Surely not. Were Bleausards really climbing sit-starts on obscure boulders in obscure areas in the late 70s?
A very significant lead by a local expert who spent the summer bivouacking in The Valley. Probably the hardest on gritstone anywhere at the time, it was dismissed by many who thought it impossible for the day and was omitted in the 1961 guidebook until its rediscovery by Al Manson in 1977.
Bit of an open offer based on some conversations elsewhere, but if anyone has any digital material you think is of interest (pics of a cool FA, vids of interesting repeats, guidebook draft material etc.) I'd be happy to sort out some long term storage via climbing-history.org.If you'd be happy making it public that'd obviously be cool, but if you just want somewhere safe for it and want to keep it private I'd be happy to help with that too.Just drop me a DM.
Quote from: Tom de Gay on April 24, 2024, 05:30:14 pmSurely not. Were Bleausards really climbing sit-starts on obscure boulders in obscure areas in the late 70s? Of only tangential relevance, but people obsessing over weird bits of rock is older than you might think.Gremlin's Wall, E4 6b, Ilkley Rocky Valley, unstarred. Climb Flake Climb but boldly venture up the wall (about 3m tall) right of the final flake. FA Roy Heilds 1953.QuoteA very significant lead by a local expert who spent the summer bivouacking in The Valley. Probably the hardest on gritstone anywhere at the time, it was dismissed by many who thought it impossible for the day and was omitted in the 1961 guidebook until its rediscovery by Al Manson in 1977.Maybe Heilds was the Gaskins of his day? I've gone up to lead it and been pretty sure I'd do it but didn't think the risk of hitting my ankles on the ledge you climb above was worth the 0-star reward. Did it with a rope above after and it's very obvious what you have to do and not massively hard, so could be top end 6a/low end 6b. Regardless, very impressive for the early 1950s! It's really uninspiring but obviously Heilds could see that it would go and couldn't get the idea out of his head.
I think this is pure bollocks given the guy was using aid on VS’s I spent time belaying Al Manson when he was trying this and it took him numerous sessions to do it. He was absolutely staggered when he heard the retro claim. If some one like Austin, Jimmy Fullalove or Eric Lilley had claimed it maybe but Ron Hields was a VS punter.
Quote from: remus on February 22, 2024, 09:51:32 pmBit of a niche one, but don't suppose anyone has a copy of Pat Aments 2009 film 'The Disciples of Gill'?Yes, I do! Delayed reply because I had to locate it and retrieve it -- didn't want to make any promises until I knew I could actually lay hands on it. Do you want to borrow/copy it?
Bit of a niche one, but don't suppose anyone has a copy of Pat Aments 2009 film 'The Disciples of Gill'?
Anyone know if Steve Dunning's dyno Super Furry Animal at Slipstones has had a repeat?
I've added a little 'Shuffle' button to climbing-history.org that'll show you a random page to raise your spirits, whether that's a route you didnt know about or an article from the SMC journal.
I was digging through some SMC journals (which are all freely available via the SMC website, what a resource!)…
We could do with some disambiguation of FAs in the historical record. For some names there’s more than one possibility, even accounting for area and period. A nice use case for a graph database?
Interested in people's opinions on first ascent details as it seems like there's some convention involved.I'd read FA details like "FA. A.Sharp, P.Lewis 15/Aug/1986" (from Beat Surrender at Mother Careys area) as meaning A. Sharp (Andy?) led it, with a belay from P.Lewis (Paul?). Potentially there was some joint cleaning effort, and potentially P.Lewis may have also led or seconded it, but definitely not guaranteed.If it was a multipitch I'd assume that would normally mean anyone mentioned in the FA details did some leading, but the exact 'contribution' to the FA would depend a bit on the route i.e. if you lead the VS intro pitches then hand over to your mate to lead the E8 pitch then it'd be fair to say your mate had done the bulk of it.
that was the convention in the past anyway. You wouldn't have typically expected to be listed on a first ascent just for belaying duties (always exceptions of course, … . As I said, those were the conventions in the past.
A decent first ascent listing should detail who led what (on a multipitch) though.
Joe Brown's ascent of Cemetery Waits E7 in 1995
Quote Joe Brown's ascent of Cemetery Waits E7 in 1995 What’s the issue with this?
I'd read FA details like "FA. A.Sharp, P.Lewis 15/Aug/1986" (from Beat Surrender at Mother Careys area) as meaning A. Sharp (Andy?) led it, with a belay from P.Lewis (Paul?). Potentially there was some joint cleaning effort, and potentially P.Lewis may have also led or seconded it, but definitely not guaranteed.
Held Dougie’s ropes on this. The famous creaky green single 9mm. On the flash he went for it from gear about 1/2 way up. Only to slip off the final move, ending up at or below me.