Tuesday, April 23, 2019

The Open

Matt's full of ideas.  For awhile now he's been saying we need to do an 18 pitch day at Golf Wall.  18 obviously like 18 holes of golf.  The only rules were that they had to be 18 different routes and they all had to be lead clean.  A few days before we discussed the order that we thought would work and wrote it down on a piece of paper that we conveniently forgot to bring to the crag.  We both warmed up on a couple easier routes before hopping on the hardest pitch of the day, Pink Taco.  I had the route wired but Matt hadn't been on the route in a while and messed up his foot beta near the top and fell on his first go, then crushed it second go.  We both had a big sigh of relief having completed the crux of the day for our 5th route.  We hoped it would be an easy coast to the finish for the next 13 routes.

The next 6 routes went smoothly until I fell on Putt Putt.  I'd done the route a hundred times over the years but just couldn't hold on.  I decided I needed to start taking longer rests between routes, eat more food, and stop trying to do doubles(2 routes back to back).  Matt motored up Bert and Ernie's even though it had some wet holds and I moved onto Cinderella.  I got 3/4 of the way up and melted off the holds.  This isn't good.  Matt proceeded to try Cinderella and fell on two attempts.  It seemed like we had both hit a wall.  More rest and more food is what we needed, I hit Cinderella on my second go by skipping a clip and Matt hit it on his 3rd.  Ok, back on track!
The second attempt on Mail Slot...
I went back to Putt Putt and it felt casual.  I thought I'd caught a second wind until I fell off the top of Mail Slot.  Matt ticked a few hold up top for me after he'd sent Greenskeeper and I sent next go.  We'd thought we'd coast to the finish after Pink Taco but as we got more and more tired there were no gimme pitches.  My last route was Hole in One and to be expected I almost came off right before the no hands rest.  We're surely not the first to climb 18 different pitches in a day at Golf Wall but that's not what it's about.

My order with approximate grades...
1:Greenskeeper .10+
2:Eagle .12b
3:Bushwood .12a
4:Par Six .11b
5:Pink Taco .12d
6:Divitator .12c
7:Masters .12a
8:Bogey Man .12a
9:Birdie(aka Pumpy ten) .10+
10:Shooter McGavin .10+
11:Gator Pond .12a
Putt Putt (fail)
Cinderella (fail)
12:Cinderella .12a
13:Putt Putt .11d
14:Three Roofs .12a
15:Pebble Beach .11
Mail Slot (fail)
16:Ping .11b
17:Mail Slot .11c
18:Hole in One .11a

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Harts Draw

Had a great 4 days discovering Harts Draw and Bobbys Hole Canyon in late March.  I accessed Harts Draw from 211 on the first day and walked 4 miles up the canyon to get to Bobbys Hole.  
Hartworm Tower
I got two towers done that day but then had to head back home to go to work.  I knew I'd be back in a couple days so I left my climbing gear hidden behind a boulder so I wouldn't have to carry it back and forth. While at work I looked some more at Google maps and discovered what looked like an easier way into the towers.  
The Infarction
So a few days later when I returned, I accessed the area from 133.  The short section of dirt road was rough in a few spots but was a much shorter drive.  I parked next to two cairns on the side of the road and was pleasantly surprised to find a trail leading down into the canyon.   Luckily no one at taken my pack of gear and I climbed one more tower and hiked out with everything.  The plan was to meet Trevor and Cam to climb some other towers but back on the rim with good service I learned that the area was inaccessible because of the snow melt.  Cam bailed completely because he was sick but Trevor decided to come meet me.  Trevor arrived later that night and we looked at photos and made plans for the next two days.
Harts and Minds Tower
In the morning we carried the climbing gear back into the canyon and set our sights on the proudest looking tower in the area, The Infarction.  Things went smoothly and we were soon back on the ground planning the next day.  We walked over to Harts Draw Rincon Butte with no plans of  climbing it but found a easy route up.  We soloed up and down, happy to get another summit. 
Trevor leading the last pitch on The Infarction
On the last day we woke up to some flurries and weren't sure if we were going to get any climbing in.  However, our packs of climbing gear were in the canyon so we had to do the hike either way.   Luckily the weather cleared up and we were able to put up 3 more short routes.
Trevor and I on the summit of The Infarction

Cody Ice

In the beginning of March we took a trip up to Cody to ice climb.  I hadn't ice climbed since the year before when we were in Cody, but luckily ice climbing is like riding a bike.  Once again we got a cabin in the valley which made the drive to and from the ice nice and short.  Unfortunately it didn't shorten the approach hikes!  On the first day, 5 of us climbed a great route called "View to a Thrill".   
Pitch 2 of View to a Thrill
 Day 2: We all climbed Too Cold to Fire.
Last pitch of Too Cold to Fire
Day 3: Unfortunately, John and Jaaron had to head home, but Brooke, Tim, Smokey Joe and I climbed Mean Green. 
Mean Green Pitch 1

 Day 4: Tim, Smokey Joe and I got a late start and climbed Broken Heart's first 4 pitches.  We walked up to My Only Valentine and were pleasantly surprised to find it in.  We climbed that and then saw that we made a big mistake of starting late because the rarely in 6th pitch was fat.  Unfortunately we had to rappel since Tim and I had left our headlamps at the packs.
Tim following a pitch on Broken Hearts
 Day 5: Brooke, Tim, Smokey Joe and I climbed High on Boulder to Save it for Later and Moonrise.
Smokey Joe following My Only Valentine
Can't wait till next winter! 

Mexican Road Trip

In January Matt, Adam and I headed on a little Mexican road trip.  We left in the morning after Adam and I got off of work.  The vehicle we were taking was a 19 year old Honda Accord.  On the 2,500 mile trip we would break 200,000 miles.  None of us were concerned with whether the car would make the trip, but Matt and Adam were both concerned with the trunk space.  You see I bought the car 6 months before with a subwoofer in the trunk and I didn't want to take it out.  I don't care about bumpin' down the road, but probably irrationally, I was worried that by taking it out we would mess up the rest of the sound system making for a very long, quiet ride.  Either way I made both of them pack very light which caused a lot of shivering later on the trip.  We got a cheap hotel outside of El Paso, food shopped, and filled lots of water bottles that night.  As planned we crossed the boarder early in the morning in hopes of making the 8 hours to Basaseachi before it got dark.  Everyone we'd talked to about traveling in Mexico suggested only driving during the day.  Luckily we remembered to get our Vehicle Import Permit as throughout the trip we were stopped 3 times by cops asking to see it.  A few hours past the border we saw a taco stand and couldn't resist.  We each downed 9 tacos to the surprise of owners.  We pulled into Rancho San Lorenzo in the late evening and met up with Fernando who owned the place.  
He organized a ride to El Gigante the next day for us.  After an good sleep we woke up and packed in preparation for 3 days on the wall.  In the afternoon we got picked up and dropped off at the TH for the wall.  An hour hike put us at the top of the wall where we would spend the night.  The next morning we woke early and rappelled the route leaving food and water along the way to be picked up as we ascended.  We also left some extra draws on the crux pitches which turned out to be nice but often they weren't on the bolts where you wanted them.  After 5-6 hours of rappelling we were on the ground and started back up.  We climbed the first 8 pitches to the Tower of Power where we'd left our sleeping gear and then climbed and fixed the next two pitches.  

Above the Tower of Power is where the climbing got hard.  Pitch after pitch of .12 climbing.  We only brought one lead line and one haul line to minimize weight and help with station management.  Luckily most of the hard pitches were about half a rope length, so the middle guy could just tie into the middle and we'd caterpillar our way up.  When we had a longer pitch we'd have the middle guy climb it on a micro traxion, maybe not the best option but it worked.  Once at the Critter Bivy which is where we spent the second night we once again climbed and fixed the next two pitches.  

 On the third day after waking up we jugged and hauled the two fixed pitches and punched it to the top.  We decided the last .12a pitch near the top was the best pitch on the route.  We joked that we should have just rappelled those top few pitches to climb the pitch instead of rappelling all the way to the ground and spending 3 days on the wall.  As we climbed the last pitch to the top the sun hit us and we started to thaw out.  The route gets zero sun so we'd been in the shade, and shivering for most if not all of the route.  We repacked on top for the hike back to the road.  Luckily our ride was there waiting for us and drove us back to Rancho San Lorenzo. 

Although we probably should of stayed another few days in Basaseachi we decided to get up early the next morning and make the long drive east to El Potrero Chico.  We made it to Mark's place in Hidalgo a little after dark and then spent ten minutes pulling an Austin Powers trying to get into an admittedly pretty big parking spot.  Apparently I forget how to reverse into a parking spot after driving for 12 hours.

The next day Matt and climbed on El Sendero Luminoso.  We'd been wanting to climb the route for years and Adam had already climbed it.  The route had pitch after pitch of good climbing on clean rock. It's definitely a classic for good reason.  We met Adam in the canyon and decided after some dinner to climb Time Wave Zero which is a route we all wanted to climb.  It was dark when we started but thought that was a good thing since it gets a lot of sun and would be hot during the day.  With only a few hard pitches we thought we'd bring a bunch of draws and simul climb as a group of 3 for the majority of the route.  Adam linked the first third,  I took us up the next third, and Matt took us to the base of the crux pitch.  At that point it started raining and only because of Adam did we continue.  Matt and I were ready to call it a day but Adam took over the sharp end and took us to the top.  We'd forgotten Adam's chalk bag and belay device at the car so we ended up lowering him every pitch then Matt and I would simul rap. 


We wanted to go check out El Salto but the region was dealing with a gas shortage and so we stuck around Potrero for a couple days and got a little cragging in.  We drove back though the boarder near Laredo and paralleled the boarder all the way back to El Paso.  Adam got dropped off in Truth or Consequences to climb some more and Matt and I continued home.