Fifty-seven years

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Messages 1 - 20 of total 32 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
rgold

Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
Topic Author's Original Post - Jul 24, 2014 - 10:41pm PT
As of today:


With Exum guides Dick Pownall and Karl Pfiffner. I was 14.

Time flies when yer havin' fun!
Al_Smith

climber
San Francisco, CA
Jul 24, 2014 - 11:18pm PT
That's fantastic! Climb on!
Curt

climber
Gold Canyon, AZ
Jul 25, 2014 - 02:42am PT
Well, at least you didn't do that before I was born :-)

Curt
tradmanclimbs

Ice climber
Pomfert VT
Jul 25, 2014 - 03:06am PT
Very cool!
donini

Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
Jul 25, 2014 - 06:18am PT
Congrats young man! Rich, when you think of it, more than a couple of East Coast climbers got their first taste at Exum.
couchmaster

climber
Jul 25, 2014 - 06:22am PT
That's awesome. Thanks for sharing it. The first climbing book I ever read was Dick Pownall's masterpiece instruction manual: "The Mountaineering Handbook, An Invitation To Climbing". Which starts out with a real engaging and detailed story of some climbers heading up to do a climb on Owl Rock (I think). Even the cover sucked me in with some fella doing a Dulfersitz rap off some total wild alpine rock looking vista. http://www.amazon.com/Mountaineering-Handbook-Curtis-Pownall-Casewit/dp/B001P6ZFYO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1406294759&sr=8-1&keywords=Dick+Pownall. His love of the Mt's was visible and transferred over to me very clearly in that work. The dude was clearly the man. I would have loved to have tied in with the guy. Here's the picture (below) of the cover at the one Chesslers Books has for sale. I wore that the pages of that book out.



Congrats yourself on a long and rich (not Rich) climbing history Rich.
Reeotch

climber
4 Corners Area
Jul 25, 2014 - 06:29am PT
Oh yeah! Way to go, Rich. Proud to share a name with ya . . .

You are one of the people whose posts I bother to read. Appreciate your experience/wisdom.

There is hope for the Taco stand . . .
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jul 25, 2014 - 06:58am PT
Congrats: well at least you didn't do that before I was a fetus!
phylp

Trad climber
Millbrae, CA
Jul 25, 2014 - 07:04am PT
That's great! Congratulations on such an interesting anniversary.
Bad Climber

climber
Jul 25, 2014 - 07:18am PT
Fantastic, Mr. Gold! Keep on climbing.

BAd
steveA

Trad climber
Wolfeboro, NH
Jul 25, 2014 - 07:29am PT
Rich,

Your definitely in a special group of climbers, who have been at it a long time, and still have the interest and ability to keep practicing our craft.
guyman

Social climber
Moorpark, CA.
Jul 25, 2014 - 07:52am PT
Way to go

a life on the rocks

A toast to you
PhilG

Trad climber
The Circuit, Tonasket WA
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:01am PT
Congratulations for keeping the love alive, and for being safe that many years.
klk

Trad climber
cali
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:03am PT
nice

tetons in the 50s-- interesting time and place
Peter Haan

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, CA
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:03am PT
That is great, Richie!
MH2

climber
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:31am PT
An excellent use of time for a 14 year-old.

I can only guess what I was doing that day, aged 8: looking for snakes and then watching Zorro.
rgold

Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
Topic Author's Reply - Jul 25, 2014 - 08:45am PT
Tetons in the 50s--interesting time and place

...and the sixties, which is what I'm more familiar with. I stayed at the climbers campground, lurked at the Teton tea parties, was up in Garnet Canyon during both the Appie accident and the Tim Bond tragedy, participated in a nasty rescue on the Grand, encountered the Vulgarians for the first time, fell in with John Gill, and managed early repeats of some of the Moran south side routes like No Escape Buttress.

I mentioned in the McCarthy welcome thread the fascinating book We Aspired---The Last Innocent Americans, by Pete Sinclair, which documents that period, partially from the point of view of running the ranger station and having to do the rescues and police the climbers' campground.

Sinclair provides a deep and complex narrative, sometimes verging on allegory, of those singular times in American climbing. I must say I responded viscerally to the "last innocent Americans" subtitle, which immediately struck a chord with me, and yet I've never been able to explain what that means myself and have never been able to extract a satisfactory explanation from Pete's book, although I think the entire text is meant to elaborate on that concept.

The book seems to me to be suffused with a melancholy about the end of these special times, partially reflected in the end an aging climber's career. And yet it is not a sad book or a downer at all and ends at the beginning, with an account of the kind of human decency that is now muted if not obliterated by the red state/blue state divide.
dee ee

Mountain climber
citizen of planet Earth
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:16pm PT
Dude, I was born 11 days later.



That ain't right!
HighDesertDJ

Trad climber
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:31pm PT
Great stories, rgold. Keep em coming.
jgill

Boulder climber
Colorado
Jul 25, 2014 - 08:45pm PT
We Aspired . . . is a fine book, capturing the spirit of that era. I can't recall how many times I dropped into the climbing ranger shack and chatted with Pete. He was getting a PhD at Wyoming and eating a lot of spaghetti to save money. He taught at Evergreen College for years, probably hired by Willi Unsoeld who was a dean. Pete's health wasn't so great when I talked with him 7 or 8 years ago. Anybody have an update?


Rich, I think I climbed the OS a year or so before you. Nice mountains, possibly even better than the boulders.


;>)
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