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john hansen

climber
Topic Author's Original Post - Nov 23, 2006 - 12:00am PT
There must be many of you, where do you play, how often, what have been the names of your bands, what kind of music?
blackbird

Trad climber
over yonder en th' holler
Nov 23, 2006 - 12:28am PT
Fiddle

Where: mostly small venues, also some Cajun and contra dances, and the typical measure of weddings and funerals

How often: not very, anymore (just enough to keep them played in) but used to every waking minute

Name brands: one unmarked German, circa late 17/early 1800s; one unmarked Russian, circa mid to late 1800s; one unmarked American (Appalachian) circa late 18/early 1900s; 5 different bows.

Type music: mostly traditional/old time, with a healthy dose of Irish/Celtic/Scottish thrown in for good measure.

BB
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Nov 23, 2006 - 02:08am PT
I have a midi studio with keyboards hooked up to my computer. I scored a Nepal trekking video I shot once.

Unfortunately, I'm just not too talented and not disciplined either. I like the creative part.

I have drums, Bamboo flutes, and digeridoos as well.

I suck at them too.

Peace

Karl
Standing Strong

Boulder climber
step outside, but not to brawl
Nov 23, 2006 - 02:11am PT
i don't think you should keep telling yourself you suck.


*ooo! edit: posted @ 11_11, my favorite number... cuz it's number one four times... cuz everything comes back to 1... and on the 22nd... which is number eleven twice!

* double duh edit: sorry for telling u whut to do... it's only just cuz i care about the karl baba so i don't like anyone saying he sucks at anything :)
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Nov 23, 2006 - 04:31am PT
Original Cactus Pricks; Don Reid on guitar and vocals, Big Al Bartlett on Drums, Michael Paul on bass, and myself on Keyboards;......rock/punk stuff ;....loud and spirited music with one foot solidly placed in the garage. Was alot of fun and played together for about 7 years;....many rowdy parties;...the more beer served and the later it got, the better we sounded; Joshua Tree's infamous climber band. Over the years, lots of others joined in for the odd gig or a song or three;....Al Dude, Paul Boren, John Bachar, Dan Zacks, Joe Croft, George Zelenz, Shawn Curtis, Mark Bowling, Clive Wright, to name a few..... Donnie, Al and Mike still play together for the odd party or gathering, and I always attend .....(And you thought Mick Jagger was old......)......most gigs played after a full day of climbing....Many a climber overdid the partying and many a climber puked or at least got a serious hangover at a Cactus Pricks party...(You all know who you are......).....Rock and Roll!
mooser

Trad climber
seattle
Nov 23, 2006 - 10:32am PT
My musical tastes are pretty eclectic, but my favorite stuff to play is bluegrass. I play guitar, banjo, mandolin, and a little bass. I love going to a big local, monthly bluegrass jam, and hanging out with people who've been playing this stuff their whole lives. Right now, I'm mostly focused on mandolin. Here's my newest fixation:

tom woods

Gym climber
Bishop, CA
Nov 23, 2006 - 11:07am PT
I'm trying to learn Dobro. I got a weekly bluegrass jam here in Bishop. My problem is that I don't know muh about blue grass yet. I keep playing the dobro like a slide guitar, which at times it is, but now when I listen it sounds like I should play it like a banjo.

Anyone else working on Dobro?
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Nov 23, 2006 - 11:18am PT
I'd rather be talented but I don't mind sucking. I rather suck at climbing too but still benefit.

You see the parts I really enjoy can be enjoyed at a lower level of ability. The Inspiration, creativity and such. In climbing, the challenge, view, and nature is the same at 5.10 versus higher grades as well.

In music, like climbing, to be really good you have to sacrifice a lot of other things

Peace

Karl
k-man

Gym climber
SCruz
Nov 23, 2006 - 11:24am PT
Band names are always intersting. My buddy wanted to name our power trio The Lemmings. We had quite a following.

I suggested The Wigs would be a cool name for an artificial band like ours, but in the end Offhand won out (I like that name because it relates to climbing).

2 Drink Minimum was at the top of the list of another group I played with, although we can't seem to get away from Wheelhouse, the name we've been plying under for the last 5 years.

I make a stab at playing bass. It's really just for personal pleasure though, I can't say that others really enjoy what I do there.
ground_up

Trad climber
portland, or.
Nov 23, 2006 - 12:22pm PT
I'm still giggin with my funk/r&b band " Thin Ice".
Built a recording studio in my home , any ST'ers ever in the area are welcome to stop by. Could never stop climbin or jammin.

BTW....am almost finished with my CD project , in the vein of tangerine dream , all tunes have el cap route names , Mescalito , Zodiac, etc.. thinkin of calling it " The Big Stone"

Will be for sale by Christmas...anyone want a copy?
john hansen

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 23, 2006 - 01:41pm PT
Me and a friend play some acustic stuff. He said he had a gig at a Yoga retreat. I said you sure.. He said hey 200 bucks for one hour. O K ... We showed up at this dark house with about 40 cars parked up and down the drive way, but it was dead quiet. He went and found a room with about 60 people with thier hands in a praying posture OMMMMMMM.... They had all spent a week getting 'centered'.
We set up(no mics or amps) and started playing. They were all very attentive, no one moved or ate or drank while we played our first song,, then they clapped and hooted and stared at us while we played the next song. After about four songs I said"Weve never played for such a focused bunch of people' that got a bit of a laugh. This went on for an hour and ten minutes,, not a peep while we were playing and then applause.
I've played in Biker bars,at weddings, hundreds of parties, and in five hundred seat theaters but this was the wierdest gig I ever played. OMMMMMM....
mooser

Trad climber
seattle
Nov 23, 2006 - 01:52pm PT
Hey Tom,

You're right about dobro being played like a banjo versus a steel guitar. Thumb and finger picks are standard. There are all kinds of good instructional DVDs you can track down online that are worth forking out a few bucks. Have fun,

Tom
dirtineye

Trad climber
the south
Nov 23, 2006 - 01:55pm PT
One reason I quit playing in bars is crowd noise.

People ought to shut up and listen, LOL.
dirtineye

Trad climber
the south
Nov 23, 2006 - 02:03pm PT
That too, the SMOKE!!!! UGH.
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Nov 23, 2006 - 02:06pm PT
Met a pro-dobro player who was also a climber in Josh a number of years back. I think his name was Curry. (Curry Smith?) Kinda looked like Brad Pitt.

Peace

karl
dirtineye

Trad climber
the south
Nov 23, 2006 - 03:36pm PT
I watched DOc Watson perform in Florida about 30something years ago. It was a barn like hall with benches, packed, and at one point, some teenager in the audience shouted out something.

In a calm but resignedly annoyed voice Doc said, "I remember my first beer too, son.", which meant, sit down and shut up.

Most people knew not to be rude at Watson's concerts.
immanti

climber
Nov 23, 2006 - 05:59pm PT
Picked up the guitar in Jr High and taught myself, did the LA thing with my band for a few years. Our name was Visitation Valley, then Local Aliens.

Still play guitar and keyboards for myself, friends and family. I enjoy it almost as much as I did those noisy, smokey clubs.

Maybe one day we can do a Taco jam session.
mark miller

Social climber
Reno
Nov 23, 2006 - 07:02pm PT
Guitar and bass since 79, finally gave up the bar gigs in March 05, Cigarette smoke was a huge reason and the fact that you get home so late, it ruins the next day. Maybe I'm getting old, sometimes I miss it when the band was groovin and the crowd was diigging it, but how many times can you play 'sympathy for the devil' and Texas flood.
I've created a very nice home studio, Digital performer, 896's, Nuemann mic's, tube pre amps. But I've found that time is now the monster in front of my recording ambitions.
dirtineye

Trad climber
the south
Nov 23, 2006 - 07:12pm PT
Ohhh digital performer.

Steve Young told me that was the one to have.

I love my Oktava mikes though.
euphoria

Trad climber
Slippery Rock, PA
Nov 29, 2006 - 01:10am PT
I play drums well, banjo poorly. Also have (since age 3 or so) played piano, violin, and trombone, but these were all abandoned when I realized that drums were frickin great to play and that girls like them.

Bands:
The Massed Gadgets, Supertrain, Family Groove Company, Clovis Jam Expedition, Los Funkieros, 5 Feet High and Rising, Tango Ray & The Tonics (that one was in Yosemite), others that I am probably forgetting.
RRK

Trad climber
Talladega, Al
Nov 29, 2006 - 09:16am PT
I played guitar for 25 years or so with various bluegrass and oldtime bands. (That's where I met Dirt, who tabbed out some Norman Blake tunes for me that I still have lying around somewhere.) Switched to dobro about 10 years ago to fill a blank spot with the New Vulgarians. (Dirt's brother sat in with us one banjo-less night during a club tour a few years back and that's when I found out that Dirt had taken up rock climbing - which I had tried to get him to do 30 years earlier). The New Vulgarians are on hiatus at the moment though we still get quite a few calls to play. I also do side work for my oldest son which I deem my highest calling. Just finished 3+ sets with him Saturday night (I was led to believe that it would only be 2 sets) which I greatly enjoyed and which lit the "playing" fire again. I'm not playing or practicing very much right now. I have a dob' student, so I at least have to get it out once a week plus sometimes play with various Vulgarians about once a week or so. However the 3+ sets we did Saturday was the first time in quite awhile that I've had to play through for the whole night, plus it was a 2-man show so I did all fills and breaks. Went from zero to wide-open in about 1 day.

RRK

PS saw this from Tom after I posted

"I'm trying to learn Dobro. I got a weekly bluegrass jam here in Bishop. My problem is that I don't know muh about blue grass yet. I keep playing the dobro like a slide guitar, which at times it is, but now when I listen it sounds like I should play it like a banjo.

Anyone else working on Dobro? "

For bluegrass I would recommend a series by a guy named Jay Buckey, which you can find online. He teaches several instruments very well. The material is a good value and comes with a CD. It covers all the pinching and rolling styles and gets you a very solid repetoir of tunes that you will encounter in the real world plus cool licks of all descriptions. Acutab has some of Rob Ikes stuff tabbed out which may be over your head to start but certainly a style worthy of emulation. Also you can get a tab from -I think Mel Bay - of the Great Dobro Sessions which is superb. (Get that disc for your own listening pleasure) Some of those tunes - particularly the Oswald stuff - is easily within your reach and sounds great (he did much of the dob on the original Circle album)
Good luck.
dirtineye

Trad climber
the south
Nov 29, 2006 - 10:29am PT
RRK hush! You are making me sound old.

I "don't" flatpick any more, except for ONE tune.

However, I will gladly play a medley of Arkasas Traveler for you, with itself, in three keys, fingerstyle, if you EVER come off your property againfor anything but lunch, legal work, gout treatment, or picking up the kid.

roslyn

Trad climber
washington
Nov 29, 2006 - 11:03am PT
cool thread. i've been playing guitar off and on since the 6th grade (70's).

I have a larivee and and a stock yamaha. My career never got beyond the proverbial kitchen party. As my buddy and i were to begin a busking career, i found myself pregnant, with no stamina to hit the streets.

I also "hack" away on the fiddle. I have a german model from the 1800's that was my grandfather's. It was restored by my best friend. I also have a french model that my husband got as payment when he was in the instrument repair business.

The Hubby also plays the banjo, he has a handmade model, old-timey, from the 20's

He also has a koa martin that some biker left at the repair store. This dude brought in the guitar with the side crushed. Seemed some business aquataince crushed it as a warning. The biker never returned and when the shop closed, bruce ended up with the guitar. With other activities like kids, life, etc., bruce never finished the restoration. He hopes to in the next few years.
spud

climber
Nov 29, 2006 - 12:27pm PT
Accordion, for 42 years. Polka.
the Fet

Knackered climber
A bivy sack in the secret campground
Nov 29, 2006 - 12:47pm PT
I've got an early 70s Les Paul Gold Top, and a Marshall Tube Combo (plus a few acoustics). I've never gotten serious enough to really learn, or play in a band, I just have fun in my garage or camping. I like everything but only really know/play rock.

My wife has a drum set that also resides in our garage. In the last 3 years I've taught myself on it, very fun.

When friends who play stop by we'll often have impromptu jam sessions.

I'd like to pick up a bass, setup a computer to record, with keyboards, but as mentioned it's hard to find the time.
pc

climber
East of Seattle
Nov 29, 2006 - 12:51pm PT
Sax and Piano.

Groups:

 Duke and the Ducktails - 50s "rock?" (not my type of music but it paid well)
 Blues Brothers Review - (I'm a Mississippi bullfrog sittin on a, on a stump...)
 Chickory Three - Sax, piano, and bass
 Horn for various folks passing through southern BC.

Now, jazz ballads for the girls at bedtime...
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Nov 29, 2006 - 01:26pm PT
Piano since I was 6, but I haven't had one for 10 years. I was having a heck of a time w/ J's neice's piano lesson material over the weekend. My fingers sure have gotten stiff.

I used to sing in musicals, choirs, my college jazz ensemble, and a garage band. Now I just sing in the car. Really loud.

I couple of my songs (lyrics) were recorded by my friend's band in Belgium (La Vierge du Chancelier Rolin). They actually had a period of high popularity in the French speaking half (Wallonia) around the same time that the movie Singles came out. One of the recurring gags in that movie was that main character's deadbeat boyfriend kept insisting that his lameass band was "huge in Belgium". I laughed so hard.
Melissa

Gym climber
berkeley, ca
Nov 29, 2006 - 01:36pm PT
For those of you that remember Nathan Sweet from rec.climbing...He made Hurdy Gurdies. I've always thought that was one of the more unusual professions that I've come across. Anyway, I haven't heard from Nathan in ages, but I googled up this offering from e-bay. Very beautiful!

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=260003084417&category=623#ebayphotohosting
Gunkie

climber
East Coast US
Nov 29, 2006 - 03:04pm PT
Sissy guitar players :)

Trumpet player, all the way. I took lessons just outside NYC with a star student of Maurice Andre from the Paris Conservatory while in HS. Paid my way through undergraduate school playing. Got a music performance scholarship, but matriculated into the Electrical Engineering program. The cool thing about that was the school allowed me to maintain the music scholarship as long as I took the requsite ensemble and course work. So I spent an extra hazy year as an undergrad. My freshmen year I was second chair in the university orchestra behind the current 2nd chair in the Philadelphia Orchestra when he was a senior. Then I was the 1st chair for the next four years. I wonder where I would have ended up had I stayed on the music path. I also wonder about the summer of 1983, between sophomore and junior years, when I blew off a job with the Curry Company in the valley. I can tell you that I wouldn't have gone back to school had I done the Curry Company gig.

I play A-Piccolo trumpet for the occasional wedding and teach my oldest daughter [she's 1st trumpet/1st chair]. Currently, Brandeburg No. 2 is my personal musical Mount Everest.

bluering

Trad climber
Santa Clara, Ca.
Nov 29, 2006 - 03:17pm PT
I used to play rythym guitar, but picked up the Bass because my band couldn't find a compatable player. It's a fun instrument. We call ourselves Smoke Break because that's the only thing everybody could get along with. I floated Tuolumne as a name but nobody liked it. I thought it was perfect myself. Oh well.
pc

climber
East of Seattle
Nov 29, 2006 - 03:41pm PT
Nice Gunkie.

Read "Mozart in the Jungle" for a "cup is half empty" look at what your music path might have looked like. Makes me sad when I look at the state of the arts.

pc
mcKbill

climber
Grundy Center
Nov 30, 2006 - 11:10am PT
Wow, neat to learn so many of you are bluegrassers. Me too, but I also play blues, and love covering Grateful Dead tunes with a little acoustic band called Terrapin Isle.

http://www.terrapinisle.com

We don't play out very often, but when we do it is typically a private party or a coffee house. The cigarette smoke in bars is very irritating for me and my bandmates.

We play some originals too...if you look at the main page of our website you'll see links to a couple of songs I wrote and recorded on my father's Boss BR-1600 digital recording machine. It's way better than the old Teac 4-track reel-to-reel.

I was lucky to grow up with musical parents. They never pushed me to play, but always provided encouragement when I showed an interest.

Music is a wonderful gift to share.

Jam on!

--mcKbill
artmusicsouth

climber
VA
Nov 30, 2006 - 01:00pm PT
Right on Gunkie! I too play trumpet though not often. I did play a Bb Schilke picc but sold it as I just did not have time keep up the chops for the requisite gigs.

My main job is that I lead worship at a church in the swampy lowlands of SE Virginia.
http://www.wrpca.org

Not much to climb on around here. I live vicarioulsy through trip reports here and from my friends who still inhabit climbable territory :(

I noodle on a number of instruments as my job requires me to have some knowledge of the instruments we use. My main focus though as a musician is as a composer of "contemporary art music" for lack of a better term, i.e. new classical music (but not the frilly kind :) I have a web site that has some of my music on there if you're bored one day:

http://www.markchambersmusic.com
GOclimb

Trad climber
Boston, MA
Nov 30, 2006 - 02:25pm PT
Used to be an opera singer.

Being a computer hack pays better.

GO
Ouch!

climber
Nov 30, 2006 - 02:49pm PT
Brutus of Wyde

climber
Old Climbers' Home, Oakland CA
Nov 30, 2006 - 03:04pm PT
B.A. degree in French Horn performance and composition.

Brutus
bachar

Trad climber
Mammoth Lakes, CA
Nov 30, 2006 - 06:06pm PT

Good thing you can't hear this photo! JB
pc

climber
East of Seattle
Nov 30, 2006 - 06:30pm PT

Hah! Offwidths and French Horns. Both require serious puckering ;)
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Oakville, Ontario, Canada, eh?
Nov 30, 2006 - 08:31pm PT
Trombone and piano - I play like I climb - acceptably well and usually off the couch. Not half bad if I practise. I sing classical and barbershop and other stuff - anything but lead!
john hansen

climber
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 30, 2006 - 11:16pm PT
We used to play a ton of gigs in the early eighties, rock and roll stuff. Billy Idol, Eddie Money, Thin Lizzy, Van Halen, Skynard. All that late 70's stuff. We would play 'Sweet Home Alabama' and then do 'Southern Man' . 'Saturday Nights Alright for Fighting'
Any thing that would get em up and rocking. Takes alot of work to get four 45 minute sets together. I played with three different bands over about three years and we finally got the best guys all together. We had alot of fun with light shows and segueing songs together(keep em dancing) and just making the show flow ( I always wrote up the set list's, an art in itself).
Lots of drugs, lovely ladies and adreniline. A couple guys went down hard snorting crystal meth and staying up for days on end.
Its very hard to keep five or six guys going in the same direction for a long time. I never did much of the 'hard stuff' and was actually doing my best climbing during those years... climb all day, play all night.
I've played alot of more mellow gigs since then,, It's still alot of fun.
Sparky

Trad climber
vagabon movin on
Dec 1, 2006 - 02:39pm PT
Piano starting at 5yrs. Many other instruments to follow. Stuck with and developed piano, saxophone, and guitar (Sax for senior recital). Studied composition and music education at UNC located on the front range. Climbed the rest of the time. Now a band director for 8yrs with 200+ program consisting of beginning, intermediate, jazz, and advanced bands out in Santa Clarita, Ca. Also run a rock climbing club so I get paid for my two greatest passions! Stoney after work and trips to the Valley, Bishop, JT, etc.... Have a home studio and still enjoy composing.

Jeff
ha-ha

climber
location
Dec 1, 2006 - 04:47pm PT
playing drums for 20 years, too many bands to name, but i sold my kit a few years ago to buy camera equipment. drums are kind of a pain (noisy, take up lots of space, everybody hates you). i'd like to get a small kit to play with brushes. mostly, i just play acoustic guitar and piano now, we also have a hammer dulcimer in the living room. i'd like to get a cello.

by the way...what's the last thing a drummer says before getting fired?



"hey guys, i wrote some songs!"
wbw

climber
'cross the great divide
Dec 1, 2006 - 05:16pm PT
I've played guitar for 30 years. I minored in classical and jazz guitar in college, when I used to practice four hours each day. Played in a jazz/fusion group called Four Voices, and came pretty close to going to Berklee College of Music in 1984. Got into climbing and the outdoor life which derailed any interest in an urban lifestyle. . . no regrets. The climbing life is the shiznitt.

I don't practice consistently anymore and haven't in years. Occasionally, I pull out my old ES-175 and noodle. I have very infrequent jams with climbing bros, which is great fun. Many years ago I got involved in a jam session at Kyle Copeland's house in Moab, and I think Todd Gordon may have been involved. To tell you the truth, there were so many famous climber-types present, Kyle's house being the epicenter of Moab climbing at the time,(Greg Epperson, Derek Hersey, Jim Beyer, and I think Warren Harding may have even popped in although I have reason to doubt my memory of that particular night), that I was pretty intimidated by it all. And I still had some chops back then. Got to goof off on Kyle's pedal steel, which impressed me as one heck of a difficult instrument.
paganmonkeyboy

Trad climber
the blighted lands of hatu
Dec 1, 2006 - 05:28pm PT
been playing for years - tuba, bassoon, keys, drums, guitar, bass, just got a sax...only just barely learned to sing though...

i like to play anything from folk to punk, but i seem to be partial to the overheating tube amp sonic youth/pavement thing, with a healthy lump of grunge thrown in the mix. and I love tube amps - got a couple old silvertone 100w heads that will push a club full of people at 3 and a half....so nice...one still has the original tubes in it, the other has been sovtek-ed...

current thing going - the high explosives - sort of a one man band with whoever happens to be in the living room when we decide to record something...demos available of some stuff here, but most of the goods are still sitting on the machine over in the other room...

http://myspace.com/thehighexplosives
Tan Slacks

Social climber
Joshua Tree
Dec 1, 2006 - 06:47pm PT
Thanks Todd for mentioning my tenure with the Cactus Pricks. A great time it was, at least until the booze limit was reached. I always dreamed of being in a rock band. I only wish I had done it before I got married. The groupies were amazing at the gordo ranch.

The other day Sierra, my eleven year old daughter was explaining to me (again) how "uncool" I was. I tried to explain to her that I had played in a rock band. The Cactus pricks no less and that I wailed the guitar like Kurt Cobain. She just laughed. Even Cindy backed me up, still she laughed....

Then I found the video. Yes one exists from one of your larger partys. She is now a believer. But I'm still uncool. In the video was a bass player that should get mentioned, another JT "local" Mark Bowling pounded it out that night.

Locker and I will pull off another feat. Perhaps instead of the "Cactus Pricks" we could be "just the pricks"

Music is good times
Todd Gordon

Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
Dec 2, 2006 - 10:19am PT
Tan Slacks;.....I mentioned Mark's bass playing.... just spelled his name wrong..(which I corrected..). To be cool, you need to grow your hair longer, get some ink done, and maybe some piercings .....and perhaps a Harley........Best consult Hillary and Chelsea on this one.........Rock on, old dude! (My kids are easier to please than your soon to be teen......all I need to do is look at their face and tickle them as I change their loaded diapers.......). You ARE cool, and Sierra knows it;... she just can't let you it. When my kids get to be teens, the only thing cool about me will be my wheel-chair and the extra-large diaper I will load for THEM to change.....(Pay back is Sa-weeeet!)
Tan Slacks

Social climber
Joshua Tree
Dec 2, 2006 - 04:59pm PT
Every now and then Sierra talks about who she might marry. I tell her I only have one prerequiset (sp)

He must be able to pick me up.
neebee

Social climber
calif/texas
Feb 17, 2018 - 10:44pm PT
hey there, say, ... was looking for the newer thread and found this...

bump... :)


spur of the moment, in thrift store:
and, wouldn't you know it! not a SPOON IN THE HOUSE! (so to speak)
so thus-- i joined the piano using a spatula and a small soup ladle...
oh my...

and-- the piano lady there, is ONE HUNDRED YEARS OLD! and her husband, is 87...

https://youtu.be/OVTS1bkcTJo



these, well, i was just messing around with some new ones, and
did not really practice to the piece... just did a fast 'add on'...

https://youtu.be/kfkC9dN8z6o


little practice... not has time to really know the piece yet...
but, am working on trying to do this everyday, now-- new year goal...

https://youtu.be/5sBPdytipL0
neebee

Social climber
calif/texas
Feb 18, 2018 - 10:10am PT
hey there say, wow... i finally had time to go back and read all these
shares...

hope you all can too...

very neat to see all this music in folks lives...

very nice!
RURP_Belay

Big Wall climber
Bitter end of a bad anchor
Feb 18, 2018 - 11:10am PT
Spot the Supertopian:

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