Trip Report
Lost in the Weather on Lost World - PTPP Bails!
Friday June 3, 2011 3:31pm
I wish to assure you that the preposterous myth is true. We did indeed bail from Lost World yesterday.

Thanks to David's generosity and the help of numerous porters both upwards and downwards along the talus, and especially for the stream running next to Lurking Fear where we filled our water bottles only moments from the start of our route, it is fairly safe to say that it was the least amount of work I have done getting to and from an El Cap route. It is also safe to say that I have never done so much work to gain such little height in so much time!

We decided to blast based on what appeared to be a decent forecast, and with the help of our porters and hairyapeman Mark and his friend Jeff, we got the Remote Simul Space Haul going where we had four guys pulling down on the loads to heave them up to our first bivi fast. And it was there at our first bivi we spent the next FOUR nights! It was total desperation -- fighting the rain, fighting the snow, fighting to stay awake, trying to keep the beer from freezing. The shiraz was so cold I had to put a bit of water in the Jetboil stove and heat the bottle to drinking temperature. I guess we should have brought at least one chardonnay. The tequila and Sailor Jerry were most welcome during the cool evenings. The canned ravioli was totally unpalatable until heated. Truly, it was hell on the wall.

David is a pro photographer and carried at least fifty pounds of camera gear, which he used to great effect as I led upwards - or at least tried to lead upwards - through various forms of precipitation, none of it friendly and all of it cold and wet. I did stop short of leading through the waterfall of runoff that was cascading down the wall and directly onto our haul bags and ledges. Amazingly and perhaps miraculously, we managed to stay reasonably dry, perhaps because much of the time it was snow that was covering our bivi. We had good flies, bivi sacks, Thermarests, rain gear, and plenty of warm synthetic clothes along with warm synthetic sleeping bags.

Wee-Wee the Big Wall Crab was accompanied by his longtime friend Herbie the Big Wall Sponge, and Herbie certainly earned his keep after so many walls buried in the portaledge fly. I picked up Herbie from the one-dollar Bargain Bin at the Sponge-O-Rama in Tarpon Springs, Florida, and he is indeed a real live dead sponge. He seemed to enjoy his time in the winter conditions, although his continual snowball fights with Wee-Wee began to get tiresome after a few days.

The climbing was fairly straightforward with the occasional tricky placements in a row to keep me thinking and get me just scared enough to remember why I enjoy climbing walls so much, and I knocked off some of the leads in just over an hour. During the brief spells of good weather, we led a couple pairs of pitches in blocks whereby I was up front leading the next pitch having short fixed while David was simultaneously cleaning the pitch beneath, connected to me with the zip line he was carrying in a bag and sending gear to the top as needed. So we actually felt like we were accomplishing something, and we optimistically moved our bivi upwards, teased as we were by the occasional moments of brilliant sunshine.

An important note of beta regarding the fifth pitch – McTopo and Nanook take heed – which is the first pitch of the Squeeze Play variation we planned to climb. As you leave the small right-facing corner and clip a couple of rivets, you pass through a roof that accepts about ¾” cams. This feature is now hanging by a thread, having opened up on my two cams and spitting me out onto the rivet. It remains attached – barely – almost directly above the bivi, and it is impossible to trundle safely until the belay has been vacated and you have hauled to the next station. We would have done this, but we bailed the next day, which I believe I have previously mentioned [ahem]. I used a portaledge fly pole to cheat-stick past this dangerous feature, and the next party should plan on doing the same until such time as they can get themselves and their pigs safely past it, and then cut it loose. After sending it off, the cleaner should inspect it to see if this newly scoured section can still be climbed, or if a rivet needs to be added, and record this information for the benefit of the next party.

Incidentally, this very same dilemma faced us on the fifth pitch of Cosmos several years ago, when Valley Giants Tom and I trundled a huge block that weighed several tons. In this instance, I first drilled a three-rivet ladder around the thing to bypass it – above the 3/8” bolt that the previous party had left there when they bailed and also left me a nice 3.5 Camalot – and those rivets I believe remain. I don’t think the route has been climbed since, and it’s possible there is a thin pecker crack where the flake used to be, in which case please chop the three rivets and the bolt. This beta has not been recorded in the newest McTopo guidebook, but I think I added it to the website beta.

As mentioned on our Lost World – Squeeze Play attempt, we had plenty of food and water, and with the temperatures so cold we were probably consuming a bit less than two litres per person per day, including the mandatory one-litre press of Mark Hudon's excellent Hood River Coffee each morning, the New Guinea dark Custom PTPP Blend. With so little action apart from watching the skies open up on us, we didn’t eat much either. Our supplies could have lasted us another week no problem, but David was starting to feel the effects of the wall and came down with a pretty serious case of Big Wall Hands aka Crab Claws, that kept him from sleeping in spite of copious doses of Aleve and ibuprofen. He also has a photo shoot next week that he really wants to make, so when we learned of the Doom and Gloom Forecast for more of the same that is said to be coming our way on Saturday and Sunday, our fears got the better of us [I was fearful of not eating pizza for so long and Dave was fearful of being unable to press his camera’s shutter button] we contacted Ansel Evans by radio, and waved for help.

And if Dave ever gets his fingers working, you can look forward to coming back here and seeing some of the bitchin' photos he took of us.

Craftily, and in no way accidentally, we took our time getting our loads together, ensuring that we arrived at the El Cap Bridge long after Tom was gone, thus avoiding the Walk of Shame, which I plan to do – beer in hand – as soon as I finish writing this. And after having another cup of coffee. It’s not yet Changeover Time, but it’s pretty darn close, unaccustomed as I am to Pacific Daylight Time. So for the first time ever on a wall, from four pitches up Lost World I dumped out our excess water. It would have been enough to fill a small sized swimming pool, or had there been any sunshine and the appropriate supplies, enough to solar power shower the entire Swedish Bikini Team, which was conspicuous in its absence. If I have extra water, I usually leave it for the next team, assuming I’m in a place on the wall that gets climbed with some regularity. But with the stream running nearby, it was pointless to conserve the water, so out it flew and our bottles comprimed for the next wall. Our pigs remained fairly full of leftover food, and if you can believe it, leftover beer. It really was so cold most of the time that the beer was fairly unappetizing[!] In fact, I shall have to bring some of that beer to the bridge this afternoon, assuming these ever-greying skies don’t open up before Tom packs up his kit and heads for drier confines.

All in all, we had fun. Or at least, I think we had fun. Having now spent 448 nights on the side of El Cap, not counting base and summit bivis, I can say unequivocally that I endured the longest continuous period of bad weather ever for me, which was six days straight. I’ve sat out a few three-day storms, but this stuff just kept coming at us, and on the lower flanks of the Southwest Face of El Cap, there isn’t really any protection from the elements. Not like over on say Zed-Em, which is completely protected from all the bad weather and enjoys near tropical conditions all of the time. Only a total pussy would bail from Zed-Em.

We, of course, are not pussies for bailing from El Cap. Certainly knott. Rather, we are Hardmen, bailing proudly and bailing in style. The storm had wiped clear the entire Southwest Face of El Cap of all other parties - those parties who were weaker, softer and much much smarter than us. We were, in fact, The Last Men Standing, and as we waved for help, our terror and cries were not audible to Tom on the bridge as he snapped photos of what we thought for sure were our last moments on earth. Or at least on the wall.

And as we and our hundreds of pounds of piggage arrived on the ground, we simul-cracked our beers and declared, "We cheated death once again!"


Visit on elcapreport.com


Note the appalling weather conditions in Tom Evans' photo above, for which we blame our bail.

We spent six nights and therefore seven days on the wall, and managed to reach only as high as the top of pitch 6. Accordingly, I am unable to sign this story as “Pitch A Day Pete”, because even I was unable to keep up with my erstwhile and proudly-earned moniker.

  Trip Report Views: 7,380
'Pass the Pitons' Pete
About the Author
"Pass the Pitons" Pete is a Big Wall Gumby and itinerant Valley Local who manages to occasionally wobble to the summit of El Cap - but knott this time.

Comments
kev

climber
A pile of dirt.
  Jun 3, 2011 - 03:46pm PT
The weather has been sh#t...Thanks for the update...

Your shiraz comments made me so cold I thought about reaching for the whiskey to warm me ;)
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 3, 2011 - 03:50pm PT
Come now, lad - here on my trip report we speak the Queen's English - and in Canada there is no "e" in whisky.

I almost didn't bail, Dingus.

Truly, Ron, we are Hardmen. Sheesh.
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
  Jun 3, 2011 - 03:53pm PT
A pitch a day -- we should race for the title of Valley's Slowest Aid Climber.

Seriously, I've been watching the clouds over the mountains from Fresno, knowing that Mark was up there with you. Too bad about the weather, but thanks for the TR, and the very entertaining writing it contains. Next time for sure!

John
Jingy

climber
Random Nobody
  Jun 3, 2011 - 03:54pm PT
Classic line from this TR "Only a total pussy would bail from Zed-Em."


Sorry to hear of this bail, but with that being the case, glad your back.

Cheers,
Jingy
couchmaster

climber
  Jun 3, 2011 - 04:20pm PT
Good to see that it all worked out. Great writing.....so Wee-Wee the former kidnapped crab was rescued? Is there a link to that (s)whole story?
Gagner

climber
Boulder
  Jun 3, 2011 - 04:31pm PT
Man ... I can't recall a spring like this in a long time. Glad to hear you guys are down and safe. I know you've got several more weeks to climb Pete, so here's to an improving weather forecast --- I mean, it can only get better, right?

Paul
BASE104

Social climber
An Oil Field
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:00pm PT
BURT BRONSON WAS COVERED WITH 12 INCHES OF ICE ON THE LAST PITCH OF THE NOSE FOR 6 DAYS AND DIDN'T BAIL.

BECAUSE HE IS A REAL MAN
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:00pm PT
As always a worthwhile read. Heating the shiraz, indeed!
Now you can watch the game tomorrow!

'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:08pm PT
Funny you should say that, Paul - we kept saying it again and again! After this, for Dave, things can only get better!

Zed-Em is a cakewalk, any weather, any time. How hard could it be? I heard some guy named Jim put it up.

Couch - you are correct, Wee-Wee the Big Wall Crab is indeed my once-crabnapped crustacean climbing partner. He isn't very good at leading, but he reads the topo pretty well through his abraded El Cap eyes. He's useless at hauling since he can't even counterweight a single beer, but he's the most patient belayer I've ever known. And when you're "Pitch A Day" Pete, well....

[Sheesh. I *wish* I were Pitch A Day Pete.]

Oh my gosh, Silver - how could I forget!! Yes, watch for me tonight, though later than usual since I'm out west instead of east. Off to the bridge, then.

BURT BRONSON IS MUCH MORE MANLY THAN ME. He may also be just a little stupider. Actually, I met a guy riding his bike last week who said he was Bronson. I need to talk to him and see if he is THE REAL BURT BRONSON. I MISS BURT BRONSON ON THIS FORUM, AND WOULD LIKE TO SEE HIM BACK. WE NEED MORE MEN LIKE BURT BRONSON.

Game? What game? Nobody in California even knows there's a game.

Holy frig, 350 page reads in an hour. Dang. Yer all a bunch of cubicle pukes with nothing better to do in your life than hang out on McTopo!! Where's that Ottawa Doug, speaking of the pukiest puke?!

And what about Mark Hugedong? Wait, wait .... I have to sneeze ....

"Pussy!"

Excuse me.
Slakkey

Big Wall climber
From Back to Big Wall Baby
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:09pm PT
Well Pete I know for a fact that you are not one to bail without good reason. I agree the weather has been crazy this spring in the valley . Rain, Wind Snow, Cold followed by a couple of nice days them more Rain. and more on the way this weekend. So here is to 448 nights on the wall and more to come in the future
BASE104

Social climber
An Oil Field
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:11pm PT
Well Pete,

Despite having comfort dialed in, it is comforting to know that you suffered.

Not trying to be mean. It is just nice to know that suffering cannot be avoided. Unless you are Buddha.
Mike Bolte

Trad climber
Planet Earth
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:21pm PT
that was a pretty fun read!
Spider Savage

Mountain climber
The shaggy fringe of Los Angeles
  Jun 3, 2011 - 05:31pm PT
A valiant effort! Thanks for taking care of my old pal and favorite commercial photographer.

Great TR. Looking forward to David's photos.
MisterE

Gym climber
Small Town with a Big Back Yard
  Jun 3, 2011 - 06:50pm PT
Sorry you guys had to bail - I know how much this meant to David. He's been working hard in preparation.

Sounds like quite a series of weather systems you guys got hit with - glad you got down safe!

Here's a link to David's blog:

http://www.davidblattel.com/blog/Main.aspx
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 3, 2011 - 07:31pm PT
David is still nursing his sore fingers. Is there some link on this website to a post about El Cap hands? I guess I must be used to it by now. When I'm on the wall, I do the "El Cap Sleep" whereby I sleep on my side with one hand under the side of my head, and the other thrust between my thighs in an attempt to keep my fingers from curling and cramping.

Anyway, what do you have to do round here to do the Walk of Shame???!! David and I eventually made our way down to the El Cap Bridge, and by 3pm there was nobody there. We even checked the Lodge caf, but no Tom. I mean, how often do I get to do the Walk of Shame? How often do I get the Bail of the Day??!!

My motto has always been, "Go big or go home!" Well, today I went home. Back to Yosemite to tune into McTopo, because it's more fun than hanging around in the Real World at El Cap Meadow. I think I'm turning into a cubicle puke. Maybe my wall climbing career is over?

One thing's for sure - it's definitely time to switch to the Friday Night post!

phylp

Trad climber
Upland, CA
  Jun 3, 2011 - 08:02pm PT
To bail, or not to bail: that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous weather,
Or to take rivets against a sea of flakes,
And by weighting, break them? To bail: to climb;
No more; and by descent to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd. To bail, to eat pizza;
To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of beer what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this 70 meter coil,
Must give us pause: there's the disrespect
That makes calamity of so long a push of four pitches;
For who would bear the whips and scorns of supertopo,
The weekend warrior's wrong, the hardman's contumely,
The pangs of second guessers, the soloer’s spray,
The insolence of the bridge watchers and the spurns
That patient merit of the unworthy takes,
When he himself might his bivy make
With a bare portaledge? who would haulbags bear,
To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
But that the dread of something after bailing,
The undiscover'd country from whose Merced
No traveller returns, puzzles the will
And makes us rather bear those chills we have
Than cry to others that we know not of?
hairyapeman

Trad climber
Fres-yes
  Jun 3, 2011 - 08:11pm PT
Sucks man. Funny thing down here in Fresno it felt fine. But everyday I would check Tom's site and the weather report and well.....feel for you guys! Hopefully October bring better weather. I had fun though humpin loads and helping with fixin.....at least the weather was perfect then eh?!

hollyclimber

Big Wall climber
El Portal, CA
  Jun 3, 2011 - 08:14pm PT
In fact I arranged the return of WeeWee from his captor to Pete several years ago now...
HB
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 3, 2011 - 08:39pm PT
Yes, Holly brokered and negotiated the return of Wee-Wee from his abductor, and broke the good news to me on the summit of El Cap. The ransom? To carry her pig, which I gladly did.

As for phylp's soliloquy?

Dr. Piton stands and applauds heartily! [almost] perfect Iambic Pentameter!
MBrown

Big Wall climber
The Eastside.... UUUUHHHHHHH!
  Jun 3, 2011 - 11:14pm PT
hah! pete bailed....muhahaha
elcap-pics

Big Wall climber
Crestline CA
  Jun 3, 2011 - 11:30pm PT
Good fun Pete, always interesting to read your commentary!
You guys made the correct call in getting out of there in a timely manner. There is a reason no one else was over there on multiple day climbs. That side is a death trap in a really hard blow!
No need for a walk of shame... it's a walk of life!
Regards
Tom
MisterE

Gym climber
Small Town with a Big Back Yard
  Jun 4, 2011 - 12:33am PT
^^Blattel IS light! That guy weighs like 105 soaking wet! ;)
Fritz

Social climber
Choss Creek, ID
  Jun 4, 2011 - 12:34am PT
PTPP: These things happen to the best climbers. I am glad you can post about it with good humor!

Here is my ST thread on the subject.

http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/1039807/The-five-stages-of-backing-off-climbs

'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 4, 2011 - 04:11am PT
Fritz - I am far too buzzed at present to appreciate your five stages, but look forward to reading it shortly.

Did you ever read the classic treatise in Mountain Mag circa early 80`s about the four stages of fallingÉ Gads, I triggered some stupid keyboard shortcut that turns question marks into these things: É Sheesh. Anyone know how to reverse this without a rebootÉ

I remember the third stage being `Awful Realization` and after the fall, the fourth stage being `Recovery`. Why does nobody write cool stuff like that any moreÉ
freerider

climber
  Jun 4, 2011 - 05:10am PT
great writing... thanks!
phylp

Trad climber
Upland, CA
  Jun 4, 2011 - 10:53am PT
PTPP, the soliloquy would have been better if I actually understood Shakespeare! But I had some fun with it.

As I was reading your very enjoyable trip report, it came to mind that really, to bail or not to bail, is one of the great eternal questions that face the climber. Certainly a cruxier issue for most of us than "to be or not to be". It was fun to think of a little bit different way of saying "thanks for the excellent trip report".
enjoimx

Trad climber
Yosemite
  Jun 4, 2011 - 12:25pm PT
Haha fun times.
Lambone

Big Wall climber
Ashland, Or
  Jun 4, 2011 - 03:13pm PT
Hey Pete, do you take any accountability for the bail or is it all on your partners hands?
Studly

Trad climber
WA
  Jun 4, 2011 - 04:10pm PT
Nice TR Pete!
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 4, 2011 - 04:41pm PT
C'mon, Matt - what kind of big wall climber are you, anyway?

You should know by now that when you bail, it's *always* your partner's fault!
Lambone

Big Wall climber
Ashland, Or
  Jun 4, 2011 - 05:24pm PT
lol...ok, ya got me.
mawk

Big Wall climber
White Bear Lake, MN
  Jun 5, 2011 - 02:50pm PT
Glad to hear you're down safe and sound.

Must have been really grim up there knowing how well prepared you are when you leave the ground. Too cold even to drink beer, that just cannot be tolerated. Sounds like you did the smart thing, no shame in that.

As you know I talked big about soloing something (Lurking Fear?) at the same time. So on one hand I'm sure my fate would have been the same, on the other I didn't even try...so more shame on me.

Hope the rest of the season goes much better for you.

Mark
'Pass the Pitons' Pete

Big Wall climber
like Ontario, Canada, eh?
Author's Reply  Jun 6, 2011 - 05:42pm PT
Hey Mark,

Nice to hear from you. Yes, this is a season that just didn't want to cooperate weather-wise. Kate and Holly managed sends through steep rock and storms, but we aren't afforded the same angle over on the SW Face. So it's probably just as well you didn't come.

However that being said, the online weather forecast is looking the way it should starting about Tuesday, nothing but suns across the board for ten days!

Whatcha up to this fall?
jack herer

Big Wall climber
Veneta, Oregon
  Jun 6, 2011 - 06:34pm PT
hey was hoping to get on lost world/squeeze play friday sometime... how big is this loose feature? is it that dangerous? i climb enough loose sh#t as is, i was really hoping to climb some solid stone!
utahman912

Social climber
SLC, UT
  Jun 6, 2011 - 07:30pm PT
Fabulous. Strong early season contender for TR of the year. Be sure to re-release it in November to get the voting Academy members attention.
billiegoat

Trad climber
North Lake Tahoe, CA
  Jun 6, 2011 - 07:34pm PT
Yarrrr Piton Pete!
J Tree and I looked for you last weekend after we bailed from the Nose after horrendous weather/frozen ropes

Hope to see you soon!


-BG

aka Larry

Trad climber
Topanga, CA
  Jun 7, 2011 - 02:13am PT
It's David Blattel. I was the infamous passenger on the ride of my life with Piton Pete. I gotta say Pete goes prepared and we could have lasted another two weeks with the amount of food and water we had. Besides the weather, I got the terrible crab hands at night that put me in misery. I thought I trained well, but never expected pulling zillion's of feet of rope and tag line would do this. I'll be better prepared for the next one.
As a photographer, the poor weather really made for some dramatic photographs and I'm looking forward to sharing them once I have a chance to go through them. The constant change in weather was unreal. I think we could have built a snowman from all the hail if we only had a flat ledge. I took over 12 gigs of shots with three cameras. As a professional photographer I should have gotten at least one photo right.
I look forward to contributing more to the forum.
DB[photohttp://www.davidblattel.comid=205307]
Go