Just when you were threatening to pull together a cogent position, you deliver this spectacular contradiction! - JB
Haha, but no, you just misunderstood me. I thought I'd been pretty clear, but obviously not clear enough.
Has anyone ever actually climbed the Cave routes without any fixed gear? Almost certainly not, they were aid routes bristling with pegs where the aid was whittled away while providing innumerable fixed points for the 'trad' climber to aim for. - JB
No.
My point was that I'd be happy to see them stripped entirely of all fixed gear. Not put back to some bonkers mess as it was back when I was learning to climb. I'd put Dominatrix in the same category.
ie: I think there's various routes with a daft history, that have ended up getting bolted as they previously had lots of pegs / tatt. Which actually could / would make fantastic trad routes if completely stripped (and I'd have thought you would probably have been on board with that had I said it a little clearer).
"What you are actually saying here is everything in the UK should henceforth be black and white except for the memorable routes of my teenage years, which should stay exactly the grey they were! LOL." - JB
As above, not arguing for that in any way whatsoever. When I learned to climb, loads of routes were a complete hybrid mess, going back to that not even remotely a good idea.
"I find the history and evolution part of what makes the sport interesting, and often adds character to routes where features allow us to read that history as we climb." - JB
So do I. Doesn't mean I think that the way things have evolved have resulted in a completely sensible outcome everywhere.
"Why should it be placed well?" - JB
Because if it isn't, it will need replacing in the not too distant future. I don't want to see pegs (or bolts for that matter) having to be re hammered in or re drilled every few years. We've seen the outcome of that over the past half dozen decades. There's sport routes with loads of holes, where if one good quality long lasting bolt had been placed there'd only be one hole. The rock is a finite resource. We can't keep doing that forever, it's not sustainable. If you're placing fixed gear, to me, it should last for a very long time before needing replacing.
"Why and how is it different in 'mountaineering territory'? How do you define such?" - JB
Here's one area I'll concede is not at all clear cut. I'd happily see hammered pegs banned everywhere in the UK and in places like Yosemite. Whilst I've no problems with them in Patagonia or the Himalayas for example.
Admittedly if I did more winter climbing in Scotland / elsewhere I'd probably feel slightly differently (although not very).
Short version though, on pretty much all cliffs primarily used for rock climbing in the UK, rather than winter climbing, I'd ban pegs (with the occasional exception as said previously for belays in really soft rock).