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the shizzle => news => Topic started by: remus on September 09, 2021, 08:47:37 am

Title: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 09, 2021, 08:47:37 am
Neil has put up a substantial new line Pavey Ark that runs counter to impact day, sounds like an ace piece of climbing. There's a write up on UKC.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTkjaWkDBgI/

(Teestub posted about it on the bold trad thread but thought it deserves a thread of it's own, not every day a new E11 gets done.)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 09, 2021, 09:07:20 am
Looks like a path to me.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 09, 2021, 10:24:45 am
https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2021/09/lexicon_e11_7a_-_first_ascent_on_pavey_ark_by_neil_gresham-72872

More plugs than Howdens! :)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shurt on September 09, 2021, 10:39:13 am
Yes it's a detailed write up but it leaves me cold and sounds like it's been written by a corporate suit rather than a climber...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: erm, sam on September 09, 2021, 11:02:07 am
I thought it was pretty interesting actually.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 09, 2021, 11:15:12 am
I thought it was alright too. More a nod to all the folk he's leant on to get the job done. Inspiring to see him progressing still.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 09, 2021, 11:46:21 am
What an absolute masterclass

Seriously though, a real beast, and pushing the boundaries still. Much respect.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 09, 2021, 12:00:48 pm
I find it a bit hard to get enthused about hard routes on this wall, Impact Day has to be the least impressive hard route I've ever looked at.

It would be interesting if Neil did go back on Equilibrium to check if it really does feel easier now he's so much better.  The lack of repeats in recent years suggests it might not be one so suited to the modern skillset.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark20 on September 09, 2021, 12:51:42 pm
Impact Day has to be the least impressive hard route I've ever looked at.
Interesting you say that (when mentioning Equilibrium in the same post!), how so? The rock is so nice on Pavey you can't go too far wrong surely?
It would be great to see a photo of the wall though, and the lines, as I can't really picture the new line

Good effort from Neil, and I quite enjoyed the in depth write up of the process
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 09, 2021, 01:18:03 pm
Hmm. Burbage South is one of the bigger grit crags, and Equilibrium a full-height line up an arete. If you consider that unimpressive you're basically writing off the majority of grit routes.

Pavey is a huge mountain crag, the Impact day wall is about 40ft high on the side of a bit of a gully. It is gently overhanging with a slab at the bottom.The wall isn't obvious from afar nor are there any obvious lines. If the slab wasn't there to hit when you fall off (as Neil discusses) you could knock a grade or two off everything. I just thought it was deeply underwhelming, Scafell it ain't. If Pavey wasn't the most accessible mountain crag in the Lakes I doubt these routes would have ever been done.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Adam Lincoln on September 09, 2021, 01:19:49 pm
To be fair, the new line is the line of the wall. ID skirts off to edge of crag for a decent rest before coming back in for top hard moves.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 09, 2021, 01:27:57 pm
Steve Mac had a play on it and says it’s really good
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 09, 2021, 01:29:51 pm
Hmm. Burbage South is one of the bigger grit crags, and Equilibrium a full-height line up an arete. If you consider that unimpressive you're basically writing off the majority of grit routes.

Was watching Pearson on Equilibrium last night as I couldn’t remember much about it. It’s a bit of a funny one isn’t it, with the ledge you can sit down on, essentially followed by quite a short techy boulder you can’t fall off. How you begin to compare that in difficulty to this new one when the character is so different, I have no idea.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 09, 2021, 01:36:45 pm
Maybe we're witnessing the demonisation of technical bold climbing? Always seemed like the obvious one to try.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 09, 2021, 01:43:06 pm
Was watching Pearson on Equilibrium last night as I couldn’t remember much about it. It’s a bit of a funny one isn’t it, with the ledge you can sit down on, essentially followed by quite a short techy boulder you can’t fall off. How you begin to compare that in difficulty to this new one when the character is so different, I have no idea.

Answer is you don’t. You compare it to others of similar style. Pearson came unstuck basing the grade of Walk of Life to hard grit routes he’d knocked out quickly.

Fair play to Gresh he’s done the full range including, of course, Equilibrium.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 09, 2021, 01:48:16 pm

Answer is you don’t.


Quote from: Gresham
From my perspective, I climbed Equilibrium, a benchmark E10, two decades ago and I'm in way better shape now. When I did that route my best sport grade was 8b+, but I've climbed 2 grades harder than that recently and also done all sorts of strength-based PBs, which I was nowhere near back then. I know I'm a much better climber overall, yet Lexicon still took me right to the brink and required way more preparation.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: guypercival on September 09, 2021, 02:19:10 pm
Fantastic effort but I don’t understand all the soul searching when trying to stick the E grade on. The Uk tech grade is useless. Just give it fr8b+ R/X and we all know where we are.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 09, 2021, 02:25:33 pm
Quote from: Gresham
From my perspective, I climbed Equilibrium, a benchmark E10, two decades ago and I'm in way better shape now. When I did that route my best sport grade was 8b+, but I've climbed 2 grades harder than that recently and also done all sorts of strength-based PBs, which I was nowhere near back then. I know I'm a much better climber overall, yet Lexicon still took me right to the brink and required way more preparation.

Thought you were making a general comment on the use of the same grade across differing routes and comparing them to work out the grade. Didn’t realise you were drawing your comment from the article (which was TLDR) and reads as typical Gresh .  ::)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on September 09, 2021, 02:30:12 pm
Fantastic effort but I don’t understand all the soul searching when trying to stick the E grade on. The Uk tech grade is useless. Just give it fr8b+ R/X and we all know where we are.

Here here (or is it hear hear?)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 09, 2021, 02:37:57 pm
It would be interesting to see a consensus on how UK trad grades are supposed to relate to each other. To my OCD mind at least. As it seems there are two independent interpretations of trad grades running in parallel to each other at E8 and above. What could be termed the newer school version and the old-school version. One interpretation an E-grade above the other.

i.e. how can 8b+ sport standard and scary/bold/runout, but not exceptionally dangerous from the crux, be E11 in the following grade table:

safe-ish 9a-9a+ E11
safe-ish 8c-8c+ E10
safe-ish 8b-8b+ E9
safe-ish 8a-8a+ E8
safe-ish 7c-7c+ E7
safe-ish 7b-7b+ E6
safe-ish 7a-7a+ E5
safe-ish 6c-6c+ E4
safe-ish 6b-6b+ E3
safe-ish 6a-6a+ E2
safe-ish  5 - 5+  E1

Where:
Bold/scary/runout but not exceptionally dangerous from crux:  +1 E-grade
i.e. loads of E5s/6s/7s, Strawberries (E7) 7c, Point Blank (E8) 7c+/8a, If 6 was 9 (E9) 8a+, Various Dave Mac E9s 8a+, Olympiad (E10) 8b, Prisoners of the Sun (E10) 8b - arguably dangerous from crux, Choronzon (E10) 8b+, Great Ness Wall (E10) 8b+/c, Rhapsody (E11) 8c.
Exceptionally dangerous from crux:  +2 E-grades
i.e. easy but v.serious slabs, loads of E5/6s/7s/8s, Rare Lichen (E9) 7c - although v.questionable as people have taken the fall, Gribin Wall Climb (E9) 7c+.
Unusually safe from crux:  -1 E-grade
i.e. Cockblock (E5) 7b, hard to think of many, perhaps people like to put stuff with well-protected hard climbing next to gear as 'benchmark for the grade' rather than drop the grade.


If only because I have a v.cool proj which is 7c/+ on gear, scary/bit runout but not dangerous, and it'd be nice to know what you're supposed to give it apart from the obvious which is 7c/+ on gear. Maybe the E number depends on whether I'm planning on starting a climbing business.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 09, 2021, 03:07:25 pm
Fantastic effort but I don’t understand all the soul searching when trying to stick the E grade on. The Uk tech grade is useless. Just give it fr8b+ R/X and we all know where we are.
Am I being overly cynical to think preserving E grades is good for the British ego in a world where 8b+ just isn't very hard any more and is being climbed on scary / run out routes abroad relatively commonly without much fuss?

Have we learned nothing from Team America rinsing all the hardest grit routes in one season, or Babsi and the others ticking Pembroke in a few short weeks?  :jab:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 09, 2021, 03:12:11 pm
Not at all imo.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: guypercival on September 09, 2021, 03:27:58 pm
It would be interesting to see a consensus on how UK trad grades are supposed to relate to each other. To my OCD mind at least. As it seems there are two independent interpretations of trad grades running in parallel to each other at E8 and above. What could be termed the newer school version and the old-school version. One interpretation an E-grade above the other.

i.e. how can 8b+ sport standard and scary/bold/runout, but not exceptionally dangerous from the crux, be E11 in the following grade table:

safe-ish 9a-9a+ E11
safe-ish 8c-8c+ E10
safe-ish 8b-8b+ E9
safe-ish 8a-8a+ E8
safe-ish 7c-7c+ E7
safe-ish 7b-7b+ E6
safe-ish 7a-7a+ E5
safe-ish 6c-6c+ E4
safe-ish 6b-6b+ E3
safe-ish 6a-6a+ E2
safe-ish  5 - 5+  E1

Where:
Bold/scary/runout but not exceptionally dangerous from crux:  +1 E-grade
i.e. loads of E5s/6s/7s, Strawberries (E7) 7c, Point Blank (E8) 7c+/8a, If 6 was 9 (E9) 8a+, Various Dave Mac E9s 8a+, Olympiad (E10) 8b, Prisoners of the Sun (E10) 8b - arguably dangerous from crux, Choronzon (E10) 8b+, Great Ness Wall (E10) 8b+/c, Rhapsody (E11) 8c.
Exceptionally dangerous from crux:  +2 E-grades
i.e. easy but v.serious slabs, loads of E5/6s/7s/8s, Rare Lichen (E9) 7c - although v.questionable as people have taken the fall, Gribin Wall Climb (E9) 7c+.
Unusually safe from crux:  -1 E-grade
i.e. Cockblock (E5) 7b, hard to think of many, perhaps people like to put stuff with well-protected hard climbing next to gear as 'benchmark for the grade' rather than drop the grade.


If only because I have a v.cool proj which is 7c/+ on gear, scary/bit runout but not dangerous, and it'd be nice to know what you're supposed to give it apart from the obvious which is 7c/+ on gear. Maybe the E number depends on whether I'm planning on starting a climbing business.
I always thought the “old school” conversion applied where the route was almost like a sport route. Not particularly big run outs. More of a physical challenge than a head game. As soon as the runouts get big then the conversion goes out the window. An 80 foot fall is a completely different proposition to doing the same climb with several bits of good gear.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 09, 2021, 03:31:55 pm
Has jwi taught us nothing?! If a route  isn’t 9c it doesn’t even deserve a grade. ;)

I respect Gresham for giving it an E grade (as well as all the other fascinating grade information he’s provided) myself. Apart from the two action photos it’s the only straw of relatability for the average trad climber to clutch at in that mammoth write-up and consensus will decide the grade anyway- very few classic routes have remained at their original grade and no-one cares.

It’s probably sensible in terms of popularising it too. The routes that only get coy stuff like HXS 8b+/ H11/ “an 8a into a V8 Boulder problem with real danger potential” etc. seem much more likely to get forgotten about.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 09, 2021, 03:57:36 pm
Indeed. If he hadn't given it an E grade, someone else would have.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 09, 2021, 04:17:09 pm
Why do people refer to 'credit card sized holds'?! Even on a slab a hold that small is too small to use for either hands or feet.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 09, 2021, 04:19:47 pm
spragging a hold the size of an atom (polished 'n' all) is way more accurate.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 09, 2021, 05:12:55 pm
Fantastic effort but I don’t understand all the soul searching when trying to stick the E grade on. The Uk tech grade is useless. Just give it fr8b+ R/X and we all know where we are.
Yeah. Although instead of the R/X weirdness we could just give it an overall grade that sums up the challenge including boldness. Maybe E11 or something?? And he's already suggested fr8b+ E11, maybe just stick a little extra hint of what the crux is and put it in a logical order, say E11 7a (8b+).  :smartass:

I thought it was pretty interesting actually.
Me too. Good to see the amount of detail behind it. Although if moose doesn't like the Ondra performance machine, God knows what he'll make of this. The main conclusions I took from it were that having good supportive people around you (paid or otherwise) and having good mental health were both pretty fucking critical  :whatever:

Am I being overly cynical to think preserving E grades is good for the British ego in a world where 8b+ just isn't very hard any more and is being climbed on scary / run out routes abroad relatively commonly without much fuss?
Yes. It's a grading system that has been around, and refined, for many decades and is exactly what almost all the target audience (and probably likely interested parties) are familiar with - and yes it does seem to work for a grubby 40' bit of rock in Derbyshire and a grubby 40' bit of rock in Cumbria (if a climber can grasp that there's a difference between a 1 move Font 7C and a 10 move Font 7C but both deserve the grade for different reasons, they can hopefully grasp the same with E-whatever). It's useful and interesting information in the context that it's used in, and I'm not sure there's a need to bring ego in as most Brits are hopefully aware of hard trad things being done abroad, nor a need for a drastic switch to 8b+ R/X given that covid has stifled incoming burners-off the last two years and no doubt Greta will stifle them in coming years.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 09, 2021, 05:35:20 pm
Why do people refer to 'credit card sized holds'?! Even on a slab a hold that small is too small to use for either hands or feet.

Glad it's not just me that wondered. Although I thought it might be something like the holds are credit card sized in terms of the length of the edge, not the depth?

If he is referring to depth though then it's clearly nonsense.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ross Barker on September 09, 2021, 06:05:56 pm
"Hyperbole"

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: duncan on September 09, 2021, 06:07:14 pm
... the Impact day wall is about 40ft high on the side of a bit of a gully. ... I just thought it was deeply underwhelming, Scafell it ain't.

The meat of the hard routes on East Buttress is mostly quite short too: Welcome to the Cruel World and Another Lonely Day have 40' or so of difficult climbing. I guess it’s hard to find rock with hard climbing that goes on for any length in the UK (there are some unclimbed examples in Pembroke...).


The main conclusions I took from it were that having good supportive people around you (paid or otherwise) and having good mental health were both pretty fucking critical 

The detail was interesting to a climbing nerd like me... and yet I couldn't help read it as a justification for employing a coach (like Neil for example!). I am a bad person.



I feel like this could be a poll but who do we think will nip in for the second ascent?

1. Steve Maclure, who will agree with everything Neil says.
2. Dave Macleod, who will praise the quality whilst subtly suggesting it’s two grades easier than Echo Wall.
3. Alex Megos, who will downgrade it to 8b R/X.
4. Sonnie Trotter flew over but was kicked out of the country before he could attempt it after being caught bivvying in the National Trust car park.
5. Cumberland Sausage
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 09, 2021, 06:09:14 pm
6. Caff (unless Cumberland Sausage is a nickname for Caff I'm unaware of).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 09, 2021, 06:27:22 pm
Top poll Duncan and ofc I'm voting for the sausage.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 09, 2021, 06:35:15 pm
Franco Cookson, confirming H10.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nike Air on September 09, 2021, 07:31:16 pm
I went up to Iron Crag last year to take a look at the new E10.
I didn't think the added finish to if six was nine really added that much. I flashed that section on top rope in Baltic conditions and thought it felt French 7a+. If you can get up if six was nine you won't be falling off this as there is a hands off knee bar between them.
ISWN seems to have changed since the two daves did it. In the middle there is now a good jug side pull to shake out on. Before according to the footage that was a slopey boss and didn't look restful at all. To me it seemed a block had fallen out to reveal a less sustained sequence.
The hype surrounding this new thing just didn't seem right and I'm gradually seeing a trend.

The climbing itself is very good but this designer danger seems hollow to me. I used to be well into it but as I've got older with a different perspective I can see it for what it is.
Gear in these routes is often not as bad as made out, "chop route" is mentioned in news reports but I can't help but thinking this is to create a wow.

Also comparing anything to equilibrium has issues, from what I remember it felt like a font 7C+ boulder problem that was condition dependant and knacky.

The grading scale might go a bit wonky if we all grade on what our mates think of routes they have done but without us repeating them ourselves. Especially neighboring routes on the same crag or in the area.

I'm confident that those in the know will appreciate the discovery of new lines and cool moves but it's the ones who are wowed that I feel sorry for, they get a warped perspective of difficulty, danger and who's in it together to make a buck out of climbing by using the media.

As mentioned the promo and hype seem to be a business model and in this day and age when climbing can be a job its going to just be this way.


Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 09, 2021, 07:51:45 pm
Why do people refer to 'credit card sized holds'?! Even on a slab a hold that small is too small to use for either hands or feet.

Glad it's not just me that wondered. Although I thought it might be something like the holds are credit card sized in terms of the length of the edge, not the depth?

If the holds are 9cm x 6cm flatties I might have a go myself.  :lol:

Americans refer to “dime edges” which I always assumed meant about the thickness of a 50p. Only when I went over there did I discover a dime is even thinner than a 5p and realise it was more of a figure of speech. I guess “credit card sized” is more of an international version. I’ll let someone else make the obvious contactless joke.  ;)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Footwork on September 09, 2021, 08:29:52 pm
I'm confident that those in the know will appreciate the discovery of new lines and cool moves but it's the ones who are wowed that I feel sorry for, they get a warped perspective of difficulty, danger and who's in it together to make a buck out of climbing by using the media.

As mentioned the promo and hype seem to be a business model and in this day and age when climbing can be a job its going to just be this way.

The article says "the trad climbing equivalent to an Olympic gold" - we all know what we thought about the Olympic medalling points system which was, well... errr  :whistle: I do see the point he's trying to make (I think) which is achieving the mind set of I can't possibly lose. Because otherwise comparing a climb to an Olympic gold is stupid.

Never forget

To be the best, you must show the best, I am the best

Agree with trying to hype up the danger for those not in the know - comments like "We went for a single 8.5mm, the thinnest rope you can use with a Petzl GriGri+" Have you seen Conor's half rope, you're bolloxed if your belayer turns up with a PETZL GRI GRI PLUS. Might as well solo the route. Unless you have any other belay device for trad climbing.

Do I need to get an equipment consultant to pimp my rack too?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: dunnyg on September 09, 2021, 09:05:42 pm
You would have to buy one first...

I found a green hex the other day on an unrecorded limestone crag, born from the finest Dales grey stuff, it will lead anyone who racks it to the headspace of Christiano Ronaldo, and let even your fine self onsight 2 grades harder than your best lime trad lead. Yours for only £50. I will chuck in the screwgate I found with it for free, if you name drop me on insta.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 09, 2021, 10:29:28 pm
Fantastic effort but I don’t understand all the soul searching when trying to stick the E grade on. The Uk tech grade is useless. Just give it fr8b+ R/X and we all know where we are.
Am I being overly cynical to think preserving E grades is good for the British ego in a world where 8b+ just isn't very hard any more and is being climbed on scary / run out routes abroad relatively commonly without much fuss?

Have we learned nothing from Team America rinsing all the hardest grit routes in one season, or Babsi and the others ticking Pembroke in a few short weeks?  :jab:

I think people deliberately confuse pokey routes with very dangerous routes. There's a world of difference between an 8b with a bit of a slammy fall and a death 8b, especially if the climbing is really insecure. There really isn't much of the latter anywhere.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: grimer on September 09, 2021, 10:33:54 pm
Good effort Neil.

Great comments everyone. Much crack.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 09, 2021, 10:44:12 pm
Good effort Neil.

Great comments everyone. Much crack.

I reckon a podcast in the style of TAPS over on the Enormocast, with Caff, Fiend and Franco would be amazing....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: grimer on September 09, 2021, 10:46:53 pm
go for it.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 09, 2021, 11:31:01 pm
Can we stage an intervention whereby Steve Mac and Gresh are allowed to continue new routing but aren't allowed to name the routes?
Fixation, Wall of GreatNess, fucking Lexicon. The hardest route in the Lakes (inevitable downgrade pending) is called fucking Lexicon.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 10, 2021, 12:07:23 am
"Hyperbole"

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
Yes it's presumably hyperbole. It just seems incongruous in an otherwise very factual analytical piece of writing, to the point that a casual/non-climber reader might take it at face value.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: andy popp on September 10, 2021, 07:48:07 am
"Hyperbole"

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
Yes it's presumably hyperbole. It just seems incongruous in an otherwise very factual analytical piece of writing, to the point that a casual/non-climber reader might take it at face value.

For all the sheen of rationality and factuality, I found the whole piece just incredibly hyperbolic - and basically one long advertorial.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 10, 2021, 08:11:32 am
"Hyperbole"

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
Yes it's presumably hyperbole. It just seems incongruous in an otherwise very factual analytical piece of writing, to the point that a casual/non-climber reader might take it at face value.

For all the sheen of rationality and factuality, I found the whole piece just incredibly hyperbolic - and basically one long advertorial.

I didn't make it to the end, it was just one massive fucking ego wank with honourable mentions for his entourage/fluffers.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 10, 2021, 08:12:47 am
I think people deliberately confuse pokey routes with very dangerous routes. There's a world of difference between an 8b with a bit of a slammy fall and a death 8b, especially if the climbing is really insecure. There really isn't much of the latter anywhere.
Not sure people are deliberately confusing anything, and I’m not convinced there’s that much of a clear divide to be honest. A long slammy fall can go disastrously wrong. And a supposed ‘death’ route could have a lucky outcome. And there’s plenty of grey in between. I’ve done bolted ‘sport’ routes which are far more dangerous than a lot of hard(ish) trad. That’s not uncommon outside of the UK.

IIRC Dave Mac fell onto that RP on Rhapsody and almost broke it - which would have turned it from a long but safe fall into possible death. How can you grade precisely for something like that? Why even bother, if it takes so much effort and thought to try and pin it down - especially when history has shown so often that the next person will have a different experience on it? I guess the answer is simple - look at the comments on UKC and it’s mainly just fascination with the ‘E11’ badge.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 10, 2021, 08:34:00 am
Parthian Shot's fall was safe until it wasn't...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 10, 2021, 08:42:43 am
Parthian Shot's fall was safe until it wasn't...
Exactly. That went from “death on a stick” to “safe as houses” to…”oh shit the flake broke”.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Yossarian on September 10, 2021, 08:56:33 am
Neil is obvs super keen and syked, but I agree about that article. I wonder if the One Show received a similarly worded press release?

It strikes me that a lot of us are of the age at which we remember new hard routes being talked about in hushed tones, maybe having heard a story about something outrageous that John Redhead had done, or someone had had talked to x and seen y trying something super hard and scary. The less you knew about it the more amazing it sounded. Moat of these things were like works of art - mysteries to gaze up at or dream about. And even when you had more detail, like Johnny's account of the Indian Face — that actually ramped up the awesomeness.

That article seemed to have almost nothing about feeling, and everything about doing. It was like getting a one-on-one with Francis Bacon to talk about Painting (1946) and getting a monologue about what brand of spoon he used to mix his paint with.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 10, 2021, 09:28:05 am
I think people deliberately confuse pokey routes with very dangerous routes. There's a world of difference between an 8b with a bit of a slammy fall and a death 8b, especially if the climbing is really insecure. There really isn't much of the latter anywhere.
Not sure people are deliberately confusing anything, and I’m not convinced there’s that much of a clear divide to be honest. A long slammy fall can go disastrously wrong. And a supposed ‘death’ route could have a lucky outcome. And there’s plenty of grey in between. I’ve done bolted ‘sport’ routes which are far more dangerous than a lot of hard(ish) trad. That’s not uncommon outside of the UK.

IIRC Dave Mac fell onto that RP on Rhapsody and almost broke it - which would have turned it from a long but safe fall into possible death. How can you grade precisely for something like that? Why even bother, if it takes so much effort and thought to try and pin it down - especially when history has shown so often that the next person will have a different experience on it? I guess the answer is simple - look at the comments on UKC and it’s mainly just fascination with the ‘E11’ badge.


I mean Trad climbing is all about the subjective and perceptions. If you discount how a route 'feels' then obviously the E grade will make no sense. I think there is an argument for abandoning the E grade and I totally agree about the obsession with it. It's weird. On balance though, it does inform in a way that 8b r/x does not - as you've just perfectly demonstrated. Routes like Parthian Shot change with perceptions. Perceptions change with events, rock damage and the stories people tell. The main take away from that story is to not trust hollow flakes entirely.

Most people putting up routes with big E grades are geeks who aren't taking massive risks. If you're climbing 8c+s at Kilnsey all the time, I can see why someone getting loads of kudos for doing a bold 8b is annoying. At the extreme bold end though, it's a totally different game. Soloing a proper sketch 8a+ is still cutting edge in the bold Trad game. If you hate the whole game then fair enough, but maybe live and let live a little? It would be like me saying everything anyone does in Parisella's Cave is pointless and only training for the real thing - untrue and just makes me look like a bit of a plum.

 As for Europe, I've been on apparent E10s there, where the climbing isn't outrageous and there are bomber size 2 nuts everywhere you want them. I've long thought that the semi-pokey 8b style Trad routes are going to end up getting downgraded as standards increase, as standards on death routes just don't increase at the same rate. But then maybe I would say that, as I'm weak and mostly climb death routes?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: galpinos on September 10, 2021, 09:30:21 am
I enjoyed the write up, as an aging dad it filled me with inspiration that gains can still be made, but I can see that some found it lacking soul. However, having been to see Gresh speak once*, he was so enthusiastic, so open and so obviously obsessed with climbing the joy he got from climbing pretty much shone out of him and it's a shame that doesn't come through in the write up.

*Kenton Cool was on the same bill and that was dullest talk I have ever heard. Interestingly, my non-climbing wife felt the same. I though she'd like the mountaineering and find the minutiae of rock climbing dull but she said she found Gresh so engaging she really cared for what he was saying.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 10, 2021, 09:37:41 am
Quote
look at the comments on UKB and it’s mainly just moaning the ‘E11’ badge.
:-\  :-\ :-\
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 10, 2021, 09:44:30 am
Somewhat "self-absorbed" and "vacuous" are what came to mind reading (most of) Neil's advertorial. Which, to be fair, is what one largely expects from UKC content. Perhaps the modern way.

The new route is an arbitrary, less obvious variation to ID (with which it shares ground). It's got an indifferent new start, shares the middle, and then a different finish. The finish must be pretty bouldery if it bumps ID from 7c+ to 8b+(ish). I'm sure the climbing is excellent as the rock there is lovely.

I agree with a lot of the other comments.  I don't really understand the grading, though I'd have fewer qualms with this if Neil didn't have a history of it: see Nike's comments (which have been echoed by others) and, e.g., https://www.frcc.co.uk/routes/fearless/


How about a thread on the demonisation of public critical review of well-known climbers' new routes...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 10, 2021, 09:51:37 am
It's an interview with Gresh, about Gresh's new route, starring Gresh in a cameo role as Gresh, focusing on Gresh's preparation and experience on Gresh's route, what on earth do people expect the article to be about?? The history of minor ferns in the Pavey Ark East wall gully??
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 10, 2021, 09:53:58 am
Quote from: Adam Lincoln
To be fair, the new line is the line of the wall. ID skirts off to edge of crag for a decent rest before coming back in for top hard moves.

The new route is an arbitrary, less obvious variation to ID (with which it shares ground). It's got an indifferent new start, shares the middle, and then a different finish.

Who to believe?  :-\ What Grimer said, entertaining thread anyway.

The history of minor ferns in the Pavey Ark East wall gully??

Now that I would be psyched for.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: colin8ll on September 10, 2021, 10:05:14 am
He’s obviously done a hard bit of climbing and his experience reaffirmed his belief in the benefits of coaching. As his whole thing is coaching, I’m not surprised he puts this front and centre in the press release. And he does admit in the article that it had been a slow year coaching-wise, so if this leads to a bit more work for him (and his mates) then fair dos.

His style of ascent is obviously at one end of the spectrum (with the drop testing, specific training and whatnot), which is a long way from what some of us still hold as the onsight, adventurous trad ideal. Perhaps awarding ‘the Olympic gold’ for this style of ascent is the most contentious bit?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 10, 2021, 10:06:43 am
It's an interview with Gresh [...] what on earth do people expect the article to be about??

How about a hint of depth, surroundings, wider context...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 10, 2021, 10:11:22 am
Quote from: ali k
Have we learned nothing from Team America rinsing all the hardest grit routes in one season

Hmm, missed this.  Two guys who have since shown themselves to be absolutely world class, on a long trip assisted by a bunch of very well-informed locals pointing them at exactly what would be most newsworthy and rinsing them with beta on gear and tactics. It would have been more surprising if they didn't tear it up (and note that the third guy didn't). 'All' is ludicrous hyperbole, for starters they tried Equilibrium quite a bit but didn't do it.

Quote from: franco
Most people putting up routes with big E grades are geeks who aren't taking massive risks. If you're climbing 8c+s at Kilnsey all the time, I can see why someone getting loads of kudos for doing a bold 8b is annoying.

This is the problem with big E grade trad climbing - it's just redpointing with less pro and it looks a lot less impressive on paper.

Quote from: colin8II
which is a long way from what some of us still hold as the onsight, adventurous trad ideal.

Quite. And what hasn't happened is the number of people operating 8c redpoint being matched by loads of E7/8 onsights. I don't think it's just fashion, it's that the skillset required is so much bigger, in a world which ever-increasingly values a number over an experience.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 10, 2021, 10:23:58 am
Quite. And what hasn't happened is the number of people operating 8c redpoint being matched by loads of E7/8 onsights. I don't think it's just fashion, it's that the skillset required is so much bigger, in a world which ever-increasingly values a number over an experience.

Can you divide fashion and skill set though? If something becomes more fashionable (like grit headpointing in days of yore) then more people do it and more people gain the necessary skillset.

If the move in climbing had been towards onsighting in the mountains being the thing, rather than big numbers, then you’d have a larger cohort taking part in the activity, with the corresponding increase in the elite.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 10, 2021, 10:24:22 am
I think there is an argument for abandoning the E grade and I totally agree about the obsession with it. On balance though, it does inform in a way that 8b r/x does not - as you've just perfectly demonstrated.
Inform who though? I'd argue it's only 'informing' the people who will never climb this route or even drop a rope down it (if so, then what's the point of it? - see arguments re: social media hype / advertorial bollocks). For anyone serious about repeating it they'll go and check it out and make their own judgement about the climbing and the risk, and 8b r/x is good enough, in fact better, to get them to that point.

Quote
I can see why someone getting loads of kudos for doing a bold 8b is annoying. If you hate the whole game then fair enough, but maybe live and let live a little? It would be like me saying everything anyone does in Parisella's Cave is pointless and only training for the real thing - untrue and just makes me look like a bit of a plum.
Has nothing to do with who's getting kudos or comparing the validity of bum-scraping traverses vs bold trad. Not sure if that's aimed at someone else? It's simply about the pointlessness of spending weeks pondering over whether something's categorically E10 or E11. And personally I'd prefer to have a better international comparison so foreign climbers can judge our routes for what they are without having to navigate a very niche grading system (which most people operating at that level agree is probably broken) and vice versa.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 10, 2021, 10:27:08 am
Quote from: ali k
Have we learned nothing from Team America rinsing all the hardest grit routes in one season
'All' is ludicrous hyperbole, for starters they tried Equilibrium quite a bit but didn't do it.
Forgive me...but this thread is all about hyperbole!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 10, 2021, 10:37:59 am
Can you divide fashion and skill set though? If something becomes more fashionable (like grit headpointing in days of yore) then more people do it and more people gain the necessary skillset.

If the move in climbing had been towards onsighting in the mountains being the thing, rather than big numbers, then you’d have a larger cohort taking part in the activity, with the corresponding increase in the elite.

I suppose my point is that fashion and popularity are now almost completely driven by the numbers - whichever approach gets you bigger number for less effort. Whereas the basic premise of climbing is choosing to make it hard - there is almost always a path round the back after all, you can always bolt, you can always chip, you can always siege. Without broadly agreed ethics we don't have a sport, but increasingly any discussion of ethics is seen as a sort of fun-sponge wankery/ peanut gallery vs the freedom to do whatever you like without comment.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shurt on September 10, 2021, 10:40:09 am
It strikes me that a lot of us are of the age at which we remember new hard routes being talked about in hushed tones, maybe having heard a story about something outrageous that John Redhead had done, or someone had had talked to x and seen y trying something super hard and scary. The less you knew about it the more amazing it sounded. Moat of these things were like works of art - mysteries to gaze up at or dream about. And even when you had more detail, like Johnny's account of the Indian Face — that actually ramped up the awesomeness.

Basically this is it in a nutshell for me. I was going to mention Johnny's essay. Climbing needs more of this and less guff about ballet coaches. Id rather be inspired than advertised at.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 10, 2021, 10:44:03 am
Good effort Neil.

Great comments everyone. Much crack.

I just can't believe you spelled craic like that grimer.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 10, 2021, 10:49:27 am
Inform who though?

3 out of the 5 aspirants here:

1. Steve Maclure, who will agree with everything Neil says.
2. Dave Macleod, who will praise the quality whilst subtly suggesting it’s two grades easier than Echo Wall.
3. Alex Megos, who will downgrade it to 8b R/X.
4. Sonnie Trotter flew over but was kicked out of the country before he could attempt it after being caught bivvying in the National Trust car park.
5. Cumberland Sausage

Grades are just summaries of the relative challenges of a route compared to other routes which also have grades. Most common systems can summarise the overall challenge, boldness/seriousness, overall physical difficulty and hardest physical section quite well (with a bit of tweaking). It's not really that difficult nor controversial unless people are particularly fixated on something being a "big number" in one system or another (and if that system is the Great British Traditional Grading system, it might be worth considering E10 has been around for 21 years, E11 has been around 15 years, and "Ungraded but definitely harder than a route given E11" has been around for 13 years).

But as interesting as grade debates are...

Without broadly agreed ethics we don't have a sport, but increasingly any discussion of ethics is seen as a sort of fun-sponge wankery/ peanut gallery vs the freedom to do whatever you like without comment.
...ethics debates are far more fun  :2thumbsup:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 10, 2021, 10:54:53 am
When was the last time someone did a new route above E7 without also giving it a French or bouldering grade and adding detailed speculation about how much falling off it would hurt as well? It certainly wasn’t this time.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 10, 2021, 11:09:28 am
Inform who though?

3 out of the 5 aspirants here:

1. Steve Maclure, who will agree with everything Neil says.
2. Dave Macleod, who will praise the quality whilst subtly suggesting it’s two grades easier than Echo Wall.
3. Alex Megos, who will downgrade it to 8b R/X.
4. Sonnie Trotter flew over but was kicked out of the country before he could attempt it after being caught bivvying in the National Trust car park.
5. Cumberland Sausage

Steve has already been on top rope and most likely any other suitors will too or will be more informed by gleaning beta than anything the grade provides.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 10, 2021, 11:40:04 am
When was the last time someone did a new route above E7 without also giving it a French or bouldering grade and adding detailed speculation about how much falling off it would hurt as well? It certainly wasn’t this time.

Possibly within the last fortnight. But can't say for sure because Caff doesn't actually report what E grade The Pumphouse Party in Battleship Zawn is, let alone what French grade it might be or what the protection is like.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on September 10, 2021, 11:43:20 am
Soloing a proper sketch 8a+ is still cutting edge in the bold Trad game.

I find this very interesting, as I have no understanding of the game. But I also know that Alain Robert soloed an 8a+ with very insecure crux moves up high 31 years ago (when his top RP level was 8b, what a lunatic). That Alain Robert 31 of years ago is still at the level of today's creme-de-la-creme is more than impressive to me.

I guess levels in soloing rise much slower than for other types of climbing. I am not sure that Hansjörg's solo of the Fish has been substantially bettered by anyone for example.

I would however be chocked if the likes of Adam Ondra or Stefano Ghisolfi wouldn't be able to solo 9a if the were so inclined. I cannot imagine them falling off a 9a that they had practiced.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 10, 2021, 11:52:04 am
I guess levels in soloing rise much slower than for other types of climbing. I am not sure that Hansjörg's solo of the Fish has been substantially bettered by anyone for example.

Honwad's solo of Freerider (I agree with your point though).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 10, 2021, 12:00:29 pm
I guess levels in soloing rise much slower than for other types of climbing. I am not sure that Hansjörg's solo of the Fish has been substantially bettered by anyone for example.

Honwad's solo of Freerider (I agree with your point though).

I've always felt that the hype around Free rider overshadowed / ignored Hansjorg's ascent. Yes, the route is less sustained and the crux a bit easier, but he literally chucked a rope down it for a few hours then went back and did it the next day. Freerider was a step up, but maybe not quite the leap it was portrayed to be?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 10, 2021, 12:08:16 pm
OTOH Fish it is reputedly much less secure climbing in general. But yes, overlooked due to the low key approach and the arena being one for the cognoscenti. The main step up for Freerider was the doing it in the biggest arena with people filming.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 10, 2021, 12:12:29 pm
Soloing a proper sketch 8a+ is still cutting edge in the bold Trad game.

I find this very interesting, as I have no understanding of the game. But I also know that Alain Robert soloed an 8a+ with very insecure crux moves up high 31 years ago (when his top RP level was 8b, what a lunatic). That Alain Robert 31 of years ago is still at the level of today's creme-de-la-creme is more than impressive to me.

I guess levels in soloing rise much slower than for other types of climbing. I am not sure that Hansjörg's solo of the Fish has been substantially bettered by anyone for example.

I would however be chocked if the likes of Adam Ondra or Stefano Ghisolfi wouldn't be able to solo 9a if the were so inclined. I cannot imagine them falling off a 9a that they had practiced.

I think that last bit has to be a bit of a misconception. I think it's more than just having the psyche for a bit of danger, otherwise we'd have seen some outlier sport climber who had just gone radge and soloed a proper sketch 8c+.

I get the feeling that being the kind of person who trains hard enough to be climbing well into the f9s perhaps self selects you as someone who doesn't just take massive risks.

It's a lot more dangerous for Dave Mac to take a sketchy fall onto a slab than some loon who doesn't depend on his body for work and isn't a pro climber. Perhaps the future of really bold Trad therefore naturally precludes pros?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on September 10, 2021, 12:35:42 pm
I get the feeling that being the kind of person who trains hard enough to be climbing well into the f9s perhaps self selects you as someone who doesn't just take massive risks.

It's a lot more dangerous for Dave Mac to take a sketchy fall onto a slab than some loon who doesn't depend on his body for work and isn't a pro climber. Perhaps the future of really bold Trad therefore naturally precludes pros?

I think you have a point here. There are a bunch of hobbyist 9a+ climbers in Spain and France so maybe we will see some amazing solos from some of them.

Alex Huber did not start to solo until he lost interest in keeping his sport climbing level up to scratch.

OTOH Fish it is reputedly much less secure climbing in general.

I have done neither, and the approach (among other things) to Marmolada does not strike my fancy, but everyone I know who has done The Fish underlines just how insecure the climbing is.

But as there are no steel perma-draws attached to stainless 12 mm bolts on the crux pitch of the Fish it might be difficult to objectively compare the actual difficulty to that of the boulder pitch on Free rider. It might well be that the actual grade of Freerider's crux pitch is much higher.

One guy that I know freely admited to hanging from gear while crying tears of fear on the crux pitch of the Fish.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Adam Lincoln on September 10, 2021, 01:08:53 pm
Quote from: Adam Lincoln
To be fair, the new line is the line of the wall. ID skirts off to edge of crag for a decent rest before coming back in for top hard moves.

The new route is an arbitrary, less obvious variation to ID (with which it shares ground). It's got an indifferent new start, shares the middle, and then a different finish.

Who to believe?  :-\ What Grimer said, entertaining thread anyway.

The history of minor ferns in the Pavey Ark East wall gully??

Now that I would be psyched for.

Ask Ben what he thinks of ID compared to Lexion. Though he probably wouldnt remember as he was a little pre occupied to look right 🤣.

Also i saw it fully chalked and clean which makes a difference.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on September 10, 2021, 01:15:53 pm
I think people deliberately confuse pokey routes with very dangerous routes. There's a world of difference between an 8b with a bit of a slammy fall and a death 8b, especially if the climbing is really insecure. There really isn't much of the latter anywhere.
Not sure people are deliberately confusing anything, and I’m not convinced there’s that much of a clear divide to be honest. A long slammy fall can go disastrously wrong. And a supposed ‘death’ route could have a lucky outcome. And there’s plenty of grey in between. I’ve done bolted ‘sport’ routes which are far more dangerous than a lot of hard(ish) trad. That’s not uncommon outside of the UK.

IIRC Dave Mac fell onto that RP on Rhapsody and almost broke it - which would have turned it from a long but safe fall into possible death. How can you grade precisely for something like that? Why even bother, if it takes so much effort and thought to try and pin it down - especially when history has shown so often that the next person will have a different experience on it? I guess the answer is simple - look at the comments on UKC and it’s mainly just fascination with the ‘E11’ badge.


I mean Trad climbing is all about the subjective and perceptions. If you discount how a route 'feels' then obviously the E grade will make no sense. I think there is an argument for abandoning the E grade and I totally agree about the obsession with it. It's weird. On balance though, it does inform in a way that 8b r/x does not - as you've just perfectly demonstrated. Routes like Parthian Shot change with perceptions. Perceptions change with events, rock damage and the stories people tell. The main take away from that story is to not trust hollow flakes entirely.

Most people putting up routes with big E grades are geeks who aren't taking massive risks. If you're climbing 8c+s at Kilnsey all the time, I can see why someone getting loads of kudos for doing a bold 8b is annoying. At the extreme bold end though, it's a totally different game. Soloing a proper sketch 8a+ is still cutting edge in the bold Trad game. If you hate the whole game then fair enough, but maybe live and let live a little? It would be like me saying everything anyone does in Parisella's Cave is pointless and only training for the real thing - untrue and just makes me look like a bit of a plum.

 As for Europe, I've been on apparent E10s there, where the climbing isn't outrageous and there are bomber size 2 nuts everywhere you want them. I've long thought that the semi-pokey 8b style Trad routes are going to end up getting downgraded as standards increase, as standards on death routes just don't increase at the same rate. But then maybe I would say that, as I'm weak and mostly climb death routes?

E10 according to who? A local sport wad who's never used the e grade system before? Not too surprising.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 10, 2021, 02:09:32 pm
When was the last time someone did a new route above E7 without also giving it a French or bouldering grade and adding detailed speculation about how much falling off it would hurt as well? It certainly wasn’t this time.

Possibly within the last fortnight. But can't say for sure because Caff doesn't actually report what E grade The Pumphouse Party in Battleship Zawn is, let alone what French grade it might be or what the protection is like.

He shouted out all his coaches and gave rope diameter and belay device details though right?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 10, 2021, 02:18:50 pm
When was the last time someone did a new route above E7 without also giving it a French or bouldering grade and adding detailed speculation about how much falling off it would hurt as well? It certainly wasn’t this time.

Possibly within the last fortnight. But can't say for sure because Caff doesn't actually report what E grade The Pumphouse Party in Battleship Zawn is, let alone what French grade it might be or what the protection is like.

He shouted out all his coaches and gave rope diameter and belay device details though right?

Yep yep. He's always sure to mention his support for the short-haul helicopter flight industry too.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 10, 2021, 03:51:00 pm
Quote from: Adam Lincoln
To be fair, the new line is the line of the wall. ID skirts off to edge of crag for a decent rest before coming back in for top hard moves.

The new route is an arbitrary, less obvious variation to ID (with which it shares ground). It's got an indifferent new start, shares the middle, and then a different finish.

I think we're just giving opinions based on different perspectives/criteria. Both of which are perfectly defensible.

My comment was in the context that ID pre-dates Niel's route and has a substantial (though relatively easy) section common to both.

The earlier route takes in more "major features" of that wall (because they make it easier / provide gear). But in doing so it is less straight up.

I'd agree that, if you give a lot of weight to the straightness of a route as a measure of significance then the new route is more significant.

However, the ID traverse left (to the edge of that bit of wall; hardly the edge of the crag!) is along an obvious feature. It then goes right and up to enter another feature in the form of the finishing groove.

Also i saw it fully chalked and clean which makes a difference.

I absolutely agree that this makes a huge difference to how, essentially, two arbitrary lines (sharing some common ground) up a fairly uniformly featured wall look.

I imagine the climbing on Lexicon is at least as good as that on ID. Neither route has a particularly strong natural line.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 10, 2021, 04:00:17 pm
I get the feeling that being the kind of person who trains hard enough to be climbing well into the f9s perhaps self selects you as someone who doesn't just take massive risks.

You could equally argue that people only do dangerous routes because they want recognition but don't have the talent or application to get good enough to compete on difficulty.

Both are pretty specious imo.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 10, 2021, 05:27:44 pm
I get the feeling that being the kind of person who trains hard enough to be climbing well into the f9s perhaps self selects you as someone who doesn't just take massive risks.

You could equally argue that people only do dangerous routes because they want recognition but don't have the talent or application to get good enough to compete on difficulty.

Both are pretty specious imo.

I don't know, from personal experience the latter basically describes the first 5 years of my climbing whilst the former describes the next 10 years!

There's definitely something to it that those in the performance tunnel won't want to step outside it for too long for fear of losing GAINZ, and those who don't step into the tunnel will only be climbing >9a if they're pretty damn talented... so the pool is more limited than it might appear, and it's limited to people who have the potential to do an awful lot of badass stuff so the route would probably have to be very good to buy the risk being worth it (after all, they can just go climb all the hardest MPs in Europe which is both hard AND likely to be pretty mentally intense)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on September 11, 2021, 05:51:08 am
Yep, interesting thread, and good mix of views. Nothing too extreme.

These words from Galpinos were great to read, and not especially surprising.

I enjoyed the write up, as an aging dad it filled me with inspiration that gains can still be made, but I can see that some found it lacking soul. However, having been to see Gresh speak once*, he was so enthusiastic, so open and so obviously obsessed with climbing the joy he got from climbing pretty much shone out of him and it's a shame that doesn't come through in the write up.

*Kenton Cool was on the same bill and that was dullest talk I have ever heard. Interestingly, my non-climbing wife felt the same. I though she'd like the mountaineering and find the minutiae of rock climbing dull but she said she found Gresh so engaging she really cared for what he was saying.

Neil's an interesting mix of massive inherent enthusiasm, together with an obsessive (self-doubt driven?) emphasis on outcome/performance.

As with Pearson's ascent of Walk of Life, the most important thing is that folk are getting out there and doing the business. It's a shame that ascents get derided often more than critiqued, but I think we've hit a much better balance here.

I'll go with a lot of the comments about the "advertorial" appearance of the write-up, but I'm not sure that isn't misleading. For me, there's a great deal of reading between the lines, wrt the sense of how committed to the project Neil had to be to get it done.
For me, that's the nub of it.

Other take aways for me were things like filling your face on days when you've avoided work. I'm going to employ some positive reinforcement and visualisation to make that happen.

On that point, the comments about visualisation are a bit off the mark, and again reflect Neil's emphasis on "getting over the line".
With sport, the reinforcement/visualisation isn't about "not losing", it's about letting the outcome take care of itself - all that you can do, is get in it's way. Most of us know that feeling from the way we commit to a hard headpoint/solo.
To that end, I think Neil places too much emphasis on his performance - in terms of searching for the missing golden bullet. I think there's a bit of post-hoc-ness in his analysis.  ;)

From that perspective, I think the write up reflects the complexities and tensions that get expressed in the creative act.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cowboyhat on September 13, 2021, 05:36:02 pm
Great thread, when I saw it ran to four pages I did wonder how a grade debate would have sustained such interest.

I could barely skim read that UKC 'article'. Dry as old sticks. As the author of some overly long self indulgent climbing blogs myself no doubt some schadenfreude will impact me down the line.


I know i'm an old man etc and that language evolves but I'm really struggling with 'bloc' 'send'  E11 'for' Neil, (he wasn't given it) and all the other fucking nonsense in the climbing lexicon these days.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 13, 2021, 06:23:41 pm
I know i'm an old man etc and that language evolves but I'm really struggling with 'bloc' 'send'  E11 'for' Neil, (he wasn't given it) and all the other fucking nonsense in the climbing lexicon these days.

Ha yeah same. Mind you the list of nonsense things in climbing could be its own four page thread!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 17, 2021, 09:43:50 am
Looks like Steve McClure took huge whip off the top of this yesterday  :jaw: 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 17, 2021, 09:53:46 am
Looks like Steve McClure took huge whip off the top of this yesterday  :jaw:

https://www.instagram.com/p/CT6kxA5jUdV/?utm_medium=copy_link

Sounds like it’s safe then 😄
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 17, 2021, 10:40:31 am
Should've tied his laces.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Duncan campbell on September 17, 2021, 10:54:13 am
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT6wjIRoVYy/?utm_medium=copy_link

Dave Macleod is on it!!

Downgrade imminent??

 :worms:  :popcorn:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: 36chambers on September 17, 2021, 10:57:12 am
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT6kxA5jUdV/?utm_medium=copy_link

Sounds like it’s safe then 😄

"THE MOST OUTRAGEOUS THING I’VE EVER WITNESSED in climbing….  NUMBER 3 WILL SHOCK YOU"  :yawn:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 17, 2021, 11:10:25 am
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT6wjIRoVYy/?utm_medium=copy_link

Dave Macleod is on it!!

Downgrade imminent??

 :worms:  :popcorn:

I really hope Dave slags it. Don't let us down, Dave.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 11:25:01 am
Fine time for cuntsagram to go back to it's sporadic log-in-required-even-to-view bullshit  :wank:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 17, 2021, 11:28:08 am
While Gresh's style on insta or the ukc write-up may leave some cold, as pointed out above, if you chat to him about his projects or climbing in general, it's clear that he's psyched off his tits for them/it. It's not necessarily my forte, but I have no more objection to it than the (to me) pseudo-intellectual waffle and condescending attitude of those at the other end of spectrum (e.g. Dan). So I don't hope DM slags it, I hope he enjoys it and everyone's happy. Apart from ukb.  :kiss2:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 11:46:22 am
Are we doing a UKB betting pool as to how the inevitable DMac subtly-implied downgrade is going to pan out??

I'm going to go along the lines of:

"Can't really estimate grades at this level as haven't climbed harder than E9 for years, well off my peak due to fatherhood and pandemic"

 +

"Probably not quite as hard as Rhapsody, which took 48 days at my local crag that I was living next door too and intimately familiar with, whilst Lexicon took 3 sessions at a crag I've never visited before.... Still can't guess the grade tho..."
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 17, 2021, 11:56:22 am
The general vibe I'm getting off this thread is that Lexicon is not that good/overgraded/over-hyped.

Maybe some of those things are true, maybe they aren't. But I always thought ID looked cool. Plenty of top end tradders seem to agree. Lexicon must be about the same quality. Let's just say the sport grade is about right: it's a precarious and pumpy 8b with a potential 80 fall, and it's on a decent bit of mountain rock. You don't have to be a fawning sycophant to give that the "good effort" nod. Worth a bit of celebrating, even. 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 17, 2021, 11:59:30 am
While Gresh's style on insta or the ukc write-up may leave some cold, as pointed out above, if you chat to him about his projects or climbing in general, it's clear that he's psyched off his tits for them/it.

I get this but I can't help being a little cynical as to Neil's grading. See my previous comment.

... I'd have fewer qualms with [Neil's grading] if Neil didn't have a history of it: see Nike's comments (which have been echoed by others) and, e.g., https://www.frcc.co.uk/routes/fearless/
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 12:00:56 pm
Off topic, but Barrows I had a dream last night that you decked off a route trying to clip the 3rd or 4th bolt after skipping the first few. It was a nasty fall onto a steep rocky landing and I think you might have died. Can you confirm?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 17, 2021, 12:09:58 pm
Quote
I have no more objection to it than the (to me) pseudo-intellectual waffle and condescending attitude of those at the other end of spectrum (e.g. Dan)

Cheetham or Varian?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 17, 2021, 12:12:22 pm
Having said all that, I would put money on Dave Mac downclimbing 75% of it at 8c, cruising it, and then downgrading it.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 17, 2021, 12:15:13 pm


Quote
I have no more objection to it than the (to me) pseudo-intellectual waffle and condescending attitude of those at the other end of spectrum (e.g. Dan)

Cheetham or Varian?


I had the same thought. Really enjoyed Dan V's blogging style. If VP could turn that into a banterous coffee table book about UK bouldering I'd buy it.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 17, 2021, 12:24:16 pm
Off topic, but Barrows I had a dream last night that you decked off a route trying to clip the 3rd or 4th bolt after skipping the first few. It was a nasty fall onto a steep rocky landing and I think you might have died. Can you confirm?
I can neither confirm nor deny that you had such a dream, but I can confirm that I own a very long clipstick and nowadays have a very low tolerance to being bold, making this seem unlikely in real life. Are you sure I didn't just say take, moan about hard clips being shit, moan about my fingers and then lower off and sulk for a while? Sounds more realistic...

Cheetham or Varian?
The former.

On grading
I get this but I can't help being a little cynical as to Neil's grading. See my previous comment.

... I'd have fewer qualms with [Neil's grading] if Neil didn't have a history of it: see Nike's comments (which have been echoed by others) and, e.g., https://www.frcc.co.uk/routes/fearless/
That's only off by 1 grade right? From my very limited experience of FAs I feel like being 1 grade off isn't a big deal, guessing how hard other people will find things is nails! From my experience of Gresh's sport grades - Freakshow he gave 8c, I thought bottom-end 8c but found an extra knee; Premonition he gave 8b+ and I thought middle of that grade; Kilnsey proj he guessed quite a bit harder than it turned out to be, but then its easy to miss a sequence swinging around on new terrain in a roof...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 17, 2021, 12:25:28 pm
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT6wjIRoVYy/?utm_medium=copy_link

Dave Macleod is on it!!

Downgrade imminent??

 :worms:  :popcorn:

I really hope Dave slags it. Don't let us down, Dave.

Show us on the fingerboard where Gresh hurt you, Will
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 17, 2021, 12:45:20 pm
On grading
I get this but I can't help being a little cynical as to Neil's grading. See my previous comment.

... I'd have fewer qualms with [Neil's grading] if Neil didn't have a history of it: see Nike's comments (which have been echoed by others) and, e.g., https://www.frcc.co.uk/routes/fearless/
That's only off by 1 grade right? From my very limited experience of FAs I feel like being 1 grade off isn't a big deal, guessing how hard other people will find things is nails! From my experience of Gresh's sport grades - Freakshow he gave 8c, I thought bottom-end 8c but found an extra knee; Premonition he gave 8b+ and I thought middle of that grade; Kilnsey proj he guessed quite a bit harder than it turned out to be, but then its easy to miss a sequence swinging around on new terrain in a roof...

That would be fine if your and my examples suggested random variation rather than systematic bias...

[Edited for readability]
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 01:41:34 pm
I think if you took an average of hard routes put up in the last 10-15 years, assuming no physical change (hold loss/gain), grades more often go down than up. This isn't surprising really, for all the obvious reasons - new beta/gear is found; theoretical danger factors become less theoretical (see Steve's fall of Lexicon and Seb's falls on Parthian); the FAer starts from a position of ignorance, the repeater starts from a position of knowledge; and the not insignificant fact that downgrades are quickly accepted, whereas confirmation and upgrade votes seem to count for less in the peanut gallery.
So it seems unfair to me to imply deliberate overgrading or even a poor ability to grade if an ascensionist's routes on average go down in grade. The alternative is to deliberately under-grade in expectation that you've missed some beta or whatever. I'd rather FAer just gave their honest best guess. It's pretty shit that as a community we treat downgrading someone else's climb as some sort of point scoring one-upmanship shit throwing exercise.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 17, 2021, 01:57:21 pm
I think if you took an average of hard routes put up in the last 10-15 years, assuming no physical change (hold loss/gain), grades more often go down than up. This isn't surprising really, for all the obvious reasons - new beta/gear is found; theoretical danger factors become less theoretical (see Steve's fall of Lexicon and Seb's falls on Parthian); the FAer starts from a position of ignorance, the repeater starts from a position of knowledge; and the not insignificant fact that downgrades are quickly accepted, whereas confirmation and upgrade votes seem to count for less in the peanut gallery.
So it seems unfair to me to imply deliberate overgrading or even a poor ability to grade if an ascensionist's routes on average go down in grade. The alternative is to deliberately under-grade in expectation that you've missed some beta or whatever. I'd rather FAer just gave their honest best guess. It's pretty shit that as a community we treat downgrading someone else's climb as some sort of point scoring one-upmanship shit throwing exercise.

Word.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 17, 2021, 01:58:46 pm
In a word: bullshit.

Birkett and DaveMac and even, largely, John Dunne managed pretty well.

How about a thread on the demonisation of public critical review of well-known climbers' new routes...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 02:09:42 pm
Are you calling deliberate overgrading, or just poor ability to grade?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IanP on September 17, 2021, 02:36:10 pm
An 'interesting' question from my perspective is around what hard trad grades mean. 

I tend to start from a fairly simplistic perspective aligning very well protected trad routes to a equivalent sport grade (and if your old enough to remember trad grades that were given sport grades, see Extreme Rock), starting from aroound 8a/8a+ for E7.  This would mean E9 covers 8c/+ and E10 9a/+ then E11 would be 9b/+.   Obviously the climbing isn't necessarily as hard on trad routes due to boldness/danger but if the grade means something then surely it must be a attempt to suggest some sort of way an equivalance between the physically hard and less hard but bolder.

Taking this position would mean that E10 is a pretty wide grade and matching in diffculty near to the very top end of UK climbing on the sport side with only 1 route in the UK and 2 climbers who have done anything harder.   This tends to make me feel that E11 is a pretty big number and it is ok to question it, while at the same time not wanting to take anything away from what looks to be an really impressive effort.   

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 17, 2021, 02:41:13 pm
The process of grading trad routes shouldn't be that difficult. Certainly not as hard you make it out Bonjoy. There are only really two important variables to consider:
sport grade - any regular climber should be should be able to accurately judge this to within 2 grades.
danger - given the four options below someone should be able to judge this to within 2 options. When climbs aren't getting put up onsight/ground-up then danger isn't *that* theoretical. Uncertainties around protection, fall distances, severity of falls and other oddities can be quite easily cleared up.

How is the below so complicated to use as a guide:

For averagely safe routes
5 - 5+  E1
6a-6a+ E2 
6b-6b+ E3
6c-6c+ E4
7a-7a+ E5
7b-7b+ E6
7c-7c+ E7
8a-8a+ E8
8b-8b+ E9
8c-8c+ E10
9a-9a+ E11
9b-9b+ E12

Bold/scary/long runouts but not exceptionally dangerous  +1 E-grade
Exceptionally dangerous  +2 E-grades
Exceptionally safe  -1 E-grade


Obviously in a fair-minded world no-one would be expected to get it right every time. But in a fair-minded world no-one would be expected to get it wrong very much either, especially someone who climbs *a lot* and in fact does it for a living. If someone *is* getting it wrong and is also incentivised to pump their achievements, because for e.g. they've chosen to make a business out of being well-known for climbing and training, then questions are naturally going to get asked. It shouldn't be surprising or seen as 'shit flinging'. See 'demonisation of public critical review'.
 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 17, 2021, 02:54:17 pm
For averagely safe routes
5 - 5+  E1
6a-6a+ E2 
6b-6b+ E3
6c-6c+ E4
7a-7a+ E5
7b-7b+ E6
7c-7c+ E7
8a-8a+ E8
8b-8b+ E9
8c-8c+ E10
9a-9a+ E11
9b-9b+ E12

Bold/scary/long runouts but not exceptionally dangerous  +1 E-grade
Exceptionally dangerous  +2 E-grades
Exceptionally safe  -1 E-grade

Is this actually consensus, or just your extrapolation to what you think the top end of the scale "should" mean? I've not got enough experience to know if it works at the top end (but it looks like plenty of classic E5s should prob be E4 from what I remember back when I used to trad climb more)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 17, 2021, 03:12:01 pm
The process of grading trad routes shouldn't be that difficult. Certainly not as hard you make it out Bonjoy. There are only really two important variables to consider:
sport grade - any regular climber should be should be able to accurately judge this to within 2 grades.
danger - given the four options below someone should be able to judge this to within 2 options. When climbs aren't getting put up onsight/ground-up then danger isn't *that* theoretical. Uncertainties around protection, fall distances, severity of falls and other oddities can be quite easily cleared up.

How is the below so complicated to use as a guide:

For averagely safe routes
5 - 5+  E1
6a-6a+ E2 
6b-6b+ E3
6c-6c+ E4
7a-7a+ E5
7b-7b+ E6
7c-7c+ E7
8a-8a+ E8
8b-8b+ E9
8c-8c+ E10
9a-9a+ E11
9b-9b+ E12

Bold/scary/long runouts but not exceptionally dangerous  +1 E-grade
Exceptionally dangerous  +2 E-grades
Exceptionally safe  -1 E-grade


Obviously in a fair-minded world no-one would be expected to get it right every time. But in a fair-minded world no-one would be expected to get it wrong very much either, especially someone who climbs *a lot* and in fact does it for a living. If someone *is* getting it wrong and is also incentivised to pump their achievements, because for e.g. they've chosen to make a business out of being well-known for climbing and training, then questions are naturally going to get asked. It shouldn't be surprising or seen as 'shit flinging'. See 'demonisation of public critical review'.

I think you've got that roughly right for safe routes. I think there are extra E points for super extreme danger and short/blind/slippy routes also. Taking away protection from a safish F8a will make it harder than making it a higher French grade.

Ultimately the E grades should be Ground Up grades, with E8 being towards the top of what the best people can do, E9 being properly cutting edge and E10 being probably slightly beyond the possibilities of what's possible (i.e. close to F9a if it's really safe). E11 should be well near impossible for anyone to climb ground up and E12 beyond comprehension.

That's just my take on it. You can't have a system down the line where any 8c climber from limestone can just rock up, feeling a bit bold and ground up an E10 at Pembroke etc, where there are still loads of E8s that are nigh on impossible on outcrops or wherever. It's a subjective system, so as the size of the cohorts of people able to climb certain routes go up and down, so too will the grades of those routes.



 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Paul B on September 17, 2021, 03:17:50 pm
sport grade - any regular climber should be should be able to accurately judge this to within 2 grades.

Sport grades on trad routes confuse me in the fact that in many circumstances after reading about whatever grade trad route with a sport route attached, seeing ascensionists (and this isn't pointed at Neil btw) at a sport crag, you'd expect to be watching a snuff film in the making if the grades were accurate (i.e. if the route was 8b, I wouldn't be confident in them not falling off with bolts, let alone above horrendous gear). I'm aware that Kilnsey isn't exactly technical wall climbing and that plays a part but even so, when considering the margin in which I'd want to be 'above' the climbing when you're risking your legs (or worse) it often doesn't add up.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 17, 2021, 03:20:06 pm
I think you've got that roughly right for safe routes. I think there are extra E points for super extreme danger and short/blind/slippy routes also. Taking away protection from a safish F8a will make it harder than making it a higher French grade. 


Am I the only one who can see this bit that I've bolded?:

Quote
Averagely safe routes
5 - 5+  E1
6a-6a+ E2
6b-6b+ E3
6c-6c+ E4
7a-7a+ E5
7b-7b+ E6
7c-7c+ E7
8a-8a+ E8
8b-8b+ E9
8c-8c+ E10
9a-9a+ E11
9b-9b+ E12

Bold/scary/long runouts but not exceptionally dangerous  +1 E-grade
Exceptionally dangerous  +2 E-grades
Exceptionally safe  -1 E-grade
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 17, 2021, 03:26:06 pm
No, i saw that. Just in the current age we live in where people are strong and scared, there's more than a couple of trad grades difference between a safish 8b and a death 8b. Maybe there's like 5 or 6 stages of danger? There are very few stage 6 (total death) routes.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 03:49:49 pm
Taking this position would mean that E10 is a pretty wide grade and matching in diffculty near to the very top end of UK climbing on the sport side with only 1 route in the UK and 2 climbers who have done anything harder.   This tends to make me feel that E11 is a pretty big number and it is ok to question it, while at the same time not wanting to take anything away from what looks to be an really impressive effort.
Pretty sure it's 2 routes, Rhapsody and Echo Wall, and 3 climbers, DMac, SteMac, and Pearson. The other two contenders, Walk Of Life and Longhope Route got mercilessly downgraded ofc.
As for E10s, quite a few off the top of my head, Equlibrium, Sleepy Hollow, Chorozon,  that other thing in Pembroke, Rewind, To Hell And Back, Hold Fast Hold True, Parthian sans flake, etc. Not counting downgrades.

Rubbernecking the downgrades isn't necessarily as vindictive as Bonjoy implies. It's just a bit of fun to watch especially when climbers dance around the issue, trying to juggle maintaining their integrity, superiority, and social media credibility, no easy task. With something like Bibliographie it's a bit dull "Yeah more like hard 9b+ cos I used different beta" "Yeah he's probably right that it's not 9c, I hadn't fully refined my beta" blah blah the end. UK trad grade nitpicking is more fun.

Incidentally I'd like to reiterate my previous post in which I wasn't slagging off the UKC article, and by implication not slagging off Gresh's route nor his effort putting it up. I still stand by slagging off  this useless trendy self-hating "british trad has a relatively low sport grade equivalent so let's all be ashamed both our punterdom AND grading system" bollox tho.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 17, 2021, 03:55:52 pm
How is the below so complicated to use as a guide:

For averagely safe routes
5 - 5+  E1
6a-6a+ E2 
6b-6b+ E3
6c-6c+ E4
7a-7a+ E5
7b-7b+ E6
7c-7c+ E7
8a-8a+ E8
8b-8b+ E9
8c-8c+ E10
9a-9a+ E11
9b-9b+ E12

Bold/scary/long runouts but not exceptionally dangerous  +1 E-grade
Exceptionally dangerous  +2 E-grades
Exceptionally safe  -1 E-grade

Totally niche question but does this work on Yorkshire limestone? A lot of the trad E6s are now 7c after bolting but I'm not sure how safe they were. Depends how many pegs/fixed slings there were, I suppose - but a lot of that information you'll only get from speaking to the people who were there.
I think part of the reason the area has suffered as a trad venue is that some of the grades were horrible. Oedipus was recently retrobolted. That was E3 and feels 7a to me now. I think that gear-wise there was hard moves off the deck to decent kit (peg, I think, and pumpy to place the back-up), then a fairly sustained upper section with maybe one or two good runners?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 17, 2021, 03:57:42 pm
Fiend - Ian was meaning 1 route harder than 9a+ and 2 brits who've climbed harder than 9a+...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 04:04:45 pm
As for E10s, quite a few off the top of my head, Equlibrium, Sleepy Hollow, Chorozon, that other thing in Pembroke, Rewind, To Hell And Back, Hold Fast Hold True, Parthian sans flake, etc. Not counting downgrades.
Olympiad. Rewind was suggested as E9 by Wojciech so might be off the list.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Franco on September 17, 2021, 04:05:14 pm
Taking this position would mean that E10 is a pretty wide grade and matching in diffculty near to the very top end of UK climbing on the sport side with only 1 route in the UK and 2 climbers who have done anything harder.   This tends to make me feel that E11 is a pretty big number and it is ok to question it, while at the same time not wanting to take anything away from what looks to be an really impressive effort.
Pretty sure it's 2 routes, Rhapsody and Echo Wall, and 3 climbers, DMac, SteMac, and Pearson. The other two contenders, Walk Of Life and Longhope Route got mercilessly downgraded ofc.
As for E10s, quite a few off the top of my head, Equlibrium, Sleepy Hollow, Chorozon,  that other thing in Pembroke, Rewind, To Hell And Back, Hold Fast Hold True, Parthian sans flake, etc. Not counting downgrades.

Rubbernecking the downgrades isn't necessarily as vindictive as Bonjoy implies. It's just a bit of fun to watch especially when climbers dance around the issue, trying to juggle maintaining their integrity, superiority, and social media credibility, no easy task. With something like Bibliographie it's a bit dull "Yeah more like hard 9b+ cos I used different beta" "Yeah he's probably right that it's not 9c, I hadn't fully refined my beta" blah blah the end. UK trad grade nitpicking is more fun.

Incidentally I'd like to reiterate my previous post in which I wasn't slagging off the UKC article, and by implication not slagging off Gresh's route nor his effort putting it up. I still stand by slagging off  this useless trendy self-hating "british trad has a relatively low sport grade equivalent so let's all be ashamed both our punterdom AND grading system" bollox tho.

The NE has two routes graded harder than E10.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 17, 2021, 04:07:20 pm
As for E10s, quite a few off the top of my head, Equlibrium, Sleepy Hollow, Chorozon, that other thing in Pembroke, Rewind, To Hell And Back, Hold Fast Hold True, Parthian sans flake, etc. Not counting downgrades.
Olympiad. Rewind was suggested as E9 by Wojciech so might be off the list.

Also Prisoners of the Sun, James Taylor's E10 at Rhoscolyn. 8b, reportedly sketchy to fall from crux.
https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2021/06/prisoners_of_the_sun_-_e10_7a_fa_by_james_taylor-72796
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 04:10:38 pm
I can neither confirm nor deny that you had such a dream, but I can confirm that I own a very long clipstick and nowadays have a very low tolerance to being bold, making this seem unlikely in real life. Are you sure I didn't just say take, moan about hard clips being shit, moan about my fingers and then lower off and sulk for a while? Sounds more realistic...
No you definitely decked - I was stood right underneath you, but might have moved out of your way. P.s. Can't believe Dunc has puntered me for dreaming about you! Doesn't everyone? :'(
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 17, 2021, 04:13:41 pm
Olympiad. Rewind was suggested as E9 by Wojciech so might be off the list.

Olympiad is 8b and safe as a DWS, therefore benchmark E9. Climbing it with the tide out is just poor tactics  :whistle:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 04:20:14 pm
Olympiad is 8b and safe as a DWS, therefore benchmark E9. Climbing it with the tide out is just poor tactics  :whistle:
I was gonna say similar but didn't want to confuse matters  :worms:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 04:22:13 pm
Fiend - Ian was meaning 1 route harder than 9a+ and 2 brits who've climbed harder than 9a+...
:lol: ooops which I'd know if I'd bothered to read the post properly instead of skimming over.

Equally shameful that I forgot Prisoners Of The Sun given I walked past the damn thing a couple of weeks ago and even downloaded the new topo for that wall in the vain hope someone had found a loose but pleasant F6b(R-) that I could dabble in  ::)

Anyway I think the point is....ummm what was the point?? Something about the top end of Pete's grade table not actually working linearly in it's common application. Yes that's the one.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 04:26:45 pm
The process of grading trad routes shouldn't be that difficult. Certainly not as hard you make it out Bonjoy. There are only really two important variables to consider:
sport grade - any regular climber should be should be able to accurately judge this to within 2 grades.
danger - given the four options below someone should be able to judge this to within 2 options. When climbs aren't getting put up onsight/ground-up then danger isn't *that* theoretical.
I think you misundertood my thesis. I'm not saying grading is desperately difficult, just that assuming no dishonesty, if you get it wrong it's more likely you'll have overgraded than undergraded. In most cases this is because of new beta (including gear). This is a one way bias, routes never gain grades by losing beta. Nobody unerringly finds the best beta on every single ascent and everyone is working within subtly different physiological limits anyway, hence the most efficient beta may not even work for the FAer. The outcome we see is more top end routes shedding grades than gaining them (with most staying at the given grade obvs).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 04:28:39 pm
Also while we're all in a super-psyched mood celebrating Gresh's (and maybe soon to be the Macs) achievement, does anyone have a nice large and clear topo showing the wall and where Lexicon goes?? The one in the Langdale guide is pretty tiny. Ta.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 04:31:02 pm
Anyway I think the point is....ummm what was the point?? Something about the top end of Pete's grade table not actually working linearly in it's common application. Yes that's the one.
Here endeth the thread.





....until next time a new hard trad route gets done and we inevitably have the same discussion and conclusion  :lol:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 04:34:30 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 17, 2021, 04:37:51 pm
The process of grading trad routes shouldn't be that difficult. Certainly not as hard you make it out Bonjoy. There are only really two important variables to consider:
sport grade - any regular climber should be should be able to accurately judge this to within 2 grades.
danger - given the four options below someone should be able to judge this to within 2 options. When climbs aren't getting put up onsight/ground-up then danger isn't *that* theoretical.
I think you misundertood my thesis. I'm not saying grading is desperately difficult, just that assuming no dishonesty, if you get it wrong it's more likely you'll have overgraded than undergraded. In most cases this is because of new beta (including gear). This is a one way bias, routes never gain grades by losing beta. Nobody unerringly finds the best beta on every single ascent and everyone is working within subtly different physiological limits anyway, hence the most efficient beta may not even work for the FAer. The outcome we see is more top end routes shedding grades than gaining them (with most staying at the given grade obvs).

I don't strongly disagree with your point about beta. But there is hold loss - Parthian Shot being the obvious one but who's to say there won't be others as standards continue to improve and harder E-grades get more headpoint traffic and holds get ripped off. It's not uncommon for sport routes to get harder with hold loss.

Also, different topic (and can of worms) but I think you could come away with a very different conclusion on the direction of hard trad grades if we come back to this discussion 15 years from now. For the very different reason of all the bullshit heavily pegged sea-cliff routes that were E6, 7 or 8 but which have become E7, 8 or 9 after shedding their steel protection.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 04:46:01 pm
I did say "assuming no physical change (hold loss/gain)."
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 04:56:44 pm
Also, different topic (and can of worms) but I think you could come away with a very different conclusion on the direction of hard trad grades if we come back to this discussion 15 years from now. For the very different reason of all the bullshit heavily pegged sea-cliff routes that were E6, 7 or 8 but which have become E7, 8 or 9 after shedding their steel protection.
This'll be great. They can all be re-climbed as quality 'new' routes without all the hassle of exploring to find them! Ultimately this is why I opted to do Big Issue without the peg even though it's still in there - so there's never an excuse to replace it. I'm hoping the same goes for all peg-protected routes, especially on sea cliffs (unless they can be hand placed and removed afterwards).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: grimer on September 17, 2021, 04:59:13 pm
This thread is less funny than it was on page 2.

I blame Steve Mac.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 17, 2021, 05:00:44 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IanP on September 17, 2021, 05:07:43 pm
Taking this position would mean that E10 is a pretty wide grade and matching in diffculty near to the very top end of UK climbing on the sport side with only 1 route in the UK and 2 climbers who have done anything harder.   This tends to make me feel that E11 is a pretty big number and it is ok to question it, while at the same time not wanting to take anything away from what looks to be an really impressive effort.
Pretty sure it's 2 routes, Rhapsody and Echo Wall, and 3 climbers, DMac, SteMac, and Pearson. The other two contenders, Walk Of Life and Longhope Route got mercilessly downgraded ofc.
As for E10s, quite a few off the top of my head, Equlibrium, Sleepy Hollow, Chorozon,  that other thing in Pembroke, Rewind, To Hell And Back, Hold Fast Hold True, Parthian sans flake, etc. Not counting downgrades.

Edit: my point has already been made, should keep up with the whole thread before replying  :oops:

Possibly wasn't clear, I meant 9b or harder, so Rainman and Mclure/Bosi.  The point being that the shortage of E11s isn't that suprising in this light and if someone not right at the top of the climbing tree claims an E11 it is ok to discuss.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 05:17:37 pm
Anyway I think the point is....ummm what was the point?? Something about the top end of Pete's grade table not actually working linearly in it's common application. Yes that's the one.
Here endeth the thread.
....until next time a new hard trad route gets done and we inevitably have the same discussion and conclusion  :lol:
Don't get me wrong, the trad grading system works perfectly and with great clarity in the context of great British trad climbing, especially with the optional addition of a sport grade. But the adjectival grade doesn't quite rise in direct linear correlation to the tech grade nor sport grade of the physical challenge, hence why DMac's new thing isn't E10 and Indian Face isn't E8. But that's totally fine because it's very easy to understand the meaning of the grade/challenge compared to all the previous routes (usually below it, at this level).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 05:18:52 pm
Also, different topic (and can of worms) but I think you could come away with a very different conclusion on the direction of hard trad grades if we come back to this discussion 15 years from now. For the very different reason of all the bullshit heavily pegged sea-cliff routes that were E6, 7 or 8 but which have become E7, 8 or 9 after shedding their steel protection.
You mean the ones that are down to E5, 6, or 7, now that they've had stainless steel """eco-pegs""" drilled and cemented into place??  ;D
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 17, 2021, 05:25:50 pm
Anyway I think the point is....ummm what was the point?? Something about the top end of Pete's grade table not actually working linearly in it's common application. Yes that's the one.
Here endeth the thread.

This is a trite conclusion which misrepresents a wide variety of contributions.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: northern yob on September 17, 2021, 05:36:40 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.

This.
Call me a cynic, or worse a shit slinger. I can’t imagine the grade holding up, time will tell.

Neil isn’t exactly a conservative grader( he’s not alone at the top end) most people seriously trying to make a living purely from climbing are always more likely to round it up rather than down. For some of the reasons bonjoy mentioned I have always rounded down when grading.

 Ultimately they have more to gain from throwing a big grade at it, and taking the subsequent downgrade than they do from being conservative. I’m sure the subsequent film and Neil’s profile will get all the more publicity this way than if he had been conservative, peer recognition doesn’t pay the mortgage.

The fact that there is pretty much a queue forming to have a look would also imply I’m not the only one….. pretty much everyone I have spoken to has been sceptical about the grade (not quality) of the route. I think it would be even sadder if the climbing community avoided these discussions for fear of being a shitslinger. Debate and even shitslinging is healthy.

It’s cool people are keen to try it, it’s cool neil has done it. It’s cool people are talking about it. It looks a great route and is undoubtedly very hard. It would be cool if the grade stands…. I just don’t think it will.


Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 05:41:11 pm
This is a trite conclusion which misrepresents a wide variety of contributions.
Did you think I was being serious? Where’s the tongue in cheek emoji, or have I missed it?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Duncan campbell on September 17, 2021, 06:07:38 pm
I can neither confirm nor deny that you had such a dream, but I can confirm that I own a very long clipstick and nowadays have a very low tolerance to being bold, making this seem unlikely in real life. Are you sure I didn't just say take, moan about hard clips being shit, moan about my fingers and then lower off and sulk for a while? Sounds more realistic...
No you definitely decked - I was stood right underneath you, but might have moved out of your way. P.s. Can't believe Dunc has puntered me for dreaming about you! Doesn't everyone? :'(

Sorry Ali! All in jest obviously!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 17, 2021, 08:20:48 pm
P.s. Can't believe Dunc has puntered me for dreaming about you! Doesn't everyone? :'(
Quote
Sorry Ali! All in jest obviously!

Careful. First punter point is the worst. Think Stu had to undergo therapy
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: andy moles on September 17, 2021, 08:32:20 pm
In the chat about top end routes and potential downgrading etc, I don't think anyone has mentioned Mind Riot - which Dave Mac basically said, with some caveats, was harder than Rhapsody, but nevertheless gave E10. It would certainly be fresher in his mind as a reference point.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 17, 2021, 08:54:11 pm
In the chat about top end routes and potential downgrading etc, I don't think anyone has mentioned Mind Riot - which Dave Mac basically said, with some caveats, was harder than Rhapsody, but nevertheless gave E10. It would certainly be fresher in his mind as a reference point.

Hard to keep track of all the hard shit that Dave Mac gets up to sometimes! https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2019/10/mind_riot_e10_7a_first_ascent_by_dave_macleod-72091
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nike Air on September 17, 2021, 09:07:21 pm
That looks Ace!
Also love 8m55sec in that video

https://youtu.be/Ox7iU5DjQ9U
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 17, 2021, 09:08:46 pm
Did you think I was being serious? Where’s the tongue in cheek emoji, or have I missed it?

Sorry, I was really quoting Fiend's dross, but selectively including your bit framed it nicely.


... this is why I opted to do Big Issue without the peg ...
Big Issue E8 if you're tall tho, innit?  :whistle:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 17, 2021, 09:27:58 pm
You can take your "dross" and shove it sideways! I'm fully aware there's a variety of contributions, I've read almost all of them to the point where more chat about sport equivalent grades has my brain stuttering and I start mis-reading posts. It's all fascinating, but maybe better to have a bit of fun about the whole situation(*) rather than being a moody sod or going round in circles about it.


(* - yes I know full well this will come back to bite me on the arse when it's the next headpunting discussion, whatever)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 17, 2021, 09:30:27 pm
P.s. Can't believe Dunc has puntered me for dreaming about you!
Careful. First punter point is the worst. Think Stu had to undergo therapy
I’m getting some legal advice. This isn’t the end of the story.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 17, 2021, 09:33:12 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
But why do you ‘hope’ that’s the outcome of Dave’s attempt? Wouldn’t you rather be proved wrong and it was E11  :shrug:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 18, 2021, 08:09:16 am
Big Issue E8 if you're tall tho, innit?
Not relevant to the point I was making, but if you’re going off topic I’ll take the bait in defence of the taller gentleman! Is this suggested downgrade based on your experience of being (a) tall or (b) short/average height? If the latter then that’s great cos I’ll get busy with the downgrades of stuff I think’s easier for anyone shorter than me (or just upgrade them for me - either way works). So…minus a few exceptions that’ll be ALL routes more than a few degrees overhanging. Plus every sit start boulder problem that exists in the world :whistle:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 18, 2021, 08:37:42 am
If it gets downgraded it gets downgraded and balance is restored to the force and Gresh will probably say "fair play hard to assess these things" (to which Dave Mac will say yeah it is but sick effort mate great route) and if it doesn't then it doesn't and Gresh will probably say "ah nice one" and honestly who gives that much of a shit either way when you could be going climbing or having a coffee while thinking about the impermanence of the consciousness or whatever it is you do.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: northern yob on September 18, 2021, 08:49:26 am
From the comfort of my armchair I’m gonna throw out a couple of thoughts. I’m certainly trying not to shitsling although probably failing dismally.

Steve said in the Ukc write up it was easier than Rhapsody, now he’s taken the ride and was fine (although probably at least a bit flustered) can it still be E11? I’m genuinely interested what people think!

Also from the instasham photo there looks to be a runner in the bottom of sixpence, is this a side runner or does the route climb into sixpence? Either way I don’t recall this being mentioned in the ukc write up. And why would you not put one a little higher up in sixpence whilst your there if you are worried about the lob?

Am I the only one thinking these things?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 18, 2021, 09:06:13 am
So soft E11 (if you're a F9b climber) that uses a side-runner low down (not on the big lob upper bit), that might be a logical and sensible place to have a side-runner rather than climbing higher up Sixpence and reversing. Makes sense.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: northern yob on September 18, 2021, 09:18:06 am
So soft E11 (if you're a F9b climber) that uses a side-runner low down (not on the big lob upper bit), that might be a logical and sensible place to have a side-runner rather than climbing higher up Sixpence and reversing. Makes sense.

Isn’t his top runner in the bottom of the pod/groove of sixpence? My post wasn’t very clear about where I meant.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: northern yob on September 18, 2021, 09:20:59 am
So to be clear his bottom and his top runner are both in sixpence I think…..
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 18, 2021, 09:29:55 am
Ah right. I didn't see the original stuff on Insta, but someone was kind enough to send me this draft topo for the next edition of FRCC Langdale, which might help....

(https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gJtxL9h3okM/YUWiweKoyCI/AAAAAAAADOA/HnB0Gpyj7k8F3Gy733bicAoWdR7nOJDzQCLcBGAsYHQ/s16000/47a9ac52-e26c-497c-81e3-9582ff6b7774.jpg)

(slight error on the lower line of Lexicon but I'm sure the proof-readers will get that fixed before it goes to print)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nike Air on September 18, 2021, 09:34:15 am
 Think it's looking that way pal, not that it was mentioned in the press release...  :shrug:

It'll be interesting to see how it pans out. They all seem to coach each other and then get loads of 
big ups
that it might be hard for them to be honest.

If that lakes has a stunning E11 I'd be well psyched, I'm all for pushing grades and new lines.

I've not done impact day or sixpence, has Neil?


Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 18, 2021, 09:41:18 am
Ah right. I didn't see the original stuff on Insta, but someone was kind enough to send me this draft topo for the next edition of FRCC Langdale, which might help....

(https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gJtxL9h3okM/YUWiweKoyCI/AAAAAAAADOA/HnB0Gpyj7k8F3Gy733bicAoWdR7nOJDzQCLcBGAsYHQ/s16000/47a9ac52-e26c-497c-81e3-9582ff6b7774.jpg)

(slight error on the lower line of Lexicon but I'm sure the proof-readers will get that fixed before it goes to print)

Have you ever considered a career with Rockfax?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jakk on September 18, 2021, 10:34:52 am
God this is such a shitty thread, sure is fun shitting on someone for putting themselves out there.
Maybe if Ste Mac AND Dave Mac AND Gresh are all talking E11 then it is in fact E11, and if it gets downgraded then who gives a shit! Things get downgraded! And perhaps that would say more about the totally contradictory nature of top-end trad grading than this particular route and its first ascentionist  :-\ (see bouldering grades around 2010 for comparison - how no one wanted to give harder than V15 and it totally messed up the world scale, or the Gaskins effect on UK bouldering), maybe there should be more E11s, and some theoretical 9B trad route should actually be E14, instead of stretching the existing scale indefinitely....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: carlisle slapper on September 18, 2021, 10:39:03 am
The upper crucial gear is the gear for sixpence, but also in the E4 Solstice that comes across that break. Its a bomber nest of up to four size 1-2 cams, as caff mentioned on insta, if you were in scotland you'd probably just rock up into sixpence and pop a few more wires in that groove too (extra 1.5m less of run out), then downclimb and hey presto 2 hr rest, no rack and no clips but a long fall if it goes wrong. The headwall looks great climbing and a superb effort but what confuses me a little as to why these new lines are sold as independent etc when there's so much history on that face from the 70's onwards. I'd be more motivated to try it as a LH finish to sixpence. Its inspiring to see things pushed in the lakes but personally its a bit of a dented trumpet if all thats left to tackle is shoulder width variations, are there really so few blank canvasses left with good sequences? i'd naively hope there are still  routes to do of this quality that just have a bit more breathing space or can be at least sold as seen. Hard truly independent routes on mountain rock do seem incredibly rare finds so perhaps its a lot to ask in this day and age. The potential in the lakes for 4-8m hard sections spurring off other lines is definitely all there, and maybe thats no bad thing if the quality of the moves is as good as this looks.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 18, 2021, 10:45:42 am
Have you ever considered a career with Rockfax?
Wash your mouth out!!  >:( :sick:

To be clear, I did not make this topo, (insta is still in it's "beg for registration so you can be fed into the FB data/marketting machine" mode), it was an anonymous donor helping me out.

P.S. Following a bit from the latter bit of what Carlisle Slapper wrote, from my non-shitting-on armchair it reminds me a lot of Rhapsody - not the purest of line, maybe with some slight contrivance and escapability, but you can see what the FA was aiming for - to climb a certain bit of high quality rock in a particularly challenging way (in Rhapsody this was "climb the full height of the shield above the end of Requiem as much as possible without escaping early"). Sometimes that's just the way things work??
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 18, 2021, 02:25:02 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
But why do you ‘hope’ that’s the outcome of Dave’s attempt? Wouldn’t you rather be proved wrong and it was E11  :shrug:

The grade will sort itself out. The fall sounds unpleasant but not beyond the realms of what could be considered averagely safe at this top end. I think the distances are probably being oversold. I know Steve's not massive bit I'm not sure how this can measure up to be a 10m runout, notwithstanding that it's still a big lob.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT9L_XhoPuN/?utm_medium=copy_link

My main beef was with the hype Vs actual quality of the line ratio. Dan has captured almost word for word what it was that I felt so please direct any further questions to him.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on September 18, 2021, 11:43:54 pm
Nice to see a few more great posts celebrating the effort  :2thumbsup:

.. and effort Ste Mac.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 19, 2021, 03:16:33 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
But why do you ‘hope’ that’s the outcome of Dave’s attempt? Wouldn’t you rather be proved wrong and it was E11  :shrug:

The grade will sort itself out. The fall sounds unpleasant but not beyond the realms of what could be considered averagely safe at this top end. I think the distances are probably being oversold. I know Steve's not massive bit I'm not sure how this can measure up to be a 10m runout, notwithstanding that it's still a big lob.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT9L_XhoPuN/?utm_medium=copy_link

My main beef was with the hype Vs actual quality of the line ratio. Dan has captured almost word for word what it was that I felt so please direct any further questions to him.

Is the whole crag even 40' high? Or would an 80' lob including some subterranean catering action?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 19, 2021, 07:13:46 pm
Pavey Ark’s 100m+ tall. The wall these routes are on starts partway up a gully on one side but it’s still taller than 80ft. Impact Day & Sixpence are both listed as 33m in the guide.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Adam Lincoln on September 19, 2021, 11:05:26 pm
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
But why do you ‘hope’ that’s the outcome of Dave’s attempt? Wouldn’t you rather be proved wrong and it was E11  :shrug:

The grade will sort itself out. The fall sounds unpleasant but not beyond the realms of what could be considered averagely safe at this top end. I think the distances are probably being oversold. I know Steve's not massive bit I'm not sure how this can measure up to be a 10m runout, notwithstanding that it's still a big lob.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT9L_XhoPuN/?utm_medium=copy_link

My main beef was with the hype Vs actual quality of the line ratio. Dan has captured almost word for word what it was that I felt so please direct any further questions to him.

Is the whole crag even 40' high? Or would an 80' lob including some subterranean catering action?

Might want to do some fact checking
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 20, 2021, 08:13:46 am
It shouldn't be... seen as 'shit flinging'.
This was a reaction to Will Hunt's comment about hoping Dave Mac 'slags' the grade on Lexicon. Maybe tongue in cheek but I do think it reflects a level of gleeful schadenfreude that exists among climbers regarding downgrading. My main objection to this is the distorting effect it has on grading - see old debates about the state of UK bouldering grades at the top end.

To be honest, I think a downgrade is inevitable but my comment was more motivated by a desire to see some rationality applied to something that has probably been a little over-hyped. I can totally understand being psyched off your head for your project, but it always pays to step back, draw breath, and wonder whether something is really as hard/dangerous/good as you thought it was in the moment; to try and present it honestly and to be prepared to have someone make a different assessment of it.

Time and inspection by others will tell. I just hope that they will feel they can give an honest assessment without it being seen as shit-flinging.
But why do you ‘hope’ that’s the outcome of Dave’s attempt? Wouldn’t you rather be proved wrong and it was E11  :shrug:

The grade will sort itself out. The fall sounds unpleasant but not beyond the realms of what could be considered averagely safe at this top end. I think the distances are probably being oversold. I know Steve's not massive bit I'm not sure how this can measure up to be a 10m runout, notwithstanding that it's still a big lob.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CT9L_XhoPuN/?utm_medium=copy_link

My main beef was with the hype Vs actual quality of the line ratio. Dan has captured almost word for word what it was that I felt so please direct any further questions to him.

Is the whole crag even 40' high? Or would an 80' lob including some subterranean catering action?

Might want to do some fact checking

Ach, I only posted that as a mate said impact day etc. were only about 25m to the top. It was a question rather than a statement!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 20, 2021, 10:16:46 am
It’s not at all uncommon for guidebooks to overestimate route lengths. It’s almost like guidebook pitch lengths are a nominal length, the reality usually being very different. Probably comes partly from a concern about people abbing or lowering off ends of ropes because ‘the guide said it’s only 25m..’ Partly from people being terrible at judging distances. Partly from rounding up to make a bigger number.
If a guidebook said a pitch I was about to try was 33m I’d expect it to be around 25-30.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 20, 2021, 10:29:28 am
Steve reckoned he fell about 23m. So looking at the pic those figures are in the ballpark - he's more than 2m above the belayer but not 10m.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 20, 2021, 10:29:41 am
Especially when the lengths are very approximately converted from good olde CC / FRCC yards, inches, fathoms and groats.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 20, 2021, 10:32:46 am
Steve reckoned he fell about 23m. So looking at the pic those figures are in the ballpark - he's more than 2m above the belayer but not 10m.

 :blink: :blink: :sick: :sick: that really is a mighty big fall!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 20, 2021, 10:34:32 am
E11 fall innit!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on September 20, 2021, 10:41:29 am

If a guidebook said a pitch I was about to try was 33m I’d expect it to be around 25-30.

For sportclimbing sectors, if the guide book says that a route is 31m, I would expect to get back to the ground on rope stretch with a 60m. If the guide says 33m I would expect to not get back on stretch with a 60m rope.

If it is Blixt's guidebook to Kvaløya and it says that a pitch is 60m I would expect to be able to reach the belay with 60m doubles and some ten metres of simul climbing.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Paul B on September 20, 2021, 02:29:00 pm
If a guidebook said a pitch I was about to try was 33m I’d expect it to be around 25-30.

This has not been my experience when climbing in the USA (or generally outside of the UK).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on September 20, 2021, 05:23:13 pm
I think this is all a slightly tricky one.

Just re route length first, of course, trad routes can be considerably longer on the rock, than the fall/ab line. The quoted route length taking into account all the meanderings. My falls tend to be a bit more direct.

Thinking about the grade, and the amount of practice that will go into preparing for the lead, there will be a wide margin between the theoretical on-sight grade, and the "grade" of the actual ascent after practice - and considerable variation in that margin.

Considering Steve's fall, the location of the route etc, it may be that the route is E10, but the ascent is likely to be much nearer that grade after some practice, than for instance a headpoint on the grit. As pointed out above, we can take into account Steve's experience of the fall, which itself changes the grade of the route. There's certainly no problem with Neil giving it the E11 tag.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 20, 2021, 10:30:49 pm
If a guidebook said a pitch I was about to try was 33m I’d expect it to be around 25-30.

This has not been my experience when climbing in the USA (or generally outside of the UK).

Perhaps I should have made it clear - UK guidebooks overestimate trad route lengths. Always, no exceptions.
(Typed from a valley in Sligo with amazing undeveloped 50, no 60, no 70m cliffs!)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: haydn jones on September 20, 2021, 10:40:42 pm
If a guidebook said a pitch I was about to try was 33m I’d expect it to be around 25-30.

This has not been my experience when climbing in the USA (or generally outside of the UK).

Perhaps I should have made it clear - UK guidebooks overestimate trad route lengths. Always, no exceptions.
(Typed from a valley in Sligo with amazing undeveloped 50, no 60, no 70m cliffs!)
I always work on this assumption with the read route too but I came really close to getting caught out last week at haytor. It said aviation was 35 meters long but on my 45 I only had less than 5 meters spare if that
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 20, 2021, 11:21:08 pm
guidebook pitch lengths are a nominal length, the reality usually being very different. Probably comes partly from a concern about people abbing or lowering off ends of ropes because ‘the guide said it’s only 25m..’

That’s certainly why Rockfax only have rough height markers at arbitrary points on their topos rather than giving a definite length for each route these days.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nails on September 21, 2021, 12:33:16 am
I always thought that was because they couldn't be arsed to research anything properly or actually at all.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Neil F on September 21, 2021, 10:55:03 am
I led P2 of Redshift on Red Wall yesterday. It’s a brilliant, absorbing piece of climbing, with loads of interesting moves, tricky route finding, and the usual Red Wall atmosphere.  It feels like a big lead, in more ways than one, not surprising for a 37m pitch of Gogarth’s finest!

Except that it isn’t.

My seconds were out of sight, and way down the wall as I look the ropes in, and I was amazed to see the middle marker just as the rope came tight.  Yep, the massive 37m 2nd pitch of Redshift is actually 25m…

Neil
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: seankenny on September 21, 2021, 06:15:43 pm
If it is Blixt's guidebook to Kvaløya and it says that a pitch is 60m I would expect to be able to reach the belay with 60m doubles and some ten metres of simul climbing.

Totally off topic, but is Kvaløya good? Or rather, is it as good as people make out, and given a choice of there or Lofoten, which would you prefer? (I'm making the not outrageous assumption that you've been to Lofoten...) I've fancied a trip there for ages but don't know anyone who's actually been.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on September 21, 2021, 07:56:36 pm
Totally off topic, but is Kvaløya good? Or rather, is it as good as people make out, and given a choice of there or Lofoten, which would you prefer? (I'm making the not outrageous assumption that you've been to Lofoten...) I've fancied a trip there for ages but don't know anyone who's actually been.

Kvaløya is a lot more arctic than Lofoten. A lot more. Colder and grimmer but with brighter light during the nights. In my experience it is more common to get long spells of good weather on Lofoten than on Kvaløya. The best routes on Kvaløya are better than the best routes on Lofoten. There are much more routes on Lofoten than on Kvaløya, but maybe not more quality long routes from 7a and up (that might have changed, but not likely). If the weather totally craps out, Lofoten has a sector of rain-protected sport climbing (sort of) but on Kvaløya you would be out of luck.

I have had better experiences on Kvaløya both climbing and nature wise, but I would recommend people to go to Lofoten. If you have a car you could start on Lofoten and if there is a 4-5 day stable weather window drive up to Kvaløya, run up to Hollendaren and do two-three routes there. They would likely be better than anything you would find on Lofoten. (This supposes that you do not do Aleksis or anything else on the shoulder, but rather routes like Svart Hav, Thanatos, Ikaros, Gemini or Halvmanerisset)

Lofoten has single pitch trad, but on Kvaløya there is very little of that (a few routes scattered on the main sport climbing sectors).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: seankenny on September 21, 2021, 08:44:18 pm
Thanks for the beta, very useful.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IanP on September 21, 2021, 09:42:37 pm
So Ste Mac has done it.  Whatever the grade, super impressive to see him so psyched and still crushing at the highest levels.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CUGKwg9I08O/?utm_medium=copy_link
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 21, 2021, 10:29:21 pm
Rope protector dab there 😄

In terms of E10’s and above, I wonder if Steve has done more than anyone else? Rhapsody, the Nesscliffe one, a couple in Pembrokeshire, now this (prob missing some others too).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 22, 2021, 06:43:18 am

In terms of E10’s and above, I wonder if Steve has done more than anyone else? Rhapsody, the Nesscliffe one, a couple in Pembrokeshire, now this (prob missing some others too).

Pretty sure you've got them all there. Dave Mac, James Pearson and Gresh are the other contenders I can think of.
Pete Whittaker is another contender, depending on what you think Recovery Drink gets as an E grade. Obvs there's also people like Caff who've got a huge depth at E9 but not much harder.

For ref:
https://climbing-history.org/climber/129/steve-mcclure

https://climbing-history.org/climber/146/dave-macleod

https://climbing-history.org/climber/153/james-pearson

https://climbing-history.org/climber/173/neil-gresham

https://climbing-history.org/climber/166/pete-whittaker
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: andy moles on September 22, 2021, 07:52:44 am
Dave Mac's 'Die by the Drop' at Glen Shian? Sounds like a pretty squished eliminate, but still.

He's also done Hold Fast, Hold True.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 22, 2021, 08:03:35 am
Good knowledge as per, I've updated the list.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: colin8ll on September 22, 2021, 08:30:21 am
Did Dave Mac actually go back and finish Hold Fast, Hold True? Very impressive if so, considering the nasty fall he took.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 22, 2021, 08:57:58 am
Good question, not sure he did. Definitely did FA of Hold Fast (E9), but not sure about completing HFHT
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 22, 2021, 10:58:44 am
So Ste Mac has done it.  Whatever the grade, super impressive to see him so psyched and still crushing at the highest levels.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CUGKwg9I08O/?utm_medium=copy_link

Seems like every man and his dog's on it atm.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 22, 2021, 12:45:13 pm
My seconds were out of sight, and way down the wall as I look the ropes in, and I was amazed to see the middle marker just as the rope came tight.  Yep, the massive 37m 2nd pitch of Redshift is actually 25m…

Neil

Sure they're not 60s?

This does remind me that what has been missing from the coverage of this route is the sort of sober analysis and depth of context we used to get in Rock Notes.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: steveri on September 22, 2021, 02:18:25 pm
Seems like every man and his dog's on it atm.

/adds to Fiend's dog friendly crag list.

"The recent scenes on Lexicon have been unprecedented. Yesterday, @francocookson & @neiljmawson turned up for a slice of the action and at one point, 3 climbers (including @ste_mcclure ) were queuing for an E11! "

Excellent, I always feel slightly sorry for routes that people have put a lot into that immediately fall into obscurity.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 22, 2021, 02:22:05 pm
I'm actually posting from below the top crux right now, doing it in my trainers, reckon it's about E6 6b.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: turnipturned on September 22, 2021, 03:33:27 pm
https://www.instagram.com/p/CUIBjWfIp8U/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Interesting topic to discuss  :popcorn:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 22, 2021, 03:49:44 pm
Hellfire. I see he was asking directly about the secret to success in a comment on one of Gresham's Lexicon posts. Seems to be a pretty clear claim of foul play.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on September 22, 2021, 04:21:23 pm
https://www.instagram.com/p/CUIBjWfIp8U/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Interesting topic to discuss  :popcorn:

I have heard these kind of comments before from old french climbers. Names have been mentioned etc.

Using banned substances seems unnecessarily complicated when it is so easy to do like most and just claim that you have done a route (or PB on a strength benchmark) without having actually done it.

I found this interview with Magnus Carlsen, the world chess champion, about cheating in chess to be fascinating (english cc)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcbHmHHwlUQ

Basically everything he says can be applied to using banned substances or false claims.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 22, 2021, 04:41:13 pm
I assume most elite athletes are probably on PEDs tbh.

And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever? Yeah. Not that I remotely care if they are or think there's even anything really wrong with it tbh, not morally anyway.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: spidermonkey09 on September 22, 2021, 04:46:14 pm

I found this interview with Magnus Carlsen, the world chess champion, about cheating in chess to be fascinating (english cc)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcbHmHHwlUQ

Basically everything he says can be applied to using banned substances or false claims.

How would one cheat in chess when playing face to face?

I am confused which bits you think are relevant to climbing; his view that the game/sport depends on trust?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 22, 2021, 04:51:22 pm
How would one cheat in chess when playing face to face?

An example I read about was a competitor who stashed a phone in the toilets prior to a competition. They'd then take a toilet break mid-game (very normal at longer time controls) and use the phone to get in touch with someone who had a chess computer to hand and could tell them the best moves.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on September 22, 2021, 04:55:43 pm
And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever? Yeah. Not that I remotely care if they are or think there's even anything really wrong with it tbh, not morally anyway.

You're definitely toeing the morality line (or just stepping straight over it) if you're a professional athlete using your performances to get sponsorship deals.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 22, 2021, 05:00:13 pm
And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever? Yeah. Not that I remotely care if they are or think there's even anything really wrong with it tbh, not morally anyway.

You're definitely toeing the morality line (or just stepping straight over it) if you're a professional athlete using your performances to get sponsorship deals.

I can see where you're coming from there. I think if you just climb as a discipline though, no competitions no sponsors, it's probably fine. Not like you're harming anyone.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 22, 2021, 05:17:38 pm
And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever?

Just one of the things that separates the pastime of rock climbing from the sport of competition climbing.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 22, 2021, 05:18:58 pm
You're definitely toeing the morality line (or just stepping straight over it) if you're a professional athlete using your performances to get sponsorship deals.

Does anybody seriously think that performance is relevant to sponsorship any more?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 22, 2021, 05:24:34 pm
So this route is actually only E9 and everyone’s taking steroids to get up the thing. Standards have slipped since Brexit!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 22, 2021, 05:28:42 pm
So this route is actually only E9 and everyone’s taking steroids to get up the thing. Standards have slipped since Brexit!

If Franco links it on top rope it could be the quickest cusping of a hard route ever!

Do we have a thread for significant cusps? Does Remus have a list? If not, why not?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 22, 2021, 05:30:20 pm
Does anybody seriously think that performance is relevant to sponsorship any more?

Where do I sign? 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 22, 2021, 05:36:29 pm
If Franco links it on top rope it could be the quickest cusping of a hard route ever!

Do we have a thread for significant cusps? Does Remus have a list? If not, why not?
What’s cusping? Is that a sex thing?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 22, 2021, 05:45:44 pm
If Franco links it on top rope it could be the quickest cusping of a hard route ever!

Do we have a thread for significant cusps? Does Remus have a list? If not, why not?
What’s cusping? Is that a sex thing?

Cusping is what happens when a route, problem, or grade that was cool is made uncool by the act of a particular person climbing it.

Example: I used to think that 8c was a big number until Jim climbed Bat Route in the Great Cusping of 2019.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 22, 2021, 05:54:02 pm
If Franco links it on top rope it could be the quickest cusping of a hard route ever!

Do we have a thread for significant cusps? Does Remus have a list? If not, why not?
What’s cusping? Is that a sex thing?

Cusping is what happens when a route, problem, or grade that was cool is made uncool by the act of a particular person climbing it.

Example: I used to think that 8c was a big number until Jim climbed Bat Route in the Great Cusping of 2019.

Just like Red Baron Roof clearly isn't 7C+?  ;)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on September 22, 2021, 05:57:53 pm
Seems like every man and his dog's on it atm.

/adds to Fiend's dog friendly crag list.

"The recent scenes on Lexicon have been unprecedented. Yesterday, @francocookson & @neiljmawson turned up for a slice of the action and at one point, 3 climbers (including @ste_mcclure ) were queuing for an E11! "

Excellent, I always feel slightly sorry for routes that people have put a lot into that immediately fall into obscurity.

Is it obligatory to be from the North York Moors to have a go?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Doylo on September 22, 2021, 06:01:46 pm
The only way to know for sure is to pull his undies down to see if he has shrunken testicles. I’m game .
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Serpico on September 22, 2021, 08:05:21 pm
The only way to know for sure is to pull his undies down to see if he has shrunken testicles. I’m game .

Surely you'd have to have knowledge of their previous size to be able to judge?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Doylo on September 22, 2021, 08:07:04 pm
The only way to know for sure is to pull his undies down to see if he has shrunken testicles. I’m game .

Surely you'd have to have knowledge of their previous size to be able to judge?
………
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 22, 2021, 10:00:39 pm
And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever? Yeah. Not that I remotely care if they are or think there's even anything really wrong with it tbh, not morally anyway.

You're definitely toeing the morality line (or just stepping straight over it) if you're a professional athlete using your performances to get sponsorship deals.

I'm not aware of any banned substances list for rock climbing, so who decides which performance enhancing drugs are ok?

Most people will claim an ascent is valid if the performance was enhanced by caffeine. Well at least testosterone naturally occurs in the body, so a little bit more of it can't be cheating, right?

Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 22, 2021, 10:14:35 pm
And I mean in rock climbing, where you don't even have to figure out how to pass a drug test? In comps you do, but not for going out and doing whatever? Yeah. Not that I remotely care if they are or think there's even anything really wrong with it tbh, not morally anyway.

You're definitely toeing the morality line (or just stepping straight over it) if you're a professional athlete using your performances to get sponsorship deals.

I'm not aware of any banned substances list for rock climbing, so who decides which performance enhancing drugs are ok?

Most people will claim an ascent is valid if the performance was enhanced by caffeine. Well at least testosterone naturally occurs in the body, so a little bit more of it can't be cheating, right?

Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).

Of course, in the non-competition world anyone can do what they want really. I guess the question is - if anyone (not positioning fingers here) had done this, do you think they'd be as likely to name check their favourite supplement as their entourage of support crew?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shurt on September 22, 2021, 10:18:41 pm
https://www.instagram.com/p/CUIBjWfIp8U/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Interesting topic to discuss  :popcorn:

I guess you could argue that a 14 page write up on UKC involving ballet and equipment consultants is an excellent cover story. Just sayin...

If I was Gresh I'd just post a photo on here of my healthy ball sack, but then maybe he's got something to hide. Doylo knows, just ask him
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: tim palmer on September 22, 2021, 10:37:20 pm


Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).

Is the ban on anabolic steroid not entirely based on objective things?  Measurable increase in strength and recovery?  Along with the objective achievements of countries with doping programs based on the use of anabolic steroids. 
I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned,  I think I heard the analogy of trying to put 6 wheels on a car used by one sports science bod.

Edit: typo
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 22, 2021, 10:57:33 pm


Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).

Is the ban on anabolic steroid not entirely based on objective things?  Measurable increase in strength and recovery?  Along with the objective achievements of countries with doping programs based on the use of anabolic steroids. 
I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned,  I think I heard the analogy of trying to put 6 wheels on a car used by one sports science bod.

Edit: typo

Re: I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned

To give one example, there's a huge amount of research on creatine showing that supplementation usually has a significant impact on performance and recovery. I imagine that little to no research has been done on the aforementioned peptides and other designer drugs that are now available.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: tim palmer on September 22, 2021, 11:12:32 pm


Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).

Is the ban on anabolic steroid not entirely based on objective things?  Measurable increase in strength and recovery?  Along with the objective achievements of countries with doping programs based on the use of anabolic steroids. 
I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned,  I think I heard the analogy of trying to put 6 wheels on a car used by one sports science bod.

Edit: typo

Re: I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned

To give one example, there's a huge amount of research on creatine showing that supplementation usually has a significant impact on performance and recovery. I imagine that little to no research has been done on the aforementioned peptides and other designer drugs that are now available.

I would put my house on the fact that the effect of creatine is tiny and much more variable than that of stanozolol. Hence why one is considered cheating and the other isn't (?).

I am not sure I see the logic in saying that because there are things that may be cheating which aren't banned we should be on board with people using things which definitely are. Besides the fact that these designer drugs can't be that good if the top athletes still pop for the same old things. 

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 22, 2021, 11:58:58 pm


Obviously I'm playing devil's advocate here, as I do think testosterone and other steroids are 'cheating' but that's not based upon anything objective. There's a massive grey area these days in which drugs are acceptable and I don't know where the line is, e.g. various peptides that can allegedly enhance anything from strength, endurance, recovery, and even cognitive/learning enhancements! And many of these aren't even banned in professional sports (yet).

Is the ban on anabolic steroid not entirely based on objective things?  Measurable increase in strength and recovery?  Along with the objective achievements of countries with doping programs based on the use of anabolic steroids. 
I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned,  I think I heard the analogy of trying to put 6 wheels on a car used by one sports science bod.

Edit: typo

Re: I think the majority of supplements do nothing which is why they aren't banned

To give one example, there's a huge amount of research on creatine showing that supplementation usually has a significant impact on performance and recovery. I imagine that little to no research has been done on the aforementioned peptides and other designer drugs that are now available.

I would put my house on the fact that the effect of creatine is tiny and much more variable than that of stanozolol. Hence why one is considered cheating and the other isn't (?).

I am not sure I see the logic in saying that because there are things that may be cheating which aren't banned we should be on board with people using things which definitely are. Besides the fact that these designer drugs can't be that good if the top athletes still pop for the same old things.

Back in my weightlifting days I used to gain a good 10kg on each of my big lifts when starting creatine along with a couple kg of bodyweight (which would disappear upon cessation). The research shows the effect is well above and beyond placebo, but I assume you are correct that stanozolol has a much stronger effect. 

I clarified that steroids weren't ok in my opinion, but that this opinion is drawing an imaginary line in the sand on performance enhancers that are ok and those that aren't. Choosing the acceptable level of enhancement a substance can provide before its not ok is where we stray from objectivity. That was my point. 

Regarding athletes popping for the same old things, well of course they only test positive for substances on the banned list. A quick google search shows me that the modern peptides etc are getting banned by testing bodies as they catch up, and athletes have been testing positive for them following the bans. I can only assume there's plenty of stuff the testing agencies haven't discovered yet. There's a bloke fighting this weekend who's previously weighed in at over 250lbs, shredded, whilst training for boxing - a cardiovascular sport. He hasn't tested positive but if anyone thinks that is completely natural then I have a bridge to sell them.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 08:39:21 am
I think Malc's point is similar, an elite athlete making absolute strength gains in their late 40s/50s has either massively underperformed to an inexplicable degree for 30 years... or they're on gear. If one thinks that can be done naturally without gear... no.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 23, 2021, 08:45:44 am
done naturally without gear... no.
Well Lexicon is pretty damn gearless on the upper headwall...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 08:53:47 am
done naturally without gear... no.
Well Lexicon is pretty damn gearless on the upper headwall...

Apparently not  ;D
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: AJM on September 23, 2021, 09:12:26 am
I think Malc's point is similar, an elite athlete making absolute strength gains in their late 40s/50s has either massively underperformed to an inexplicable degree for 30 years... or they're on gear. If one thinks that can be done naturally without gear... no.

I'm not entirely clear how much of this conversation is merely hypothetical and how much of it relates to Gresham in particular, but if the latter - is he "elite" in strength terms? As he says in the IG post below, things that represent major milestones for him are the sorts of things "the youth" warm up on....

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

He's way better and way stronger than me and all that, so this is absolutely not intending to do down his abilities - but there's "making strength gains as an elite athlete in your 50s" and there's "getting to hang the bm2k slot one armed", and I honestly have no idea whether the latter is still in the realm of elite performance that means it is subject to biological constraints in the way the former is.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nibile on September 23, 2021, 09:13:15 am
There's a bloke fighting this weekend
:offtopic:
I'm looking forward to watching the match. I think that Usik may be a bit too light in this class, he's a natural light heavyweight. I hope that the weight gain will not slow him down, speed and technique are some of his assets. Joshua doesn't have much to prove but he's got to be careful, apparently he hasn't got exactly an iron chin.
 :offtopic:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: wasbeen on September 23, 2021, 09:27:46 am
I think Malc's point is similar, an elite athlete making absolute strength gains in their late 40s/50s has either massively underperformed to an inexplicable degree for 30 years... or they're on gear. If one thinks that can be done naturally without gear... no.

I'm not entirely clear how much of this conversation is merely hypothetical and how much of it relates to Gresham in particular, but if the latter - is he "elite" in strength terms? As he says in the IG post below, things that represent major milestones for him are the sorts of things "the youth" warm up on....

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

He's way better and way stronger than me and all that, so this is absolutely not intending to do down his abilities - but there's "making strength gains as an elite athlete in your 50s" and there's "getting to hang the bm2k slot one armed", and I honestly have no idea whether the latter is still in the realm of elite performance that means it is subject to biological constraints in the way the former is.

I think in Neil's case, much of the improvement has come from getting lighter rather than from getting stronger.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 09:36:32 am
I think Malc's point is similar, an elite athlete making absolute strength gains in their late 40s/50s has either massively underperformed to an inexplicable degree for 30 years... or they're on gear. If one thinks that can be done naturally without gear... no.

I'm not entirely clear how much of this conversation is merely hypothetical and how much of it relates to Gresham in particular, but if the latter - is he "elite" in strength terms? As he says in the IG post below, things that represent major milestones for him are the sorts of things "the youth" warm up on....

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

He's way better and way stronger than me and all that, so this is absolutely not intending to do down his abilities - but there's "making strength gains as an elite athlete in your 50s" and there's "getting to hang the bm2k slot one armed", and I honestly have no idea whether the latter is still in the realm of elite performance that means it is subject to biological constraints in the way the former is.

Relative though isn't it. Strength now compared to strength then. I think Malc's point is;

1) Climbed and trained since he was a teenager.

2) Climbed and trained professionally for like, 30 years.

3) Had made personal strength all time PBs in his 50s

How could that happen? Either he's been training really badly for all that time, like incomprehensible so, or he's been training well and is dedicated (and he totally is, this is Neil Gresham) and is superhumanly gifted in his hormones, or he's found a way to make absolute strength gains in later life after decades of his job to literally be training hard. And there is only one known way to do that.

Incidentally the argument of "teenagers learn to do this as a warm up" to me says well there is only one known way to give you the hormones of a teenager when you are 50.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 23, 2021, 09:39:08 am
"Go on a radical and potentially harmful diet and climb E11" is a strong message for the kids of today  :yes:

I wonder if Malc will cave in and ask the direct question: "Neil Gresham, did you take any steroids or similar performance enhancing substances as part of your recent training to do Lexicon??". And then can get a simple yes / no answer....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: 36chambers on September 23, 2021, 09:43:20 am
https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

Looks like Inspector Malc already had his suspicions when that clip was posted. From the comments: 

Quote from: malcsmithclimbing
"That’s crazy, most guys max out about 30! You’re continuing to get stronger towards 50! What’s the secret?"
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jakk on September 23, 2021, 09:48:15 am
I think Malc's point is similar, an elite athlete making absolute strength gains in their late 40s/50s has either massively underperformed to an inexplicable degree for 30 years... or they're on gear. If one thinks that can be done naturally without gear... no.

I'm not entirely clear how much of this conversation is merely hypothetical and how much of it relates to Gresham in particular, but if the latter - is he "elite" in strength terms? As he says in the IG post below, things that represent major milestones for him are the sorts of things "the youth" warm up on....

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

He's way better and way stronger than me and all that, so this is absolutely not intending to do down his abilities - but there's "making strength gains as an elite athlete in your 50s" and there's "getting to hang the bm2k slot one armed", and I honestly have no idea whether the latter is still in the realm of elite performance that means it is subject to biological constraints in the way the former is.

I think in Neil's case, much of the improvement has come from getting lighter rather than from getting stronger.

I climbed with him quite a bit about 6ish years ago before he moved up north, and I think his approach to nutrition has improved massively in the last few years.
I feel like until recently his sport climbing tactics were still a bit back in the 90s, which makes sense since he basically took a 15 year break to do trad and ice.

So specifically, back then he was still doing the 90s diet (stop eating totally before a trip to drop 5kg) which made him light, but doesn't really make you sustainably strong. Nowadays he has found a diet that he can periodise in and out of, and lets him be both light and strong in those performance periods, then back out of for training.

As for strength, his job has always been to make others strong, but again, he himself was a trad climber, he basically took a long break from training strength for sport of bouldering, so it's not like he hit his genetic potential at 30. So he knows how, but never really hit his peak until the last few years.

Also, this is ~8b+ trad, so easier moves than his 8c+ a couple of years ago. The hardest part here is obviously combining it with the headgame, especially when you consider his history of nasty trad falls and now being 50 with kids.

I feel like the ukc post actually explains pretty well how all these factors came together, with lots of small things adding up, and lots of help from a wide range of other people to focus on each discrete piece necessary for the send.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 23, 2021, 09:50:05 am
Quote
but there's "making strength gains as an elite athlete in your 50s"

I think a lot of the cynicism stems not from doubt of the above, but the reality of translating that into performance on rock, especially facing a >20m fall at your limit in your 50's, and then grading based on a not that similar route you did 20 years ago and remembering it feeling easier, despite the fact that back then you did a lot more actual climbing and a lot less seeking marginal training gains.

Malc's comment seems to be more of a reflection of his own preoccupations. Neil wrote the same stuff about his Malham 8c+ a few years back, he has a training business to promote and if you take Xeno's example you can make marginal gains forever without actually getting anywhere.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: roddersm on September 23, 2021, 09:50:42 am
"Go on a radical and potentially harmful diet and climb E11" is a strong message for the kids of today  :yes:

I wonder if Malc will cave in and ask the direct question: "Neil Gresham, did you take any steroids or similar performance enhancing substances as part of your recent training to do Lexicon??". And then can get a simple yes / no answer....

He more or less has in this thread - https://www.instagram.com/p/CUCjto8oZ6K/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Quote from: malcsmithclimbing
If you’re not highly trained then you can improve whatever your age. If you’ve been training since the 1980’s and expect improvements into your 50’s then you may need to resort to keto dieting, recruitment training, or more realisticaly steroid/ growth hormones
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 09:59:22 am
A better question would be if he is, do we really care that much.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Danny on September 23, 2021, 10:07:45 am
A lot of this 'roid speculation comes across as yet more mud slinging.

Gresham's strength gains are hardly outlandishly elite. He's been training for 30 years, but these one armed max hangs haven't been around for nearly so long as a training staple. Anyone who does them regularly will know how a few kg can make all the difference, and weight is pretty easy to manipulate if you're keen, even in your 50s.

At the end of the day, one arming a 20 mm edge ain't that hard in the grand scheme of elites. And it's not like Lexicon is cutting edge sport grade wise, even for a trad route, even compared to Gresham's own PB. Eric Horst recently one armed the lattice rung for the first time, and he's been training since the Neolithic. I'm not saying it's out of the realms of possiblity that Gresham is on PEDs, but equally, you could well believe that someone who has loads of time to focus on training—as he does—could make some quite modest gains while on a specific mission to climb a project. A project which many on here seem to think is a bit wank and likely overgraded.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 23, 2021, 10:15:21 am
Nibile: Usyk KO 11 for my money.

Regarding strength improvements in later years, has anyone considered prescribed TRT rather than outright steroid use? That's one way to get back 21 year old T levels whilst remaining legal!

I have a couple of friends involved in boxing at a high level and they reckon everyone is maxing out TRT doses to the limit of what is permissible, using non synthetic testosterone so they don't even need a script and TUE.

Disclaimer: none of this is related towards gresh or any climber in particular.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: roddersm on September 23, 2021, 10:34:19 am
Nibile: Usyk KO 11 for my money.

Regarding strength improvements in later years, has anyone considered prescribed TRT rather than outright steroid use? That's one way to get back 21 year old T levels whilst remaining legal!

I have a couple of friends involved in boxing at a high level and they reckon everyone is maxing out TRT doses to the limit of what is permissible, using non synthetic testosterone so they don't even need a script and TUE.

Disclaimer: none of this is related towards gresh or any climber in particular.

But that is the crux of the issue, no? If someone is using synthetic testosterone, unless due to some medical condition, it is pretty disingenuous to promote their performance gains /longevity and then attribute them entirely to improved training methods and diet...
 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: webbo on September 23, 2021, 10:40:58 am
So climber A climbs a new 9B which is then repeated by climber B. Climber A then admits to using PED’s in order get up the route. Who is credited with the first ascent.
In other sports records are removed if an athlete is using PED’s.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 23, 2021, 10:43:47 am
Nibile: Usyk KO 11 for my money.

Regarding strength improvements in later years, has anyone considered prescribed TRT rather than outright steroid use? That's one way to get back 21 year old T levels whilst remaining legal!

I have a couple of friends involved in boxing at a high level and they reckon everyone is maxing out TRT doses to the limit of what is permissible, using non synthetic testosterone so they don't even need a script and TUE.

Disclaimer: none of this is related towards gresh or any climber in particular.

But that is the crux of the issue, no? If someone is using synthetic testosterone, unless due to some medical condition, it is pretty disingenuous to promote their performance gains /longevity and then attribute them entirely to improved training methods and diet...
 

I agree, but even if it is for a medical reason it could still explain someone improving like a 21 year old in their 50's.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Banana finger on September 23, 2021, 10:47:35 am
I love the idea of Gresham having to post a picture of his cock and balls with todays newspaper and an egg for scale
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: roddersm on September 23, 2021, 10:55:20 am
So climber A climbs a new 9B which is then repeated by climber B. Climber A then admits to using PED’s in order get up the route. Who is credited with the first ascent.
In other sports records are removed if an athlete is using PED’s.

Well imo Climber A is still the first ascensionist but I guess sponsors/climbing community/media etc. can form their opinion on what was the most impressive performance.

I don't see how it is much different to other aspects that factor into making an ascent like tactics, there is an expectation that people are being honest..   
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Neil F on September 23, 2021, 11:04:46 am
My seconds were out of sight, and way down the wall as I look the ropes in, and I was amazed to see the middle marker just as the rope came tight.  Yep, the massive 37m 2nd pitch of Redshift is actually 25m…

Neil

Sure they're not 60s?

Yep - definitely a pair of 50s (the same pair I've been climbing on for the last few years)


This does remind me that what has been missing from the coverage of this route is the sort of sober analysis and depth of context we used to get in Rock Notes.

 :-[  :lol:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 23, 2021, 11:06:23 am
https://www.instagram.com/p/CTHcr27DAO_/?utm_medium=share_sheet

Looks like Inspector Malc already had his suspicions when that clip was posted. From the comments: 

Quote from: malcsmithclimbing
"That’s crazy, most guys max out about 30! You’re continuing to get stronger towards 50! What’s the secret?"

Haven’t caught up on the rest of thread so apologies if already mentioned.
But on this clip ^ …  I don’t get the fuss? Why is Malc picking up on this as an example of anything remarkable? I can do a one armer on the bm2k slot - for 5 secs not 10 as per Gresh in that clip. I’m 46. I’m not elite.  Unless I’m mistaken and I’m brilliant. Which I’m not.

As far as suggesting steroid use it’s a poor example as finger strength isn’t much to do with ‘being strong’ in the traditional sense of packing on muscle. Finger tendons get strong very slowly and it’s entirely unremarkable for someone in their late 40s / early 50s to be able to do what Gresham is in that clip.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 23, 2021, 11:11:42 am
This does rather come across as something of a social media ducking stool. The route must be wildly overgraded, or Gresh must be on roids. Either way burn the witch.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 23, 2021, 11:21:09 am
It seems that way.

When the route was originally reported with the typical Gresham media machine fanfare and hyperbole I admit I instinctively rolled my eyes and my first thought was that someone who actually *is* an elite climber - come off it Gresham isn’t, he’s an elite self promoter - to eventually repeat the route and proclaim it soft or a downgrade.

But the shit being flung about potential steroid use seems pretty off to me. Going to have to come up with some far more concrete justification than doing a one-armer or looking lean and ripped in mid-life. Poor show.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 23, 2021, 11:23:29 am
He more or less has in this thread - https://www.instagram.com/p/CUCjto8oZ6K/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
Yup that's exactly my point, he HASN'T asked directly.

Witchhunt, smitchhunt, willhunt, whatever. Another climber has publicly dropped pretty strong hints, that's what this all stems from. The speculation and rubbernecking on here is actually errring towards the side that such hints are unjustified and baseless, ergo no hunt to be had. And with that jolly jaunt on the go we've all forgotten about potential overgrading (which seemed to be limited to a few bah humbugs anyway)...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: AJM on September 23, 2021, 11:46:03 am
Relative though isn't it. Strength now compared to strength then. I think Malc's point is;

1) Climbed and trained since he was a teenager.

2) Climbed and trained professionally for like, 30 years.

3) Had made personal strength all time PBs in his 50s

How could that happen? Either he's been training really badly for all that time, like incomprehensible so, or he's been training well and is dedicated (and he totally is, this is Neil Gresham) and is superhumanly gifted in his hormones, or he's found a way to make absolute strength gains in later life after decades of his job to literally be training hard. And there is only one known way to do that.

Incidentally the argument of "teenagers learn to do this as a warm up" to me says well there is only one known way to give you the hormones of a teenager when you are 50.

I really don't think it's as simple as saying "it's all relative". There's some element of absolute to it. If nothing else, doesn't your argument imply that McClure (9b p.b. at c47?) is probably using? That's the most immediate example I can think of but if we're saying that anyone whose been training for a while and is still getting stronger after 35 or 40 is probably taking steroids then that must be tarring hundreds if not thousands of climbers?

It feels far simpler and more likely that there's a lot of people who got quite good at climbing by climbing lots and not by ever getting that brute strong and whilst carrying various inefficiencies in training or diet (as others with direct experience have noted w.r.t the latter) that mean that they never really maxed out their strength when younger and therefore have more potential to make strength improvements as they get older. To be fair, anyone who wasn't solely training as a boulderer when younger probably had inefficient training from the perspective of maximising brute strength gains since they were "wasting" time getting fit.

Anyway, as others are saying, this is coming across as a bit of a bullshit witch-hunt. I don't know if Malc has personal history with Gresham, or whether his background in being extremely strong means he's looking at this through a very specific pure strength focused lens (when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail and all that), but this feels like pretty weak stuff.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 11:55:47 am
I can totally see where you are coming from. There is a spectrum from "entirely clean" to "Olympic Weightlifting" in terms of how juiced a sport is. I assume every single competitive weightlifter who isn't 100% shit is doping. Same with cycling. Bit less with running but still like yeah probably. I'm not sure where I sit with climbing.

There's a few reasons why Neil Gresham could be posting raw feats of strength PBs at his age. Malc thinks it's cos he's juicing. I'm not saying he is but if it turns out he was I'd not be that surprised.

Anyway I don't want to witch hunt him. If he is i don't care and it doesn't invalidate his success imo.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: roddersm on September 23, 2021, 12:00:30 pm
[Anyway, as others are saying, this is coming across as a bit of a bullshit witch-hunt. I don't know if Malc has personal history with Gresham, or whether his background in being extremely strong means he's looking at this through a very specific pure strength focused lens (when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail and all that), but this feels like pretty weak stuff.

I agree, although I think the point about use of PEDs/TRT and the ethics around it in climbing is valid, if he has something specific on Gresham he should share it, otherwise it comes across petty and bit nasty to single him out publicly like this....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Will Hunt on September 23, 2021, 12:47:32 pm
He more or less has in this thread - https://www.instagram.com/p/CUCjto8oZ6K/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
Yup that's exactly my point, he HASN'T asked directly.

Witchhunt, smitchhunt, willhunt, whatever. Another climber has publicly dropped pretty strong hints, that's what this all stems from. The speculation and rubbernecking on here is actually errring towards the side that such hints are unjustified and baseless, ergo no hunt to be had. And with that jolly jaunt on the go we've all forgotten about potential overgrading (which seemed to be limited to a few bah humbugs anyway)...

Don't bring me into this! Malc was slagging some bloke for doing something at Dumby wrong wasn't he? He just sounds a bit bitter. Perhaps he's bought too much into the coaching business' marketing of "Neil's been training like a bastard for 30 years" which probably ought to be caveated to say that he went off to be a trad dad for 15 of those.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Rocksteady on September 23, 2021, 12:54:28 pm
Malc is famous for being strong (the strongest?) and isn't as strong as he used to be.

Gresh is famous for...what? In terms of climbing it's probably being early repeater of Indian Face? And Equilibrium? Main requirement for those is headgame not steel fingers.
Then otherwise it seems to me Gresh is the first person I'm aware of who figured out how to make a living from climbing without being a cutting edge climber. I.e. coach, magazine articles on training, big publicity of his ascents in climbing media, focus on winter routes because there's more equipment needed so better sponsorship potential etc. etc.
I can see how that creates a lot of jealousy and vitriol from people who are a lot stronger with more significant climbing achievements but don't have the following or make the same money from it. So also creates motivation for hacking Gresh down.

In terms of Gresh's coaching, in the past it's always been heavily movement based. I'm sure he's done a lot of fingerboarding but the training programmes now are massively different even from when I started climbing in 2007-2008. The idea that you do everything on 20mm edge half-crimps is pretty new I think, maybe only since the evidence from Eva Lopez on training effect being better from larger holds with weights than training on smaller holds, repeaters etc? And has taken a while to crossover into effective programmes.

Anyway that's a really long way of saying that to my mind Gresh's finger strength improvements are eminently feasible without roids. Simplest explanation is he's got better at that sort of specific training. And that helps maintain a reasonable level of climbing ability, especially with the extreme levels of preparation he's clearly done to climb this route.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: gme on September 23, 2021, 01:12:20 pm
This thread is approaching a new low point for the site, a bitter, armchair critic, old mans club, low point.

Neils done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together and whilst he can come over as overtly commercial for many tastes i have no idea how you all think he deserves the shit talk that has being going on in this thread.

Hes gone out of his way to climb what looks like a great route, good enough for Steve and Dave mc to make the effort to go try it, hes given it a grade based on what he thinks but that people doubt and might, with time, be proved to be wrong (didn't everyones hero Megos just do the same, wrote loads about it and even made a film) and wrote a bit of a long winded piece that may or may not be to peoples taste and now hes a drug taking, over grading cheat. WTF.

And re his amazing strength gains in his 50s what a crock of shit. If i lost a stone through dieting i could hang the beastmaker edge for 10 secs and do one armers no problem at all which would be a PB, its not hard and i would guess theirs loads of 50+ people could do it. Neils never been a strong boulderer so it no surprise that with a bit of focus and loosing a load of weight hes managed to do what loads of 7C boulders can do.

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: wasbeen on September 23, 2021, 01:25:49 pm
People generally admire natural talent more than hard work and grafting.  Not entirely sure why. Perhaps it holds a mirror to ourselfs as to what we could achieve if we were more pshyced, disciplined, hard working etc.


Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IS2 on September 23, 2021, 01:28:33 pm
The idea that you can’t get stronger over 30 or 40 or whatever, seems flawed…. I’m very old,71, and changed how I train for single hand lock off in January, after many years of training two handed with added weights.
Previous max 20mm edge two hands was BW plus 25kg … total 85kg. Started single hang 15mm edge in Jan at 37kg, today I did 50kg Right hand and 47kg left hand. ( was close to this in May but been climbing lots so it dropped off, started training it again at the start of Sept).

No drugs involved, just a change of training protocol.

Obviously I’ve been training ( this particular ability ) sub optimally for the last 40 years. I suspect sub optimal training is endemic in climbing training even among among elite climbers.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 01:29:52 pm
This thread is approaching a new low point for the site, a bitter, armchair critic, old mans club, low point.

Neils done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together and whilst he can come over as overtly commercial for many tastes i have no idea how you all think he deserves the shit talk that has being going on in this thread.

Hes gone out of his way to climb what looks like a great route, good enough for Steve and Dave mc to make the effort to go try it, hes given it a grade based on what he thinks but that people doubt and might, with time, be proved to be wrong (didn't everyones hero Megos just do the same, wrote loads about it and even made a film) and wrote a bit of a long winded piece that may or may not be to peoples taste and now hes a drug taking, over grading cheat. WTF.

And re his amazing strength gains in his 50s what a crock of shit. If i lost a stone through dieting i could hang the beastmaker edge for 10 secs and do one armers no problem at all which would be a PB, its not hard and i would guess theirs loads of 50+ people could do it. Neils never been a strong boulderer so it no surprise that with a bit of focus and loosing a load of weight hes managed to do what loads of 7C boulders can do.

I don't think he's a cheat or an overgrader. I like Gresham, he's done nails stuff, he has done loads for British climbing as you say, and he seems like a good bloke.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: nik at work on September 23, 2021, 01:35:01 pm
Bon effort to Gresham

Otherwise what Gav said.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Paul B on September 23, 2021, 01:48:58 pm
And re his amazing strength gains in his 50s what a crock of shit. If i lost a stone through dieting i could hang the beastmaker edge for 10 secs and do one armers no problem at all which would be a PB, its not hard and i would guess theirs loads of 50+ people could do it. Neils never been a strong boulderer so it no surprise that with a bit of focus and loosing a load of weight hes managed to do what loads of 7C boulders can do.

The hardest thing I've found to believe on this thread is that the bloke that wrote all of the training articles for OTE I consumed as youth wasn't able to do that many one armers until this point in life. It feels a bit like Ste Mc saying he couldn't do one which seemed entirely more likely to be haven't tried/not bothered!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Andy B on September 23, 2021, 01:59:55 pm
Wot Gav and Bonjoy said.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: andy popp on September 23, 2021, 02:44:21 pm
I agree that the thread has taken a sorry turn. The UKC press release/report was certainly not to my taste, and in ways that were about more than just the style or choice of words. But I don't think anyone could ever doubt Neil's commitment, motivation and passion. It doesn't look like the most amazing line in the world, but I have no real opinion on the quality of route or the grade. How could I. I've seen that wall once nearly 40 years ago and whatever grade it is, it's miles above anything I was ever capable of. Some of the speculation on the grade was informed, but much of it was not. The accusations of use of PED are too much. If Malc has genuine grounds for thinking that's what happened then he should say so. At the moment he's just providing cover for others to speculate on no real basis.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 23, 2021, 02:46:53 pm
+1 to Gav's post

Paul - I remember Steve getting an injured finger many years back (maybe 2012 or so?), and going from "I can't do a one armer" to doing 2 or 3 with perfect form in a row with a pause at the bottom in between... In about 2 weeks... It was very apparent that "I can't" meant "I've never really tried properly". P.s. it's very possible to write nerdy things about training and be unable to smash out multiple one armers!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: steveri on September 23, 2021, 02:58:21 pm
I've a feeling the comment from Malcolm Smith was take out of context. I can't find it now but there was a couple of follow ups between NG and MS along the lines of 'I put it down to this and this', 'nice work, you've done well', 'I train better and harder than when we used to train together years ago'. I'm not sure there *was* an accusatory subtext.

I can't find the comments now and wonder if they've been deleted because of the way this thing has grown legs and been (mis)read??
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Paul B on September 23, 2021, 03:13:51 pm
P.s. it's very possible to write nerdy things about training and be unable to smash out multiple one armers!

Yeah completely, but the image given off by the OTE articles wasn't one of someone buried in the nerdy details of training but someone who trained (a LOT).

Steveri, I think you should take a look at the comments on others posts further back. They're there and Bonjoy is on the money!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 23, 2021, 03:30:34 pm
Just for the avoidance of doubt my comment about Gresh, Mcclure and Macleod all having to take steroids to climb this new E9 and that it being related to Brexit was said tongue in cheek.

I think they’re all great. Except Brexit.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Pantontino on September 23, 2021, 03:47:22 pm
My seconds were out of sight, and way down the wall as I look the ropes in, and I was amazed to see the middle marker just as the rope came tight.  Yep, the massive 37m 2nd pitch of Redshift is actually 25m…

Neil

Sure they're not 60s?

Yep - definitely a pair of 50s (the same pair I've been climbing on for the last few years)


This does remind me that what has been missing from the coverage of this route is the sort of sober analysis and depth of context we used to get in Rock Notes.

 :-[  :lol:

Hands up, I made a mistake there (both in NWR and GS). It was in the '88 CC Gogarth guide as 37m and I didn't spot the error. Daft really as it's dead obvious that it's not that long when you look at the topo.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: roddersm on September 23, 2021, 03:54:48 pm
I've a feeling the comment from Malcolm Smith was take out of context. I can't find it now but there was a couple of follow ups between NG and MS along the lines of 'I put it down to this and this', 'nice work, you've done well', 'I train better and harder than when we used to train together years ago'. I'm not sure there *was* an accusatory subtext.

I can't find the comments now and wonder if they've been deleted because of the way this thing has grown legs and been (mis)read??

Malc's account looks to have been suspended/removed, hence any comments deleted.

Edit: it is back up minus the steroid post...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Nibile on September 23, 2021, 05:16:23 pm
Nibile: Usyk KO 11 for my money
Do you mean Usyk wins by ko or loses by ko?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 23, 2021, 06:19:16 pm
Nice write up from Steve
https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2021/09/second_ascent_of_lexicon_e11_7a_by_steve_mcclure-72884

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 23, 2021, 06:34:30 pm
Cool write-up. Sounds like a sick effort.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Doylo on September 23, 2021, 06:42:51 pm
Bunch of cunts.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Oldmanmatt on September 23, 2021, 06:58:57 pm
Bunch of cunts.

Giggle.

I’m 50.
Not climbing much, at the mo, but still training hard; if not climbing specific.
The only PED I’m using is Ibuprofen which allows me to almost function the day after a heavy session.
I’m setting benchmarks which exceed my own PB’s in my 20s. Pushed a 170kg bench yesterday, 10 higher than I’ve ever done before. Last time I lifted seriously was early 90s.
I can hold an Iron Cross on the rings, again, not since about ‘94 and I’m 9kg heavier than I was then.
I have been training these things since January.
I’ve been a personal trainer and coach for about ten years now, but I’ve always trained hard and gone hard in the things I do.
I’ve just learned more and evolved over time. The whole field has (regardless of the specific sport).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 23, 2021, 07:58:28 pm
I’m setting benchmarks which exceed my own PB’s in my 20s. Pushed a 170kg bench yesterday, 10 higher than I’ve ever done before. Last time I lifted seriously was early 90s.

I don’t know anything about bench but do you mean lbs ?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Oldmanmatt on September 23, 2021, 08:28:17 pm
Nope. 😁 I am training hard.
I did 122.6 (don’t ask about the .6) to failure on Tuesday, to predict my 1rm and managed 9 reps. That indicated a 158/59 1rm. So I went for it on Wed, and because I just felt good, I put an extra ten on.
Surprised I didn’t pop a vein in m’ brain, but still here.

2xBW.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark s on September 23, 2021, 08:46:07 pm
Going around pointing the "you are on steroids" stick around isn't very clever.
I have had it in the past to which my answer was yeah so fucking what. If people want to say its cheating, that's their opinion, I disagree. Im open about my bodybuilding past. 3 years ago I was still climbing bits and bobs while going to the gym alot. I was twice as strong as I am now but climbed like a complete fucking punter.
Of course older climbers can climb harder than before. I'm getting better than I was before and I haven't touched gear for over 2 years. I'm weaker but lighter.

Well done Neil and Steve for the quick repeat and I'm sure Franco will do it at some point
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on September 23, 2021, 09:31:42 pm
Great post gme.

a bitter, armchair critic, old man

I know he’s traditionally a pin-up for this forum but this is certainly how Malc Smith comes across recently. Young lad climbs Hubble? Doesn’t count ‘cos he used a kneepad. Older climbers do a new high-profile trad route? Must be on steroids.  ::)

You’d think someone who’d climbed at the cutting edge himself would feel secure enough to be humble when other climbers do well, at least in public.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: User deactivated. on September 23, 2021, 10:07:34 pm
Nibile: Usyk KO 11 for my money
Do you mean Usyk wins by ko or loses by ko?

I fancy Usyk to win by KO, which I'm aware is not a very popular prediction, but I see a referee stoppage with Joshua out on his feet. I've been an Usyk fanboy since he was in the amateurs, so could be biased, but I do like Joshua too. Great fight.

Pushed a 170kg bench yesterday


Mutant
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: lagerstarfish on September 23, 2021, 10:11:41 pm

2xBW.

bench press?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Oldmanmatt on September 23, 2021, 10:19:44 pm

2xBW.

bench press?

Well, yeah. I’m a cuddly 85kg.
And a bit.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on September 23, 2021, 10:31:08 pm
Bon effort to Gresham

Otherwise what Gav said.

Yep, thanks Gav for your post  :thumbsup:  +1

What I'm taking away from this thread is a heap of new psyche for new benchmarks..

And that 50+ is the new 30  ;)

I remember walking down the road after a session on Pollitt's board. I must have been 22/23, and thinking "I guess that's it; mountaineering for me from now on" (except I missed that bit out).

I think that the way we pick our battles/challenges, changes as we get older.

When we're younger, I think we can be more motivated by a sense of how our performance reflects on ourselves; that can drive us. However, taking a step back, and asking "Actually, what is possible?", is something we are perhaps only able to do with a degree of detachment that may only come with age anyway.

Totally agree with the comments about the level of physical performance we're talking about here being nothing even remotely unusual.

The reference to other artificial means just comes across as the sort of bollocks spouted by folk who don't want to acknowledge the level of focused effort that some people are prepared to invest in their long term goals.

For me, Gresh's psyche comes as much as anything, from the relief and payback from the risk of making that investment.

It should come across as nothing other than a source of inspiration.

 :boxing:  :punk:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Andy F on September 23, 2021, 11:49:47 pm
Ben Moon: 9a at 49
Ste Mac: 9b at 49
Stevie Haston: 8c+/9a at 52

Just saying...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 24, 2021, 09:21:03 am
Good post GME.

now hes a drug taking, over grading cheat. WTF.

I agree it's important to be aware to what extent the forum response is portraying him as a drug taking, over grading cheat, because that would be a pretty damn harsh response to his new route. To help out with this I've had a quick scan through the thread (prior to your post) and determined this:

Posters directly accusing him of drug taking:
-

Posters raising suspicions (mild or strong) of him drug taking:
-

Posters directly accusing him of over grading:
-

Posters raising suspicions (mild or strong) of him over grading:
Nike Air
Tony S
IanP
northern yob

Posters rubbernecking a potential Dave Mac downgrade:
(does not imply personal suspicions of over grading and may be more focused on DMac's downgrading habits)
Duncan campbell
Will Hunt
Fiend

Posters replying not accusing him of over grading nor drug taking:
(may include criticism of the UKC article or independence of the route etc etc, may also include off-topic posts)
SAChris
shurt
erm, sam
Danny
Wellsy
Johnny Brown
mark20
Adam Lincoln
shark
teestub
guy percival
Ged
petejh
ali k
cheque
Bonjoy
Bradders
Ross Barker
duncan
Footwork
dunnyg
grimer
Fultonious
Will Hunt
andy popp
Yossarian
galpinos
colin8ll
jwi
remus
abarro81
DAVETHOMAS90
cowboyhat
PaulB
andy moles
jakk
carlisle slapper
haydn jones
Nails
Neil F
seankenny
turnipturned
Serpico
Liamhutch89
tim palmer
AJM
Nibile
wasbeen
36chambers
roddersm
Banana finger
Rocksteady

Posters specifically interested in Gresh's testicles:
Doylo

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark s on September 24, 2021, 09:32:15 am
Great post gme.

a bitter, armchair critic, old man

I know he’s traditionally a pin-up for this forum but this is certainly how Malc Smith comes across recently. Young lad climbs Hubble? Doesn’t count ‘cos he used a kneepad. Older climbers do a new high-profile trad route? Must be on steroids.  ::)

You’d think someone who’d climbed at the cutting edge himself would feel secure enough to be humble when other climbers do well, at least in public.

Nail on the head

The fact he has deleted said post says alot.

I know I can be a grumpy old twat with some climbing topics but seeing hard routes get done is inspiring and is what we should be seeing, especially after a summer of Olympic climbing (see earlier comment)

If I was him I'd make a public apology


I'm half tempted to be a Guinea pig and see how steroids would or would not benefit a climber. I am sceptical it would be a huge leap. A low dose to allow training everyday would be the best method. That's where I'd fall down as once a week hanging from a 20mm strip of wood is enough. Higher doses would only add weight. Muscle strength increase is fast, tendons cannot keep up and as soon as you pull hard the injuries will come.
Overall I don't see the point.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 24, 2021, 09:47:22 am
Great post gme.

a bitter, armchair critic, old man

I know he’s traditionally a pin-up for this forum but this is certainly how Malc Smith comes across recently. Young lad climbs Hubble? Doesn’t count ‘cos he used a kneepad. Older climbers do a new high-profile trad route? Must be on steroids.  ::)

You’d think someone who’d climbed at the cutting edge himself would feel secure enough to be humble when other climbers do well, at least in public.

Nail on the head

The fact he has deleted said post says alot.

I know I can be a grumpy old twat with some climbing topics but seeing hard routes get done is inspiring and is what we should be seeing, especially after a summer of Olympic climbing (see earlier comment)

If I was him I'd make a public apology


I'm half tempted to be a Guinea pig and see how steroids would or would not benefit a climber. I am sceptical it would be a huge leap. A low dose to allow training everyday would be the best method. That's where I'd fall down as once a week hanging from a 20mm strip of wood is enough. Higher doses would only add weight. Muscle strength increase is fast, tendons cannot keep up and as soon as you pull hard the injuries will come.
Overall I don't see the point.

I think the training every day benefit would be pretty substantial. There's no doubt in my mind that PEDs could benefit climbers. But yeah not like power lifting!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Oldmanmatt on September 24, 2021, 09:49:21 am
Great post gme.

a bitter, armchair critic, old man

I know he’s traditionally a pin-up for this forum but this is certainly how Malc Smith comes across recently. Young lad climbs Hubble? Doesn’t count ‘cos he used a kneepad. Older climbers do a new high-profile trad route? Must be on steroids.  ::)

You’d think someone who’d climbed at the cutting edge himself would feel secure enough to be humble when other climbers do well, at least in public.

Nail on the head

The fact he has deleted said post says alot.

I know I can be a grumpy old twat with some climbing topics but seeing hard routes get done is inspiring and is what we should be seeing, especially after a summer of Olympic climbing (see earlier comment)

If I was him I'd make a public apology


I'm half tempted to be a Guinea pig and see how steroids would or would not benefit a climber. I am sceptical it would be a huge leap. A low dose to allow training everyday would be the best method. That's where I'd fall down as once a week hanging from a 20mm strip of wood is enough. Higher doses would only add weight. Muscle strength increase is fast, tendons cannot keep up and as soon as you pull hard the injuries will come.
Overall I don't see the point.

Yup. I once heard a mate refer to it as “the twang juice” after the sound of a biceps insertion leaving home to settle closer to the shoulder, or similar…
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 24, 2021, 09:54:35 am
Not surprised Malc has deleted that post, seemed like a real random one.

Totally agree with Fiend, I think Gav's comments would have been far better directed at Malc (particularly given he is one of the few forum members who might have his number). Having reread the last couple of pages pretty much every post is looking at Malc's comment and concluding it is baseless, or discussing drugs in sport in a general way. The only post that could be read as endorsing Malc's conclusion makes more sense as an attempt to work through his logic.

The enthusiastic endorsement of Gav's post suggests either I've missed something major, or there are a lot of skim-readers on the forum.

I'm sure as baffled and disappointed by Malc's comments as Neil probably is, there must also be an acknowledgement that you don't attract bizarre criticism form such high profile pundits without doing something pretty exceptional in the first place. I'm actually struggling think of a bigger compliment to your training than Malcolm declaring you must be on drugs, it's like when people start quizzing you about what chalk or rubber you're using because they can't quite believe the gulf in performance. Fucking skill mate.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 24, 2021, 10:06:48 am
Fiend can you stick me down also for ‘interested in Gresh’s balls’.
Ta.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 24, 2021, 10:09:07 am
Sorry, too late to modify the post, but I think it's safe to say that most, if not all, of the people who are posting but not accusing of over-grading nor drug-taking are still definitely interested in Gresh's balls. It's just that Doylo is ONLY interested in those....





FWIW, in the interest of fairness, there has been a fair amount of criticism of the UKC article and some criticism of the purity / quality of the actual line, which may or may not be fair game for the armchair punt-dits.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 24, 2021, 10:18:11 am
Neils done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together

While I agree, I think, with the general sentiment of your rant this stuck out to me as an odd thing to say.
In a spirit of ‘what have the Romans ever done for us?’, can you expand on what it is you think that Neil has done for UK climbing that’s more than the rest of us put together?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 24, 2021, 10:22:40 am
I thought the same, noting the presence of some keen developers, guide book writers and climbing media producers.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Yossarian on September 24, 2021, 10:23:22 am
Off the top of my head, inspired thousands of London climbers to jump up and down on the spot and wave their hands in circles of varying radii...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 24, 2021, 10:27:47 am
I'm half tempted to be a Guinea pig and see how steroids would or would not benefit a climber.

I think hypothetically, as with creatine, it would be the faster recovery at lower doses, rather than any muscle building that would be the main benefit for climbing. Being able to have 6 well recovered sessions a week rather than 5 would make a massive difference for a pro over a year. Pro cyclists still get positive tests for nandrolone etc. and they definitely aren’t interested in increasing mass!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 24, 2021, 10:28:38 am
Off the top of my head, inspired thousands of London climbers to jump up and down on the spot and wave their hands in circles of varying radii...

Surely a negative contribution if anything then? ;)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 24, 2021, 10:38:01 am
Quote
FWIW, in the interest of fairness, there has been a fair amount of criticism of the UKC article and some criticism of the purity / quality of the actual line, which may or may not be fair game for the armchair punt-dits.

It's a climbing forum. Clearly it is fair game. If you just want back-slapping stick to congratulatory commenting on Instagram and characterising absolutely anything else as 'the haters'.

Quote
Surely a negative contribution if anything then?

Neil has a broad CV that only a handful can compare to and maybe Dave Mac is the only obvious person to have comfortably exceeded it, and his contribution to DWS was pretty major. So he deserves respect. But being the first pro climber to move to London to further their career definitely suggests that pro climbing is not going where many of us would like it to be going. Is that positive? For the people he inspired, yes. For climbing generally there is a debate to be had. And did Neil just do what he had to or did he help create that environment? Who knows. But it's encouraging to see he wasn't trapped by it, and moving to Kendal and doing hard new routes in the Lakes is surely something we can endorse.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark s on September 24, 2021, 10:38:49 am
Not surprised Malc has deleted that post, seemed like a real random one.

Totally agree with Fiend, I think Gav's comments would have been far better directed at Malc (particularly given he is one of the few forum members who might have his number). Having reread the last couple of pages pretty much every post is looking at Malc's comment and concluding it is baseless, or discussing drugs in sport in a general way. The only post that could be read as endorsing Malc's conclusion makes more sense as an attempt to work through his logic.

The enthusiastic endorsement of Gav's post suggests either I've missed something major, or there are a lot of skim-readers on the forum.

I'm sure as baffled and disappointed by Malc's comments as Neil probably is, there must also be an acknowledgement that you don't attract bizarre criticism form such high profile pundits without doing something pretty exceptional in the first place. I'm actually struggling think of a bigger compliment to your training than Malcolm declaring you must be on drugs, it's like when people start quizzing you about what chalk or rubber you're using because they can't quite believe the gulf in performance. Fucking skill mate.

Getting accused of being on steroids is the best compliment you can have over your training.

If there was a drug to give you the cahoons like Neil and Steve, I want some.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on September 24, 2021, 10:58:22 am
Quote
FWIW, in the interest of fairness, there has been a fair amount of criticism of the UKC article and some criticism of the purity / quality of the actual line, which may or may not be fair game for the armchair punt-dits.

It's a climbing forum. Clearly it is fair game. If you just want back-slapping stick to congratulatory commenting on Instagram and characterising absolutely anything else as 'the haters'.

Quote
Surely a negative contribution if anything then?

Neil has a broad CV that only a handful can compare to and maybe Dave Mac is the only obvious person to have comfortably exceeded it, and his contribution to DWS was pretty major. So he deserves respect. But being the first pro climber to move to London to further their career definitely suggests that pro climbing is not going where many of us would like it to be going. Is that positive? For the people he inspired, yes. For climbing generally there is a debate to be had. And did Neil just do what he had to or did he help create that environment? Who knows. But it's encouraging to see he wasn't trapped by it, and moving to Kendal and doing hard new routes in the Lakes is surely something we can endorse.

The guy is from London.  I'm not sure career can be the only reason he moved there. 

Also, is a coach the same as a pro climber?  I don't think it is.  He was making money by coaching people, not by climbing non-significant routes and making a big deal out of them.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 24, 2021, 11:05:16 am
Quote
The guy is from London.  I'm not sure career can be the only reason he moved there.

Clearly he's free to do whatever he wants. The comment was in the context of the idea that he has "done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together".

Quote
climbing non-significant routes and making a big deal out of them

Are there any pro climbers in the UK making a living like that? Maybe Steve Mac? The rest are all coaching or have a job/ business.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 24, 2021, 11:31:30 am

Quote
climbing non-significant routes and making a big deal out of them

Are there any pro climbers in the UK making a living like that? Maybe Steve Mac? The rest are all coaching or have a job/ business.

Well I don’t think he can be accused of bigging up non-significant routes (I’m sure you didn’t mean to imply that) and he doesn’t live off sponsorship - his day job is route setting, coaching and other bits and bobs.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: SA Chris on September 24, 2021, 11:42:36 am

Are there any pro climbers in the UK making a living like that?


Surely some of the young comp wads are living (although maybe not making a living ?) off not doing any routes at all, are they defined as pros though? 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Johnny Brown on September 24, 2021, 12:00:29 pm
Quote
Well I don’t think he can be accused of bigging up non-significant routes (I’m sure you didn’t mean to imply that)

Sorry yeah just read it as doing significant routes! Bloody skim-readers eh!

Quote
his day job is route setting, coaching and other bits and bobs

So yeah none then. I think Dunnie managed it for a bit in the nineties? (Mostly getting paid to big up new routes, arguments about significance notwithstanding).

Quote
Surely some of the young comp wads are living (although maybe not making a living ?) off not doing any routes at all

And arguably not doing much in comps either? I've no idea if they're making a living tbh, but if they are all bathing in Cristal on the Sport England gravy train you can see why no one under 30 is bothering much with hard trad.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on September 24, 2021, 12:01:55 pm
Quote
Surely a negative contribution if anything then?

Neil has a broad CV that only a handful can compare to and maybe Dave Mac is the only obvious person to have comfortably exceeded it, and his contribution to DWS was pretty major. So he deserves respect. But being the first pro climber to move to London to further their career definitely suggests that pro climbing is not going where many of us would like it to be going. Is that positive? For the people he inspired, yes. For climbing generally there is a debate to be had. And did Neil just do what he had to or did he help create that environment? Who knows. But it's encouraging to see he wasn't trapped by it, and moving to Kendal and doing hard new routes in the Lakes is surely something we can endorse.

My tongue was firmly in cheek with my comment....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: sxrxg on September 24, 2021, 12:15:12 pm
Quote

The guy is from London.  I'm not sure career can be the only reason he moved there. 

Also, is a coach the same as a pro climber?  I don't think it is.  He was making money by coaching people, not by climbing non-significant routes and making a big deal out of them.

Is this not similar to a PGA professional in golf vs a touring professional golfer? Both would be classed as golf professionals as it is how they make a living just one makes a living coaching and running golf clubs whereas the other makes money from competition winnings. Could we not have a similar setup in climbing where a minimum climbing standard is required, minimum time working within the industry, and the requirement to undertake professional training each year and stay current with the latest standards? Golf is obviously a very old sport and very well developed so it may take significant period before climbing gets something similar to the PGA membership scheme. There is also the debate about if climbing should have this level of professional involvement or if as a community we wish to stay more 'grass roots'.

You also have golf influencers making money off Instagram/YouTube etc, I think that most of these whilst making a living from golf would consider themselves social media professionals and not golf professionals. Liam from golfmates Youtube as an example, there is also Rick Shiels however he is also a PGA professional. I can't really think of any obvious examples in climbing though that would be making a living from this, possibly Bouldering Bobat are getting a decent amount of advertising with over a million views on some YouTube videos.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on September 24, 2021, 04:51:37 pm
Quote
The guy is from London.  I'm not sure career can be the only reason he moved there.

Clearly he's free to do whatever he wants. The comment was in the context of the idea that he has "done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together".

Quote
climbing non-significant routes and making a big deal out of them

Are there any pro climbers in the UK making a living like that? Maybe Steve Mac? The rest are all coaching or have a job/ business.

How does living in london affect one's ability to make a big contribution (whatever that means) to climbing? Mick Fowler etc.

I don't think there's many pro climbers making an actual living full stop, but theres definitely people who are trying to be pro climbers, and make money from just going climbing. I don't think Gresh does that (certainly not from the media I see), he very clearly makes his money by doing a job within the climbing industry. They're quite different.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Banana finger on September 24, 2021, 06:22:31 pm
Not surprised Malc has deleted that post, seemed like a real random one.

Totally agree with Fiend, I think Gav's comments would have been far better directed at Malc (particularly given he is one of the few forum members who might have his number). Having reread the last couple of pages pretty much every post is looking at Malc's comment and concluding it is baseless, or discussing drugs in sport in a general way. The only post that could be read as endorsing Malc's conclusion makes more sense as an attempt to work through his logic.

The enthusiastic endorsement of Gav's post suggests either I've missed something major, or there are a lot of skim-readers on the forum.

I'm sure as baffled and disappointed by Malc's comments as Neil probably is, there must also be an acknowledgement that you don't attract bizarre criticism form such high profile pundits without doing something pretty exceptional in the first place. I'm actually struggling think of a bigger compliment to your training than Malcolm declaring you must be on drugs, it's like when people start quizzing you about what chalk or rubber you're using because they can't quite believe the gulf in performance. Fucking skill mate.

Getting accused of being on steroids is the best compliment you can have over your training.

If there was a drug to give you the cahoons like Neil and Steve, I want some.

coke
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jakk on September 24, 2021, 07:12:19 pm

I don't think there's many pro climbers making an actual living full stop, but theres definitely people who are trying to be pro climbers, and make money from just going climbing.

There was some interesting talk about this topic in a recent episode of the Climbing Gold podcast (honnold's one) with the US national team where they touched on the relative incentives there vs in Europe.

In the US it is relatively easy to earn actual money from shoe sponsors etc from climbing hard stuff outdoors, since for whatever reason that's what they value, but in Europe money for climbing is more likely to come from a federation, and so you ended up with this split of more strong comp climbers here and more strong outdoor climbers there.

It's obviously more complex than that but it's at least part of the incentive structure. This was from the people running Team USA, so they were trying to basically give more support themselves so more younguns do comps instead of goimg to live in a van in the mountains.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on September 24, 2021, 10:51:14 pm
I've a feeling the comment from Malcolm Smith was take out of context. I can't find it now but there was a couple of follow ups between NG and MS along the lines of 'I put it down to this and this', 'nice work, you've done well', 'I train better and harder than when we used to train together years ago'. I'm not sure there *was* an accusatory subtext.

I can't find the comments now and wonder if they've been deleted because of the way this thing has grown legs and been (mis)read??

Just what I was looking for Steveri  ;D

You beat me to it.
I didn't like the inference that Malc is now some sort of washed up old man, dribbling from his armchair.
I can't imagine there being any beef between them (Gresh/Malc), and was thinking that Malcolm will have known the physical level we're talking about here.

In that context, I can see how his remarks about Hubble sans pad may have been directed towards cutting through the spin.

Replying to Barrows:

"it's very possible to write nerdy things about training and be unable to smash out multiple one armers!"

I won't take it personally. Thanks.
 ;D
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shurt on September 24, 2021, 11:48:09 pm
This thread is approaching a new low point for the site, a bitter, armchair critic, old mans club, low point.

I can see there has been a fair amount of mug slinging yes but I think it's fair to say that if you are expecting a Gresh back slapping fest then this isn't really the place. People question stuff, points are made about grades or even steroids. So what, it's an internet forum. I don't remember anyone actually directly accusing him. People aren't beyond criticism because they've climbed an E11. I'm not sure the 9 page write up on UKC helped.

Neils done more for UK climbing than the rest of us put together and whilst he can come over as overtly commercial for many tastes i have no idea how you all think he deserves the shit talk that has being going on in this thread.

I think Neil has done more to promote Neil Gresham than anyone else, yes he's done some good stuff for UK climbing, nice one. People are allowed to not like the way he goes about promoting himself and re: shit talk we should remember that massive shit done at the bottom of that route in the Lakes that he was involved in.

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 25, 2021, 08:41:51 am
Yes, let's not forget some completely unrelated gossip from years back.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 25, 2021, 08:57:39 am
Turdgate was great fun but IIRC Gresh was on the other side, i.e. it seemed to be that someone did a shit beneath a potential new micro-route to prevent some young lass doing the first ascent which was going to be promoted as some VS-to-E7 fa fairytale and partly attributed to Masterclass coaching, thus he was one of the "victims" in the debacle.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shurt on September 25, 2021, 09:36:40 am
Ok, I should have put loads of emojis or something with the final comment. Not entirely serious just trying to inject some brevity into the situation...
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: ali k on September 25, 2021, 09:41:08 am
Turdgate was great fun but IIRC Gresh was on the other side, thus he was one of the "victims" in the debacle.
Unnecessary details. Not the right thread for facts this one. Anyway it was Franco that did the shitting - it’s all in the new Alastair Lee film.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on September 25, 2021, 09:43:59 am
They could have used the turd as a +1 E grade due to the hygiene risk and claimed E8. Missed a trick there.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Teaboy on September 25, 2021, 01:43:13 pm
I can see there has been a fair amount of mug slinging yes but I think it's fair to say that if you are expecting a Gresh back slapping fest then this isn't really the place. People question stuff, points are made about grades or even steroids. So what, it's an internet forum. I don't remember anyone actually directly accusing him. People aren't beyond criticism because they've climbed an E11.

It's a climbing forum. Clearly it is fair game. If you just want back-slapping stick to congratulatory commenting on Instagram and characterising absolutely anything else as 'the haters'.

Obviously it is 'fair game' to criticise and people aren't 'beyond criticism' but I'm struggling to understand what he's being criticised for (and its pretty infantile to use the defence of "no one directly accusing him" when we all know what's gong on, if anything the dog-whistling is worse as people do it to weasel out of what they earlier said, e.g Will Hunt's "desire to see some rationality applied" or Shurt's "trying to inject some levity").
If this place isn't the place for giving climbers a bit if back slap (not sure that's true, Power club and YYFY threads are full of people thirsting for validation of their own) why does it have to be a place of low level sniping?

So what is the mud slinging about? So far we have:
The route - in my 30+ years I've been reading tales of routes on that wall, I've said on here that BB's attempt on Impact Day was one of the most iconic ascents of the era but now, suddenly, this is a scrappy bit of rock 40' high above a rambling slab approach! He never said he climbed the LGP of the lakes but spotted a line that joined ID on good rock with good climbing, since confirmed.

The grade - I'm not sure what's expected here, he gave it a high E grade but then gave comprehensive break down (for which he was criticised) with V grades for individual moves, sport grade for over all, length of fall, details of gear so its not like he was trying to hide anything. Other top end routes might have more accurate E grades but you've really less idea of what's involved. He may have got this wrong but it seems it is harder than some E10s out there. Hang the over grader!

The write up - There was an article on UKC, which dropped off the front page after a week. This month we've also had an article on there about a sponsored male climber repeating an established E9 so it would be odd if this didn't make a splash. The article might be long winded but if someone gave me a platform to talk about my best ever climbing achievement I'd probably ramble on a bit and also mention other people involved. Sure he could have mentioned an existential crisis about a ladybird on a hold or being dive bombed by the demons of Bosch but I expect he would then be criticised for not being specific enough. I've had long conversations about a single hold and this site is full of nerdish climbing threads so this criticism seems particularly weak.

Social media presence - Wake up granddad, my bathroom fitter has an insta account for his work. A small ground engineering company I know has a social media manager. Follow any route setter or coach on Insta and you will see that NG is far from the worst offender.

Doping - Monkey tennis?

This is not to mention the lingering impression that people like to give that he's somehow how not authentic, someone in it for the money, a bit corporate etc. This often comes from people who've been climbing 5 minutes and never venture further than 30 mins from their door. You don't climb as hard as you can, as often as you can for over 30 years if you don't love climbing. You don't choose to try and make a living out of climbing if you don't love it.






but, but...he moved to London.....

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Oldmanmatt on September 25, 2021, 01:51:04 pm
Yes to most of that.

But, where the fuck can I watch the Monkey Tennis?
Best idea of 2021!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: northern yob on September 25, 2021, 04:44:20 pm
This is a climbing forum people are going to talk about climbing, some of it will be positive some of it will be negative.

I don’t think anyone has accused Neil of taking PED’s on here. If anything I’d say he’s been staunchly defended with regard to this and rightly so.

I don’t recall Neil’s achievements or his obvious enthusiasm and love for climbing being doubted

The quality of the climbing is pretty obvious and hasn’t been doubted.

The article on Ukc has had some criticism, it’s not to my liking and fair game I think. If you play the media game (which Neil does very well) in this style you should expect some backlash from certain quarters.

The consensus of people who know the wall well or have been on his Dove crag route seems to be that it’s over graded,I’ve heard  his Malham 8c+ isn’t tough for the grade… Both these routes received significant media attention yet little grade scrutiny. He then gives something the biggest number that exists I’m not a C&@T for questioning it.

The quality of the climbing hasn’t been doubted!

The wandering line and gear in existing routes wasn’t mentioned in the very in depth article, therefore I think questions are valid. If it’s a bit contrived like rhapsody that’s fine, but it should’ve been mentioned, If it makes sense to have the gear where it is (and not put some higher in sixpence) fair enough.

If people genuinely think this thread is a pile on or the bottom of the barrel I would suggest they grow a backbone or maybe stop reading it.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on September 25, 2021, 05:32:39 pm

Is it?? And if so, what are you going to do about that?? Forums are what contributors make them, what people post influences the direction a forum goes, as well as the moderation and keeping behaviour in check of course. The Karma system can works both ways as it seems to get used a lot to praise good / entertaining / informative contributions from what I've seen.

Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IanP on September 25, 2021, 06:36:25 pm
SInce I was picked up as one of the people who queried the grade I may as well come back on it. 

I wasn't really accussing NG of overgrading, more questioning in general what trad grades now mean at the higher end.  Think I'm possibly stuck in the 90s a bit but as stated my view was that trad grades covered approx 2 sport grades. back in the day Zoolook and Revelations were given E7 iirc, standards went up to E9 as sport standards when up to 8c+ (or even 9a!?) in the 90s.  Sport grades going up to 9a/9a+ over the next couple of decades then gives a lot of space for E10 trad routes of differnt difficulties.  If the gaps are staying the same then E11 has to be bloody hard. Steve took 100 days(?) to climb Rainman 3 years ago, he certainly repeated Lexicon a lot, lot more quickly than that. 

If its the case that its been decided that trad grades need to cover less wide grade spans in the higher grade thats fine, and possiblty makes sense as standard are increasing more slowly, just think the question is worth asking and  maybe even interesting for the very geeky. 
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 26, 2021, 02:06:29 pm
Obviously it is 'fair game' to criticise and people aren't 'beyond criticism' but I'm struggling to understand what he's being criticised for....

Firstly, I don't think it's all criticism, nor is it of NG as a person. I'd say it is largely critical review of how NG expressed some things in his write-up. So, critique, if you will.

Quote from: Teaboy
The route - this is a scrappy bit of rock 40' high above a rambling slab approach!
Said no one in this thread. People questioned the extent of the new climbing on the pitch Vs common ground (shared with ID), and how this was reported.

Quote from: Teaboy
He never said he climbed the LGP of the lakes but spotted a line that joined ID on good rock with good climbing, since confirmed.
NG wrote "make the line independent apart from a junction with Impact Day in the easier middle section" and that it would be "an epic 8b+ power-endurance burn". As above, the reporting made the extent of the common ground very unclear (UKC has "crosses briefly through the easier climbing on ID"), especially given the clarity of everything else. Also the route is very close to Eclipse/Sixpence at the bottom and Sixpence again higher up but this isn't mentioned at all - just an observation, don't take it as a criticism!

Quote from: Teaboy
The grade - I'm not sure what's expected here, He may have got this wrong but it seems it is harder than some E10s out there. Hang the over grader!
My comments highlighted that 2 out of 2 of NG's recent trad routes have been considered (by people who have repeated or previously climbed parent routes) over-graded. Specifically, Fearless: E8 vs E9 (not really any harder than parent route); Final Score (given E10) not meaningfully harder than ISWN (E9, but which has become easier after its FA and 2nd ascent due to a block coming off).
Given this, one might think that it may be prudent to be more conservative with one's grading; especially when applying the equal maximum grade currently in use for UK trad.
NG wrote, "[Simon Nadin highlighted the] phenomenon ... 'Old Man Over Grading Syndrome' ... this certainly caused me to check my work."
He still gave it a definitive (no maybes/perhaps) E11. A strong statement. Surely open to comment/questioning?

Quote from: Teaboy
The write up - ... The article might be long winded but if someone gave me a platform to talk about my best ever climbing achievement I'd probably ramble on a bit and also mention other people involved.
I think people were largely/entirely criticising UKC rather than NG here.

Quote from: Teaboy
Social media presence
I don't think anyone made any criticism that NG has a social media presence. I think it was just pointed out that if you only want to read congratulatory notes without any critical review then you're better off visiting athletes' social media pages.

Quote from: Teaboy
but, but...he moved to London.....
Not me guv'. No idea what this was about. Not really read that stuff or the doping stuff.

----

I hope this has helped you, Teaboy, with your understanding of the comments in this thread.

I hope you also understand that critiquing need not imply disrespect/dislike or that any achievement is somehow made void. It is not "mudslinging".

As I've written before, let's not demonise critical review. The world would be very dull indeed if we all thought the same way and couldn't engage in an open exchange of views.  :kiss2:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Duma on September 26, 2021, 02:27:50 pm
Simon Nadin highlighted the phenomenon  'Old Man Over Grading Syndrome'

OT, but anyone have a link to this blog or article?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 26, 2021, 03:17:25 pm
Simon Nadin highlighted the phenomenon  'Old Man Over Grading Syndrome'

OT, but anyone have a link to this blog or article?

It was no more than a humorous comment on Instagram

www.instagram.com/p/CTAkpHmjqDh
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: chris j on September 26, 2021, 03:59:47 pm



Quote from: Tony S link=topic=31488.msg644810#msg644810
[quote author=Teaboy
The route - this is a scrappy bit of rock 40' high above a rambling slab approach!
Said no one in this thread.

[/quote]

Oh yes they did...  :jab:


Is the whole crag even 40' high? Or would an 80' lob including some subterranean catering action?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 26, 2021, 04:22:26 pm
Oh yes they did...  :jab:

Wrote no one (sane, operating in the modern metric system?!) in this thread.

It is common tactic of trolls to highlight minutiae irrelevant to the general thrust of an argument...

Just saying.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fultonius on September 26, 2021, 04:30:33 pm



Quote from: Tony S link=topic=31488.msg644810#msg644810
[quote author=Teaboy
The route - this is a scrappy bit of rock 40' high above a rambling slab approach!
Said no one in this thread.


Oh yes they did...  :jab:


Is the whole crag even 40' high? Or would an 80' lob including some subterranean catering action?
[/quote]

Wait a fuckin minute here. I'll happily accept "poorly worded query that could have been fact checked and therefore irrelevant" but I have never said it looked shit or scrappy, just that falling 24.38m might in fact put you sub soil. Given I've never been to pavey arc, it's not an unreasonable (just lazy) question, and yes, it was prompted as a bit of knockdown as it seemed a bit of an overly self congratulatory write up...

If Steve had done the FA and the only news was his write up I doubt ANY of this thread would exist....

Anyway, I realise most of my contributions to this thread have been negative. For the record, I've got no beef with NG. The climbing looks great, if a bit on the silly side of bold. Good effort etc. etc. I just got triggered on many levels by his general online demeanour and the article just ramped that up and tipped me over the edge.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 26, 2021, 05:57:53 pm
I'm confused about how high this crag is supposed to be.

NG's write up:
Quote
With Impact Day, there's a peg which effectively splits the headwall into two separate runouts. These runouts are big by anyone's standards and those who've taken the ride from the crux have described it as a solid 40-footer, including rope stretch.

40 feet = 12.25m metres. Firstly is it correct that a fall from ID is 12+ a bit metres? That's around the height of many UK sport routes - like falling from the lower-off on Mecca to ground level.
Great Ness Wall is reported by Steve Mc (https://www.ukclimbing.com/news/2019/05/first_ascent_of_greatness_wall_e10_7a_for_steve_mcclure-71966) as being 18 metres high in total. The beacon lead walls are around 14m, 17m at the highest. So falling the length of the beacon walls except for the highest point?


NG's write up:
Quote
Yet with this project the fall would literally be twice the length.
80 feet = 24 metres.

So falling the whole height of Great Ness Wall, plus add another 6 metres - i.e. add on the height of falling out the top floor of a house to the whole height of Great Ness Wall.
My bullshit radar is starting to ping loudly now...

I wondered what I could use as an example of a 24 metre (80 feet) fall. I came up with the famous bridge in the Bosnian town of Mostar. Funnily enough I 'visited', in a military vehicle, the Stari Most bridge in Mostar in 1995 not long after it had been destroyed in fighting. It's since been rebuilt and is 24 metres (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stari_Most) above the river at it's central point.
Here's a vid of a guy jumping from it to show a 24 metre (80 feet) fall:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKO-YXwKbnU

Also, the fall from ID was said to be 'including rope stretch' - my pretty basic take on the physics says to me that it doesn't follow that a fall from a similar height as from the headwall of ID but without 'the peg that splits the runout' on ID is going to be twice the length of the fall from ID - which is what it appears from NG's write-up to be the logic being used. Longer yes but not twice as long, as the rope stretch shouldn't be double it should be a design engineered percentage of the overall force. Unless the rope is a special one that increases its stretch % with every doubling of fall length.   

No doubt this photo of ID is foreshortened. 12+ metres fall? https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/pavey_ark-342/impact_day-265496#photos&gid=1&pid=2

So I find it difficult to believe that the report of a 24 metre fall is true. If the evidence shows that I'm wrong then I'll happily accept I'm wrong.

Even if the fall were 15 or 20 metres instead of 24 metres that's still a pretty massive and scary fall - 50 to 65 feet. Just not 80 feet.. So around a 20-35% overestimation depending.


NG's write up:
Quote
If you look at the breakdown of Lexicon (8b+ with 80-foot fall potential from a last move crux and the promise of a hard strike)

Hmm..

Is it wrong to want accuracy and factual reporting of things in climbing? I find it ironic that for a pastime so popular amongst academics there's so much that goes unexamined and unquestioned. I'll be happy to have my doubts proven to be unfounded.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 27, 2021, 08:56:06 am
Whoops - I seem to have removed the topic by mistake - now reversed

 :sorry:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: abarro81 on September 27, 2021, 09:08:26 am
I have no idea how far these falls are, but I've been amazed on multiple occasions just how far people fall on some trad falls, despite not being far above gear (presumably because of stretchy thin ropes + soft catch + belaying with doubles being harder?)  e.g. 3min in, falling with feet maybe 4ft above last runner but goes a long way...  https://vimeo.com/10606269 . Looks v different to the bridge jump example because you're decelerating for a large proportion of the time in the air rather than still accelerating.
That said, 80ft is a long way... I think Will is about right with 30m (~100ft) for this one, which is fuckin' huge: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ve2qCG4-0YM
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: teestub on September 27, 2021, 09:12:10 am
Whoops - I seem to have removed the topic by mistake - now reversed

 :sorry:

There was me thinking Gresh’s Inner Temple legal team had been in touch!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bonjoy on September 27, 2021, 09:35:53 am

Is it wrong to want accuracy and factual reporting of things in climbing?  I find it ironic that for a pastime so popular amongst academics there's so much that goes unexamined and unquestioned.
No. Especially not where there's a fairly definitive objective answer. I always take people's descriptions of fall length as being measured in the same units as fish that got away, so knowing if this holds true for newsworthy ascent is of interest.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: shark on September 27, 2021, 09:52:19 am
Whoops - I seem to have removed the topic by mistake - now reversed

 :sorry:

There was me thinking Gresh’s Inner Temple legal team had been in touch!

I have been bracing myself for the call
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on September 27, 2021, 01:29:04 pm
I'm confused about how high this crag is supposed to be.

I think we allow for a fair bit of hyperbole in reporting of lengths of routes and, especially, falls, generally. So I let that sort of thing slide unless it's completely ridiculous.

Quote from: petejh
Firstly is it correct that a fall from ID is 12+ a bit metres?

The wall is about 25m, I think. If you fall from 1.5m below the top of ID (RP crux) with slack, non-tied-down belayer, rope stretch, and belay device slippage, ~10m sounds believable - mainly from the slack/deviations (say 2m) and movement of the belayer (say 3m based on your linked pic!!).

About half the fall is probably slack/belayer movement because you'd have to be really remiss for the climber to hit anything once that top peg is clipped so you may as well give them a soft catch. (Note: Best not to fall off ID before clipping the top peg.)

Rope stretch is approx proportional to the squareroot of the effective fall factor [FF] (for a given [climber's] mass and a given rope) and the (effective) total rope (available to stretch).

In your ID Vs Lexicon example, FF doubles (approxing on both that the fall is off the top) so elongation for the same climber on the same rope would be ~1.4x on Lex as for ID. But NG mentions using a single rope (less stretch). More significantly, though, he mentions a tied down belayer. Perhaps(?) a Grigri was used. There's possibly also slightly less slack/deviations. All these factors will mean the falls are not greatly comparable.

Empirically, in pic of SM after his fall, he 'looks' to be ~5m above ground so maybe ~20m fall so ~65ft.  I'm being "generous" with my estimates here, as SM did not come off the very top and he could well be more than 5m off the ground.

Regardless, 15-20m is still big, especially if, proportionally, less of that is deceleration (since belayer is tied down and it's on a Grigri).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on September 27, 2021, 01:48:00 pm
Thanks, good breakdown. So more likely in the region of a 50-65 foot fall which like you say is BIG. Just not 80 feet..

I guess we all just need to 'hang on to our hats and wait for the film from Alistair Lee at this year's Britrock tour.'.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: jwi on October 03, 2021, 11:29:57 am
I usually use the following rule-of-thumb: if the climber has time to start to scream the fall is longer 10m.

(I am not sure where I got the rule from, so it is completely hearsay. But it makes sense: it takes a bit more than a second to take a quick deep breath and about one-and-a half to fall ten metre)
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on October 03, 2021, 01:03:54 pm
Hmmm, entertaining but entirely spurious. I call as evidence the regular "screaming" of profanities at the instant of departure from rock.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on October 03, 2021, 01:25:26 pm
Agree. I think the hallmark of a plus 10 metre lob is the profanity, followed by drawing breath again and then screaming. A double scream if you will. The biggest lob I've ever seen was in gorge du tarn, off one of those things with massive runouts high up. That might have even been a triple screamer.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mrjonathanr on October 03, 2021, 01:58:02 pm
Good theory. The biggest lob I ever saw was John Dunne at Malham using Zoolook to get fit. He skipped the draw on the run out, got higher then fell off anyway. The rope went from Andy Jack’s plate down to his feet, horizontally across the floor and then up towards John.

They met somewhere by the first bolt. As the theory suggests, there were indeed many profanities uttered.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: duncan on October 05, 2021, 03:36:32 pm

1. Steve Maclure, who will agree with everything Neil says.


You can read if he did or not in this interview for the BMC (https://www.thebmc.co.uk/interview-steve-mcclure-and-lexicon-e11?utm_campaign=later-linkinbio-teambmc&utm_content=later-21140947&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkin.bio).
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Wellsy on October 05, 2021, 04:01:05 pm
Isn't really the viewpoint for most of us "looks way harder than anything I'll ever do, who fucking knows"
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Tony on October 05, 2021, 05:09:16 pm
Isn't really the viewpoint for most of us "looks way harder than anything I'll ever do, who fucking knows"

You know this is a discussion board, yeah?

Your response would make for some really dull discussions.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on October 05, 2021, 07:17:55 pm

1. Steve Maclure, who will agree with everything Neil says.


You can read if he did or not in this interview for the BMC (https://www.thebmc.co.uk/interview-steve-mcclure-and-lexicon-e11?utm_campaign=later-linkinbio-teambmc&utm_content=later-21140947&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkin.bio).

Spoiler:
NSFW  :
Quote
Of course, people will ask my opinion on the E11 grade, like I actually know! I am no expert like MacLeod, though  I'll suggest that it is harder than other E10’s I’ve done. And so it could be E11, or hard E10, but overall, I'm not suggesting it should be downgraded. Of course we may be wrong, it may be E10, but E11 seems a fair place to start.
So that will be a yes then  :lol: Lucky I guess Ste Mac's got a scrawny enough butt that he can perch nicely on the fence he's sitting on  ;D

Also updated topo from a different angle, showing the full scruffy insignificance of this 40' wall tucked away in a grotty gully. https://www.instagram.com/p/CUCjto8oZ6K/?utm_source=ig_embed
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: DAVETHOMAS90 on October 05, 2021, 09:32:32 pm
Yes, scruffy  ;)

There are many classic routes that boil down to one harder, shorter pitch. Same is true of routes on mountain crags in Wales too.

I took a lob off the top of Total Eclipse. A crew were there getting footage with a thing called "Pole Cam", interviewing Ben and Jerry. They were looking for an idiot to volunteer for a big lob.

I clipped the bolt on the lip, and ran it out from there to the belay (maybe E5 6b IIRC). We had reams of slack out, and the hardest part was just looking straight at the camera while letting go. Ended up somewhere near the start of Obsession.

The second time, I started tipping over backwards, which wasn't great for my back when I stopped. Twice was enough  ;D
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on October 05, 2021, 10:00:39 pm
Also updated topo from a different angle, showing the full scruffy insignificance of this 40' wall tucked away in a grotty gully. https://www.instagram.com/p/CUCjto8oZ6K/?utm_source=ig_embed

Am I right to think that the dotted lines on that topo should be the Lexicon start and finish? Most of the line of Lexicon seems to comprise Impact Day, and I.D it was done long before and is considered a pretty significant route in its own right(?). Just seems a bit dismissive, without knowing the wall or the routes. Maybe I.D is an eliminate/variation on the obvious line.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on October 05, 2021, 10:03:49 pm
Pretty sure the focus of the topo lines in this case is on Lexicon, as the topo and associated discussion is about Lexicon. And  God knows there hasn't been enough discussion about Lexicon yet.....
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: petejh on October 05, 2021, 10:45:38 pm
Fairy muff.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark20 on October 24, 2021, 10:11:50 am
I really enjoyed the Lexicon film. It's a good looking line up a vague rib on the leaning headwall. Massive respect to Neil Gresham who clearly put alot of work into getting it done, and comes across brilliantly in the film, very inspiring  :2thumbsup:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: andy moles on October 24, 2021, 10:39:31 am
I thought as a film it was run-of-the-mill. Which is fine, it only happened a few weeks ago and the content is worth watching.

Standout moments were Steve's massive fall, obviously, and Gresh's top-out celebration.

Oh, and "more celebrities than Love Island"  :lol:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Duncan campbell on October 24, 2021, 11:14:41 am
I really enjoyed the Lexicon film. It's a good looking line up a vague rib on the leaning headwall. Massive respect to Neil Gresham who clearly put alot of work into getting it done, and comes across brilliantly in the film, very inspiring  :2thumbsup:

Me too - that headwall looks amazing! Ste macs fall was well worth seeing and gresh came across well too - not trying to sell anything just psyched about the route. The rock up there is fantastic looking
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Ged on October 24, 2021, 11:47:57 am
I really enjoyed the Lexicon film. It's a good looking line up a vague rib on the leaning headwall. Massive respect to Neil Gresham who clearly put alot of work into getting it done, and comes across brilliantly in the film, very inspiring  :2thumbsup:

Where is said film?
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: mark20 on October 24, 2021, 12:35:31 pm
Brit Rock film tour. Presumably to be put online when the tour is done
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on December 18, 2021, 03:00:39 pm
Alistair Lee had a good shot of Steve Mcs fall in his Brit Rock film which I thought would offer a good opportunity to try and work out how big the fall actually is. Thankfully he's just posted it on facebook so I whipped out the steve mc ruler, and it works out at about 9.5 x mid-fall steve mcs (from his feet at the top to his feet at the bottom:

(https://i.imgur.com/Eobgf0d.jpeg)

Say 1 mid-fall Steve Mc is between 1 m and 1.2 m tall, then the fall is probably about 9.5m to 11.4m. Conclusions: definitely not 20m. Definitely a long way. I definitely wouldn't be psyched to take that ride.

Assumptions: there isn't some crazy lense on the camera that'd be distorting the image. The stitching used to put together the pic hasn't stretched it weirdly. The top of the shot is pretty close to where Steve actually fell off. The bottom of the shot is pretty close to where Steve actually stopped.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Bradders on December 18, 2021, 03:47:11 pm
I mean, however far it is, he's pretty flipping close to his belayer when he stops!
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: IanP on December 18, 2021, 04:06:09 pm
Alistair Lee had a good shot of Steve Mcs fall in his Brit Rock film which I thought would offer a good opportunity to try and work out how big the fall actually is. Thankfully he's just posted it on facebook so I whipped out the steve mc ruler, and it works out at about 9.5 x mid-fall steve mcs (from his feet at the top to his feet at the bottom:

(https://i.imgur.com/Eobgf0d.jpeg)

Say 1 mid-fall Steve Mc is between 1 m and 1.2 m tall, then the fall is probably about 9.5m to 11.4m. Conclusions: definitely not 20m. Definitely a long way. I definitely wouldn't be psyched to take that ride.

Assumptions: there isn't some crazy lense on the camera that'd be distorting the image. The stitching used to put together the pic hasn't stretched it weirdly. The top of the shot is pretty close to where Steve actually fell off. The bottom of the shot is pretty close to where Steve actually stopped.

Good geeky stuff - just to add to it, 1.2 m sounds a bit low.  Checked my height sitting on standard dining room chair (feels about right for Steve's falling position)  and it came just under 80% of my standing height, applying same calculation to Steve (1.69m) gives 1.34m so fall height of 12.7m , still a way off 20m but as you say a pretty long way
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: cheque on December 18, 2021, 08:07:16 pm
Assumptions: there isn't some crazy lense on the camera that'd be distorting the image. The stitching used to put together the pic hasn't stretched it weirdly.

Assuming the camera’s followed Steve as he’s falling (I haven’t seen the film yet ;) ) and it’s not on some kind of vertical slider then there’ll be some kind of perspective distortion because the camera’s pivoted on one point rather than linearly following the fall. Whether that makes much of a difference to this highly scientific measurement I’m not sure but it’s the reason that architectural etc. photographers who need to stitch photos together with total accuracy use panoramic heads that allow the camera to be moved along one plane only between shots.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: Fiend on December 18, 2021, 09:41:51 pm
Top anal retentive dweebery there, who says this forum is a bunch of ex-climbers doing book reviews or some bollox like that?!  :2thumbsup:
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: remus on December 19, 2021, 08:38:40 am
Assumptions: there isn't some crazy lense on the camera that'd be distorting the image. The stitching used to put together the pic hasn't stretched it weirdly.

Assuming the camera’s followed Steve as he’s falling (I haven’t seen the film yet ;) ) and it’s not on some kind of vertical slider then there’ll be some kind of perspective distortion because the camera’s pivoted on one point rather than linearly following the fall. Whether that makes much of a difference to this highly scientific measurement I’m not sure but it’s the reason that architectural etc. photographers who need to stitch photos together with total accuracy use panoramic heads that allow the camera to be moved along one plane only between shots.

Good camera knowledge! Again largely just guessing, but I reckon the shot was probably done from fairly far away with a relatively long lense and a small-ish camera movement to follow the fall so hopefully wouldn't add too much distortion.
Title: Re: Lexicon, E11 7a FA for Neil Gresham
Post by: spidermonkey09 on December 19, 2021, 10:14:02 am
When Steve did a talk for the Yorkshire Area BMC a few weeks ago he said that Alistair Lee had positioned his camera wrong and it was pointed too high, so when he fell off he fell out of the shot. Apparently Al requisitioned Dave Macs footage for the film, so I would imagine that's what that is. Might mean more likely to be a fixed camera instead of anything nerdy going on?
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