Showing posts with label henhole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label henhole. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 December 2012

Goodbye 2012. You were wet.


At last that's over with. This year, although I have witnessed some incredible climbing, it seems like it rained all Summer. Then it rained all through the Autumn and it's still raining now.
How did this happen? I guess we've been spoiled by the last three or four years which have been relatively dry. A few years ago, this was normal. I remember when I started climbing, it would get to October and that was it. Get inside, get the weight belt on and get crimping, because it wouldn't stop raining until April. That's one of the reasons the Northumberland crew were so strong (and injured...)
I was holding off on this blog for a while as there were so many projects on the go in The County, but the weather has called time on those until the next cold, dry spell.

Despite my lame excuses at not taking enough photos, there have been brief pockets of dryness.
Up at Hepburn, Adam Young managed to nail Preparation H to add to his growing collection of eights.

Adam Young on Preparation H 8a, Hepburn


You don't usually see how bad the holds are on photos of this.


Adam Young on Preparation H 8a, Hepburn


Adam Young on Preparation H 8a, Hepburn


Dan Varian squeezed in a committing top-out on the superlative Death Knell wall at Bowden to give Nature's Angry 7b+. The crimps on this wall are amazing. It follows Andy Cowley's Heaven Can Wait, but instead of moving into Death Knell (E6 6c), it continues straight up off a horrible, little two-finger divot. The usual long, scary fall awaits if you don't make it, but the landing is 'kind of' reasonable. I had a go at this years ago after I had done Death Knell, but I didn't have it in me to make the moves at the top. That was a great couple of weeks. I remember Death Knell had half a dozen ascents by the Berghaus Wall squad in the space of a fortnight, which is probably half of its total number of ascents ever. It never seems to get done these days, but it's the epitome of Bowden highballing.


Dan Varian on Nature's Angry 7b+


Dan Varian on Nature's Angry 7b+


Dan Varian on Nature's Angry 7b+

Also at Bowden, I met up with Alison Monks. At the end of the day, she decided to 'warm down' on Scoop Traverse with it's tricky crux move.


Alison Monks on the crux of Scoop Traverse 7a


Alison Monks on Scoop Traverse 7a


Matthew Harle on Scoop Traverse 7a


Katie Mundy on Captain Haddock 7b


The Wave, Bowden Doors




In the search for dry rock, I met up with Alison over at Back Bowden. The North Wall is dripping, and will probably stay like that over the winter.

Black Triage
This is what the North Wall looks like at the moment...

Alison Monks staying low, out of the dampness

Matthew Harle training on The Emperor 7b. The next hold was dry, but we didn't go any higher.


Andy Rutter convinced me to go up to Shaftoe for a couple of hours and we 'enjoyed' a muddy walk-in. He wanted to do Buford T Justice. There's not much on top of a lot of the boulders, so they tend to stay dry. The landing was horrible though...


Make sure you land on the mat...

The pebble of justice.


Andy Rutter on Buford T Justice 6c+

Pulling on the pebble

We headed over to the Font Boulder as it was getting dark. Bleaustard is a great problem to photograph, as well as climb. The long throw always looks good.


The Font Boulder

Andy Rutter on Bleaustard 6a+



Maybe it's the weather that has influenced the way I feel about taking photos of climbing which changes week by week. Sometimes it's so important I have to get it out of my system, so I can get on with the real world distraction-free. When I'm stressed with work and trying to find the time to sleep, work wins. Usually.
Is it ever just a waste of time? It feels that way a lot recently. I struggle to find a photo I'm happy with, while all around me is mediocrity. I look through my climbing photos and there are maybe two or three I'm happy with, and even those have faults.

One thing that never fails to reset me is hanging out with friends and watching them climb. Some of my best climbing experiences have been when I've been in the background watching, spotting or belaying. The privilege of being there when someone pulls it out of the bag and climbs three grades harder than ever before. Reassuring someone shaking on a bold lead and talking them upwards. Getting pulled off the ground holding a big fall.
For me, these moments are just as memorable as climbing itself.
Watching Adam, being spotted by Andy Cowley, getting Preparation H slowly wired, then getting it ticked. Hanging out in the sunshine while Katie's warming up on Captain Haddock, then being inspired by Dan taking big falls and pulling on tiny, tiny holds. Seeing Alison throwing herself at a move again and again, determined and focused.
Knowing that there is so much climbing history right here under your fingertips in these beautiful crags and these fantastic routes.

As a perfect example, before I met Adam over at the Northern Soul boulder, I spent an hour or so with Karen, Broon and Stevie over at The Picnic Area. Great banter and great climbing.


Stevie Walker on Photo Opportunity Arete 5


Broon on Photo Opportunity Arete 5


The unstoppable Broon on Photo Opportunity Arete 5



Recently, Katie Mundy and Micky Stainthorpe have opened a bouldering wall in Carlisle, Eden Rock. I went over to take some photos and it's a great wall. One of the reasons that makes it stand out is that it features some of the most beautiful wooden holds you'll ever see. A real labour of love by Dan Varian. He's been collecting different pieces of wood, so each is unique, and fashioning them in the Beastmaker laboratory. He's also building a frightening training board, so make sure you get along and punish yourself. Schedule in a couple of rest days afterwards...





































Here are a few photos from Round 1 of the Winter Bouldering Series

















See you next year.
Keep the faith.


Thursday, 1 November 2012

The Stell, Back Bowden, Crag Lough and The Tatras.


Firstly, I've got a Twitter account and amongst other things, I'll be posting about conditions in Northumberland whenever I'm out and about. If you want a heads-up on climbing conditions, follow me here, or press the follow button on the top right of this page.

Ok, so there are two new hard problems to report from The County, courtesy of that man Varian, as well as a ground-breaking first ascent at Back Bowden.

Let's start up at The Stell where Dan has completed his eight month project to give Great Expectations which clocks in at 8a+. It's short, but brutal. You can read about the battle here on the Beastmaker blog. Dan reckons he had between 80-100 attempts at the crux move! Anyone who knows how strong he is will appreciate how difficult that means it must be. Do I really need to mention that the holds are shocking? It'll be interesting to see how long it is before it gets repeated and what the grade settles at. Now that I've said that,  watch it get flashed...
It's good to see such a hard problem unearthed at a relatively small, recently developed venue. You gotta be in it to win it.




Dan Varian on Great Expectations 8a+, The Stell


Dan Varian on Great Expectations 8a+, The Stell


Dan Varian on the crux move. Great Expectations 8a+, The Stell


Dan Varian on Great Expectations 8a+, The Stell

You can watch a video of Dan climbing Great Expectations here.

Everything hard at Hepburn got climbed recently by Ned Feehally on a flying visit, including a rare repeat of The Governor. Ned added his voice to those singing its praises, saying it is the best problem of its type in the country. Not the county... the country.
He's always got a project on the go and on the same day, Dan added his extension to Trivial Pursuits 7c to give Trivial Pursuits Deluxe 8a+.


Dan Varian on Trivial Pursuits Deluxe 8a+, Hepburn

And, speaking of The Governor, I was at the premiere of Alastair Lee's new film, 'Autana' at the Tyneside Cinema last week and who should I bump into, but Andy Cowley looking like he's recovering well. Unsurprisingly, he's got some impressive scars.

A good night was had by everyone at the Climb Newcastle birthday party. Paul Carruthers showed some videos of lots of quality problems and Steve Blake gave a fantastic talk about climbing in Northumberland. Split into two, he talked about what it was like 'back in the day' when he was part of the group pushing standards in the mid-seventies and early eighties. As you can imagine, there were lots of classic photos. He also talked about new venues that the NMC are developing, but he wouldn't give away any secrets. Not yet anyway.
He did, however, tease us with photos of some quality looking lines that are yet to be claimed.
You could make a lot of money with that information, Steve.

Now then, back to business. Remember that ground breaking ascent at Back Bowden I mentioned? It was like a hot, summer day a couple of weeks ago when I bumped into Al Horsfield. He was casually ticking a lot of the harder classics, but things stepped up a gear when he pushed Northumberland climbing standards one step further into the future by making the first ascent of The Sorcerer using only a cucumber as protection.
Yes, you read it here first.
Surely it's only a matter of time before someone repeats Transcendence using sprouts for gear. They're perfect for those shallow shot holes.



Al Horsfield on The Sorcerer E1 5c


Al Horsfield on The Sorcerer E1 5c


Al Horsfield on The Sorcerer E1 5c


Al Horsfield on The Sorcerer E1 5c


There was some more conventional climbing going on as well...



Al Horsfield on Lost Cause E4 6b, Back Bowden


Al Horsfield on Outward Bound E4 6a, Back Bowden



Joe Spoors on The Enchanter E3 5c



Neil Colquhoon on Magic Flute E2 5b



Walking out at sunset


When I've had the time, I've been spending a few more of my evenings hanging out around Crag Lough and Hadrian's Wall. As you do.



Errr... Guess where...


Crag Lough


Crag Lough


Rain heading right for me.


It was pretty bad weather when I set off up The Cheviot last weekend. There was snow on the tops on Saturday. It cleared up, but all the rain and snow from the day before meant there was quite a bit of water coming down the streams. There wasn't really anywhere to cross safely until you got much higher.



A lovely day in The Cheviots



Looking up to Henhole



Henhole



Henhole







I said in my last blog that I would put up a few photos from Poland and here they are. We went walking in the Tatras Mountains and needless to say, saw some amazing climbing venues.
Unfortunately, the first issue is the amount of shit next to the paths. As soon as you hit the trail, one of the first things you see is shit everywhere. It's pretty shocking. There are a huge amount of visitors, and most of them travel into the national park via the same route we did, but surely the park authorities can sort it out.


How NOT to shit outdoors











Walking in to Hala Gąsienicowa







Looking towards Granaty Mountain




Looking up to Granaty Mountain from Czarny Staw







There are a few climbers on these buttresses


Check out this amazing looking rock at the top. Some three star aretes for sure.


Granaty Mountain


Looking towards Slovakia from Zawrat (2159 m)


These buttresses are mind blowing.


Zamarła Turnia. The rock in the distance is like Shelter Stone meets Gimmer at an acid party.


Dolina Pięciu Stawów (The Valley of Five Ponds)




Looking towards the White Tatras. Access is restricted (I think), but that is A LOT of rock in the distance.







The view from Kasprowy Wierch

This was the second attempt at The Tatras. I've been before, but the weather was so bad that we bailed. I'm glad I went back as it's such a beautiful place.
We stayed in Zakopane which is sort of the 'Keswick of the Tatra', but far more interesting and extremely photogenic. I loved it.
There was an exhibition of mountain photography in the middle of the town. What a great idea!






This is more interesting than those boring photos of mountains.






There are native bear in the Tatras


The climbing van


A hot day


This makes me chuckle


Drama







A cable car station wouldn't be complete without a papal vending machine.


Alright, that'll do for now.
Until next time...