Monday, August 29, 2011

August pt 3




The next problem on the tick list was "Poverty Line" a tall V6 at the talc mine boulders in manuels. I went out with Jamie hoping to lap the problem quickly and then start working on a v8 I have not sent in the same area.

We warmed up and then started working the problem. It is quite tall with the crux moves coming high off the deck so it took us a little while to get our heads around committing to the moves. After a few goes I slapped for what I thought was the hold on the crux move but hit blank rock instead.

Thinking I had remembered the beta wrong we started trying other options and spent a long session trying to find a way up the problem. After falling for quite a while and trying to figure out what we were missing I tried slapping for the same hold I had earlier, this time I found the crimp I had missed earlier and stuck the hold. I came off that go but we both sent the problem shortly after we figured out the original beta had been the right sequence after all.

After a long session on small crimpers we were not feeling in the mood to try any other hard problems so we packed it in and called it a day, happy to have another problem ticked off the list... even if it took longer than it should have.


Friday, August 26, 2011

August pt 2



The next day out was with Giz to Flatrock. Giz is just trying to get back into bouldering after a forced hiatus, so Flatrock was a good are for having lots of easy problems.

We warmed up in the sun at The Crab House and the Two Boulders, doing laps on easy problems I have done countless times but still enjoy.

Then we headed down to see if "Making Love to a Kenmore" V4 was dry. Kenmore is a really cool problem, one of my favourites at flatrock; you squeeze your way up an over hanging fridge shaped feature. The sides are completely blank and almost textureless so you really have to squeeze to keep yourself on. Near the top there is one hold on the face that lets you get to the top-out. Unfortunately seepage from the grass above the problem tends to run directly down over this one hold. So it is rare to find it dry enough to use.

As expected this was the case, but we decided to get on it anyway, Giz worked on the squeezy moves while I managed to complete the problem by chucking for the top past the wet hold.
A few days later we came back so Jamie could do the problem and found the hold surprisingly dry... oh well.

"Making love to a kenmore" V4

After sending Kenmore we went to the trailer boulders, Giz worked on "Nazi's and their chickens" V3 until his skin hurt to much to keep going, then I got on "the Bundaberg Arete", a crimpy balancy v7 that feels really hard every time I try it. After a bit of work I was relieved to get the send as my fingers were starting to protest about the amount of crimping they were doing.

A video of "Rading Gorbachov's wine Cellar", "Finger Fried" and "The Bundaberg Arete"


Thursday, August 25, 2011

August pt 1

After that first sunny day climbing it proceeded to rain for nearly two straight weeks. Apparently that was par for the course for the summer...but I was not used to it and started to get a bit frustrated with the lack of climbing and always biking to work in what felt like a hurricane.I managed to get out to blackhead with Kaleb one grey afternoon that was a bit dry despite some light drizzle. Otherwise I was stuck with gym climbing as my only option for a while.

Eventually the weather finally shifted and I was able to get out again. After being shut down by "Beat it like a red headed step child" again last time I was keen to finish it off.

Despite the lack of warm up problems on the boulder I went straight there with Erica on the first sunny day we'd had in ages. After a few attempts to get the fingers warmed up I was finally able to get through the whole problem. Feeling solid the whole way was a huge relief after flailing on my last 3 visits.

Here's a video from the first time I sent the problem... over 3 years ago...

Which shows that my self made video techniques have not changed much over the years...


After sending that we made the trek out to the Red Army Boulder to get on "Raiding Gorbachov's Wine Cellar" a fun V6 that was also on the Sendage list. After a few tries to pull past the start move crux I was able to send that problem quickly as well and was starting to feel like getting through this list wouldn't be too tough after all.


We headed back to town for a lunch/ supper at Sun Sushi where we met up with Jamie and Claire, then myself and Jamie headed out to Fort Amherst to try and tick two V7's off the list.

Jamie warming up at Fort Amherst with the battery in the backround.
After warming up we went to was "Green Eggs and Ham" a V7 Thomasina and Greg put up... last summer? or was it the summer before... keeping track of time is hard....

Anyway the problem is basically just a heinously hard start move on terrible crimps and then it's over. Working it last year I managed to find some way to haul my butt off the ground to do the moves... but when we got there this day neither of us could figure out how to pull the first move...

So we gave up on that one and moved on to "Ketamine", a tall technical climb with powerful and interesting moves, which i feel is the gem of the area... and not just because I did the FA.

Jamie showed me some new beta he figured out which avoids relying on a really tenuous heel hook. At first I thought his new beta was going to make the problem easier... but after sessioning the problem for about an hour neither of us had sent.

Jamie sighed "I guess it's just not going to go today" Right before he pulled on for a final attempt and sent the problem. Inspired by Jamie's send I got back on and... fell past the crux move. After waiting a bit to recover I got on again, this time getting past the crux and up into a good crack near the top of the climb... when my feet cut and all my weight fell onto what was basically an accidental hand jam... which surprisingly held and I was able to regroup and send the Climb.


My next day out was with Jamie and Giz. We headed out to the Barrens boulder, which has a bit of an epic hike in, but also has two of the best problems on the send list. Finger Fried V6 and At Play in the Fields of a Warlord V9. Both are very crimpy climbs up slightly overhanging granite. Skipping a warm up Jamie sent Finger Fried after a few tries for his send of the problem and I repeated it for the list afterwards. Then we moved on to Warlord... which at first felt impossibly hard but after a bit of work trying to remember the moves and body positions I started to trust the painful crimpers a bit more and nearly sent. However we were severely limited for time because I had a wedding to go to that afternoon. So after a few more attempts we had to pack it in and head back.

I was getting picked up for the wedding at 2:30, so we left the boulder at 1:00 to do the 20 minute hike out, then a 20 minute drive back would leave me plenty of time to shave, shower and change for the wedding.

When we made it out to the car Jamie put his hands on his head with a look of disbelief... he had left his keys behind at the boulder. Without saying much else he dropped his pad and sprinted back off into the marsh.

With a 40 minute round trip ahead of him I started to worry for my chances of making the wedding... However Jamie ran like a Champ and made it in and out in just 20 minutes and I still made it home with plenty of time to get prepped for the wedding.

Ok... not going to get caught up in one post apparently... more next time along with that video I promised...




Sunday, August 21, 2011

Back Home



So I have been back home for about 3 weeks now but have been too busy to update the blog.

At the beginning of the summer Kaleb posted a tick list of 25 boulder problems on Sendage. With the idea that whoever climbed the most of the boulder problems from the list before september 1st would win a free pair of shoes from Evolv. Most of the problems were climbs I had done before, but in order for them to count for the list I would have to repeat them this summer. I thought being away for 3 months would give me a fun handicap and I would have to catch up by sending as many as I could in just the month of august.

However it seemed like while I was away everyone else lost interest in bouldering... choosing instead to spend what few dry climbing days were available this summer hanging around on ropes down at flatrock.

So I found when I got back I was not as far behind on the list as I had anticipated. Still the list includes many of the hardest boulder problems I have ever done around here (and a few that I have not been able to do yet) So I decided I would spend august trying to tick as many of them as I could.

The very first day I arrived back in St. John's was a clear sunny day so a very jet lagged version of myself went out with Jamie Robbins to try to start ticking problems.

We went to the Vacation Boulders, a cluster of three short boulders on the highway barrens. They've never been my favourite spot to boulder but they had a few of the easier problems from the tick list so we decided to head there first and get them out of the way as a warm up and then head to hard stuff.

We made short work of both
"Monkey Trainer" V3





and "Hula Girl" V4.


Both low to the ground traverses on grainy slopers.... which reminded me why I was not so keen on the Vacation Boulders....

So then we headed on to try "Beat it like a red headed stepchild" a V8 that I had only climbed once before. I had already spent two sessions in the spring before going away trying to repeat it but despite doing the problem in two sections on both occasions was unable to link the whole thing. I was hoping a summer of regular bouldering on steep terrain would let me finish it off quickly. But after a prolonged session I had to give up once my fingers hurt to much to grab a painful jaw-like hold any more and leave without finishing the problem.


Ok, out of blogging time for today, so this is to be continued, next post should be soon and include a video of some of the problems climbed from the list so far.