Sketchy Soloing in Flatirons?
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I'm curious, has anyone else gotten themselves into uncomfortable situations soloing in the flatirons? I picked up Roach's book, saw 1,000' rated at 5.6 and immediately said "I'm there". What I failed to take into account was that I had no experience in the flatirons and more importantly, minimal experience with slabs. Meaning I couldn't remember the last time I climbed one. But 5.6?? I'd could walk up that. Everything here begs to be free soloed. Suckered in. It's much more committing than you think, and before I figured this place out, I got myself into a few heart pounding, compulsively chalking, almost a statistic situations. I'm sure half of you ran up the direct route your first time, barefoot and blindfolded without even knowing what sandstone was. For the rest of you, have you ever been lured into onsight solos you maybe should have roped up for? Please no speeches about the evils of onsight soloing. We all make our own decisions and I try to make mine responsibly. I'll concede that in my situation a little more respect for the rock might have been warranted. |
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Yes, I have. Maintaining your equanimity when the situation gets scary is the attribute that allows you to grow into an accomplished soloist. And, remember-you still have to get down again;the flatirons can be pretty dicey that way. In thirty plus years since my first solo,most of the sketch has involved getting down. |
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Here in the East we have our own slab climbing as well - the infamous Chapel Pond Slabs in Keene Valley, NY. Even a 5.5 on the slab can be mighty scary with it's long run-outs, exposure and 'lack or grip of your rock shoes' that so many newbies (incl myself) have felt. Slab climbing is a entirely different bear indeed - fun - but none-the-less challenging. |
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Smoother, in the Flatirons. That was the headiest solo, but even if you were roped up, you'd still be essentially soloing. |
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Yikes! :o |
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Well I guess I have sketchy solo story for you. Not exactly sketchy, but definitely spicy. |
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shuminW wrote: Cause hard slabs don't really climb any differently than easy slabs? Step, reach, or some sequences of those 2 moves. Doesn't this prove the point? The only excitement on a slab is the runout, which isn't unique to slab climbing.Yeah, whatever |
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johnL wrote:I'm developing a slab climbing shoe. Stiff and sticky of course but several needles inside near the toes. You have a cortisone pump on your waist to control the level of pain relief needed.sounds pretty sweet, but are they made of cardboard? |
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I got suckered into onsight soloing Pineline at night. they said it was a 5.2 with a first few feet of 5.6. needless to say I topped out after having a aneurysm and was told we just did Pineline. the following day I was told Swan Slab Gully was 5.2 and went up on that. |
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Will R. wrote:What I failed to take into account was that I had no experience in the flatirons and more importantly, minimal experience with slabs.Perhaps you should reconsider your approach to soloing. |
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So Here's the thing, if you don't feel comfortable soloing, then guess what you're human. Soloing is dangerous. But take it like a man, and realize that just because you can buy climbing gear next to the ladies yoga pants at REI doesn't mean its safe, its not. That being said soloing can be some of the most full you'll ever have climbing. I think the times I was in the most danger, were the best I've ever had. And that's more or less the thing. |
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On my first trip to Boulder, I found myself partnerless so I soloed the East Face of the First. I figured that if I was comfortable on the first pitch, which is 5.6 and pretty unprotected, if I remember correctly, that the rest of the route shouldn't be a problem. Good in theory, but I did encounter a sketchy section higher up where a rope would have been much appreciated. Still, I earned my chops on slab climbing venues such as Suicide and Joshua Tree. Despite that, 5.6 still felt scary at times. |
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Soloing well below your limit can be a lot of fun and addicting. However, I believe that most soloing accidents happen when something unexpected happens. You handhold could break off, even on a 4th class route. On the 3rd Flatiron, somebody could drop a piece of gear on you. It might rain. You could go the wrong way. When you think about it, there are hundreds of unexpected dangerous things that might happen to you, and most of them have not so much to do with the technical difficulty of the route, but how big a cliff is below you. |
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Strangely though, the worst accident I had in the Flatirons was when I was roped up on lead! On a route rated 5.0! I still have no idea why I suddenly started to fall. The worst part was that a friend was free soloing 15 feet below me, and I could have knocked him off. The good news is that I managed to dynamically grab onto a huge flake just before I would have crashed into him. I suffered nothing worse than some nasty abrasions. My friend was untouched, and the bottle of champagne I was carrying survived intact! |
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George Bell wrote:Strangely though, the worst accident I had in the Flatirons was when I was roped up on lead!Your story reminds me of when my buddy and I took his kid up the first. We were at the top one pitch back from the rap anchors waiting for another party to finish rapping off (Lynn Hill, no less, and some beginner friends). After a while, a couple Brits show up, one of whom had very bloody shins. He was leading, somehow lost his footing, and started to slide. Just as he was really getting going, he hit a ledge and stopped. Without that ledge, he'd have taken a tumbling 60 or 70 footer. No fun on a 60 degree slab. Of all the Flatirons soloing hazards that George mentioned, getting off "route" is perhaps the easiest and most frightening thing to do. Been there a couple times... |
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My first day in the Flatirons I was hiking around checking the rock out, walking from Chautauqua to Der Zerkle!....what's NCAR? Anyway, I was on my way back and I passed this guy with just shoes and a chalk bag. We exchanged small talk and he told me he was "going for a quick solo" and invited me along. I think the route is called "What if your not". Initially he told me it was 5.9 but as I was climbing up after him he kept saying "if it feels harder than 5.8, your doing it wrong. It was pretty scary at first pulling on huge hueco's and flakes, but after a few laps I got used to it. Probably one of the best days I've had in the Flatirons, it was soloing but not really that sketchy. Maybe that's why it was so good. |
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George Bell wrote: ...and the bottle of champagne I was carrying survived intact!Way to preserve the precious cargo, George! That's my kind of Flatiron ascent. |
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T.Dailey wrote:....what's NCAR?It's where The Nose got flattened by a steam roller. |
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Dave, |
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Really? |
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