You can hardly blame Rockfax for being too commercially successful, but it does make me very sad because guidebooks always offered something that I thought was special. There was passion on the page that is completely absent from the Rockfax books.
At the end of the day a guide is a largely functional thing, you have to get to the crag and know which routes you're getting on, and Rockfax's utilitarian approach does this at the expense of more character (Nick's guide being a prime example, pretty hard to use as an actual guide!) This leaves me thinking that guidebooks are not the best medium of expression for an authors creativity, and longer term apps will win out because they're just much easier to use
Remus.As a fellow nerd of history I presume you have this ordered? https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/B0CD91XVHY?ref_=dbs_m_mng_wam_calw_tpbk_1&storeType=ebooks&qid=1688975335&sr=8-1
Quote from: remus on August 06, 2023, 06:14:41 pmAt the end of the day a guide is a largely functional thing, you have to get to the crag and know which routes you're getting on, and Rockfax's utilitarian approach does this at the expense of more character (Nick's guide being a prime example, pretty hard to use as an actual guide!) This leaves me thinking that guidebooks are not the best medium of expression for an authors creativity, and longer term apps will win out because they're just much easier to useYou seem to be suggesting that a book cannot give both clear approach/route information AND also have bags of local flavour. There's no reason that this need be the case.I personally checked all the approach descriptions on Streetview and corrected scores of distances (which when measured out on Google Maps were found to be wrong). Where an approach is difficult I got friends who hadn't visited a particular crag before to road test our description. I badgered the Dunnings and Ibbertsons of the world to check my topos and the grades of hard sport venues; similar with bouldering.I also filled up any white space I could with amusing anecdotes/locations of swimming spots and canyoning expeditions for hot days/little ticklists - including one of Hidden Gems: fabulous routes which might not be on the radar of first-time visitors. In short, there's loads in there that you won't get from a guidebook produced by people parachuting in to smash-and-grab some topo photos.You can have your cake and eat it, but you'll never get it from Rockfax.(I'm not saying that Northern Rock is the best guidebook ever made but I'm still proud of it.)
Nick's guide being a prime example, pretty hard to use as an actual guide!
In May, when we visited Taghia, I was looking in the new-route book in the gite for something short, quick-drying and moderately hard after the flurry of snow we had in the morning. I found a brand new route called Soleil de pluie, that seemed to fit the bill. FA by Arnaud Petit, the local guide Mohammed Messoudi and a certain Emmanuel Faber.I showed the topo for my better half and she immediately spotted the last name in the list. "Emmanuel Faber?, was this route opened by the CEO of Danone?" (Danone is one of the biggest listed companies in France).And, yes, the route was put up by the former CEO of Danone. That explains how the route could be so expensively equipped, I guess.Anyway, Faber is a fascinating figure in the French agricultural industry, and has written a fairly well received autobiography (Ouvrir une voie / To open a new route).If you have no time for a book, Grimper magazine has an interview with the former boss manhttps://www.grimper.com/news-rencontre-emmanuel-faber-grand-patron-prefere-voler-coinceurs-plutot-qu-en-jet-prive
Mirror Mirror by Ed Drummond Great account of one of the all time climbing epics. Bizarrely it had me fascinated by the Troll Wall for two decades, an itch I'm very happy never to have scratched.
Text is still available on the WaybackMachine although a little awkward to get the text out caus of the formatting of the webpage.I've put the text into a temporary place here: https://justpaste.it/7w0py
I don't understand people who say that Rockfax guide books lack charm. They have routes drawn on the picture of the wrong mountain, write up 70 m pitches as 50 m, edit out pitches on long complex routes, contain absolutely absurd gear beta, mix up the pitch grades and have many more idiosyncratic edit choices. To rely on a rockfax in the mountain, without double checking with FA topo, definitely adds to the adventure!
Quote from: jwi on August 06, 2023, 09:59:13 pmI don't understand people who say that Rockfax guide books lack charm. They have routes drawn on the picture of the wrong mountain, write up 70 m pitches as 50 m, edit out pitches on long complex routes, contain absolutely absurd gear beta, mix up the pitch grades and have many more idiosyncratic edit choices. To rely on a rockfax in the mountain, without double checking with FA topo, definitely adds to the adventure!The best one has to be photographing the Verdon Gorge from the rim on the opposite side so that from below not a single feature is apparent.
It's one thing to take a photo of the wall, it's quite another to spend the time acquiring the knowledge for accurately drawing on the lines.
Quote from: Will Hunt on December 20, 2023, 12:59:31 pmIt's one thing to take a photo of the wall, it's quite another to spend the time acquiring the knowledge for accurately drawing on the lines. FTFY