Further edit: I have FA'd hundreds of routes, many in ground up, minimalistic, high stylistic points, "style." Other routes have been TR'd, wired, clips calculated, and rap drilled. In most cases, I feel that the style was "best" for the route (but, not always).
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 24, 2014 - 02:22pm PT
Ed...I have done many FA's of trad routes drilling/gear on lead up to 5.12, I really don't want to call it the "best style". I just did them.


Bob, why did you do that? Curious onlooker.
aspendougy

Trad climber
Los Angeles, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 02:31pm PT
I wonder what climbing would be like as a sport if routes were never recorded, topo'd and graded. You see a line and do it, and then if anyone asks, you just say, "yes, we started there, and more or less went that way, and well, yes some of it was hard for me...........there's a bolt here and there................. and,yes, no chalk as it leaves marks;

I have always liked the idea of an anonymous, libertarian climbing landscape.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 02:38pm PT
Couch wrote: Bob, why did you do that? Curious onlooker.


I didn't know any better? :-)

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 03:26pm PT
This question would be fun to discuss during a poker game or while driving from the Bay Area to a climbing destination. There is so much to consider and to think about…many people care to judge the style that was applied, but seems like in the grand scheme of things it changes nothing. Did Bachar Yerian make all the climbers bold? No. Did a rap bolted crack with perma-draws make all climbers think its ok to rap bolt cracks? No. Did oxygen-less ascent of Everest guarantee that every Everest climber (or even a significant number) will stop using bottled oxygen? No.

Seems like usually it is the personal challenge that each climber seeks from the climb. Even though some seek pure fun, some seek to get scared shitless, some seek adventure, some seek physical exertion and most I know enjoy some sort of a combination of these. Some get scared on 5.8 after a 5 foot runout. Some solo 5.12. We are really different. And that’s ok. Best style could range from one climber to another. Usually I think about how much out of my own comfort zone I take it, how much training time did I put in so I could give my best performance, how much harder can I make things to maintain free climbing, how much fun I/my partner are having and than I think about others who come after. For example, will those who come later think I am a dickhead because I ran it out 100 feet on a beautiful line that deserves to be often climbed by 5.7 climbers? Or will they think the bolts would be too close if I added 7 to my 100 foot runout?

Seems like those who put in a lot of time into developing their rock climbing skills usually agree that there is a variety of ways to skin the cat and to get great satisfaction from putting up a route GU or TD. Best style is usually one that satisfies the climber and if the route is worth repeating, those who come later. Personally, I noticed that some routes I have done I only cared about own experience and didn’t care if anyone would repeat it. And some were so good that I tried to improve them later to encourage others to repeat it. If route is really good its cool to know others have experienced same awesome feelings you had.
madbolter1

Big Wall climber
Denver, CO
Jun 24, 2014 - 03:54pm PT
on the STForum, isn't it at least a bit refreshing to hash out climbing issues rather than the other political choss?

There's certainly room for and value in both, but, yes, I'll agree that this is good climbing substance.

I love to hear the tortured reasons why it is not the "best style" by people who actually know it is... so I'm not only obsessed, I'm delusional.

Not delusional. And the reasons why your definition is incorrect are not "tortured."

There are many clear-cut counterexamples to your definition that are clearly "best style" but fail your definition. You continually ignore these, and your steadfastness in simply ignoring, rather than showing what's wrong with, the counterexamples is, yes, a bit obsessive.

Perhaps we can start with getting clear on the answer to this simple question: Are parkas on K2 "aid" according to your definition? Why or why not?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 03:58pm PT
don't get your dig, DMT

I'm good with any style, I wouldn't put routes up in any style, and I wouldn't advocate for anything but "best style" 'cause we all agree that that is "ideal" (or hopelessly romantic... whatever).

Maybe some of the responders to this post fear that I would start raving about lack of conviction to adhere to the "best style" but I fully understand the situations where that style is not used in a FA. I totally get the issues surrounding the choices for a style.

Perhaps what I would wish, growing from this discussion, was a fuller understanding from not only the FA community but the community of climbers that come after the FA, about the intentions that go into an FA, and why there is some apparent variation, and where that comes from in terms of what is deemed an individual's choice.

Oddly, some of the same voices that say "I should use any style I want depending on how I feel" object to routes for which the FA did not consider other climbers, in particular in using "best style" (or near to it). Often these result in routes that are challenging to lead due to choices made in placing protection.

My feeling is that if the FA figured out how to avoid grievous injury or death, that a team armed with the knowledge of the route can do the same, or at least know enough not to attempt it if they deem they have inadequate skills.

Lots of these routes eventually become routine for high end climbers of any generation, but may not be accessible to the majority of climbers.

Sometimes that is the intention of the FA team, sometimes not.



I'd weight the voting by the number of full length pitches put up, a vote for every pitch... (you get half vote for a half pitch)

Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:12pm PT
Danielle Steel has written 92 books and J.D. Salinger and Harper Lee have each written one. No doubt Steel knows more about the publishing process and probably what will generate the most sales overall, but does that maker her the most reliable authority with regard to the quality of the final product?
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:15pm PT
Ron, fact IS that top climbers of TODAY don't even consider death routes of yesterday as test pieces. There is a climber that soloed a 5.13 and people do more bad ass sh#t than ever. There were pussies back in your day and there are pussies out there now. What's the point of always trying to sting the crop of today's climbers? Are you that insecure?

But today, it would be called irresponsible of the FA. Labelled a death lead and scorned in general as it required 50 plus feet of face climbing on imaginary pro. Another party just a few years back came upon that face and not knowing they were on a route bolted it. Safe to say the thrill of that pitch aint what it used to be.

If someone bolts a line without knowing there was someone's line there it is not that big of a deal. Jesus Christ, it is not like they did it on purpose. If there was a clearer history or if bolts were visible, I am sure not many would touch that line.

One route i did that has received bolts long after i first did it was such a place- and in the middle of a longish runout i craftily put a long dong piton behind a crappy lil flake for pro. I didnt have a lot of confidence in it holding a very long fall as it was placed like a chock- and i yelled down to Chuck that Royal would be proud of me for that. And in that weak state of security i somehow gathered the needed "oomph" to continue upward on thin holds, smears and occasional decent hold to a fine ledge. I was more than pleased with my effort in fact i was down right feeling super human. A high-high that was. And the "good lead Henry" when Chuck reached the ledge bolstered that. ( Back then our entire group was nicknamed "henry" lmao!)

Be proud of yourself for breaking through own fears. It shouldn't bother you that it received new bolts from someone whose skills/composure/ethics were different from yours. Especially if they didn't know there was a route there...

PS: Ed, so how many votes do I get for 32 new pitches with about 4,200 ft of climbing in the last 6 months? LOL

I think number of pitches shouldn't matter though. I think it should only matter if you can beat everyone else from this thread in a bar fight.
This thread is evolving!
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:22pm PT
A pin on your route is often a good sign that you're not on an FA. (ETA Sorry…I was thinking about an earlier post, the C. Corner one, not Ron's).
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:51pm PT
Whoever is trolling as Ron is funny! Hahaha
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:52pm PT
that would be 32, but taking Melissa's point to heart (and the general aside that it is just about climbing, it's not brain surgery or rocket science) quantity doesn't necessarily translate to quality.

As with any creative process (and all of the FA's we're talking about are the product of a creative process) a fraction of the product stand the "test of time." And while the FA teams definitely have their favorites, those may not be crowd pleasers.

But then again, as has been noted many times, it isn't about crowd pleasing, usually, it has to do with our own satisfaction.

"Best style" does take into account the inevitable conclusion that what we consider "impossible" today may be possible tomorrow. When we "murder the impossible" what we have done is denied some future climber the opportunity to do an FA in a better style than we could do it now.

If it is only about our own satisfaction, why does actually succeeding on a particular FA matter? It is all good climbing up to the point we cannot continue in "best style." Layering all the other stuff on the climbing gives the FA some important status which is beyond our self satisfaction, it gives us affirmation from other climbers. Seeking affirmation is perilous when it becomes the end all.

We, the climbing community collectively, aren't mature enough yet to see the wisdom in letting someone else do better than we could do; perhaps it goes against human nature, I don't know.

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 04:58pm PT
Just in case anyone wants to call me or my bros soft for rap boltingcracks, we will be at sugarloaf parking lot in the evening. Tapout shirts, power drills, spinning rims and baseball bats. Call us soft "Ron!"

Bwahahaha
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 05:07pm PT
Ed, what if im learning to drill from hooks and stances, do a GU route with only 12ft runouts while some stronger climber can do it with 30 ft between bolts. He would have a bolder and better style, or would he?? My route might be enjoyed by more people, maybe? Maybe not? How about if I skipped climbing this route because I think someone else might do it in better style (whatever it is), how would I learn to hook and drill from stances if I always think someone can do it better?

Are the answers as obvious as the answer to OP? :-)
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 24, 2014 - 05:36pm PT
Ed wrote: that would be 32, but taking Melissa's point to heart (and the general aside that it is just about climbing, it's not brain surgery or rocket science) quantity doesn't necessarily translate to quality.


But there is something to say about having experience with doing new routes as to not doing them and then telling everyone what their style should be.

:-)

Roped trad climbing was/is relativity safe compared to downhill mountain biking, downhill skiing, BMX biking, skate boarding and host of other sports.

You have a better chance of getting hurt bouldering than you do rope climbing.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 05:45pm PT
since 2003 I've got 92 pitches of FA's mostly in the Valley and Tuolumne Meadows, nearly all of them with ablegabel, some of you have done some of those routes...

every route was done ground up

some of those turn out to be FA's on routes that had a previous FA we didn't know about...

getting hurt is a real possibility, Bob D', doing FAs in "best style" as a very good friend of mine knows... and in doing "trad roped climbing" as another very good friend of mine knows. but I think it will be counterproductive to squabble over such things.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 06:12pm PT
Jeez Louise Ed, I've been thinking a lot about this. Damn you!!!
Todd Eastman

climber
Bellingham, WA
Jun 24, 2014 - 06:17pm PT
Charisma creates the best style...
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:03pm PT
Demerits for chipping.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:09pm PT
Ed: If it is only about our own satisfaction, why does actually succeeding on a particular FA matter?

Hmmm, definitely can't even go there and basically because, for me, it's all about the line. I usually don't 'pick' lines, they instead grab me for whatever reason and I tend to obsess over them. In general that obsessing takes the form of simply wanting to do the line as I see and envision it, in its entirety. And nothing about that entails anything but my own satisfaction and that of any partner involved. Again, love it, hate it, climb it, don't climb it - hell, I don't even care if you or anyone else knows about it beyond insuring it doesn't end up bolted stupid.

Ed: It is all good climbing up to the point we cannot continue in "best style."

It can still be all 'good climbing' even after a compromise from the point we cannot continue in "best style" depending on the reasons and circumstances around why a compromise was struck. On the six pitch, seven roof FA I've been working on (a compromise in its own right). Part of my desired 'best style' was cleaning and trundling on lead from stances - at least until we encountered a very loose microwave-size block in the apex of the large A-frame roof that you had your face then chest against and no way to avoid it. We finally made the call to place a piece, do a take, clean it, come down, pull the rope and give it another go later. It was a slightly disappointing compromise, but not one I'm going to shed tears or walk away from the route over - sh#t happens and while I always strive for a particular ideal, I also understand pulling it off is not necessarily a common experience.

Ed: Layering all the other stuff on the climbing gives the FA some important status which is beyond our self satisfaction, it gives us affirmation from other climbers.

Once more I don't really care about anyone's affirmation other than, these days, enough acknowledgement of the route's existence to insure it isn't inadvertently sprayed with bolts [while I still want to climb it].

Ed: Seeking affirmation is perilous when it becomes the end all.

And what I suspect is actually behind a lot of 'crag development' and 'community service'.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:27pm PT
The Warbler: Climbers crave new rock...

And these days, if you're being honest, in most places you have to add the phrase: ...to bolt.

The Warbler: I've done around a thousand FAs in 45 yrs of climbing, by the way, couchmaster (since you asked), and the best style for the game has definitely changed from my seasoned perspective.

Here we agree, so few climbers in today's demographic have experienced or understand what it means to be runout thirty or forty feet into the unknown on a difficult FA having to figure out a sequence while actually climbing, unable to reverse course or rest in place by any means - not to mention simultaneously scanning for decent pro.

But in that, and to some some significant extent, it's not just 'the game' of climbing which has changed, but rather the very definition of what climbing 'is'.

Or at least from what I can tell, the vast majority of today's demographic experience and 'define' climbing as this: 'clip, dog, clip, dog, clip, dog, redpoint, next'. Now that may be climbing to you, but it so far removed from what I'm after and conceive of as climbing as to almost escape words. Sure, to each his own, but I personally wouldn't bother climbing if that was the sum total of my experience with rock.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:30pm PT
Healy
With all due respect...
you sound like a sourpuss!

drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:35pm PT
How long would you guess?
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:41pm PT
Close!
...and FYI, I've never climbed in a curio. :-)
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:43pm PT
Healy, With all due respect...you sound like a sourpuss!

I'm actually not, I just that I came up in a time and place where we were lucky enough that a small group of us were basically alone and everything we touched was an FA. That just left me with an indelible craving / obsession for being on unknown terrain and I also just happened to LOVE placing pro. I also am all about the movement, particularly having my feet higher than my hands whenever possible. That twin obsession with movement and pro have just left me in a state where, if I'm not placing pro, then I'd rather just TR to really focus purely on the movement and rhythm without all the annoying faux clipping.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:45pm PT
That just left me with an indelible craving / obsession for being on unknown terrain and I also just happened to LOVE placing pro. I also am all about the movement, particularly having my feet higher than my hands whenever possible.

Nice.
Like I said, respect.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 07:47pm PT
Ron: H,, your two above posts reflect my exact thought -verbatim.. Whoda thunk that??
Even planets align for the odd eclipse now and then. Stranger things have happened and it's certainly not your climbing I find 'vexing'.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:19pm PT
So Ron, how come you never led the bachar yerian...or tapestry? Is that because you were too big of a pussy even though it seems like u climbed allll the time? Thought so. Typical sore loser. People do BY now way more often than they did when u were roaming them roadside craggies of yours.

If you dont want me to bring in the honnolds of today why would you bring up bachar yerian or anything dano has done? Those were creme of the crop climbers bitd like honnold is today, no? IQ of a doorknob, I get it, no need to explain.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:30pm PT
Vitaliy: If you dont want me to bring in the honnolds of today why would you bring up bachar yerian or anything dano has done? Those were creme of the crop climbers bitd like honnold is today, no?

A little quiz: what percentage of the total climbing demographic did Bachar & Co represent in their day versus Honold & Co. today?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:38pm PT
sounds like a new chorus of My Generation...

probably the number of serious climbers in our generation is somewhat less than the number of serious climbers of the current generation...

fractions don't mean much, the sport is very popular due to gym climbing, and for the most part, gym climbers don't do first ascents...

there is enough bad azzness in all the climbing generations, it wasn't limited to one or the other.

Not sure why Ron wants to start a fight over this...
mike m

Trad climber
black hills
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:40pm PT
Ed I actually agree with you, but I am sure not everyone else does. I have rap bolted plenty but I am constantly looking for new trad routes. They are getting hard to find. I also feel so much awesome terrain has been opened in other styles it is worth a lot of respect, and I would say most of that terrain would not have been opened in such a traditional style. I think what you are describing is better described as most traditional style rather than best. I also feel rap bolting ect has not taken over the really classic traditional areas as much as many would have you believe. The sky is not falling.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 24, 2014 - 09:54pm PT
Ed: there is enough bad azzness in all the climbing generations, it wasn't limited to one or the other.

True, but not as a percentage of the demographic. Some folks love to roll out this and that climber can crush old school and they're right, but for every one of them there are now millions of folks who couldn't get up your average Eldo 5.10 with just a set of nuts and hexs. Are today's accomplishments amazing? F*#k yes. But we now select for those individuals out of an ocean-like demographic, the vast majority of whom don't remotely possess their capabilities even though some claim they're common as dirt when that just isn't the case at all.

mike m: I also feel rap bolting ect has not taken over the really classic traditional areas as much as many would have you believe.

I'd suspect that has less to do with climber restraint and to do with active and tight public and private land management at those areas (Eldo and Gunks come to mind).
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 24, 2014 - 10:21pm PT
It was me who started it...by calling Ron out for manufacturing a route.
Sorry to change the vibe.

So back on topic....

Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 24, 2014 - 10:39pm PT
Are we brave enough to walk away from the things we don't have the balls to do?

Sure, all the time. Fortunately there is no shortage of new lines to in best possible (ie sliding) style
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 25, 2014 - 04:20am PT
FortMental, Nice, Very nice.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 25, 2014 - 06:31am PT
DMT: I'd like to see you do an Eldo 5.10 with just a set of nuts and hexes. Put out!

Was never a problem doing just that back in the '70s and wouldn't hesitate to do the same today, but then whipping out a cam every time I reach for a piece isn't my first instinct.

In fact, I keep proposing a 'National Cam-Free Day' for some eye-opening historical perspective, but it just never seems to gain any traction. Then again, SARS around the country are busy enough without it raining climbers.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Jun 25, 2014 - 06:39am PT
Mark F: You get even more points if you do it with a swami belt, no chalk, and no dogging.

Not a problem given I still don't dog and don't use chalk.
Mark Force

Trad climber
Cave Creek, AZ
Jun 25, 2014 - 06:47am PT
Healyje, oops, I deleted that post. I posted that more as a celebration of that style rather than a personal challenge. I like your style and we are pretty much on the same page. I'll show up for "national Cam Free Day!" Sounds like fun.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 25, 2014 - 06:57am PT
I'll just throw this out there....

http://www.rockandice.com/lates-news/making-the-grade?page=1

blahblah

Gym climber
Boulder
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:04am PT
DMT: I'd like to see you do an Eldo 5.10 with just a set of nuts and hexes. Put out!


Was never a problem doing just that back in the '70s and wouldn't hesitate to do the same today, but then whipping out a cam every time I reach for a piece isn't my first instinct.

In fact, I keep proposing a 'National Cam-Free Day' for some eye-opening historical perspective, but it just never seems to gain any traction. Then again, SARS around the country are busy enough without it raining climbers.

It was before my time as a climber, but as I understand it, in the 70's a typical Eldo free climb was still loaded with fixed pins from aid ascents, so the nuts and hexes were essentially supplemental gear between fixed pieces.
Consider Country Club Crack (not Eldo but Boulder Canyon)--I believe the hard climbing (on the 2nd pitch) used to be entirely protected with fixed pins (this is from talking with people who did it back "in the day"). Now there are no fixed pins (near the hard climbing; for whatever reason there's still a random junker or two somewhere up there).

If anything, modern "trad" climbing is significantly bolder than 70's "style," which was more similar to sport climbing in that it was "clip and go."

Edit: I should add, while it isn't my "thing," I can see that lots of Eldo 10s could be safely led with just nuts; the climbing there lends itself to nut protection much better than at some other areas that feature more wide, parallel cracks.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:05am PT
Fort wrote: Are we brave enough to walk away from the things we don't have the balls to do?


So romantic.


Blah wrote: If anything, modern "trad" climbing is significantly bolder than 70's "style," which was more similar to sport climbing in that it was "clip and go."


Really...well I was there and even through there was some fixed gear you are way off the mark. Modern trad climbers on the harder/headpoints top rope them into submission, prefixed gear and usually start from the top down...just like sport climbers.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:34am PT

Jefe is of Satan. Promoting chipped climbs.




I salute all of you who climbed with nuts and hexes and had pterodactyl eggs for breakfast.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:37am PT
So is Healy.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:45am PT
drljefe's link has the next to last line:
Or is it instead more sensible to recognize that it is sometimes acceptable for preparers to modify the rock so other climbers can have the sort of experience you had?

in the article written by a professional philosopher, whose article demolishes the arguments against manufacturing climbs.

He does say he never has manufactured a climb, I wonder why?

Is there any sentiment here that supports manufacturing climbs (chipping, gluing, taping, etc)?
(I suppose "it depends" will be the most extreme answer).

DMT, you a climb manufacturer? why or why not?
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 25, 2014 - 08:32am PT
Thanks for reading that article Ed.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 25, 2014 - 08:36am PT
DMT wrote: Yes I've climbed Serenity Crack and others like it.


Funny...I think that when way over most heads on this thread.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 08:47am PT
Not sure why Ron wants to start a fight over this...

Some people are uncomfortable in their own skin so they talk trash about others to make themselves feel worthy. Makes them feel better about being a never-been wimpy little c*nt lice. Wondering why aren’t there crowds on B-Y while never having sackage to get on it yourself. Unfkinbelievable.

Some folks love to roll out this and that climber can crush old school and they're right, but for every one of them there are now millions of folks who couldn't get up your average Eldo 5.10 with just a set of nuts and hexs.

Oooooh hexes, didn’t see this one coming! These gumbies today don’t use hexes! What a bunch of incompetent tw@ts! What’s next? Are you gonna be proud you guys did not drive cars with seat belts installed, cuz as we know that is also super bad ass!?

It is cool some people did some hardcore ascents on protection that is not used as often in today’s world, but what is the point to constantly throw tomatoes at generation of today’s climbers? Things have changed. Gyms opened up opportunities for ALL KINDS of people to get into it. For better or worse, this is what it is, and it is only gonna get more popular. It is much healthier to be happy about things you have done and be happy for other people getting out and challenging themselves. We all play by different rules and that should be ok.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 08:55am PT
So why didn't you ever get on Tapestry or B-Y? Was it lack of skills, sackage or all of the above? :)
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:02am PT

Some people are uncomfortable in their own skin so they talk trash about others to make themselves feel worthy.

Hey numb nuts. You're like a monkey trying to f#ck a football. Without a topo you'd have to rescued off routes every time you leave the road, couldn't find your ass with both hands, let alone the route.

You ruin your shorts from your bung hole clenching them, once the last pro is below your waist. I should put you back on the boat and send your sorry little ass back to mama.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:37am PT
Ahh yes, the SuperTaco we know and love!
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:41am PT
Hey numb nuts. You're like a monkey trying to f#ck a football. Without a topo you'd have to rescued off routes every time you leave the road, couldn't find your ass with both hands, let alone the route.

Speak to people like you would if you actually were facing them in real life, clinker. You would piss your panties bi#ch-boy.

I never did the BY for the very same reason you havent. ;-)

I still have a whole life ahead ;)
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:47am PT
Why you little piss ant. It will take all of YOSAR to pry my boot out of where the sun don't shine. If you want some of this, come and get it.

Speak to people like you would if you actually were facing them in real life, clinker. You would piss your panties bi#ch-boy.

Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:50am PT
PM sent bi#ch boy! Bring your daughter along so she could blow me as well.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:54am PT
Is it too early for popcorn?
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:55am PT
Hey, I did make a trip report. I tripped over a fire pit at the campground.

In real life I would do something cheesy, like have Vitally autograph my chalk bag, next to Honnolds sig.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:59am PT
PM sent bi#ch boy! Bring your daughter along so she could blow me as well.

You have really crossed the line now. You talk big for having a miniscule tallywacker. My daughter better bring her binoculars.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:04am PT
Do something about it c*#ks@cker.

We will have a lot of fun! YOSAR will be taking your boot out of my ass!
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:23am PT
So why didn't you ever get on Tapestry or B-Y?

Vitally was going to try and put up a FA like these. Didn't get far, so right now his route is referred to as the "Back-off and Urinate Yourself" or
the B-U-Y. I think he has peaked, his next TR will be about shopping.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:29am PT
Clinker your words are empty, just like your 'sack.' Talk big but would never have enough bravery to confront me in real life. Just a bunch of internet tough guy babble. Please carry on...
Tell me more about how scared I am while climbing 5.6 and how I can't find a route without a topo. It is incredibly original and funny.
this just in

climber
north fork
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:34am PT
Just read the last page, this is a perfect example of ethical debates.
Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:51am PT
Ed's question is really a question of ethics, which in various philosophical, theological and sociological camps has remained a hot topic for centuries. What we would like are some moral imperatives, a "proven" protocol or set of inviloate guidelines that work across the board. AKA, "rule consequentialism."

What we need up with are some general principals and in an ever shifting world, we try to navigate according to some principals, but end up winging it half of the time, advised by conscience. There are too many variables for a single beta, but a million approaches we can argue over, and do.

JL
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 11:20am PT
Largo, you wrote a really cool piece in an older Climbing magazine that I liked. If I find it, I will post a paragraph out of it...very appropriate for this debate. I think it was in the same magazine with a big article about Bridwell. Very interesting stuff.
overwatch

climber
Jun 25, 2014 - 11:32am PT
no offense Mr M I'm sure you'll be after me next but you seem to be the one always jumping on the internet tough guy act... anyone who disagrees with you as a matter of fact
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Jun 25, 2014 - 11:34am PT
Largo,

Several of us tried to differentiate between style and ethics. To me, ethics concerns our behavior that affects others, whereas style concerns behavior that affects us only individually.

My ethical guideline is optimal impact -- usually as little as possible -- from ascents (first or otherwise). That has, of necessity, changed over time. The advent of sport climbing, permanent rappel and belay anchors, etc., certainly increases impact, but may also be necessary for the rock to accommodate the increased population of climbers.

My stylistic guideline is optimal challenge. This usually requires some sort of balancing between safety, risk and difficulty.

John
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 12:06pm PT
overwatch, I do not say things differently than I would to people in a face to face conversation. What I said to Ron for example is an obvious observation. He talks down a whole generation of climbers for not getting on the B-Y, but does not have own stripes to back up his babble. Talks down all the people on Everest, I can probably count 13ers he has done on one hand. I did not say anything I wouldn’t in a face to face conversation. I am not a troll, I show my face here and I am not hard to find. If someone wants to try and put a “boot in my a*#,” please avoid the empty words and PM me instead. As long as you are not bringing weapons to a fist fight I am up for a good ol rukus. :)
overwatch

climber
Jun 25, 2014 - 12:11pm PT
again no offense intended this is just my observation but that's what all the internet tough guys say

and whether you can back it up or not you probably can just saying it on the internet is the definition of an internet tough guy

And what I have learned in 30+ years in martial arts is that there is always someone better
And humility is a good thing
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 12:37pm PT
Yes Ron, you do not make a good impression on this forum. And I remember you talking about your mountaineering resume - far from impressive. So have you climbed ANY peaks above 5000M? If so correct me and let us know which and by which routes? Bigass mountaineering expert that hasn't climbed sh#t and a king of runout that has not gathered enough sackage to climb the B-Y in his 35 years of climbing. Not sure if this is sad or funny.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 12:42pm PT
As long as you are not bringing weapons to a fist fight I am up for a good ol rukus. :)

Long after being up for a rukus I will be plenty capable of dishing out the sheet. Mr. M's TR's are great and the first one I read was pretty spicy as well, he knows how to banter and write a good story.

The trash talk run was so enjoyable and good for the soul. Keep us up to date on most of the escapades.




Maybe Hawk should have went with "Fledgling" for a handle? :0

kev

climber
A pile of dirt.
Jun 25, 2014 - 12:54pm PT
Hey V & R,

Can you two love birds take your conversation to messaging or something so everyone can put the popcorn down and get back to a conversation.

clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 01:04pm PT

Does wit/sense of humor decline for ALL men after 40?


I give it a solid 2/10

You may be right but my testosterone level certainly has, I'm only good for twice a day now.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 25, 2014 - 02:40pm PT
I think it's safe to say that the most active climbers, or prolific first ascensionists in this thread and the ones that climb at above moderate standards currently, or both are the most liberal and least judge mental where style is concerned.

100% agree.

I will pass own judgment and say I do not think rap bolting a route with big runouts is very good style. Friend was telling me about a sport climbing crag where he climbs. Some guy who puts up a lot of routes there worked one of his routes into submission and than chopped the 2nd bolt. So if someone wants to repeat the route but blow it going to the bolt that used to be third, he will deck. Climbing there is hard (5.12 as I remember, or at least 5.11). I would consider it terrible style.
overwatch

climber
Jun 25, 2014 - 03:30pm PT
I would say that person is a sociopath
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 25, 2014 - 03:33pm PT
I'm not so sure about my OP being the "rule"
maybe it's good that people have been involved in these discussions in the past and have categorized my OP (but maybe I'm just trolling here, too). But my contention was not that "best style" be a rule, but that we all recognized it as being the best style. (I know that DMT didn't think so, but he's being difficult).

My response to DMT's question:
is cleaning the living dirt out of cracks any less an impact than chipping? Drilling a bolt? If so, why?

is that "it depends," the impact that is...

I've cleaned cracks and cliffs on FAs and I consider that "less than best style"

usually when cleaning a crack there is a consideration of the extent of cleaning. If the route isn't "a keeper" then modest cleaning (enough to place pro) is usually the way to go. If the route is "primo" then the cleaning may take place after the pitch is sent.

That is the usual MO for bolts too, enough to make the FA, and then a decision after the route is done as to whether or not to go back and add bolts if needed... the FA having been done with considerably more boldness than the usual climbing team would want to commit to.

But for a totally cleaned out crack there is no doubt that the cleaning provides holds that were not available before the cleaning, much in the same way that chipping makes holds available. The only difference is that the soil in the cracks is not a permanent feature, and while the rock is also not permanent, the time scale of its impermanence is much longer (why that should matter I don't know, but it seems to).

Cracks that were completely cleaned in the 1970s and never climbed again are currently refilled with soil... and plants.

This rate of restoration is something that I think Dingus McGee was getting at on some long ago thread (which I pulled my contributions too since Dingus seemed to think they were stupid).

But since we don't know what it is we "took" when we cleaned out the cracks, we don't know the species that got gardened out, plant and animal, then we cannot properly assess the impact.

It was a dilemma I wrote about in my Alpinist piece...
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 25, 2014 - 03:55pm PT
Lurky, it was a response to my expanding the discussion in the DIngus McGee thread... which some responders there felt would be better if it were elsewhere (the discussion on first ascent style).

Maybe everyone else is tired of my posts, I can easily stop posting if you think that's the best course forward. I think it's interesting... you don't have to click on the thread if you are outraged, if it offends you, or if you think it's completely pointless.

clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 25, 2014 - 05:04pm PT
I was sitting on top a run out 5.10(a Higgins route) as a teenager, belaying up my partner. A guy climbs up the standard route and asks me how we were enjoying our top-rope. I confessed to onsighting it (he was impressed), we started talking routes.
I mentioned Lava Falls and he told me about doing the FA stance only. To Jack Holmgren there was no other way to put up a FA, He sent me a photo-copy of his bolt bag contents and I was on my way to new climbs.
So I became a stance climber by accident or fate. As there seem to be enough stance leadable climbs left to explore, I will probably stick with this version of the game.
What has surprised me this last year, is how contagious this style of FA is with "newer" climbers. What could be enticing about burning calves and balancing where you you would rather hang on with both hands. On steep stuff hanging on with one hand and spending forever to drill a hole, but this just seems to add to their interest. Who knew?

Edit; Lurky, I am not calling you to do any dog sitting, I'm afraid of what you might do with my dog while I was gone.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 25, 2014 - 07:54pm PT
Quite the scene this turned out to be.


Everyone knows any bouldering FA done ground up is the best style short of free solo.


No rope, gear, bolts.



The only other thing I have to add is that a bunch of u pussies can eat a rap bolted dik covered in tick marks. I say this because it seems appropriate to the theme of this thread.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 25, 2014 - 08:13pm PT
Lol!
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:14pm PT
Quite a load for those pardners to swallow
ß Î Ø T Ç H

Boulder climber
extraordinaire
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:23pm PT
Everyone knows any bouldering FA done ground up is the best style ...
Chalkless, barefoot, butt-ass naked, and no pad(s).
thebravecowboy

climber
in the face of the fury of the funk
Jun 25, 2014 - 09:31pm PT
Ground-up, no reporting, now that is the style.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 25, 2014 - 10:53pm PT
I love the process of establishing a new line from the top down.
These things are not flying in at some crazy rate, I take my time, and they're pretty far from the car. I'm usually alone.
I'm pretty lucky. Like Healy said earlier, the vast majority of lines have not been climbed. Low hanging fruit, clean and juicy fruit, and the choice of how I want to eat it.
Take my chances and bite right in, hoping it's ripe and tasty, or peel it, cut it up, and choose exactly how I wanted to savor it. I've done both.
Before I started any bolting, though, I climbed lots of gear routes. I wanted to climb, not work!

I love climbing established routes and routes I've seen from the top down, routes I know go.
But there is really nothing like taking off into the unknown. It's adventure. It's exciting.



This thread has been a good discussion at times and a total sh!tshow at others but it's helped me examine what I feel is the "best" style. No conclusions reached!

But really it's helped remind me that we're all fortunate to be climbers at all, and even more fortunate to have the opportunity and drive to seek out first ascents.

As long as you're not totally botching the job/stinkin' up the joint, having fun, and coming home safe, you're style is cool with me. The "best", in fact.

RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 26, 2014 - 12:16am PT
Quality Jefe!

This has been quite the exercise but it was all worth it for your post & pics, cheers.

This thread has been a good discussion at times and a total sh!tshow at others but it's helped me examine what I feel is the "best" style. No conclusions reached!

But really it's helped remind me that we're all fortunate to be climbers at all, and even more fortunate to have the opportunity and drive to seek out first ascents.

As long as you're not totally botching the job/stinkin' up the joint, having fun, and coming home safe, you're style is cool with me. The "best", in fact.


My friend has a wise quote:


"If you are lucky enough to be in the mountains, you are lucky enough......"
rgold

Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
Jun 26, 2014 - 01:34am PT
I think the whole discussion was in trouble as soon as Ed typed the title. The assumption that an ordering of styles is “obvious” has a Platonic ring to it—implying that there is at some deep intrinsic level a natural ordering that we would all discover and agree on by simply reflecting on the situations involved. In mathematics, this Platonic ideal suffered a fatal blow with the discovery of the non-Euclidean geometries. In a ironic twist of fate for Plato, these intuitive (but not logical) anomalies may turn out to be critical parts of the description of the natural world at very small and very large scales.

I believe the full-blown development of sport-climbing as a genre, like the discovery of non-Euclidean geometries, suggest that you can change the rules and still have perfectly consistent and valid results. If so, then the best we might be able to manage would be a partial ordering of styles in which we have to accept the fact that certain pairs of styles may simply not be comparable with the ordering tools we have. Or in a more general sense than comparability of pairs, it may be the case that given any two styles, there is not necessarily some third style that is better than both. If this is true, then the quest for a “best” style is futile beyond the individual level, in which a person can, of course, declare whatever ordering they wish.

I am not, with these observations, embracing any of the anarchic sentiments that have surfaced in the discussion. Climbing, whatever the genre, has to have rules or it will perish. The reason is that everything we as climbers recognize as climbing requires the voluntary rejection of possible means, and without some ability to codify what it is we are rejecting there is no recognizable activity left. Saying that the rules we have accepted are arbitrary does not mean that any arbitrary rules suffice, nor does it mean that any pair of arbitrary rules are equivalent. At the end of the day, our practices, even if they do not agree across genres, have to cluster into coherent communally-accepted restrictions of available means. The various clusters may be at odds, but some kind of internal coherence is required.

I also agree that there is an important and potentially very contentious distinction between style and eithics, with ethics, at least as far as the recent discussions go, having to do with how the practices of one genre might affect the community as a whole, most especially in terms of the use and modification of increasingly scarce resources. But that discussion, although it may refer to styles, will imply an entirely different set of ordering standards, based essentially on resource management rather than what we do or don’t do to get up our routes.

There was a time when this "old debate" made more sense, just as there was a time when "geometry" meant "Euclidean geometry." But the Eucldean world is now one of several at least logically possible ones, and our climbing world too is no longer monolithic. All the kings horses and all the kings men are not going to put Humpty Dumpty back together again, and I think the way forward lies in finding how the various genres can, each presumably making some concessions, manage to coexist. This seems better to me than setting them against each other with ordering schemes that are ill-adapted to the realities we face.
Dingus McGee

Social climber
Laramie
Jun 26, 2014 - 05:09am PT
Ed,

Back from climbing!

Here it is:

Rest Assured,

if all of Yosemite were bolted it would not be a great Sport Area. The rock texture there does not have the features that constitutes high quality sport moves. Plus we don't do no stinkin cracks.

We have our ideal turf and you have yours and most of the time they are quite different. Rock by its very nature does crack some of the expanses of the overhanging featured faces we choose to use. WE carry only draws so we inevitably end up placing bolts near cracks. These bolts do not prevent you from using gear.

Perhaps you tradies could tell us where you think your turf ends and our begins? Please come out and do our faces using only your gear.
Dingus McGee

Social climber
Laramie
Jun 26, 2014 - 06:21am PT
Randizzy,

for you: same as Tradsters
Dingus McGee

Social climber
Laramie
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:03am PT
Randi,

we speak American English here, not Oxford English.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:37am PT
T
Randi,

we speak American English here, not Oxford English.

The speaking of the English language improved as it moved westward, reaching perfection around Santa Cruz, CA.

Sharma and others from this area for example speak perfect English in my opinion.

jstan

climber
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:42am PT
Top down's the best style to bolt climbs that steep so the finished product does justice to the moves and the quality.

We have an answer for single pitch areas. The areas seeing the most concentrated use.

Routes are put in on top rope and thereafter repeated in the same style. No protection need be installed. This way depending upon the holds you rule out you can have ten different routes on the same rock. We've been doing that in bouldering for decades.

For the sixteen years I was in Washington, Carderock had more use per square foot than any other area I have seen. This was the way it was done and we all had a blast. Not one piece of protection was ever installed.

Norwegian

Trad climber
dancin on the tip of god's middle finger
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:47am PT
milktoast when you grow up
you should be bacon.

you'd make great bacon.

it could be like this,

dingus portpork.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:57am PT
milktoast when you grow up

The curious case of Dingus Milktoast. His body ages normally, but his intellect grows younger each day.


Others may be similarly afflicted or gifted.
survival

Big Wall climber
Terrapin Station
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:58am PT
Great post Jefe!
jstan

climber
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:00am PT
Where climbing is proceeding in high density, when someone decides to put in a line of protection they act to reduce the number of things people will be doing. Why should the desire for authorship possessed by one person diminish the opportunities afforded all others?
jstan

climber
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:15am PT
jstan even a cursory reading of the history of climbing will answer your question about the desire for recognition.

Aren't you in those books too?

I was saying then, the same thing I am saying now. It is up to others to weigh the issues in their own mind.
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:31am PT
Did anyone say parking lot?

drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:40am PT
DMT- seems we have some parallels.
Now that you're done being "difficult" lol!
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:52am PT
"Randizzle" lol!

Burchey, I really want to like you!

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:53am PT
for DMT

did you cut a trail to your new area?

when you cut that trail (I'm going on your MO) did you consider what it was you were cutting? or did you assume that "it's just a little trail in a vast area so it can't have done any harm" sort of justification?

did you consider whether or not your need for yet another "new" route was because you were bored with the 100s of other not anymore "new" routes you had put up in the past, and that in a few years, months, weeks, this "new" route will also bore you and you'll feel the need to put up yet another "new" route?

how about when someone else climbs on your routes uninvited by you? will you feel the rage of violation that someone did something on "your" route and that that was unacceptable because of your 18th century view that since you "improved" the land that act translates into a "deed of ownership" of that land?

would you dismiss a better, younger climber's ability to send your project easily without resorting to technological aid to accomplish it, and in better style than you could muster?

could you be so kind as to inform us what the general rules of the DMT wing of the climbing FA community are, the domain over where and when they are in force, the "statue of limitations" of their enforcement, the constitution of the governing body that pertains to them.

also, it would be nice to understand the history of the DMT wing, from where its "headwaters" spring, and from which it derives its authority. this might also indicate where this wing may move within the range of possible FA factions.

given that you do not feel beholden to any "arbitrary" statement of "rules" for FAs, could you inform us as to your own "arbitrary" rules and why someone should follow your's when doing FAs in "your" domain?

what is the penalty for other FA factions invading "your" domain and putting routes up over "your" routes, or altering them in anyway? A stingy rebuke in the form of an email?

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:09am PT
The Warbler brings up an epicure's view of guidebooks, one that is not accessible to the vast majority of guidebook readers, if for no other reason then they view a guidebook as a resource for quick and comprehensive information on a route requiring no greater knowledge of an area.

One might have a hint that a route with the FFA team of Pratt and Sacherer, with a date that puts the route within the acme of their FFA contributions, might require a set of rather advanced skills...
even though the rating seems somewhat tame.

While I agree that the FA list is important, its use as additional information regarding the climb is limited to those who actually know the history of an area. Many modern guidebook authors distill this info into the inclusion or exclusion of the routes, and for those included routes, it appears as shorthand in route descriptors. At that point the list is relegated to recognition, the informational content is cryptic to the "common" user.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:19am PT
I totally agree with rgold, but just because there are non-Euclidean geometries does not mean that Euclidean geometries are incorrect, they remain valid in their domain.

By framing the question as he did, he puts even more onus on those who would claim to be beyond "Euclidean" to explain just what the boundaries of those domains are, simple to do in mathematics, more difficult to do in climbing.

rgold's criticism of my position is entirely valid, but it does make this requirement that anyone who claims them as the basis of their "style" has to show that they are entitle to making that claim.

rgold does not give any slack to students who fail at proofs but claim that since there is non-Euclidean geometries that the Euclidean proofs are no longer correct.

If you want to go down this path, you join rgold and madbolter1 in a dialog on the topic of: "what is climbing," which most would certainly want to avoid...

the most important thing to take from rgold's response is that rules, however arbitrary, are necessary to define climbing. Climbing makes no sense otherwise.

By the way, this is exactly the conclusion of climbers in Yosemite Valley came to, representing the first "style/ethics" debate, and the origin of what Dingus McGee calls "California Rules", the battle between the Robbins clan and the Harding clan, and the rather intellectually flaccid arguments we hear today... whining about self freedom and all that.

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:26am PT
since it is about FA style, I'm interested in the debate among FAists.. others may have opinions
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:29am PT
"...but the whole enterprise is built on instinct and primal satisfaction, not gentlemen's rules of conduct."

the classic excuse to avoid responsibilities for your actions.

Why not cut down that tree that gets in the way of your "instinctive" judgement of a "way killer" line? especially if doing so gives you "primal satisfaction."
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:33am PT
I've climbed at Squamish... and I believe that there are a set of arbitrary rules that FAists follow there... though I have never put up an FA at Squamish (I've climbed with people who have)

have you?
Vitaliy M.

Mountain climber
San Francisco
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:34am PT
I would like to agree about importance of recording the FA/FFA team. I tried to climb more things in the Valley and I looked at who did them first. As you notice these names more often its like an alarm bell. ‘Oooooh it’s the Warbler’s line, bust be hard as fk!’ Not sure where he learned to stem, but that 11b (Bircheff Williams) is sure gonna feel like 5.impossible to those who are accustomed to low 5.11 splitters. People like Pratt, Bridwell, Sacherer, to name a few, really pushed it in their day.
Anyone here watched the movie about Royal and Tom Frost climbing WF of the Sentinel? Hats off to those guys for doing it using some dress up shoes and pins. All these little climbing stories matter to some people, so having a record is awesome. I got a big kick finding out that Sacherer and Bridwell did North Buttress of Middle Cathedral in a day before cams came out. And Clint Cummins’ epic work to put up the Ho Chi Minh trail? AWESOME! The stories of FAs kick ass!!!

I do have a question. So if a 5.8-9 slab climber bolts a 5.8-9 route from stances and hooks and run outs are not huge is it a better or worse style than if a 5.11 slab climber bolts it with 50ft runs between bolts on sustained 5.8 terrain? Seems like people respect the runout so maybe the latter is better style, but than the weaker climber is challenging himself a lot more. To me it seems like none is a better style, but just a little different. What are the thoughts of others on this?
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:34am PT
Ed wrote: the classic excuse to avoid responsibilities for your actions.


BS.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:36am PT
peace and love, Bob D'A
mucci

Trad climber
The pitch of Bagalaar above you
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:43am PT
I have always believed that the best style of a multipitch first ascent involves both climbers sharing the leading.

Getting towed up fa's puts one in the "subman" category, thus diminishing that persons opinion of "best style". You gotta pay to play. Leaders are just that.

clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:48am PT
Getting towed up fa's puts one in the "subman" category

"I'll be your subman anytime Mucci" quote from the blockbuster Top Rope Gun.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 09:58am PT
They are known only by the climber and subject to projection by the onlooker


Only tha FA is real. Subsequent ascents r' simply projections.



There is lutz meh where that came from.

^^^just for Hawky
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:00am PT
'Getting towed up fa's puts one in the "subman" category, thus diminishing that persons opinion of "best style". You gotta pay to play. Leaders are just that.'

I'll certainly fess up to being in the "sub man" category, mostly following (but I have done some leading) on those 90+ odd pitches... though the "getting towed" bit would be an exaggeration.

Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:01am PT
"I'll make my own rules, informed about the choices of others of course?"

why the question mark?
and you get to choose those that do inform you and those that don't... which is convenient, though naturally human.

rgold

Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:05am PT
Everyone's getting touchy. Herewith a visual summary of the clash of genres.

A rock.

What trad climbers see when the look at the rock.

What sport climbers see when they look at the rock.

What trad climbers see when they look at sport climbers’ vision.

What trad climbers think sport climbers do

What trad climbers see as the effects of sport climbing.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:06am PT
But I'll cut one if I want.

Ethically, a chain saw would be prohibited in a wilderness area. Hand saws are cool.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:09am PT
What trad climbers see

Chief Sitting Bullshit
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:18am PT
Ed wrote: peace and love, Bob D'A

Thanks Ed...it is how a do my routes. Communal with love and peace guiding me.

Once a hippie, always a hippie.

Funny this thread reminds me of my first two years as a philosophy major and also reminds me why I changed to a science major my third year. :-)
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:24am PT
Jebus H Bomz

climber
Peavine Basecamp

Jun 26, 2014 - 10:13am PT
You are parsing things amongst a group that is largely in agreement, Ed, and acting like you've made a point when you observe a small point of personal division from the party line you'd prefer towed. I'm sure we all mostly agree on what constitutes clean climbing, LNT, and what constitutes a proud line. Or, since you are clearly not averse to intractable arguments, you can continue to magnify the small areas of difference in the interest of a debate we can't possibly solve here. Meanwhile, we all climb in the real world. I suppose you want to be an architect of mores? I would suggest more approachable rhetoric, in that case.


From what I've read here at the Taco, I think the future of climbing is in good hands.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 10:55am PT
W.L. asks:
So, um, when was the last time you went climbing, Ed? Outside of the Yosemite boundaries, too.

earlier this year, in the spring, I was climbing with a good partner we were starting to train for the fall season in Yosemite Valley. I said it was a great way to start the season, he observed "you've been climbing continuously for the last few years, what do you mean 'start of the season'?"

that was just before that same partner took a fall and hit a ledge, ending his season... two weeks later another partner took a fall on a nearby route ending his season. both injuries were serious. so for the first time in a long time this summer is a climbing hiatus for me, especially since my wife will need some help recovering from a surgery that is soon to happen. I feel I can't risk climbing in the style I've been climbing these past 40+ years, I need to be there for her.

Outside of Yosemite... quite a lot, including 15 years in the 'Gunks... but recently? I've climbed in WY, other parts of California, and in Nevada, even a little in New Mexico.

I've climbed Dingus McGee routes, and even Dingus Milktoast routes...


does this qualify me? or can you still make an argument that dismisses my opinion as myopic?
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:00am PT
Randizzle can judge us.

And as soon as we claim a FA anyone can judge us.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:04am PT
Visiting a another country a few times does not make you an expert on that country. I have no doubt that Ed's climbing experiences favor the trad greatly. He is limited in his scope to pass any opinion on things he know little to nothing.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:14am PT
Along that line of thinking, I'd have no business giving advice on being terrible in bed!

Hah! New thread.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:17am PT
Making sure the base area is nice and tidy is good FA style IMO.


dave729

Trad climber
Western America
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:27am PT
Second that Ryan.

Manly 1st ascents should always involve pruning shears to carve a tunnel into the thorn bush to the base of pitch 1. Although gaming the aurthorities system for choosing controled burn locations to remove 'dangerous fuel loads' is the preferred method for clearing wide areas.
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 26, 2014 - 11:51am PT
does this qualify me? or can you still make an argument that dismisses my opinion as myopic?

I dunno Ed... The ethics police say they'll need more information on those Dingi characters you mentioned...
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 26, 2014 - 12:44pm PT
Visiting a another country a few times does not make you an expert on that country.

No, but sometimes it doesn't take long to know whether you dig it there or you don't.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 12:47pm PT
Melissa wrote: No, but sometimes it doesn't take long to know whether you dig it there or don't.

Digging it and trying to say what rules/ethics/style are best are two different things.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Jun 26, 2014 - 12:53pm PT
Do I really need to live either place and become an "expert' to know that the Norwegian government is sending, let's say, public education in better style than Afghanistan's government?

I just don't buy it that if someone finds something unethical or bad style that they have to participate avidly in that thing to be entitled to the opinion.
jstan

climber
Jun 26, 2014 - 01:19pm PT
And we wonder why the US Congress is a disaster area.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 01:30pm PT
"I just don't buy it that if someone finds something unethical or bad style that they have to participate avidly in that thing to be entitled to the opinion."


Do you really need it spells out to you?

Doing sports routes the best style is from the top down, boulder problems for the most part are wired and clean. These all go against what Ed claims is better style.

You can have your opinion based on limited experiences...kinda what gets us in trouble most of the time.
Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Jun 26, 2014 - 02:09pm PT
Ed, you always have interesting ideas which is why hundreds respond.

Per defining "best style," there are two considerations. First, the style per the people climbing, and two, how that style affects the experience of others.

Deep waters ahead . . .

JL
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 02:13pm PT
Deep waters ahead . . .

Some of us would say deep waters behind, too.



John
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 02:34pm PT
We are making mountains out of mole hills.
Bob D'A

Trad climber
Taos, NM
Jun 26, 2014 - 02:39pm PT
Mole hills surrounded by water
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 02:42pm PT
how that style affects the experience of others.

How does that style affect the appearance of others?

Sport, hangdog, french free, free solo, remote adventure sport hybrid, multi pitch, speed, impress the GF top ropers, old trad, new trad, GU sport... any trends?
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:19pm PT
"He is limited in his scope to pass any opinion on things he know little to nothing."

I've climbed sport routes in the US, and I've climbed in Elbesandstein, once, and I've climbed in Canada and in the Northeast of the US... and I've climbed in Mexico...

but I didn't dedicate my life to sport climbing, that is true... and I've never climbed in Colorado...

given my limited experience on all sorts of climbing (I don't really boulder that much) I would say that I am not qualified to discuss the topic of this thread, that I was totally misguided in starting what I thought might be an interesting discussion.

THEREFORE, I will kill this thread off...

my idea will be to post one last time, taking the text from the OP and putting it in the last post, synopsizing the thread as I see it, and then killing off the OP.

This will happen sometime tonight.

You will no longer have to put up with my obviously naive, inexperienced and totally off target comments and go back to doing what you like to do without having to examine your actions, thus freeing yourselves from any responsibilities for you acts.

I'm sorry if the questions that arise from this discussion have disturbed you in any way, far be it from me to have you question what you do and why you do it. Especially since my definition of "best" is such an abhorrent idea.

Of course any style is appropriate anywhere someone wants to use it anytime they want, without any consideration outside their own pleasure.


I am happy for you.
Carry on.

rgold

Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:51pm PT
given my limited experience on all sorts of climbing (I don't really boulder that much) I would say that I am not qualified to discuss the topic of this thread, that I was totally misguided in starting what I thought might be an interesting discussion.

THEREFORE, I will kill this thread off...

I hope you don't do that Ed. There are plenty of thoughtful comments and perspectives here, worth having around I think. (But I would think that, wouldn't I, since I authored one of them.) Remember that voluntary response surveys always garner a hugely disproportionate number of negative comments, which can easily give the impression that those negative views are predominant when they aren't even close. In this case I'm not sure the negative views are even predominant in this thread, they are just very persistent, and in the end they abandoned reasoning about content resorted ad hominen attacks (demolished by Melissa but no one seemed to notice). Don't sell the many silent readers short---they are perfectly capable of detecting all this.

I can't say I agree with you myself, or at least am not sure I fully agree with you, for reasons I tried to elucidate. But the discussion has been interesting and valuable for me, and I think it deserves to make its way into the the archives, where like almost everything else it will eventually fade into obscurity, perhaps to be revived from time to time.

My only real gripe is I posted a set of pictures that I thought were really funny, and you guys were all so grouchy no one managed so much as a chuckle. Oh well, maybe my sense of humor was off the mark.

I say leave the thread alone Ed. This post is number 518; it's not as if folks aren't interested in the topic. It is what it is, and it ain't all bad.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:54pm PT
Don't nuke it Ed.

This thread has been a good discussion at times and a total sh!tshow at others but it's helped me examine what I feel is the "best" style. No conclusions reached!

But really it's helped remind me that we're all fortunate to be climbers at all, and even more fortunate to have the opportunity and drive to seek out first ascents.

As long as you're not totally botching the job/stinkin' up the joint, having fun, and coming home safe, you're style is cool with me. The "best", in fact.

I thought a lot during this thread's life.
It's a good thread.

You certainly have my respect, and many others' too.
thebravecowboy

climber
in the face of the fury of the funk
Jun 26, 2014 - 07:59pm PT
this thread should stay.
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:16pm PT
Deleting your own thread is comparable to chopping your own route. You established it and have no control over who follows. Unless you have inadvertently bolted someone else's line, leave it to history.
rick sumner

Trad climber
reno, nevada/ wasilla alaska
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:23pm PT
Your idea of best style is correct for the species of the time. The best route leaves no trace, with extinction of the dinosaur race you must erase.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
Jun 26, 2014 - 08:27pm PT
the original opening post to this thread was:


"It is style which complements affirmation with limitation and with humility; it is style which makes it possible to act effectively, but not absolutely; it is style which enables us to find harmony between the pursuit of ends essential to us, and the regard for the views, the sensibilities, the aspirations of others; it is style which is the deference that action pays to uncertainty; it is above all style through which power defers to reason."
J. Robert Oppenheimer, A Definition of Style
from
W. Walker Gibson, ed., The Limits of Language (N.Y. : Hill & Wang, 1962), 50f

http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/883716/J-Robert-Oppenheimer-and-Style

This is a complex sentence which Steve proposed to use in some writing, the discussion somehow centered on the moral authority of Oppenheimer and not so much in parsing the sentence. But the sentence contains 5 elements that are interesting to enumerate as a starting point for a discussion on climbing style and first ascents:

1) “complements affirmation with limitation and with humility”

Affirmation is the act of stating a truth, not the act of proving a truth. Relating this to climbing, one might affirm that a climb is “impossible.” Our choice of climbing style, however, might have it include a recognition of our limitation (“impossible for me”) and/or our own humility regarding the climb.

2) “makes it possible to act effectively, but not absolutely”

A style allows us to actually do the first ascent, but that style might include the consideration that any choice cannot be considered "absolute"

3) “enables us to find harmony between the pursuit of ends essential to us, and the regard for the views, the sensibilities, the aspirations of others”

the style considers what other climbers might do, including those future climbers

4) “the deference that action pays to uncertainty”

Deference is the respectful submission, here it would mean that our actions would honor the uncertainty of what we would find on a first ascent. An example might be starting up a climb and finding a blank section. The style we adopt would inform our decision as to whether or not to proceed, and how.

5) “power defers to reason”

Style helps us decide if what we are capable of (our power) should over ride our principles.



It is a good place to start.

Now the definition of the best first ascent style is something I think we can all agree on:

You start at the ground and climb to the top without resorting to any aid, and making the minimum possible alteration of the route from the state that you found it.

Not able to maintain this style, the first ascent attempt is abandoned in a manner that leaves it as unaltered as possible making it available for future attempts.

This is an ideal, and it pertains to the first ascent, but we would not disagree that any route put up this way represents the best way for the first ascent.

It is a style that helps us decide our actions during a first ascent.




my synopsis of the response is that, basically, since the rules of climbing are arbitrary, there is no possibility of the community of climbers defining a best style.

However, this perceived difficulty arises from factors outside of the actual First Ascent, in particular, a consideration of how other climbers coming after the first ascent will find the climb. Obviously, these are serious considerations, however, they are in tension with the first ascent style in many respects.

The boldness of the first ascent team in running out the climb between anchors, especially on routes requiring bolts for protection, is a consideration that the first ascent team makes without prior knowledge of what the route will be. Given the that the FA team may be confronted with the choice of doing the route in “best style” or using a less than best style to prepare the route for subsequent ascents, e.g. hang on a hook (which would be using aid) to drill a bolt reducing the runout, or gunning for the next stance from which to bolt, is an example of a dilemma that many FA teams face.

On rock that cannot currently be bolted on stance there is no alternative to rap bolting except choosing not to put a route in. It is not at all clear that some future technology would allow a ground up ascent, and it is not at all clear what the impetus is for putting the route in.

For sport routes it is not at all clear why these need to be put in at all. Consider that the sport route is essentially the same sort of route the exists in artificial climbing walls in climbing gyms, the outside variety of these climbs being somewhat longer than a typical gym, but in essence, gym climbing came about by emulating outdoor sports route. The technology exists to make the indoor artificial experience the same as the outdoor one with considerably less commitment involved with the existence of the routes (no presumption need be made about the impossibility of doing the route in “best style” today or in the future).

The environmental impact of reproducing sport routes on artificial walls is much less than the outdoor version, no approach trails, no cleaning cliffs, no issues involved with driving to and from the outdoor location. The routes can be set and reset without drilling offering a variety of climbs. The safety equipment is maintained on schedules. The safe behavior of the climbers is also insured by the staff of the gym.

We all like being outdoors in wonderful settings, is that enough of a justification to commit the cliff, a climbing resource, to a particular style forever (effectively)?

These are all questions which may arise from my lack of a true understanding of “sport climbing” style.

Aid climbs are another genre which come from quite another place in climbing, one that predates the rise of free climbing standards. Aid climbs do go places which it is difficult to see how you would ever free climb the route. But in the span of less than 50 years the massive siege of The Nose on El Capitan, using much aid, became a free climb which could be done in a long day. There are many factors which go into this, including the use of pre-inspection, rehearsal, etc. to figure out how to do the aid climb free, which would not be “best style.” But the fact that the route goes free begs the question: could it have gone free using “best style” only? without the aid route existing.

I think the answer is unquestionably yes. I don’t know how long it would have taken, but we know its possible to do now, and we know the grade the route goes free at, and while an extraordinary accomplishment, it is not at the extreme of free climbing technical difficulty.

Aid climbs are a tradition from the past. Every year many aid climbs have points-of-aid reduced and many climbs now go free with some route variations. It is generally considered ok to continue to use aid on the big wall routes, but ascents of shorter routes are much more likely to be considered “free” routes once they have a first free ascent.

If an aid route cannot go free one might ask, as above for sport routes, why put a route there?

These are important questions because you can put a route anywhere you wish with enough technology. So the concept of a “natural line” ceases to have any operational meaning. The only thing that matters, of course, is the rule we make that defines what constitutes too much technology.

In the end, this use of technology can be set high enough to eliminate any element of adventure (that is, the outcome is never in any question) but low enough to satisfy the concept that the route shouldn’t be too contrived (whatever that means in this context).

To an audience which would frequent a place like Super Topo Forum it would seem odd that anything but a high quality route, safely protected, scrubbed clean, with excellent topos and description would be a route done in best style. The only uncertainty is whether or not the climbers have the physical ability to climb it. That’s what SuperTopo is all about.

And perhaps that is the future of climbing.

That is not what climbing was, nor need be.
Messages 1 - 334 of total 334 in this topic
Return to Forum List
 
Our Guidebooks
spacerCheck 'em out!
SuperTopo Guidebooks

guidebook icon
Try a free sample topo!

 
SuperTopo on the Web

Recent Route Beta