New and Experienced Climbers over 50 #31
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Lori Milas wrote: Thanks Lori. The thing about climbing when you get older, in my experience, is that you get so much praise! People say ‘well, you made THAT look easy’ and ‘’You climbed that nicely’. Of course, I’m missing out the not stated but inferred ‘[for an old person]’ bit but I take my compliments any way they come thank you very much. |
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This is about the climbing bans at Araps. The Pines is the camp site climbers have been going to for decades. With Love to Another By Carl I sat in The Pines on a lovely day, An insignificant dot on time’s infinite way, As I waited for friends to climb and to play, To climb and to play in a respectful way. I looked at the majesty, And felt weak and small, Everything was big, Big, mighty and tall. I worried about falling, My spirt would wane, I worried about falling, Depressed; sad I became. But I looked at the sky, And I spoke to my god, And I looked at the majesty, Of beautiful rock. And I said, You don’t need to be bold, You’re old, you’re not young, If you connect you’ll find wisdom, And the answers be told. So I went for a walk, I stepped barefoot on land, Told the birds that I loved them, I was nature boy, I was grand. And back at camp I looked again at the sky, And the grass and the trees for a very long while, and they said connect, If you connect you’ll be high. And I saw a flat stone, It spoke in my hand, It said connect and you’ll be free, Connect and you’ll feel grand. And I took up another stone to scribe, The lesson I’d been given, On that flat stone I’d found, I felt very more than alive. And I wrote ‘connect’, And it came out like written in ink, With a double fine line, As if written in ink. Later at the washpoint, While washing my dishes, I left my ‘connect’ message stone for another, With love from me, With love to another. |
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Carl, I have fond memories of Arapalies in the 80’s. My favorite routes were Orestes, Kachoong, and Taste of Honey. So sad that this is happening. |
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Ward Smith wrote: I haven’t done those routes. It’s a sad situation. So many climbers are posting how Araps is so spiritually healing for them. So grounding. Thinking about it makes me cry. There really is no where like it in Australia that I know of that’s so good for learning to trad climb and also for moderate to very hard grades. They will commercialise what’s left and make it dull and sterile. |
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Gonna be in JT for a few days with a bunch of climbing buddies. Need some beta on not-so-well known cragging sites with stuff in the 5.7 - 5.11 range. I know the Park quite well, but have lost touch with a lot of it in recent years as the crowds have swelled. PM me if you prefer to keep the suggestions on the DL. Much appreciated. |
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Hidden Dome has some nice routes on it. |
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My wife and I recently spent a day and a half at the Highway 62 Crags. Nothing particularly stand-out, but we avoided going into the park on two very busy days, saw parts of it we’d never seen and I climbed several routes that were new to me. |
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apogee wrote: Apogee, not sure what you are looking for, but its not very hard to get away from people honestly. Especially this time of year almost anywhere a bit off the road won't see a crowd. I'm sure you've been to the White Cliffs of Dover, but its great if its a hotter day. There has been a handful of routes added in the last 10 years or so. Of course you walk right past Baskerville Rock as well. BITD these would be crowded, but I an earlyish start gets you out ahead of 98% of the people. Lori has posted pictures at Brownie Girl Dome. It also has had route activity and the new ones are quite good. There are a couple of heady leads on the wall so heads up! The Seitch was quite popular when the routes went up, but not so much anymore. All the routes are mixed, and a few are quite hard (IMO). Patch Dome is also a short walk and Date with Destiny Jones is one of a few routes there worth doing. An area you can play by ear is Echo.. If you get there early you can tick off the popular Echo proper routes. You can move around the corner ( avoiding Popes Crack, still overcrowded ) and head to North Face of Snickers, Little Hunk SW Face, and Physical Graffiti ( just the one route ). These are all visible from the same place and have various sun/shade. The last 4-5 times I went anywhere in Comic Book I didn't see anyone. Not sure what you've done there, but Herman is a little shorty that's good on the way in.Black Hill Gold is also just on the way in (or out ) and you can look at Bob's Texas Tea and just shake your head. Watergate is great and there are a couple of new ones including Midday Lightning. From Barker Dam, Oregon Trail has a 1/2 day of shortish bolted routes. Once there you could also do Lubricated Goat, which is good, and Bish which is just goofy funess. Plus you walk right by stuff like X Rated Tits, as well as the old school class ( and Lori favorite ) Eye for an Eye Route for a Route Beak Boulder has a great mix of old and new, mostly sport like: you also get stuff like Totally Tubular Most of these are newer bolted stuff, but obviously that's most of the new stuff. Plus, my eye for quality is obvious quite bad as I've climbed here way too long. |
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Jan Mc wrote: Hidden Dome is awesome, but can be freakishly chilly on a cold day. Plus it is oddly strenuous to get to. |
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Murf wrote: Hey! Thanks for gettin' the rope up there for us...(March 2006...seems like awhile ago...ha ha). Ran into our mutual friend Jeff a few months back at the gym. Still looking good and hasn't aged a bit... |
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Brian in SLC wrote: There it is, that easy step up, which for me turned out to be a fiasco. There was a line getting into the park at 10 this morning as I was leaving, but as a rule, I never see anyone here. Earlier is better as far as having the whole place to yourself. I was at Cave Corridor this morning on my way to hike up that miserable Ryan mountain. There are some moderate routes on those very pretty rocks and I doubt you would find a single person Climbing there. —- Wendy, I hit my three post limit yesterday and I am so sorry about Bruce. He’s been having problems for a long time right? Will you keep us posted please? I’ve been at the hospital with Tony every day and it’s a long drive so today I thought I’d take a day off, and of course I got a text from him that he was “profusely bleeding” and he was pretty sure he was going to lose his leg. Half hour later I got another text that his hematoma had burst and all that bleeding was coming from there and the wound care people thought it was a good thing. They will be adding another woundVAC and transporting him off to rehab Meanwhile, I had my keys in my hand – – do I stay or do I go? I’ve really been thinking about a dog. I miss my border collie who was my best friend, but I really didn’t understand how much he needed a job. Toward the end of his life, I took him to a border collie trainer who turned him loose in a field with some sheep and he lost his mind running after them. She said he was wonderfully fast and perfect as a herding dog, but that at this point in his life, his hips had a little arthritis and it wouldn’t be good for him. So it wouldn’t be fair to bring a new little border buddy here, right? I am probably not up for the serious training and workouts border collies love. I also had two Pomeranians who I was totally in love with so that’s a thought. But it seems like every day some neighbor reports that some coyotes got after their little fluffy and all that’s left are a few of wisps fur. Likewise, cats don’t do so well around here either. I’ve never had 100% indoor cat. They always want to go outside. So while Tony has been in the hospital, I turned on a series on Netflix called “this is us “. Somehow, I watched and slept my way through 17 episodes. I still don’t know how I feel about it. Is anybody watching this? Gidget. Not only was she a surprisingly good swimmer, but she loved swimming underwater at our lake. She would do a swan dive off of a rock and not resurface for 15 or 20 feet. |
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Donald Thompson wrote: Whiskey Does Riley like to chase stuff? Beautiful dog! Thank you for sharing! |
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Murf, thank you for the suggestions. I'm pretty wary of popular areas like Echo, but you might be right that we could luck out if the timing is right. We don't mind walking in a reasonable distance...and I'm especially happy to do so if it means getting away from people. There is a variety of ability in our group, but all highly experienced climbers, so any kind of suggestion is probably helpful between 5.7 - 5.11. A spot that has good density of routes would be ideal, so everyone can be doing something. |
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Lori, Bruce seems to be prone to wounds that don't heal and become infected. He should come home tomorrow, assuming the portable wound vac arrives. I just received a box of antibiotic balls to put in the fridge. It feels like I've been dealing with the logistics nonstop today. You will understand how exhausting this is -- and not in a good physical way. |
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Whiskey was a looker too. I got Riley from a breeder located in Midpines on the road to Yosemite Valley. yeah a few months back he went after a skunk one night and got sprayed. Since it was cold and snowing outside we had to let him in. The entire place stunk so badly that it set off the fire alarm several times during the night. He once charged a bear on a nearby trail but I screamed at him to stop, which he did, thank God! My brother-in-law a couple years ago had hip replacement surgery. We nearly lost him . When he got home he was in severe pain and he and my sister tried to convince the med people that something wasn't right, but they assured them that it was just a matter of time and that everything was ok. Meanwhile my brother-in- law got worse. Finally they took him back for tests and thereby discovered he had contracted an infection that apparently had been introduced by the replacement objects themselves. It was such a novel and rare bacterium that they reported and described the infection in several medical journals. They had to go in and take out that replacement and swap it with a new one-- hopefully one they had remembered to disinfect properly this time. |
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So sorry about bruce and tony. |
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Lori wrote…”It’s humiliating to learn that some kid climbed 10c on his first day out and it’s taking me five years to get there.”
I have some young friends, college age, who have been coming out to SP for less than a year bouldering and they have done maybe 5 pitches of sport… I got them to come out. Not only did they get the rope up for me they Flashed everything they tried right up to 12b … Still praying for Tony to recover quickly. Being in hospital is no picnic with all the wake-ups, stabbing and jabbing all day and night. He is lucky to have you supporting him. @Wendy … praying for Bruce. @Appoge … I have found that “Rock Garden” despite its short approach and many hi quality routes can sometimes be deserted on crowded weekends. Good luck @Carl … what is happening right now is a crying shame. Go work for local political change. Later all |
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I found a little French Bistro where I can drop in for a sandwich while visiting Tony. The braised beef Gruyère is heaven and they serve it gluten free for me. AND they play French music in the background.
To hone in on this a little closer— if you were going to pick and choose when to really hit that protein goal it should be the day AFTER a hard workout or serious day of climbing. this is when the body is in its most anabolic state and requires max amino acids to build muscle etc.
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