UKBouldering.com

[Peak - South][Gardom’s, eatswood, Seagull Tor][12 probs][6A-7C] + eatswood topo (Read 18299 times)

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
It’s a while since I wrote up any new probs so have a fair number, hence splitting into three threads for different areas. I’ve put the names of the best things in bold for skim readers.

Gardom’s Far South – These probs are in the woods below Moorside Rocks and back towards Stump Hole. No total classics but some good quality nonetheless and a well situated alternative warm-up for harder stuff on G South or Moorside. Bo Line and Sheepshank are probably the best of the bunch, Not Now Bernard climbs a fairly impressive feature. There’s scope for more circuit fillers and a couple of short hard routes with bad landings.

Disillusioned/Indignant Fox 6A The first block visible over the wall when approaching from the direction of Birchen is an overhanging cracked prow. Sit start and climb the front direct. Alternatively finish up the left arete at a grade less.

Fly Lichen Eagle 6B Just left of the cracked prow is a vertical wall boulder. Climb the right arete from a sit start.

Run Lichen Antelope 6A+ Climb the flaked wall, starting with one hand undercutting the slot.

Leng Roach 6A 100m left of Fly Lichen Eagle is a collection of higher rocks including a prominent high jutting prow.
Right of the prow is a wall with a wide mid height break. Climb the centre with a long stretch out of the break.

Not Now Bernard 6C The right arete of the big jutting prow is a spicy layback

Bo Line 6A+ About another 100m left and on the other (Moorside) side of the drystone wall is a biggish vertical face undercut at the base. Climb the lovely vague central rib on slopey edges. A sit start on the left arete bumps it to 6B+. Possibly done some years back by Alain Gordon-Seymour (it looks like the thing he told me about doing yonks ago anyway).

The Sheepshank Redemption 6C – Tight but good line up the wall just between the left arete and BL, from a sit start.

eatswood

I’ve always wondered how much of the cave at the end of the traverse is buried under blocks (presumably the remains of an old bivi/shelter), some of which I’d previously moved in about 2007 to make the landing on the trav less treacherous. The answer is a fair bit, enough to add worthwhile low extensions to probs up the left arete and a low traverse. I finished the roof probs up the none eliminate version of HFP, on UKC this is called Hats for Me or Kristian’s Problem depending on whether you start on the left or right. The harder righthand start probably includes some of the 7C low start to Hat’s for Weasels mentioned in the VG guide (anyone know details of this?), though I imagine it must have been mighty bum scraping indeed with all the blocks in place.
I’ve gone into this detail as the guidebooks’ inclusion of eliminates and undefined sit starts and their exclusion of the obvious all-holds-in line has made things a bit complex/confusing. As crag author for one of the guides I’m more to blame for this than anyone else.

New Hats for Me 7A+ Sit start low on the far left on an undercut and dish, slap up crimps to gain the jug rail in the roof , then use everything to gain the big jug on the arete.

eatswood Roof 7B+ Start low on the right matched on the big sidepull undercut. Use the shothole out left to get some sidepulls then slap for the jug rail. Finish as above. A good and independent none eliminate.

Rubble Rouser 7C Start along the eatswood Traverse, once at the big jug/flake a few moves in, drop down and make tricky moves into a pair of old drill holes thence a ‘sports’ rest on a kneebar. Another hole helps gain holds leading left into the last move of the normal trav.

Rubble Rouser is good and not at all bum scraping (such is the volume of blockage shifted). It could well be 7C+ especially if you aren’t very good at resting in sketchy kneebars and/or have normal sized digits, I have dainty lady’s fingers and it’s still a squeeze fitting back-twos into the drill holes. Sport climbers and folk with 8a.nu scorecards will note that there is now huge potential for link-ups.
Note: The last hold before joining ET is on a fair size block which flexes a bit. I intend to re-inforce this when I get a chance, but in the meantime be careful how you use it.
Gritlad took vids of the up probs.

Seagull Tor

Face Arete is now clean and I’ve sealed the footer on the arete which was eroding badly. Good prob, well worth doing.

Crab Nebulous 6C – On the boulder below Boeing (same boulder as the world’s hardest grade 5 prob rocking onto a slab which is currently very mossy). A SS rising R-L trav starting in the long slot.

Parapet 6B – The roundy arete left of Parachute on its left side
« Last Edit: May 14, 2014, 08:44:44 pm by Bonjoy »

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9

dave

  • Guest

Ru

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1973
  • Karma: +120/-0
The low start to hats for weasels was something I did. Sit start at the back of the cave, pull on and do a large reach pop for the jug in the middle of the roof where hfw starts. Not really sure why it wasn't started there in the first place. I think the first holds were kind of low, but can't remember that well - it only took a couple of goes after doing HFW and possibly doesn't increase the grade. I moved a block or two, but there was still a lot more that could have been shifted. Does that help?

a dense loner

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 7165
  • Karma: +388/-28
That's a worse claim than mine  ;)

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Cheers Ru that makes sense, I thought that must be what the 7c in the guide was. I've added a further couple of moves but they aren't especially hard. I gave it the generic name as it's more a tidy up prob than fa. With the none eliminate finish it's the obvious logical line.
I fixed the creaky block on the travel yesterday BTW.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Here's a topo of eatswood Cave to help make sense of its many variants.
« Last Edit: May 15, 2014, 12:39:12 pm by Bonjoy, Reason: its not it\'s »

monkey boy

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1196
  • Karma: +65/-0
Tom 'Gangle' Newman repeated Westwood with the original method.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Great stuff, such a good move. Was that from the same sit? Did he reckon still 7c+ or harder?

Ru

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1973
  • Karma: +120/-0
I've done the "Westwood move" i.e. stand up westwood without "K" but pulling on using the crack and a pebble like rugosity to get left foot on the lip. This is about 7c.

monkey boy

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1196
  • Karma: +65/-0
He thought 8a. I have done the move too but for some reason coming into it from sit just makes it that much harder. I think 7c+ for the move doing it the original method.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Will change to 8a.
Sorry, I suspect that little hold might be out of reach on the stand start now Ru (without stacked pads) after I cleared all the blocks out from the landing. Doubt you could use it as an intermediate on 'the move' from sitting, so it falls a bit between the 4b and the 4c stools, 4b.5 if you will.

Paul B

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 9635
  • Karma: +264/-4
You can also finish the trav by going lower just after J (useful when the end slopers are wet). Likely this can just be summed up as a different sequence but it'll be a whole lot less bum scraping after your digging efforts (which seem quite substantial).

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
That's kind of a reverse version of the reverse sequence. Yeah, there're no bum scraping moves at all now even on the low traverse now. The landing is friendly enough now to comfortably do the traverses with only two pads (one at a push if you don't mind getting muddy) and nobody to move them along for you. I also disassembled the blocks wedged in mud masquerading as ledgy footholds at the base of Corpse Crack which now makes G the logical start position for the right to left.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Anything to avoid bouldering indoors or on lime at the tail ends of the season and wet days really.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
New version will say:
4. The Pessimist 8A – F to D
   a.   Westwood Original 8a – J to D, eliminate K.
   b.   The Westwood Move 7c+ – Stand start LH J, RH crack/undercut to D, eliminate K.
   c.   Stand Start 7C – Stand start to D

shark

Offline
  • *****
  • Administrator
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 8736
  • Karma: +629/-17
  • insect overlord #1
I also disassembled the blocks wedged in mud masquerading as ledgy footholds at the base of Corpse Crack which now makes G the logical start position for the right to left.

Bugger. That's going to make the last moves on the Reverse harder and worse still vindicates Kristian claiming they were out

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Sorry, you now also need to do an extra move or two at the start to do it from a proper sitter. Finishing up Corpse Crack is probably now the best most logical finish for the reverse. It's not all bad news though, maybe the extra bits on each end will bump it up to 7c.


Topo (see above) is now updated.

Andy B

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1839
  • Karma: +97/-3
  • fishie in a dishie
I,ve been biting my tongue on the lime eliminates threads, but retro eliminates on the grit!?!

If K makes Westwood easier then it's an easier problem not a different one.

monkey boy

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1196
  • Karma: +65/-0
I,ve been biting my tongue on the lime eliminates threads, but retro eliminates on the grit!?!

If K makes Westwood easier then it's an easier problem not a different one.

I agree to be honest. I think it is the same problem but with different beta. Both are probably 8a anyhow.

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
Totally true, but it’s not a different problem it’s an eliminate. Personally I think there is a time and a place for the recording of eliminates. I think a one sheet internet topo of a rainproof climbing wall style venue is a good example of such. As someone who goes to this place regularly, due largely to a reluctance to go indoor or boulder on lime at the tail ends of the grit season or when it rains, I do treat it somewhat like an outdoor climbing wall. I don’t intend to put things like Connoisseurs Version or Westwood Original on pb.info as full entries, though I suppose others might. It’s a fair argument that treating places in this way might encourage proliferation into inappropriate areas but I don’t think this is reason enough not to do it for places that really fit the bill. The existence of sub-problem entities, which eliminates are in most cases, in the right context only detract from the lines they bastardise if people are daft enough to let them, as is the case at Crag X where most of the none eliminate versions of things aren’t recognised problems. This is also the reason why I have used numbers and letters. The numbered problems in the main being the all holds in lines, with the lettered problems being variants/eliminates on that theme. I think if anything my documentation tries to re-prioritise away from eliminates, for example see the way Hats For Weasels/ Kristain’s prob is arranged.
As a fan of Pinches Wall I assume you appreciate the value of eliminates in some contexts, so I assume it’s the where and when that you differ with me on. I don’t think you need to bite your tongue about this though. Geeky as it may be I think there’s a valid, nay important, debate to be had about where eliminates enhance bouldering and where they detract.

As to Westwood Original my justification is that I think K has perhaps been altered since the FA. It could just be my poor memory but I recall it being much less user friendly at the time. It is also arguably better climbing than the no-holds-barred version involving one of the most impressive moves I’ve ever seen executed. In the context of the nextdoor problem having a long established eliminate version (one which only makes sense as a wet weather version of Kristain’s problem, as the exclusions are otherwise a bit random and the new climbing not exceptional enough to justify a name let alone be the soul recorded problem up the line in three guides). It also defines the worthy challenge (IMO) of linking the low roof on the left into Westwood. The other point is that this topo is just the world according to me, it’s not presented as definitive or the product of any consultation, I trust people who write future guides understand this. However maybe I’ve got it all wrong and James’ way is actually still the easiest way to do the move from that sit position, in which case I’m just muddying the waters. It could be so as everyone I know of  whose done this bit of climbing from sitting came in from the right. I’ll ask Tom (or any other repeaters who come to light) next time I see him.


Ru

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1973
  • Karma: +120/-0
I,ve been biting my tongue on the lime eliminates threads, but retro eliminates on the grit!?!

If K makes Westwood easier then it's an easier problem not a different one.

I agree in general, but I thought Varian said that old Westwood was still a valid problem as you couldn't use 'K' if you started where James did when he did Westwood?

SA Chris

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 29339
  • Karma: +637/-12
    • http://groups.msn.com/ChrisClix
Totally true, but it’s not a different problem it’s an eliminate. Personally I think there is a time and a place for the recording of eliminates. I think a one sheet internet topo of a rainproof climbing wall style venue is a good example of such. As someone who goes to this place regularly, due largely to a reluctance to go indoor or boulder on lime at the tail ends of the grit season or when it rains, I do treat it somewhat like an outdoor climbing wall. I don’t intend to put things like Connoisseurs Version or Westwood Original on pb.info as full entries, though I suppose others might. It’s a fair argument that treating places in this way might encourage proliferation into inappropriate areas but I don’t think this is reason enough not to do it for places that really fit the bill. The existence of sub-problem entities, which eliminates are in most cases, in the right context only detract from the lines they bastardise if people are daft enough to let them, as is the case at Crag X where most of the none eliminate versions of things aren’t recognised problems. This is also the reason why I have used numbers and letters. The numbered problems in the main being the all holds in lines, with the lettered problems being variants/eliminates on that theme. I think if anything my documentation tries to re-prioritise away from eliminates, for example see the way Hats For Weasels/ Kristain’s prob is arranged.
As a fan of Pinches Wall I assume you appreciate the value of eliminates in some contexts, so I assume it’s the where and when that you differ with me on. I don’t think you need to bite your tongue about this though. Geeky as it may be I think there’s a valid, nay important, debate to be had about where eliminates enhance bouldering and where they detract.

As to Westwood Original my justification is that I think K has perhaps been altered since the FA. It could just be my poor memory but I recall it being much less user friendly at the time. It is also arguably better climbing than the no-holds-barred version involving one of the most impressive moves I’ve ever seen executed. In the context of the nextdoor problem having a long established eliminate version (one which only makes sense as a wet weather version of Kristain’s problem, as the exclusions are otherwise a bit random and the new climbing not exceptional enough to justify a name let alone be the soul recorded problem up the line in three guides). It also defines the worthy challenge (IMO) of linking the low roof on the left into Westwood. The other point is that this topo is just the world according to me, it’s not presented as definitive or the product of any consultation, I trust people who write future guides understand this. However maybe I’ve got it all wrong and James’ way is actually still the easiest way to do the move from that sit position, in which case I’m just muddying the waters. It could be so as everyone I know of  whose done this bit of climbing from sitting came in from the right. I’ll ask Tom (or any other repeaters who come to light) next time I see him.


Very true (i stopped reading at the second line)

Bonjoy

Offline
  • *****
  • Global Moderator
  • forum hero
  • Leafy gent
  • Posts: 9945
  • Karma: +561/-9
I'll maybe do another rehash based on the assumption starting at J makes a difference without the need of a rule, though someone is bound to then traverse down into the Pessimist.... :slap:

Andy B

Offline
  • *****
  • forum hero
  • Posts: 1839
  • Karma: +97/-3
  • fishie in a dishie
That was a long answer!

It was more that, unless I missed it, Westwood (as in the true non eliminate line) isn't in the topo.

Personally, I think you can have a lot of fun on eliminates, but recording them just detracts from the quality of the true lines. I think a surprising number of people will take Topos like this and other stuff they read about rules on problems as gospel a very short distance down the line.

If hold K has changed after the first ascent it's been recently.

It's still possible to use K from James' start.

 

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2024, SimplePortal