Quote from: shark on June 21, 2020, 10:06:26 pmProfessional dog wanker El MochoHe's stronger than you, but no need to be rude. P.s. once you've read that, you cannot unread that. Cringeworthy.
Professional dog wanker El Mocho
A stroke of luck then?
Quote from: tomtom on June 22, 2020, 04:42:31 pmA stroke of luck then?Is that an attempt at a dog pun? very poor
Quote from: monkoffunk on June 22, 2020, 02:20:48 pm.....After that tried workshy, which is either a two move 7B+ (at least) or the worlds hardest 7A depending on if you use the supporting block. Both seem impossible to me but that doesn’t bother me as I’m convinced it’s the biggest sandbag on Portland. Quick exhausted play on sub youth (vert 7A+) on way out. Tried different beta I’ve seen recently on Instagram. Some hope this might go in near future having given up on it last November. Could you share the Instagram of sub youth? Turns out that new cuttings is quite doable with my son so may be spending a bit more time there. Terrible choice for summer daytimes but there we go! Do you know anything about Baron Gunpowder, on that front?Workshy was originally given 7B with the block wasn't it? I'm sure I saw a video of the old sequence once which suggested that, but of course I can't find it now. Love to do it one day just for the sheer impossibility/brick hardness of it. Never done the first move nor the throw to the lip, which given there's only really what, 4 moves, isn't a strong performance!
.....After that tried workshy, which is either a two move 7B+ (at least) or the worlds hardest 7A depending on if you use the supporting block. Both seem impossible to me but that doesn’t bother me as I’m convinced it’s the biggest sandbag on Portland. Quick exhausted play on sub youth (vert 7A+) on way out. Tried different beta I’ve seen recently on Instagram. Some hope this might go in near future having given up on it last November.
Quote from: nai on June 22, 2020, 11:13:08 amSimon, you may be doing this already but I found it easier to pull on, RH to lower of the slopey crimps, heel up, RH to the pinch before LH onto the higher sloper. You've still got to lockout a bit but you're half way there at least.Tried that way and pinch seems like a red herring. Sam recommended that way yesterday and had one go but can’t get enough purchase on pinch to stay on. It’s really awkward to use and moving off it seems harder than going from lower crimp.My current method is pull on RH to slopey crimp LF cross to foot beak Rheel on then dramatic flag with Left leg LH to crimp next to RH rock up and get intermediate sloper above pinch with thumb in flake with RH then bump it again to good crimp
Simon, you may be doing this already but I found it easier to pull on, RH to lower of the slopey crimps, heel up, RH to the pinch before LH onto the higher sloper. You've still got to lockout a bit but you're half way there at least.
Sorry for ignorance but is the subyouth you're discussing the start to what was once a route bitd? 7b IIRC? Is the route now redundant?And if so do folk boulder out plyometrically speaking too these days? And if so what font grade?
With the dramatic flag, are you flagging on to something? I can't remember what the hold was like but it was flagging through on to a hold that made the difference for me.
I haven't been on Workshy for ages but somehow my memory isn't allowing me to able to imagine jumping (for the lip?) with feet still on the low block. But maybe I've forgotten how far it is.
The routes are still there, but I don’t think many people climb them on a rope. The sport grades make no sense at all, sub youth is much harder than 7b+, there is a hard 7B with is apparently 7c and a 7C that was apparently 7c+ on a rope. But they aren’t. I think plyometrically speaking still tends to be done on a rope, although has been bouldered at 7B I think?
It seems further than Shane makes it look here! https://www.instagram.com/p/B6x45gyDS11/?igshid=1jv4e3v22g5fh
Quote from: monkoffunk on June 22, 2020, 10:34:42 pmThe routes are still there, but I don’t think many people climb them on a rope. The sport grades make no sense at all, sub youth is much harder than 7b+, there is a hard 7B with is apparently 7c and a 7C that was apparently 7c+ on a rope. But they aren’t. I think plyometrically speaking still tends to be done on a rope, although has been bouldered at 7B I think?Guide says 7B for plyometrically speaking.I've never been on it, but the tale I heard second hand was that the top wasn't that much easier than the bottom on Sub Youth. Definitely not a place that uses the same grading scale as say Wallsend or Battleship!
S- another evening belaying trip, this time to Horseshoe. Horrifically busy, to the extent that it put me in a bit of a bad mood. Saw someone stripping a route via abseil, with no prussik, grimly locking the dead rope off with one arm while struggling to extricate the draws with the other. I thought he was going to crater in front of me. When he got down I politely asked whether he had a prussik loop. He looked at me like I was a complete cunt and told me he had a jumar in his bag, like this somehow answered the question. I gave up and left it, but how more people dont kill themselves is a mystery to me. From his conversation with his mate, it transpired that another member of their party had untied at the top of the route and dropped the rope. He then decided to unclip from the belay and top out, unprotected, through the choss. He seemingly had no idea about the danger. Unbelievable, and frankly a bit depressing. Once everyone fucked off I actually quite enjoyed a few 6s on the main wall.
Quote from: AJM on June 23, 2020, 08:32:05 amQuote from: monkoffunk on June 22, 2020, 10:34:42 pmThe routes are still there, but I don’t think many people climb them on a rope. The sport grades make no sense at all, sub youth is much harder than 7b+, there is a hard 7B with is apparently 7c and a 7C that was apparently 7c+ on a rope. But they aren’t. I think plyometrically speaking still tends to be done on a rope, although has been bouldered at 7B I think?Guide says 7B for plyometrically speaking.I've never been on it, but the tale I heard second hand was that the top wasn't that much easier than the bottom on Sub Youth. Definitely not a place that uses the same grading scale as say Wallsend or Battleship!Cheers, interesting. Pretty sure I did Subyouth in the early 2000's, though the mists of time are fogging things a bit. Would have been up there with my harder boulder problem ticks at the time if 7A+ is correct. Definitely never managed Plyometrically Speaking, but remember the move was ace.Re sport grades Oxley was pretty tall wasn't he, does height tame these problems much?