RECORD of Royal Robbins Alpine Accomplishments?

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Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Topic Author's Reply - May 3, 2017 - 08:00am PT
Excellent!

Between Ed, Pat, and Tamara, we have laid the Robbins free-solo of DNB to rest.
It was outlandish and inspiring while it lasted. (We will stay with Charlie Fowler as the first to do this climb all free without a rope).

Royal Robbins did however, free-solo the East Buttress of El Capitan in Tretorn!
Pat Ament also reports, definitively, that Royal climbed the DNB in Tretorn, and most importantly, Pat reports Royal's solo ascent of the DNB via means of self-belay, and not via free-solo.

This comports with Royal's notation in the scan provided by Tamara.

.............................

Royal Robbins SPIRIT OF THE AGE, Pat Ament

Page 231
Some of Royal's friends lost track of him during the early 70s, although he did not lose track of himself. He and Liz opened another climbing equipment store in 1971 in Fresno, California. He raced up the Salathe-Steck on Sentinel in ten hours with Doug Scott and Tony Willmott. He was climbing in Tretorn tennis shoes which he felt were the best combination of comfort and rockclimbing performance. These were not the usual stiff climbing shoes that provided support on small holds. They could not be jammed into cracks the way the hard Robbins Boot could. Yet Royal was climbing better than ever. In his Tretorn tennis shoes, he climbed the Salathe Wall of El Capitan with a friend from Madison, Wisconsin. He climbed the Direct North Buttress of Middle Cathedral Rock in Tretorns and also led his friends Egon and Joanna Marte up the Salathe Wall of El Capitan. El Cap was now hosting guided tours.
Page 232
One day at the base of El Cap, in May 1974 on the shorter pinnacle routes, Royal solo free-climbed "Ahab" (a 5.10 off-width originally led by Frank Sacherer). From the top of Ahab, he down climbed "Moby Dick," all in his Tretorn tennis shoes. He free-soloed the exacting 5.11 start to "the Slack," continued up the Slack, crawled through the space behind the pinnacle, and climb down the strenuous lower pitches of the left side of the Slack.
Page 235
Elsewhere in Yosemite during the early and mid-‘70s, Royal free-soloed the difficult off-width cracks that form the Right and Left sides of Reed Pinnacle (both 5.10). These illustrations of mastery were daring enough with a rope and in regular climbing shoes, much less free-solo and in his Swedish-made, low-cut, flimsy tennis shoes. This was, arguably, the highest standard of free-solo climbing in the world at the time. He also free-soloed the left side of the Cookie (5.10), Chingando (5.10), Moby Dick-Left Side (5.10-), the Crack of Despair (5.10 off-width), and the East Buttress of El Capitan (5.10). He made countless other solo ascents of slightly less difficulty (such as Commitment, 5.9, Cleft, 5.9, the Mouth, 5.9, and the Right and Center routes on the Cookie, both 5.9). Several of these routes were conservatively graded and closer to 5.10 than 5.9. Royal self-belay soloed many longer routes, including the North and Direct North Buttresses of Middle Cathedral Rock.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Topic Author's Reply - May 3, 2017 - 08:18am PT
Pat Ament describes Tretorn, Royal's early and mid-70s climbing shoe of choice:
Swedish-made, low-cut, flimsy tennis shoes
Exactly!

During the mid-70s, when I started climbing, I used to play tennis in Tretorn. Nothing about the court shoes inspired me to try climbing in them. One of my early climbing partners, who didn't play tennis, actually bought a pair of Tretorn because he knew Royal climbed in them!

I tried my friend's Tretorn on the rock, if only for a few moments. I couldn't see how Tretorn would hold an edge. The rubber felt fluffy, which may have been good for lateral movement on the court, but seemed too soft for rock. I couldn't believe Royal climbed in such unsupportive footwear.

In the mid-late 70s, Adidas Cross-Country were far superior on the rock. Because the plantar area of the shoe was much stiffer laterally, owing to the dark green EVA underfoot, you could actually edge in them and the soles were of a tan colored gum rubber, which were fairly sticky. Leather uppers added to the effect of support when standing on the toes or edging.

In comparison with Tretorn, twisting the foot into cracks would have been (was) vastly more comfortable and effective given the leather toe box of the Cross-Country.
Tretorn, by contrast, had limp dish rag uppers with desiccated bathmats for soles!

But a lot of the earlier climbers used gym shoes, so there was a precedent.
I can also see how Tretorn, with their narrow toe box, would have been an upgrade from the Chuck Taylors of Royal's youth.

Royal at Stony:


https://www.royalrobbins.com/blog/category/our-heritage/


Look again at Pat Ament's list of climbs that Royal accomplished while wearing Tretorn.
Imagine yourself heading up on any one of them, either with a rope (Salathe Wall) or without a rope (East Buttress of El Capitan), and with only these dainty coverings on your feet:

Tretorn




A more structured alternative for the following generation:

Adidas Cross-Country


[edit]

Clint: correction made for Lower Cathedral Rock.
Dave's Deviation extension added as an independent attribution following the FA & FFA of Dave's Deviation.
Phred: Kichatna routes amended with ratings, thank you.
Free-solo of El Cap East Buttress replaces DNB free-solo.

(changes bring us to version 3.4)
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
May 3, 2017 - 03:00pm PT
Good work on figuring out the Tretorn stories, Roy (and thanks to Pat for getting the stories into print in the first place)!

I checked on the date of the FA of Lower Cathedral Rock - North Face.
The guidebooks have it correct at 6/1960.
The date was not in Ed's original list in 2008.
So I must have put the 1963 date in my copy during my edits, oops!

The source on Dave's Deviation extension to top is Spirit of the Age, p.32 (and p.31).
Phred

Mountain climber
Anchorage
May 3, 2017 - 03:24pm PT
From page 62 of the 1970 AAJ (http://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/12197005800/Californians-in-Alaska);, Mount Nevermore was climbed on July 18, 1969, and rated NCCS III, F7. Mount Jeffers was climbed on July 22, 1969, and rated NCCS III or IV, F8, A1. Sasquatch was climbed on August 2, 1969, and rated NCCS IV, F8, A2. Team was Joseph Fitschen, Charles Raymond, and Royal S. Robbins.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Topic Author's Reply - Aug 9, 2017 - 01:33pm PT
Version 3.5 is now up in the OP.

Tamara Robbins assisted with the Telluride area, adding many notations for Robbins FA on Ophir Wall and in Cracked Canyon.
These were pulled from her scans of Royal's detailed notes.

...........................

In addition, the following 9 routes were culled from Mountain Project:

Canada:

Squamish, Murren Park, Milkman's Wall, Mr. Crabbe, 5.11c FA Royal Robbins (?) FFA unknown


Arizona:

Prescott Area, Granite Dells, High Rappel Dell, Siege, 5.10 [date?] FA Royal Robbins + David Lovejoy + Rusty Baillie


California:

Donner Pass, Snow Shed Wall, Karl's Gym, 5.10d FA 1973 Chris Vandiver + Royal Robbins


Colorado:

RMNP, Spearhead, Syke’s Sickle, III 5.9+ FA 1958 (?) Richard Sykes + Dave Rearick + David Isles + John Wharton, FFA Royal Robbins, Layton Kor 1964 (?)


Utah:

Little Cottonwood Canyon, The Thumb, east side, Robbins Route, 5.10 FA Royal Robbins + Ted Wilson

Big Cottonwood Canyon, Storm Mountain Picnic Area, Storm Mountain Island, Amphitheater Overhang Left, 5.12d FA Royal Robbins, FFA Jim Karn or Steve Habovstak

Big Cottonwood Canyon, Storm Mountain Island, Amphitheater Overhang Right, A1 FA Royal Robbins

Moab Area, Valley of the Gods, Mexican Hat, Robbins Route, 5.6 A2 FA Royal Robbins


Minnesota:

Duluth Area, Ely's Peak, Robbins F12 Overhang, 5.8 FA Royal Robbins (?)

[Edit] specified Siege, in the Granite Dells as 10b R, per Steel Monkey.
Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Aug 9, 2017 - 02:51pm PT
Cool stuff.
Thanks for sharing, Roy and Tamara.
steelmnkey

climber
Vision man...ya gotta have vision...
Aug 9, 2017 - 08:28pm PT
Best date I have for Siege in the Granite Dells is 1971.

In a January 1971 guide to the Dells, there is a listing for something called "Seige Climb", rated F8. It appears to be the same climb.

One last edit... the route in the latest Dells guide gets a 5.10b R rating.
Steve Grossman

Trad climber
Seattle, WA
Aug 16, 2017 - 10:10pm PT
Another obscure Robbins route mentioned here.

http://www.supertopo.com/tr/Wind-River-TR-Cathedral-Cirque/t208n.html

Orion's Reflection (5.9 A2) Cathedral Buttress Wind River range.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Topic Author's Reply - Jan 20, 2018 - 09:44am PT
Version 3.6 is now up in the OP.

It reflects the entry made by Steve Grossman for the Wind River Range.

[edit]Thanks Steel M.
Siege FA date added to 3.6!
steelmnkey

climber
Vision man...ya gotta have vision...
Jan 20, 2018 - 02:34pm PT
Sieige in the Granite Dells, 1971
Tamara Robbins

climber
not a climber, just related...
Jun 11, 2018 - 06:03pm PT
Hey there Roy... I think we forgot one of the more humorous ones - Mexican Hat near Bluff UT ;) That was in 1962 with Jack Turner.
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Topic Author's Reply - Jun 11, 2018 - 07:51pm PT
Got it Tam!

I've added this for version 3.7:

Valley of the Gods, Mexican Hat, (SW of Bluff) Robbins Route, 5.6 A2 [1962] FA Royal Robbins + Jack Turner

We had an entry for the route under Utah/Moab Area, but the inclusion of an FA date and the Jack Turner partnership was lacking: Thanks much for the cleanup!

Every time I look at this list I'm just blown away by the productivity of one Royal Robbins and his merry cohort.
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