Sale Athée 6c+Oddly it's got a few bolts - like three or four on the whole pitch (other pitches similar - some where it's welcome to have a bolt, others right next to good gear). I'm not really sure of the rationale for bolts on a pitch like this, but the big plus is that you don't have to carry as many cams up the mountain.
Quote from: andy moles on July 08, 2023, 11:45:09 amSale Athée 6c+Oddly it's got a few bolts - like three or four on the whole pitch (other pitches similar - some where it's welcome to have a bolt, others right next to good gear). I'm not really sure of the rationale for bolts on a pitch like this, but the big plus is that you don't have to carry as many cams up the mountain. I'd heard that's the exact rational for sporadic bolting on the big alpine cracks - so that you can survive on a standard alpine rack and not need triple cams and >#3. It's logical when you look at it that way.
Sale Athée 6c+Aiguille du Moine
The 52 years guidebook is ace. The only thing I found confusing is the theoretical quicker descent to couloir Samson after topping out La Demande or similar. Would appreciate a detailed explanation or GPX file if anyone has one (I’ll freely admit I haven’t extensively googled this yet and will probably find it directly after posting but just in case…) edit: I see Camp2Camp recommends abseil access in most cases. Have I imagined this descent route?
park at the first Belvédère on the Route des Crêtes and walk upstream following a wide but rapidly thinning path along the crest. Follow cairns in a big loop down and left to a beautiful grove of old pine trees. Walk down along the small sportclimbing sector Valaute in an ever steeper a gully until you find a rap station at the base of the huge prow of the route Les Naufragés. Two raps (45 m and 30 m) lead to the base of the sector. Walk downstream the beach until you can take a small via ferrata up to a window in the tunnels
That's all there is to it - throw the rest of the topos in the bin!
Hadn't realised quite how out of date blogspot is! Anyone got any suggestions for a good format for writing trip reports?
I've been meaning to write this up since the summer and decided to use an old shared blog that a group of us used to use. Hadn't realised quite how out of date blogspot is! Anyone got any suggestions for a good format for writing trip reports?https://scottishclimbers.blogspot.com/2024/01/sognando-aurora-tofana-di-rozes-5-year.htmlProbably a bit wordy for JWI, but nowhere near as nicely written as Mischa's last piece (which I thoroughly enjoyed).
Is a knife cut lino print the current oeuvre for artisanal topos?
Quote from: Fultonius on January 03, 2024, 10:27:15 amI've been meaning to write this up since the summer and decided to use an old shared blog that a group of us used to use. Hadn't realised quite how out of date blogspot is! Anyone got any suggestions for a good format for writing trip reports?https://scottishclimbers.blogspot.com/2024/01/sognando-aurora-tofana-di-rozes-5-year.htmlProbably a bit wordy for JWI, but nowhere near as nicely written as Mischa's last piece (which I thoroughly enjoyed).I liked it plenty! Just missing some info, such as a succint description of every pitch, access/parking info, season/aspect and preferably an artinasal topo :D.
such as a succint description of every pitch, access/parking info, season/aspect and preferably an artinasal topo
I had actually thought of doing that at the end, but I don't have good notes from the day so it would be a bit of a memory lottery! I think I might try to take better notes in future, maybe I'll get the writing bug again.
Eh... in Briançon perhaps??? There are tons of stuff in and around the Ecrins. Alas, I have neither the guide books nor the knowledge but some friends did “Ici mieux qu'en face” on Tour Termier and said it was a good 7a with a short boulder problem on the 7b pitch.https://www.camptocamp.org/routes/175360/fr/tour-termier-ici-mieux-qu-en-face