Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Pursuing Ideas

Shit is Bananas; B-A-N-A-N-A-S

I must say, the epic-ness of my journey has slowed down significantly in the last month. I believe this is for two reasons: 1. it’s getting cold EVERYWHERE and 2. I no longer have a full time partner. Although the climbing has all but stopped, life still happens. I spent Thanksgiving in the L.A. area with family that I haven’t seen in a long time. After that I have spent a lot of time driving; leaving SoCal passing through Arizona and Utah circling Colorado for a while then down to Texas. I have never in my life pictured myself in Texas but here I am.

This is NOT Texas
I did stop in Indian Creek Utah for a couple days to get some world class crack climbing in. I met a new friend Matthew who ended up taking a ton of killer pictures. All the pictures in this post are thanks to Matthew. You can check out his story at: matthewparentstories.com.

Possibly one of my favorite pictures ever
I am laying low for the holidays then there should be a sharp spike in epic-ness in January when I head down to El Potrero Chico Mexico for arguably the best winter climbing in North America!
I want to ride a reindeer back to camp
Have you been naughty or nice?
"King Cat"
Santa gets pissed when that hand crack ain't all # 2's!
Looking down the side of North Six Shooter
HO-HO-OH SHIT


Sunday, November 16, 2014

A New Chapter

Stinky Dawgs
The longer I wait to write a new post the harder it becomes. On the road there are new stories unfolding on a daily basis and so many of them criss-cross one another that I sometimes can’t believe everything that happens in a months’ time. Dan is no longer living in Bertha and is off on a new chapter of his journey which also starts a new chapter in mine. Before we get to that though, there was one final epic month of adventure for Dan, BB, and I.

Goodbye Clear Waters!
With a promising sign before leaving Tahoe, in the form of an epic rainbow, we continued making our way down the west coast. Time in California is starting to feel like the time we spent in Wyoming; a revolving door of continually circling around familiar areas. Because of this I will probably mix up the sequence of events over the next month as we did 2 rounds each at Yosemite, Bishop, San Francisco, all while also pin balling through multiple points in Southern California. California is pretty much what I was hoping it would be and I love the weather: 80 and sunny in November?...Can I live here forever? The Sierras are phenomenal and I foresee myself spending much more time in the future in this area.  

Internal Dialogue: "Holy Shit!"
Half Dome
Dan's best Timmy O'Neil impersonation
Top of Nutcracker (Half Dome in distance)
3000 feet of El Cap Above me...maybe next year
Yosemite: What can I say that hasn’t been said a million times before? There is so much history and amazing climbing here that it is mind boggling; the views are spectacular and awe inspiring. The only downsides that I personally saw were no dogs on trails (which makes sense but sucks when you live in a van with your dog) and the tourists. I am not bad mouthing tourists by any means but just noting the amount of people who visit the park is overwhelming and this was even during off season. I don’t think I could handle the swarms of vacationers during peak season. One thing I really like about climbing is being able to get away from cities and people and living a more primitive lifestyle. The other plus side to this is that the people you do run into are usually like-minded and down to earth. Dan and I split ways for part of our Yosemite visit and were together for the other half. The big walls of El Capitan and Half Dome are a little out of our league for this trip but that’s not to say we didn’t have a blast on the shorter less committing rock. One of the highlights was our outing on Moby Dick (5.10a). Dan impressively led it with the lack of proper protection which, another climber promptly noted to us that Moby Dick is known to eat multiple number 4s and that Dan didn’t take any! After completing the short, easy, rarely done second pitch, we set up a top rope on Moby and proceeded to have time trials to see who could climb it the fastest. I believe we were able to climb the 140’ route in the low 3 minute mark but were still beat by an ex-Navy fellow who was able to knock that time down into the high 2 minutes. Yosemite was fun but it was time to move on!

On top of Magician 
We topped out all these spires
Peek-A-Boo!
MMMM the Sierras
Lady of the Needles
Fred
The Needles: The Needles are a series of granite domes located in the Sequoia National Forest and are probably my second favorite stop of the trip only next to the Bugaboos. Similar to the Bugaboos, the approach isn’t exactly easy and keeps the lazy climbers and tourists at bay! We basically had the campsite and climbing to ourselves for a whole week besides sharing with our new found friends Gaelin and Jake. The cost of all this was a 3 mile hike to a climbing area offering almost no easy to moderate climbs but boasting awesome multi-pitch splitter cracks on granite domes named The Witch, The Sorcerer, and The Charlatan. Most of these routes start off at a level which demands at least some level of proficiency and speed. In the seven days we spent there, I hiked roughly 42 miles at 8000 feet elevation and climbed 5 routes; 1 route each day that we climbed. Every day was an adventure and I have never felt in better shape in my entire life than when we were packing up to leave. 4 of the 5 climbs absolutely blew my mind all while being the hardest climbs I have done to date.  I don’t have a favorite of the three but Thin Ice, Fancy Free, and Airy Interlude (all 5.10b) were all super incredible experiences. We also were able to summit 5 of the tallest domes via the routes we chose.  I WILL definitely be returning here next chance I get. The highlight memory I have occurred while topping out of Fancy Free. As it turns out, The Needles are a favorite fly by area for a local Air Force base so during the week you are almost guaranteed at least 2-3 fly bys every day. After finger traversing the final couple moves of the climb, I grab the top of the rock and mantel onto what I thought was going to be a large flat ledge but as it turned out actually swiftly dropped down the back side so I was mantling onto a sharp point of the rock. While I was pulling myself onto this unexpected feature of the rock, 2 fighter jets flew by upside down not more than 200 feet away and almost knocked me clear off the top of the route in shear surprise. Luckily, I held on and got the feeling that they were congratulating me for completing the climb! A truly heart stopping experience!

Dan traversing in the Gorge
Pulling the Crux
BB needs to grow some thumbs
"You looking at my bacon!?"   
Dan and I were starting to accept that The Needles were going to be the last big adventure we had together. We had roughly a week of travel left together and were throwing around the idea of going back to Yosemite to climb the East Buttress of El Capitan and Snake Dike on Half Dome. While we could have probably accomplished this, the logistics and the chance of getting stuck on the climbs overnight kept us away. Instead we decided to attend a climber festival in Bishop which I think was completely appropriate as our adventure started only shortly before the Lander festival earlier in the trip. For the most part we took it easy but not before having one last day long outing: Towering Inferno (5.11b) in the Owens River Gorge. Towering Inferno is the only route that tops out of the gorge and is marked as unique by the first pitch, a full rope length 5.11a hand traverse. Dan took a nice clean fall at the beginning of the first pitch and I spiced it up on the 4th pitch taking a decent slab fall and drawing some blood. We made it to the top despite the deteriorating rock quality on each pitch and had our last top out ritual together which consists of eating a cliff bar, chugging water, taking in the view for a minute, and then starting to make our way back down. The rest of the weekend was enjoyed with more climbing, climbing movies, and partying. Sadly, the weekend had to come to an end and Dan had to move on.

Dan officially relinquishing the keys to Bertha
Who is more sad?
Last family photo
We spent our last day lying on a beach and doing nothing. BB knew all day that Dan was leaving and was visibly distraught. The time came and we goofed off one last time in the airport parking lot blasting music, dancing, and chugging beers and Perrier. We said our goodbyes and just like that we each closed a chapter in our journey. Reflecting on my adventure with Dan, I don’t think it could have gone any better and I couldn’t have found a better partner to do this with and likewise, I wouldn’t want anything to have happened any different or have a different partner. I think climbing partners form a special bond that is necessary to be able to do what we do. We literally have to trust each other with our lives on a daily basis and know that the other person can handle what we are doing safely. Normally, it’s not easy to form this kind of relationship and any number of small personal qualities could easily throw this off. I feel this was not the case with Dan; we gelled right off the bat and were able to even tolerate each other while living in a van just feet from each other at all times for 6 months. I say tolerate, but honestly we didn’t have to “tolerate” each other because we clicked right away and there was nothing but smooth sailing from there. Unfortunately I am losing my partner and I think I was spoiled with this experience. Dan is off to backpack Thailand for who knows how long and I wish him all the luck in the world. I know down the road we will link back up for some big adventures…hopefully even abroad!

This translates to 246,000...37,000 since March!

So now I have decided that I will continue my journey solo. I am going to explore how the climbing circuit works when you don’t have a climbing partner to go climb any time you want. I think this will allow me to spend more time located in one destination as well as affording more free time to reading and playing guitar(and maybe blog posts haha). We will see how it goes.

Uhhhh....hurry up!
Beautiful
I linked up with a friend Lexi and we decided to climb at Tahquitz. Lexi has been climbing on and off with Dan and I along the way and is trying to push herself into the Traditional climbing world. She decided she wanted to start leading traditional pitches so we decided to give it a shot. We hiked up to Fingertrip (5.7) and after a quick review of anchors got to work. She flawlessly led the first pitch without a hitch. After linking up at the first belay, we decided we were running out of light too quickly and I would take over for the rest of the climb. We were treated to a beautiful sunset (the 150th of the trip!) on the last pitch and topped out shortly after sunset. With just a little light remaining we decided to rappel off some tat and rings we found determining it would be quicker and easier than trying to find the down-climb decent. Unfortunately we only brought one head lamp which made for a pretty tricky decent. Fortunately though, at the climber festival I took a self-rescue class which taught me how to ascend a line after rappelling and this became an extremely useful skill as I had to do this 3 separate times while trying to figure out which way to go.  Eventually, we avoided epic-ing and landed at the base of the climb only 3 and a half hours after the sun set. Despite the horrible horrible horrible (and slightly entertaining) karaoke at the bar in Idyllwild, the burger was very much enjoyed.



I have now made my way to Las Vegas, Nevada and will be climbing at Red Rock National Preserve for a couple days. Which way will the road turn from here? I am not sure but I’ll let you know in about a month ;)


Thursday, October 9, 2014

The Clear Waters of Tahoe are Calling my Name

Tom Cruise in Action
Last time I left you with a bunch of photos of my Alaskan Adventure; hopefully, this post will have more words than pictures, but lots of pictures too!

Dancing in Squamish
We arrived in Squamish on a sunny Thursday afternoon which was much welcomed after all the cold and rainy weather we encountered throughout the past month. The first thing you see entering Squamish is The Chief which is a 500 foot tall granite dome overlooking the town and we were instantly drawn to the base. We rented a guidebook for the day and settled on the climb “Snake” (5.9) which was supposed to be similar quality to the 5 star route next to it (Diedre 5.8), just slightly harder and much less traffic. We rack up and head to the base of the climb. We meet a duo who are repelling down because they got off route onto a much harder route that they couldn’t finish. We were then met by another group wanting to climb the same route. Dan and I started feeling rushed to get up it and that’s where the mistakes started. We planned on linking the first two pitches together but Dan stopped half way through the second pitch and I wasn’t quite sure why. Upon linking up with Dan, it turns out the beginning climbing wasn’t quite as easy as we were under the impression of and there was too much rope out for Dan to feel comfortable. We reset the belay and Dan is going to shoot for the chains but is once again stopped by a combination of moves that he didn’t feel comfortable maneuvering without proper protection. He set a belay on a tree to the climber’s right and I met him at the tree. He explained to me that the moves looked sketch and that there was no pro. There are now two parties waiting behind us and I am feeling the need to rush to get out of their way. I was looking at traversing through roughly 30 feet of “5.7” unprotected terrain from the tree. I take one look at it and in the back of my mind I’m thinking “how hard can 5.7 be?” and tell Dan “I’ll just go for it.” Right off of the belay I found a small nubbin to throw a sling around and Dan asks “what the hell that’s going to do?” I didn’t think it would hold either but it was a bit of mental duct tape and I told Dan “well, this is just a no fall zone.”  I start to move through the traverse; I look at my different options and start to work my feet out. I can see where I need to get but all I have to work with is sloped hands, which I can barely even palm, and two nubbins to stand on. I can see a good foot hold about another 2 feet out and make a committing intermediate move to get into position to get to that hold. I realize my sequence is off and I can’t get to where I want to go. I am basically being held to the wall by one toe on a tiny nubbin and I’ve got Elvis leg. I start to panic but close my eyes and start to breathe slow and deliberately. My leg stops shaking and I can here Dan yelling “Just breathe man you got it, you can do it, stick with it!” I try to reverse the intermediate move I just made but I just can’t hold it anymore. I don’t have it. I could tell my foot was going to blow and I just went with it into the “no fall zone.” I don’t know what happened between there and looking up at Dan but according to Dan I fell down about 15 feet missing a large flake directly below me and landing on my feet on a more slabby ledge. When my feet hit, they gripped and I flipped head over heels and fell another 10 feet landing/slamming into another wall on my back. Somehow, the sling that I slung as “mental duct tape” had held and saved me from falling another 5-10 feet and decking on a pointy horn that would have surely landed me in the hospital. Dan immediately started yelling to me to figure out how bad I was. I was in a lot of pain but I knew I was in one piece and good enough to be lowered and make my way down. I could tell by the look on the two parties below us that the fall must have looked horrible. Even when I tried to make a joke or two while passing by the other climbers they just looked at me slightly confused and in shock probably thinking WTF is wrong this guy?  

I had to take it easy the rest of the day and the worst part was that I couldn’t sit, stand, or lie down without being in an immense amount of pain. It was starting to get to the point where Dan and I started debating if I actually needed to go to the hospital. I figured if I wasn’t peeing blood that I’d be ok so we skipped the hospital and I just tried to take it easy. Later that night in camp we were talking to other climbers who have done Snake and they were telling us that there are two ways to do the unprotected traverse: the easier way (5.7) is to stay low and find a foot hold way out left, which I didn’t see because I was rushing; the second way (5.10) is to stay high on shitty feet and no hands which is what I ended up doing. The following day I decided I needed to just sit around and Dan went climbing with others from the camp. The whole day I couldn’t get the sequence of events out of my head. This was the first bad fall I have ever taken while climbing and I didn’t know how it was going to affect me. We have run into multiple people that use to climb until they took a fall that was too much for them and quit. I have only been climbing for roughly 2 years and I’m debating trying to make a career out of climbing and now I don’t know what to think. I’m not invincible. What I’m doing is dangerous. One wrong decision can leave you in a hospital or dead. These thoughts keep swirling in my head. I wonder what my mental head space will be like when I can climb again. What if I get to a scary point and freak out and can’t keep calm? When Dan meets back up for dinner we start discussing what’s going on. Dan still has 2 months of travel and climbing planned with me and I don’t want to let him down; I want to keep climbing. Dan was talking to a local friend of his and we told him we were on Snake and he says “Oh, Snake I took a bad fall on that climb 5 years ago and haven’t been back to it since.” I thought about the prospect of skipping this climb but I think that it would then just haunt me; the climb that got the best of me. I decided then that I was feeling good enough to climb the next day. Dan asked me what I wanted to climb and immediately I told him Snake. He was a bit surprised but said he was hoping I would say that. I had to conquer this climb to keep my head in check. It was decided: Snake was going down first thing the next morning.

The "Traverse" the second time around
We get to the base of Snake. This time we have the route to ourselves with no parties waiting for us. We know what we are getting ourselves into. We free solo the first pitch and set the belay. Dan climbs to directly under the traverse and sets a belay which is a much safer position than from the tree way out right. I follow up and start to look at my options. I find a number 2 cam placement on a flake out right which is super bomber but would still produce a long fall. I climb up to the beginning of the traverse and start to look around. There has to be gear placement somewhere. I find a little nook that looks like I could shove a pink Tricam in and although super sketchy, if it held, would make the fall much safer. I don’t think it would have held so it was just more “mental duct tape.” I look out to the same holds I used on the last go around. I stop and take a deep breath and look some more; I take my time. I see the lower left foot that the other climbers had told us about. I look down at Dan and tell him to watch me closely. I commit to the traverse. I move my foot out left and being lower than my last chosen path, had better hand holds. I balance out onto my left foot so I can make a reachy move to a side pull. There’s no turning back from here, but once I hit that side pull, I knew I was fine. I pulled through and clipped the chains. I let out a huge sigh of relief and belay Dan up. It felt really good to pull that move clean but this was just the beginning of the climb. We still had 4 more (5.9) pitches to go and I needed to lead 2 of them. I decided to take this next one right off the bat; another traverse: this time about 45 feet straight left with almost no gear and a difficulty rating of 5.9. I took my time and worked my way through finding sparse gear along the way. Dan flew up the next pitch of bomber hand crack with a slabby face. Now it’s back to me, another sketchy traverse! I had to climb about 50 feet of demanding crack until I made it to a tree that marked the beginning of this traverse. It moved about 20 feet to the right but under a roof with no feet and semi decent hand jams. This was physically demanding and much harder than the two traverses before but it was a clean fall with no worries of hitting anything. The wind started to kick up half way through the traverse but I powered my way through, up and around the corner of the roof and clipped the chains. Dan followed up and finished out the last pitch. We had conquered Snake and I had conquered my fear.

I am still mentally dealing with the repercussions of the fall. The following week of climbing proved to be extremely mentally challenging for me and I had to really focus on keeping my cool while leading. I think in the end this experience will strengthen me mentally and also make me realize the dangers of what I’m doing and to take more precautions while doing it. I know that I’m not invincible and I know that I want to keep climbing.

I live in my van
After Squamish I lived in a junkyard in Vancouver for 2 days while swapping interiors of my van. Westfalia made a full camper that was only available in Canada and I just so happened to stumble upon one with a near perfect interior in a scrap yard. I hadn’t gotten that dirty working on my van nor have I been in a junkyard in a while so it felt good to be back in my element.  

Mini Mushroom
On top of Eagle Rock
We were lucky enough to have the opportunity to enjoy mandolinist Chris Thile and upright bassist Edgar Meyer perform at the Chan Center for Performing Arts at the University of Vancouver. From here we made our way down to Bellingham to meet with Peter and Jan who are friends of Dan. Peter is a sailing enthusiast and decided he was going to take us sailing through the San Juan’s for the weekend. Jan precooked food for us which was the best food I have had in quite a time. First we sailed to Vendovi Island to meet with Peter’s friends. We spent the night docked at Vendovi then sailed to Cypress Island the following day. We hiked out to Eagle Rock and enjoyed a beautiful sunset. We spent that night anchored in Eagle Harbor. Next up was more catching up with old friends of Dan’s in Duvall. Dan lived and went to school in Duvall for a year when he was 18 and some of his classmates are still in the area.
A three hour tour...
Peter is a Badass human being

Dan's eating?...what a surprise
We were itching to climb again so we moved on to Smith Rock. We met up with our friend Mary who we met earlier in the trip in the Tetons. Mary writes for Earth magazine and has been living on the road for 9 years. It’s really incredible to think about all the places she has been. Even her dogs have visited more states than me. You can read her blog here:The Blonde Coyote which has a sweet write up of our adventure here: Smith Rock Adventure I'll be looking forward to reading part 2! We spent the week climbing at the birth place of sport climbing. This place has some very unique climbing on some kind of super solid volcanic rock. The climbers at Smith are super chill and respectful to the point where you can leave your phone at the outlet outside of the bathroom without worrying about someone swiping it. We finished our stay at Smith with an ascent of Monkey Face which is the iconic classic route of Smith Rock.

BB Dawgsss is a Circus Dawgsss
I can't count the number of beautiful sunsets we get
Monkey Face in the Background
Dan and I made it to the base of monkey face just a few minutes after another party of 3. They were telling us that they have never done a bolt ladder before and Dan and I were thinking we might have to wait in line to get on top. We decided we were going to try and climb past this party on a decent looking crack to the right “how hard can it be?” Sound familiar? Dan climbed Monkey Face 2 days prior with Mary so I was given the opportunity to lead most of the pitches. The first pitch was super quality 5.9 crack to bolted anchors so we knew we were on some kind of decent route. I took the second pitch as well which looked like a sketchy traverse. It was instantly a flashback to Squamish. I slung a chock stone and made my way out. Luckily I found a bolt at the end of the traverse but unluckily it was a rusted 1/4” POS. I clipped a double length to the rusty bolt and looked at the large corner above me. I made my way up into the corner and was standing on a solid horn. There was a bomber number 2 C4 placement behind the horn but I had already used my number 2 and only had my number 1 so I looked around and all I could find was a number 5 micro-nut. I decided there was better gear up higher and moved into the unknown. I made it to a sketchy stance about 10 feet above the micro nut and looked for gear placements. There was none. I looked down and realized I’m 25 feet left of my belay and 25 feet above my last bomber piece. If I fell, the micro-nut would surely blow and I doubt the rusted ¼” bolt would fare much better. This fall I would not walk away from and I am past the point of down-climbing. I am transported back to Squamish and have all the same feelings; I start to panic. I close my eyes and take deep deliberate breaths; my stance isn’t THAT bad. Ok, I calm down a little; what do I have to work with? I lean out from the corner and look onto the face and I see a bolt! Oh shit, it has no hanger…WTF!? More mental duct tape…I delicately place a sling over the stud that’s sticking out all of about an inch and a half and clip the sling. I take a few more breaths and commit. I climb out onto the face and another 10-15 feet above my last stance and finally find a place to slot bomber gear in. I quickly throw a .75 X4 and a Yellow DMM nut in the crack and equalize them; this would hold a bus. I can finally relax and calm down safely, 40-50 feet above my last bomber piece of protection. I later find out that I was on an X rated route which means there is no protection and a fall would result in serious injury or death. We continued the climb, still behind the party of three and finished out the route via the Pioneer Route which is the most popular route most climbers use to ascend Monkey Face. There is an A0 bolt ladder to get into the mouth of the monkey which was the first time I ever attempted something like this. From the mouth of the monkey, the climber crawls out the cave over a 150 foot vertical drop onto an easy face to the summit. Of course we were making our best monkey calls the whole way up; the perfect way to finish up our Smith Rock Experience. From the top we make a 150 foot simul-repel and I pretended I was Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible. We have a farewell/victory dinner with Mary then part ways and head toward San Francisco.
A0 Bolt Ladder
In the Monkey's Mouth (Mary in the Background)
150 feet of exposure
Just Monkeying around
"Pulling Rope is better than Pushing Rope..."
DA DA DA DA NA NA (Mission Impossible theme song)
Monkey Man
Monkey Men and BB
I wanted to see The Good Life perform at the Fillmore and just by chance, our friend Sharah who had lived in the van with us for a few weeks was also in San Francisco. We all met up and enjoyed the show together and then went to check out the Haight-Ashbury. I was geeking out with all the Grateful Dead history all around. We spent the night in the parking lot of a harbor and enjoyed a beautiful sunny Sunday morning on a sailboat that Sharah was currently crashing at. Dan and I spent the afternoon at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival and caught Bela Fleck & Abigail Washburn and Joe Russo’s Almost Dead (A Grateful Dead Tribute Band).

We made it to Lake Tahoe the following morning and decided we needed a down day to do laundry and catch up on internet. While driving through town, we were rear ended at a stop light. We pull over and meet Devon, Dave, and Heidi who just so happen to be climbers. After assessing the damages, which was worse to their truck (nothing happened to Bertha), I decided the authorities need not be involved and that we should be friends and go climb. So yesterday was an amazing day climbing in Lake Tahoe with our new friends and I now write this post from their couch. Funny how life works out sometimes… 

The horrible quality of these pictures are really starting to annoy me so once again here are links to full res pictures and more pics than posted here: September AND October