Katie and I crashed Morgan and Tara's anniversary trip to Leavenworth. It was fun to show some Leavenworth newbie's around the familiar boulders, and see their excitement for bouldering grow.
Showing posts with label bouldering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bouldering. Show all posts
Monday, October 21, 2013
Sunday, August 25, 2013
There's no place like home
I just got back from a trip back to Scotland. I forgot what a beautiful country I come from. I brought my shoes and got out bouldering one day at Muchals. The climbing wasn't too amazing but the setting sure was.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Middle Fork Bouldering
Throughout the summer a group of boulderers from Olympia have been developing a new bouldering area near north bend. I finally checked it out yesterday with my roommate Jeremy who has done a lot of the fa's there, and Boon. I was impressed, the rock quality is great, and it is in a beautiful setting.
The majority of the developed problems are easy to moderate, which is great for me since I'm not in the best bouldering shape right now. Jeremy toured us around the rat-trap boulders, the cave area boulders, bean slug boulder, roadside boulder and other boulders that I forget the name of. Given its proximity to Seattle, and the quality of the problems, I can see this area getting pretty popular once the word gets out. Chase, one of the main developers put the blog www.northbendbouldering.blogspot.com together which has a lot of photos and gives a bit of the background of the development.
The majority of the developed problems are easy to moderate, which is great for me since I'm not in the best bouldering shape right now. Jeremy toured us around the rat-trap boulders, the cave area boulders, bean slug boulder, roadside boulder and other boulders that I forget the name of. Given its proximity to Seattle, and the quality of the problems, I can see this area getting pretty popular once the word gets out. Chase, one of the main developers put the blog www.northbendbouldering.blogspot.com together which has a lot of photos and gives a bit of the background of the development.
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Vegas!!!
I'm In the Las Vegas airport coming back from an incredible weekend. I went down to see a girl I met in Fiji. We had a crazy time, as with any trip there were some setbacks. I missed my flight down, so had to pay for another ticket the next morning, we bought cirque du soleil tickets for the wrong week, and I lost a chunk of money playing blackjack at the $50 minimum bet table, oops!
But we had some really good times as well. We lived it up at a big hotel on the strip and I felt like a baller cruising around in my 2013 mustang convertible rental. Partying all night to Calvin Harris at XS nightclub was incredible! I even got out bouldering at Red Rocks today despite a brutal hangover and 100 degree temps. The Kraft boulders are really good, I got shut down on anything remotely difficult. But it was good to check it out.
It's going to be strange going back to normal life after this. I'm seriously considering flying back down this weekend again. I don't think it would be good for my bank account though.
But we had some really good times as well. We lived it up at a big hotel on the strip and I felt like a baller cruising around in my 2013 mustang convertible rental. Partying all night to Calvin Harris at XS nightclub was incredible! I even got out bouldering at Red Rocks today despite a brutal hangover and 100 degree temps. The Kraft boulders are really good, I got shut down on anything remotely difficult. But it was good to check it out.
It's going to be strange going back to normal life after this. I'm seriously considering flying back down this weekend again. I don't think it would be good for my bank account though.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Dry Spell
The blog has gone a bit quiet recently. I'd like to say its because I've been too busy climbing to update, but the truth is that I've had a bit of a dry spell of late. I know its not really an excuse, but I have been absolutely loving teaching, and giving it my all pulling long hours has left me exhausted on the weekends. Its been just too hard to consider a weekend trip to Smith or Vantage. People have told me that its been one of the driest Falls in recent memory, but I just haven't had the time/energy to enjoy it. Hopefully I will be able to find a better balance this upcoming winter/spring.
I have managed one day out recently though. It was a crisp, clear Saturday in December, and Jeremy, Derik, David and myself headed up to test the friction at Gold Bar. I've always been skeptical of those who swear by bouldering in near-freezing conditions, but I've got to say, after this trip I might be a convert. I had been thinking about a certain couple of V6's on the Five Star Boulder ever since I was last there back in 07 (wow i feel like an old man saying things like that). My goal was to climb at least one of them. It was too cold to consider warming up, plus the boulder doesn't really have any warm ups, so I got straight on Green Padded Ass. The starting sloper rails felt like jugs with the cold crystals gripping into my dry skin. As I climbed higher the slopers got worse, my feet cut off, but there was no way my hands were losing contact with the rock, then I was topping it out on icy jugs. My first climb of the day, and I'd already met my goal. I almost sent Five Star Arete as well, but the finish jug was a little too damp to allow me to hold the swing. We then moved on to the river boulders at Index, my first time there and I was impressed. I got on the excellent Leggo my Eggo, and some river polished boulders that were HARD! It was fun taking turn and sessioning with the guys. I'm looking forward to getting back to these areas, especially since I now know that Green Padded Ass actually starts with a V0 sit-start, so I can't quite add it to my scorecard just yet. I'll just have to make sure I get back out there in equally cold conditions, otherwise I might have to try a bit harder.
I have managed one day out recently though. It was a crisp, clear Saturday in December, and Jeremy, Derik, David and myself headed up to test the friction at Gold Bar. I've always been skeptical of those who swear by bouldering in near-freezing conditions, but I've got to say, after this trip I might be a convert. I had been thinking about a certain couple of V6's on the Five Star Boulder ever since I was last there back in 07 (wow i feel like an old man saying things like that). My goal was to climb at least one of them. It was too cold to consider warming up, plus the boulder doesn't really have any warm ups, so I got straight on Green Padded Ass. The starting sloper rails felt like jugs with the cold crystals gripping into my dry skin. As I climbed higher the slopers got worse, my feet cut off, but there was no way my hands were losing contact with the rock, then I was topping it out on icy jugs. My first climb of the day, and I'd already met my goal. I almost sent Five Star Arete as well, but the finish jug was a little too damp to allow me to hold the swing. We then moved on to the river boulders at Index, my first time there and I was impressed. I got on the excellent Leggo my Eggo, and some river polished boulders that were HARD! It was fun taking turn and sessioning with the guys. I'm looking forward to getting back to these areas, especially since I now know that Green Padded Ass actually starts with a V0 sit-start, so I can't quite add it to my scorecard just yet. I'll just have to make sure I get back out there in equally cold conditions, otherwise I might have to try a bit harder.
| Jeremy floating up the Five Star Arete, the rock is as good as it looks! |
| The hold just above his right hand was just damp enough to shut us down. |
| The picturesque, but deceptively hard River boulders. It is waay colder than Derik's and David's attire suggests. |
| The ever faithful Sasha! The river wasn't too cold for her. |
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Squamish Bust
I was hoping to write a blog about how I climbed amazing long routes up The Cheif in Squamish, but my trip didn't quite work out that way. On my first day there, I met up with Micah, Jimmy, David and his brother who were all psyched on bouldering, so off we went into the forest. I've got a lot of respect for boulderers, some say they are the most ADD of climbers, but I think it requires a huge amount of patience and drive to try the same move over and over. I know my attention span is not up for it which is why I prefer routes, and rarely try the same route more than once or twice. I didn't get to boulder much, I flashed a V4, got worked on a V8, then literally on the next problem I tried tragedy struck.
Well maybe I'm being a bit dramatic. We were trying Superdyke (hardest V3 ever), I was on the crux rockover, only about 6ft above the pads when my foot popped and the next thing I knew I was rolling on the ground in agony. Luckily newly-certified wilderness first responder Micah was there to administer some much needed Rainiers, which really helped with the pain, as did the 20+ Ibuprofen's I took that evening (I was in a lot of pain). Thanks to David for giving me a piggyback out of the forest, and to Jimmy for exacting revenge on the problem for me.
The trip wasn't a complete bust though. When I was hanging around the campground I saw Kristen Kreuk an actress from the TV show Smallville heading up the tourist trail to the top of the Cheif. I had the hugest crush on when I was a teenager, in fact I think a poster of her might still be on my bedroom wall in Scotland. I'm certain it was her, she was looking good! I was too paralyzed to talk to her, I think I may have creeped her out with my staring though. For the rest of the trip I just chilled by Murrin Lake with my ankle in the water, read some books and daydreamed about meeting Kristen again.
The swelling has gone down a lot in my ankle now and I can walk again. I got it x-rayed today and they confirmed that it is just a bad sprain. I'm supposed to keep it in a boot for a couple of weeks, but hopefully the swelling will go down enough to fit it into a climbing shoe soon. Just no more bouldering for me, at least not anytime soon.
| David working his nemisis, Mantra (V8) |
The trip wasn't a complete bust though. When I was hanging around the campground I saw Kristen Kreuk an actress from the TV show Smallville heading up the tourist trail to the top of the Cheif. I had the hugest crush on when I was a teenager, in fact I think a poster of her might still be on my bedroom wall in Scotland. I'm certain it was her, she was looking good! I was too paralyzed to talk to her, I think I may have creeped her out with my staring though. For the rest of the trip I just chilled by Murrin Lake with my ankle in the water, read some books and daydreamed about meeting Kristen again.
The swelling has gone down a lot in my ankle now and I can walk again. I got it x-rayed today and they confirmed that it is just a bad sprain. I'm supposed to keep it in a boot for a couple of weeks, but hopefully the swelling will go down enough to fit it into a climbing shoe soon. Just no more bouldering for me, at least not anytime soon.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
She-Bear Photos
Got out to the She-Bear boulder today again to do some more scrubbing and work on projects. I cleaned up a few good moderates. Snapped a few photos, I'll let them do the talking.
| The She-Bear boulder from the parking, its about 20ft tall |
| The She-Bear Slab an awesome tricky V1 |
| A welcome jug high on the slab |
| Kevin on a crimpy V8 on the main face |
| Lots of good crimps |
| The stand start here is an amazing V3 |
| The top out is perfect, but not the way Kevin does it |
| Working a tricky arete, will probably be V6/7 |
| Yes the rock is that good! This is starting hold to an amazing V6 sloper problem. |
Kevin on Pooh Bear a fun V8, he sent it next go
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Find of the Year
Wow I haven’t been this excited about bouldering in a long time!
Let me explain. So recently a lot of the Olympia bouldering crew (Jimmy, Jeremy, Derik, Miles, David, Kevin, Chase and others) have been scouring the forests around Olympia and clicking through Google Earth in search of rock to climb on. Until recently their search had returned very little worthwhile. Then last week while turkey hunting in Capitol Forest, Chase stumbled upon a moss covered monster boulder. Pretty soon the boulder crew had waged war on the moss and an excellent boulder emerged, they dubbed it the ‘The She-Bear Boulder’. All week rumors have been circulating of a boulder so good it puts the blocs in Leavenworth and Squamish to shame. So today I thought I’d take a break from schoolwork and see what all the fuss was about. Half an hour after leaving downtown Oly I was standing under one of the best boulders I’ve ever seen! The rumors are not exaggerated, this boulder is something special. The crew have done a great job of cleaning it, dragging up their sledgehammers, chainsaws, leaf blowers, crowbars, and machetes to clear away the vegetation and remove the ‘loose’ holds. There is still more work to do and a major tree to take out, but it is very climbable in its current state. Jimmy has snagged most of the FAs, although there are a couple of hard ones and eliminates still to go.
Today I climbed a few of the future classics. Most of the problems I did were graded anywhere between V4 and V7 depending on who you ask. The hardest I did was an amazing sloper problem called Gummy Bears that felt around V6 to me. And I got the first ascent of a fun link-up that weighs in at around V5. I’m sure we’ll get a grade consensus soon. There are about 10 independent straight up problems, most of which have been done at V0- to V7, with potential for another 20 or so link-ups and eliminates. Most of the boulder is slightly overhanging with lots of small crimps so it lends itself to problems in the V4-V7 range, with a smattering of easier warm ups and at least 2 classic HARD lines that will be in the double digits for sure. Its certainly going to keep me busy this summer. I can’t stop thinking about a couple of projects that I need to finish up before someone else does. I’ll be headed back up Monday or Tuesday for an evening session depending on weather if anyone wants to join, as long as you don’t steal my project. Oh and I’ll bring my camera this time.
Let me explain. So recently a lot of the Olympia bouldering crew (Jimmy, Jeremy, Derik, Miles, David, Kevin, Chase and others) have been scouring the forests around Olympia and clicking through Google Earth in search of rock to climb on. Until recently their search had returned very little worthwhile. Then last week while turkey hunting in Capitol Forest, Chase stumbled upon a moss covered monster boulder. Pretty soon the boulder crew had waged war on the moss and an excellent boulder emerged, they dubbed it the ‘The She-Bear Boulder’. All week rumors have been circulating of a boulder so good it puts the blocs in Leavenworth and Squamish to shame. So today I thought I’d take a break from schoolwork and see what all the fuss was about. Half an hour after leaving downtown Oly I was standing under one of the best boulders I’ve ever seen! The rumors are not exaggerated, this boulder is something special. The crew have done a great job of cleaning it, dragging up their sledgehammers, chainsaws, leaf blowers, crowbars, and machetes to clear away the vegetation and remove the ‘loose’ holds. There is still more work to do and a major tree to take out, but it is very climbable in its current state. Jimmy has snagged most of the FAs, although there are a couple of hard ones and eliminates still to go.
Today I climbed a few of the future classics. Most of the problems I did were graded anywhere between V4 and V7 depending on who you ask. The hardest I did was an amazing sloper problem called Gummy Bears that felt around V6 to me. And I got the first ascent of a fun link-up that weighs in at around V5. I’m sure we’ll get a grade consensus soon. There are about 10 independent straight up problems, most of which have been done at V0- to V7, with potential for another 20 or so link-ups and eliminates. Most of the boulder is slightly overhanging with lots of small crimps so it lends itself to problems in the V4-V7 range, with a smattering of easier warm ups and at least 2 classic HARD lines that will be in the double digits for sure. Its certainly going to keep me busy this summer. I can’t stop thinking about a couple of projects that I need to finish up before someone else does. I’ll be headed back up Monday or Tuesday for an evening session depending on weather if anyone wants to join, as long as you don’t steal my project. Oh and I’ll bring my camera this time.
Monday, January 3, 2011
Bishop over New Year
Just after Christmas Chas and I headed down to Bishop California for a week of bouldering. It was a cold week to be down there but we still ended up getting a lot done. We set up camp at the Pit, and ended up climbing only at the Happies all week, the Buttermilks were snowed out. I was worried about my injured finger, but I taped it up pretty good, and tried to avoid anything crimpy. Hanging off pockets didn’t hurt it, which was good because the Happies are all about pockets. On our first couple of days we managed a quite a few V4’s and V5’s pretty quickly. Chas was climbing really well for his first real bouldering trip, we didn’t find anything project worthy though. The temps were chilly, it was nice in the sun, but it was really tough when a strong wind was blowing. The forecast looked called for very cold temps and strong gusts, so we thought it would be a good chance to drive up to Mammoth to visit and old friend of Chas’. It was nice to sleep indoors and have a hot shower, but Mammoth was a little too crazy for me, and I was glad to return to Bishop the next day.
| Chas sending a V4 "one finger!" |
| Me pulling on pockets on the west rim |
| The first powerful move of WORK is a four letter word |
Me thinking I flashed a V7!
Almost sending a V5
| The end of a good trip! |
Saturday, October 30, 2010
The South Sound Keeps Pulling Down
Last weekend was the fourth annual South Sound Pull Down at the warehouse rock gym in Olympia. It was a hugely successful competition, with more entrants than ever before, and tons of awesome prizes. A big thanks goes to everyone at the WRG who put it on especially Fawn, Sierra and Jimmy.
Having claimed the title of best Olympia climber in 07, 08, and 09. I really wanted to keep up my streak, but I also knew that I hadn’t been bouldering as much as I had in the past and I was up against some really strong competitors, so I wasn’t too disappointed when I didn’t win. I finished in 3rd place in the Men’s Advanced category just two points (one fall) behind Eric and Olcay who tied for first. But I was also beaten by a few who entered Men’s Open, including Micah and Nathan. I was happy with my performance though, and I got a sweet prize. Laura did awesome as usual and easily won her category. This comp has got me excited for climbing indoors now, and I think I’m going to enter the Seattle competition this year as well. Check out Micah’s write up about the comp for a much more interesting report.
Having claimed the title of best Olympia climber in 07, 08, and 09. I really wanted to keep up my streak, but I also knew that I hadn’t been bouldering as much as I had in the past and I was up against some really strong competitors, so I wasn’t too disappointed when I didn’t win. I finished in 3rd place in the Men’s Advanced category just two points (one fall) behind Eric and Olcay who tied for first. But I was also beaten by a few who entered Men’s Open, including Micah and Nathan. I was happy with my performance though, and I got a sweet prize. Laura did awesome as usual and easily won her category. This comp has got me excited for climbing indoors now, and I think I’m going to enter the Seattle competition this year as well. Check out Micah’s write up about the comp for a much more interesting report.
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| Laura sending her hardest problem of the competition. Photo Credit: http://www.patrickpenoyar.com/ |
Friday, October 22, 2010
Mind Games
I had a great time in Leavenworth this past weekend. The company was fun and I had a couple of sends that I’m particularly proud of. I drove over with Laura, Boon and Esteban in my car. And we met Micah, James, Melody and Gretchen out there. Friday night Micah got us a prime camping spot at the free campsite and plenty of wood keep us warm until the Rainier put me to sleep. Saturday, we headed to Castle Rock to climb some trad routes, along with Ian, a visiting climber from Salt Lake who we met the day before. I warmed up on a 5.6 and a couple of 5.8’s then Ian and I decided to try some harder climbs. I went for the onsight of The Nose, a classic 10d trad route. It wasn’t pretty to watch, I was probably up on the route for 45 minutes, climbing up and down, but I managed the onsight. Thinking back on it now, it was one of my funnest and most memorable sends of the year, but while I was on it, it was anything but fun. I was sketching out, pumped and not-confident. My gear was actually really good, but I couldn’t get the image of me falling and stripping my gear out of my mind. I have a love hate relationship with hard trad climbing, I really want to climb more and push myself harder. But when I’m actually on hard trad routes I scare myself silly. Ian gave it a shot after me, for an 11+ trad leader he was pretty sketched out on it as well which made me feel better for struggling a bit. Although it was almost as scary belaying him on it as it was leading it. Saturday night we had a good fire going but I guess I’m getting old cause I couldn’t stay up as late as some others in our group.
On Sunday we headed out to the boulders, I felt a lot stronger than I normally do on my second day climbing, I guess combining trad and bouldering works pretty well. After warming up on a few easy classics, we met up with Nathan who was in Leavenworth that weekend as well and we projected The Jib (V8) together. I say project, but really he flashed it while I worked on it. Last time I bouldered out here, I flashed the first move, but couldn’t do the rest. This time the end felt pretty straight forward but I struggled on committing to the first move. Another guy pulled over his mat as well, and he tried it, he soon decided he didn’t like it so was about to take his mat away, I knew I just had one chance before there wasn’t enough pads for me to feel comfortable on it. I committed to the move and dispatched it easily. It’s funny how something that you project, can feel so easy when you actually send it. It’s cool to have sent two V8’s this year, but apart from those two my next hardest is a V4. What’s up with that? I’m not too concerned though, I’m just glad I’m starting to get my boulder strength back, just in time for the South Sound Pull Down!
On Sunday we headed out to the boulders, I felt a lot stronger than I normally do on my second day climbing, I guess combining trad and bouldering works pretty well. After warming up on a few easy classics, we met up with Nathan who was in Leavenworth that weekend as well and we projected The Jib (V8) together. I say project, but really he flashed it while I worked on it. Last time I bouldered out here, I flashed the first move, but couldn’t do the rest. This time the end felt pretty straight forward but I struggled on committing to the first move. Another guy pulled over his mat as well, and he tried it, he soon decided he didn’t like it so was about to take his mat away, I knew I just had one chance before there wasn’t enough pads for me to feel comfortable on it. I committed to the move and dispatched it easily. It’s funny how something that you project, can feel so easy when you actually send it. It’s cool to have sent two V8’s this year, but apart from those two my next hardest is a V4. What’s up with that? I’m not too concerned though, I’m just glad I’m starting to get my boulder strength back, just in time for the South Sound Pull Down!
| Me onsighting The Nose 10d Trad at Caste Rock, Leavenworth |
| Nathan on the sit start to Spongebob Squarepad (V5) |
| Boon on an awesome V2 at Mad Meadows |
Saturday, September 25, 2010
What I've been up to
Summer is officially over, whether it ever arrived is still up for debate. I haven't been climbing as much recently. After my Ten Sleep trip, my parents visited from Scotland for a couple of weeks. This was their first time visiting me since I moved to Washington in 2006. We had a great time, they liked Olympia, and I showed them around the NW a bit including some places I had never visited before like Mount St Helens and the Oregon coast, both of which are beautiful. When they left, my student teaching placement started up, and I've been busy with that since. I'm at a High School in Tacoma, which has been difficult at times, but I'm really enjoying the experience. I did manage to get out a couple of weekends ago to Leavenworth bouldering which was a lot of fun. My bouldering strength is not what it should be, but I just renewed my membership to the Warehouse, so that should improve soon. I'm probably not going to get out as much this fall since I'll be pretty busy, but I'm getting out climbing at Vantage tomorrow, and I wouldn't miss The South Sound Pull Down for anything. Below are a couple of photos from Leavenworth, a shot I forgot to include from Ten Sleep, and a funny video from Ten Sleep.
| Jimmy takes it to a whole new level on The Practitioner |
| Laura works a sweet V4 The Lobster |
| Totally Flashed this photo. Ten Sleep, we'll be back! |












