Vicarious Thrills! November 14, 2011
Posted by littlebangtheory in climbing.Tags: bouldering, Farley Ledge, Jason Danforth, Pete Clark, project, Stereogram
2 comments
I went back out to Farley Ledge this weekend to see if the lads from last weekend would make further progress on their bouldering “project.” I might no longer be able to climb, but it still holds a powerful fascination for me, as well as an opportunity to expand my photographic bag of tricks. Action sports photography is a whole ‘nother beast than nature photography!
Anyway, there were Pad-People everywhere, and it was cool – young and old folks (well, OK, mostly young) hangin’ and chillin’, alternately relaxing and tearing it up to the best of their varied abilities. I followed a group of half a dozen up the steep trail to Stereogram, a vicious V10 problem which fights its way out the underbelly of an impressive boulder perched up near the top of the ledge. Stereogram has a reputation for being difficult to photograph, as it climbs out of a deep, dark hole into the light; much of the action occurs in the dim confines of a lithic Oubliette.
Here’s the general overview, for setting and scale, with a kid from Colorado emerging from the pit at the lower right:
I’m sorry not to have gotten his name, as he photographed well (long, elegant body positions and serious facial expressions.)
[Ed. – Tom Camillieri, thanks to Blake Cash]
Here’s a series of him working this set of moves:
That’s a really cool looking sequence.
A bit later I heard the sounds of climbers down below, where last week’s project had transpired. I packed up quickly and scooted down the steep trail, dancing from rock to rock, attentive to miss the dry leaves coating nearly everything; a misstep on such steep terrain would be nothing if not ugly.
And I was just in time to see Pete and Jason getting to work on the arete which had so engaged Breyton and Hayden the weekend before. I wanted a different perspective than the over-and-up view I’d shot those lads with, so I set up a rope and rappelled into a position looking down the ridge at the action.
It worked. I got a sense of the height, steepness and tenuousness of attachment which characterize this particular piece of stone, and an appreciation of why it remains unclimbed despite a decade of serious efforts by some very strong climbers.
Here’s Pete Clark putting a series of complex foot moves to good use, an instep scum to a powerful toe, all the while moving too quickly for my shutter speed, despite an ISO of 5000:
Pete makes the difficult look easy, and the impossible look hard. It’s a gift few of us are given, and his humility is as impressive as his ability.
Jason Danforth put his calm to work as he found the hang-point at about the same spot:
This man’s stronger than dirt, and stands a good chance of sending this thing.
As darkness crawled up the valley walls, both of these dudes left happy with their progress. Perhaps next time they visit it will all come together for them, and the “project” will get a name.