I would have written up a blog post for last weekend, but
other than managing my first 7a boulder problem at Churnet it was a bit of a
let-down. The problem was the same one I almost managed the week before (fingers).It
reassured me that I didn’t manage it the first time because I was getting
physically tired, rather than technically incapable. This is something that I
was worried about. I find it quite interesting that I prefer working boulder
problems which my friend Toaf would describe as “just pulling on holds, with no
technique required, only big guns”. I think this says something more about our
different styles of climbing rather than the problems to be honest. As I was
saying, I prefer working boulder problems with long powerful moves rather that
short moves and intricate sequences. However when trad climbing, I’m much more
likely to head for something slabby, with obvious rests and less chance of
getting tired, pumping out and falling off. When it comes down to it I guess
when you’re going for the onsight its just better to stack the odds in your favour.
The Sunday was spent climbing at the Roaches. If you’ve been
following this blog for a while, you’ll know how I feel about the Roaches, but
for those who haven’t I’ll reiterate it. The Roaches is an excellent climbing
area. There are amazing routes, multipitch and single. There are big overhangs,
slabs, walls and a host of classic bouldering… and I’ve ruined it for myself! I’ve
spent so many days bumbling along the Roaches through my uni life taking out
groups, and then bumbling along with little or no desire to climb only to be outside
that everytime I got there I’m just left wanting to be somewhere else.
I’ve tired making tick lists of climbs I want to do there. I’ve
tried getting psyched for particular routes and I’ve been bouldering there
loads, because well there is loads of awesome bouldering there. And I still can’t
seem to get inspired. I’ll keep trying, I really will because it’s defiantly
one of the best climbing areas Staffordshire has to offer.
I did manage a one route on the day (that’s after failing to
even get onto the slab of C3P0, backing off Eugene’s Axe and belaying Ronnie on
Pincer) which was Valkyrie Direct. I seem to having a bit of a saga with this
photogenic prow of rock. I’ve never actually completed Peter Harding’s original
route (Valkyrie). On my first attempt I managed to do the crux and then it
rained, torrentially, forcing my inexperienced climbing brain to back off,
getting lowered through the damn holly bush. This wasn’t the last time I’ve
been through that bush either. I’ve been back since and done the crux, only to
reverse the whole thing and then quit climbing for the whole day (it was the
day after my grandfather had died, and I shouldn’t have gone out climbing). I’ve
been involved I a rescue when the flake was pulled off. I ended up arriving
first on scene and then leaving last and stripping out the guys route once
everyone else was off. And I’ve spent an evening sitting on the belay after the
first pitch, after me and my climbing partner at the time decided that she wasn’t
going to do the second pitch but the view as the sun went down was too good to
waste. It was then I found out you could walk off from here, if you’re careful.
So when I headed up Valkyrie Direct (HVS 5b) I didn’t really
know what I was expecting. I climbed slowly and carefully and managed to deal
with the overhanging flakes quite easily (though I did stich it with gear). I then
finished up Valkyrie doing the crux and climbing round the corner, only to sit
on the top and decided that the route was badly over graded. It wasn’t until I
checked the guidebook description later that I realised I’d missed out the
stiff, wide crack and therefore the crux and point of the route. In future I’ll
stick to taking my guidebook up with, or actually reading the route description
properly before I set off.
In the mean time I’ve been tapping away on mine and Soames’s
little guidebook and I’ve been teaching myself how to use GIMP, although
slowly. It’s quite hard to learn how to use a new program, without a manual.
Mostly I’ve been ploughing away learning my trial and error, but this can be a
disheartening process. I’ve little or nothing to show for hours and hours spent
practising with the software, but I’m full of ideas about what I’d like to do
with it.
On the note of the guidebook and therefore the cliffs development
in general it’s all I seem to think about. I’ve been asking various friends
down Redpoint [hyperlink] and further afield if I can borrow size 4 cams for
the crack line of hydrophobia. This sticking corner crack, dubbed Hydrophobia
by Soames based on my seemingly intense fear of the sea but enjoyment of
awkward crack climbs, has been sat in my mind from the moment I saw it. It
fills me with dread and fear, but I can’t wait the literally get stuck into it.