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Messages 539 - 558 of total 692 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
Big Mike

Trad climber
BC
Oct 6, 2011 - 05:13pm PT
MH We have wireless everywhere these days. I am currently posting from my cell phone. Its a blessing and a curse!

How is your project going? Did you see my offer to help?
MH2

climber
Oct 6, 2011 - 11:07pm PT
Anders still has a coal-burning modem, a rotary phone, a straight-razor & strop with which he disciplines his cat.





Just wanted to frame that.
Big Mike

Trad climber
BC
Oct 6, 2011 - 11:12pm PT
Hahahahahahahahaha! Nice one Tami :)
Chief

climber
The NW edge of The Hudson Bay
Oct 6, 2011 - 11:15pm PT
How does Tami know all these details about MH?
Chief

climber
The NW edge of The Hudson Bay
Oct 7, 2011 - 03:15pm PT
OK this might seem a bit remote but bear with me as it is related to climbing in Squamish in the seventies.
In this age of political correctness we must change certain vernacular.
The formation formerly known as The Squaw is now called Shlaynay and essentially impossible to spell and unpronounceable.
How about the First Nations Significant Other?
Would that make an Indian Giver an Aboriginal Philanthropist?
Kind of reminds me of the late Sam Kinnison's explanation for someone's (initialsWG) inexpicable rise to entertainment fame.
"The whole world decided not to hurt her feelings."
Back to climbing.

PB aka, Chief, Tomohawk etc.
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Oct 7, 2011 - 06:14pm PT
And what should be done about routes like "Teenage girls don't blow gorbies" or "Smell of fat chick"

And I think Hamie would like to rename "Rock On" to "Rocking on for one more short pitch above Bastille"

The whole naming climbs thing is sorta weird.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Oct 7, 2011 - 07:05pm PT
Some route (and cliff) names are politically incorrect, sometimes embarrassingly so. Adolescent silliness you never quite live down.

The Squamish people have now published a Squamish-English dictionary, which may prove a useful reference.

Slhanay, as with the cliff's former name, was and is an unofficial name, so at least there's no complicated name change process required.

ps I resemble that remark about how my cat disciplines me. She has all sorts of razor sharp attachments already.
hamie

Social climber
Thekoots
Oct 7, 2011 - 11:15pm PT
Cheers, Ghost! You must have received the pix I sent you way back.
Regards, H.

EDIT: Ooops! Wrong decade!
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Oct 8, 2011 - 01:15am PT
You must have received the pix I sent you way back.

Yup. And as you may recall, I never tacked a name onto it. Just told as many people as I could that I'd found an incredible climb in the South Gully. The "Rock On" name came from Jim and Bob when they added the last pitch.

Did you guys mostly aid it? When Steve Loomer and I first climbed it, the cracks on the first two pitches were full of dirt and roots, and we couldn't free it until we'd cleaned it out. It wasn't as dirty as most of the lower-angle cracks and corners on the Chief, but it did take a couple of trips up it before we had it cleaned to the point that it was a reasonable free climb.
hamie

Social climber
Thekoots
Oct 8, 2011 - 01:52am PT
"Peter, Tami and I freed Bastille in the rain".
??????? Jim, it's always raining out there. That's why it's called Squish--it's the sound of a rockshoe on wet moss.
Yes, Ghost we hung on a few pieces, but not a lot. More often we just used the dirt and roots which you so recklessly removed later. It was a technique which I now refer to as "Early Squamish". The concept of cleaning a climb, or even a single pitch, was unheard of. We climbed like Tami's neanderthal ice climbers, not like her super-honed rockstars of the 70s.
"Grunt. Moss good."
"Aarrggghh. Shrub better. Eat shrub too."
H.
Big Mike

Trad climber
BC
Oct 8, 2011 - 02:50am PT
Tami- When i bailed from "Rock On" it was getting late and we still had the last two pitches to go when we got to the anchor.

We were climbing on my 70 m half ropes so it was easy to bail in one rap. What was not so easy was getting the end of the rope unstuck from the sapling it had decided to wrap itself around on the way down.

It was only 15m or so up on the easy terrain on the left just to the right of the great arch. Someone had a fixed rope on the great arch so i put a prussik on it as a backup and climbed right to free my stuck rope. Then simply took a nice swing and rapped down.

I was thinking in your situation you could have used a prussik & backup knot to lead the route placing protection so if you did fall and the rope should unstick then your belay could catch your ass.
bmacd

Mountain climber
100% Canadian
Oct 8, 2011 - 02:51am PT
Peter, Tami and I freed Bastille in the rain.

Bad news for you Jim, gf and I also freed it, also in the rain, before you even knew about rock climbing,. So I am contesting your FFA claim bro .... besides MH has written it up as someone else completely.

;)
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Oct 8, 2011 - 03:03am PT
Bad news for you Jim, gf and I also freed it, also in the rain, before you even knew about rock climbing,

Oh yeah? Well we freed it while you were still in diapers. And anyway, all you kids can do nowdays is hang off bolts and talk about sending the redpoint and you don't know anything about real climbing because climbing is about adventure and bloody bolts just take all the bloody adventure away and when we were your age we had to crawl uphill both ways to get to and from school and it was in a snowstorm and...
Relic

Social climber
Vancouver, BC
Oct 8, 2011 - 09:54am PT
Tami, can you tell us about Spiderfly? It's a shortish leaning crack near the houses in hospital hill with an easier leaning crack next to it. The new manicured trail that passes right under it has brought it out of obscurity. McLane calls it a Squamish legend that you guys did in 1979.
Younkin

Mountain climber
Utah
Oct 8, 2011 - 10:55pm PT
I was never able to get up to Squamish but I was in Leavenworth allot in the 70's. I hung out with Julie Brugger, Carla Firey, Mark Ward, Jay Osseander, Al Givler, Dave Davis and Bill Lingley, I have talked to Carla a few times over the years and Jay Osseander is up in ALaska. Bill Lingley worked in Olympia for Washington State in the Geology Department. I now live in Utah and only tell stories about climbing. I loved those years, my favorite place was mountaineer creek basin at the base of Sherpa Glacier on Mount Stuart.
Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Oct 9, 2011 - 12:47am PT
Egads! I'm on youtube?! Is nothing profane? What next?

Anyway, when I started climbing at the Chief, it was still cooling from molten magma, and p'terodactyls were nesting on the second summit. Plus there was the crawling through snow and slugs bit.
hamie

Social climber
Thekoots
Oct 9, 2011 - 01:44am PT
Nice pic. As I said upthread, "neanderthal types".
Big Mike----If you only had 2 [short] pitches to go,you were close to the top of Bastille, and at the START of Rock On! You were also climbing on the toes of neanderthals. Don't pay any attention to Jim, Tami, Bruce, MH etc. They're just a bunch of know-nuttin' kids.
H.
Big Mike

Trad climber
BC
Oct 9, 2011 - 04:42am PT
Hamish- You will notice that i put "Rock On" in quotations.

When you guys did the Bastille, KM says you went straight under a chockstone where "Rock On" traverses left. Is this accurate?

Mike


Mighty Hiker

climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Oct 10, 2011 - 01:10am PT
What is that odd graffiti above/behind the climber's back?
Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Oct 10, 2011 - 01:30am PT
It's not graffiti Anders, it's just the photographer's watermark.
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