Stashed Crash Pads in RMNP
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I am in agreement with most of the people who replied to this thread, and I think stashing pads is a bad idea. In fact, I don't really understand the practice at all. Unlike some other comments, I also believe that stashing gear at the base of climbs, if you are hiking out, is bad form. I believe that if you are hiking out, you should take everything you came in with; if not more. |
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We may very well lose access to the areas around Evans because of this also. |
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i am a boulderer, and call me cheap or poor, but i think pads are expensive, and anyone who wants to leave them in the park to be eaten by rodents should call me up, cuz id rather use them right....150 bucks a pop?? come on...spoiled brats |
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Well, it seems as though most of you believe that stashing pads in the park or anywhere else for that mater is not an acceptable practice. I don't buy the argument that because roped climbers have been stashing gear for decades at areas like Yosemite and the Diamond that it is okay to do so here. My problem with this is that it threatens future access, The Park is aware of this practice and it is, in my opinion, only a matter of time before we have regulations regarding bouldering in The Park. Unless we police ourselves. |
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Chris, |
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Hey Greg Schrodt -- I know you, and I know you're a better person than your post would lead us to believe. No need to call people pussies here. Doesn't help move the discussion forward. The climbing community is too small and too tight to throw that stuff out. --J |
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Sounds like Greg is just tellin it like it is. |
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Chris, |
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There is a difference between stashing gear in the bivy area under the Diamond and leaving crashpads near Emerald Lake, etc. Agreed with the above statements, remove the crashpads as they are trash. Seriously, they don't weigh that much and are not too difficult to carry. I'm not hitting boulderer's in the teeth as I enjoy bouldering myself, but seriously, stashing a crashpad because it's too heavy to carry?? |
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Shane, |
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Will, I think the difference is the gear is stowed for a quick return hike for more supplies, or get food, or take care of sanitation needs for the night and then is put to use on the wall. |
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Chill bros. As long as the people stashing pads are mindful of the situation and they aren't leaving the pads for more than a reasonable amount of time (subjective I know) and as long as it doesn't become an issue with NPS then why complain. Who made it right for anyone to take the law into their own hands and remove the pads. Sounds like we have some NPS Vigilantes here. |
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Ok, I live in Estes and constantly boulder and climb in the park. This is the first year I've been bouldering up here and understand the landings are horrible. The thing is Chaos see's soo many climbers a day, that if everone brought up 1 pad, there would be plenty to make even the worst landings ok. So why stash em'. It's getting out of hand, this is a fucking national park. Man up and remove any pad that you've left up there. |
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Mark, |
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I have been hearing a lot about this from the locals in RMNP. Mostly i have been shocked at the reports of all the foam bits scattered around everywhere by the critters eating the crash pads. |
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A relevant thread from last year |
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Lee Smith wrote: I would take exception to stashed gear of ANY sort in wilderness areas (or even the local crag). Crash pads are exceptionally intrusive. A pack full of project gear is also intrusive. Don't be lazy. Pack it in and pack it out.Boy is my face red. It has occurred to me that earlier this summer I actually stashed a bunch of gear at the base of a climb. Here is the scenario: We backpacked (55+ lb. packs) 3 miles on good trail and then bushwacked another 1.5 miles into a wilderness area where we set up a camp. Another rough .75 miles and 500 foot of elevation gain brought us to our objective--some unclimbed crags in the Mt. Evans Wilderness. After several hours of climbing we went down to camp, but we left ropes and gear in a small cave at the base of the crag so we wouldn't have to carry it up the next day. We did this for 2 days in a row. The likelihood of any one coming upon our gear was extremely small. We had the entire place to ourselves and would have known if any one else was in the area. Still....I stashed gear. I probably would do it again in the same situation. So I have come to the conclusion that this is a very complex issue. But I think the guiding concern should be the obtrusiveness of the stashed gear. Marmot-eaten crash pads are very obtrusive. A couple of packs of gear stashed for 2 days in a cave 5 miles from the nearest-other-humans is very unobtrusive. I guess we all have to gauge what others might see on their outdoor adventures, and how our actions will affect their experience. |
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The other issue at Chaos Canyon right now is access. We can debate if stashing pads at Chaos and stashing gear at the diamond are similar practices or different. However, the rangers do know that pads are stashed at Chaos and do not approve, thus endangering access. This fact alone should stop the practice of stashing of pads at Chaos. I believe that Chaos Canyon will be closed to bouldering if the current trend continues. |
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A couple years ago I was hiking in the Mt. Evans area and came across a bunch of foam blowing in a little nook at the base of the apron. It never occured to me it came from a fellow climber. Disgusting. |
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Professional climbers? Strong climbers? Cmon, if you can't carry your equipment, you shouldn't be using it. |