Arcadia climbing gym

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phile

Trad climber
SF, CA
Topic Author's Original Post - Sep 25, 2012 - 06:35pm PT
Hey, relocating from SF to Pasadena in a couple of weeks. How is the bouldering gym in Arcadia? Will I think it sucks compared to the Planet Granite and Touchstone gyms?
jstn

Trad climber
monrovia, ca
Sep 25, 2012 - 06:55pm PT
I've never been to those gyms, but probably. But hey, if you live in the area and you are busy it's enough to keep you in shape.

I trained there about two days per week for about two years. Still climb there, just hiking more now, too.
10b4me

Ice climber
dingy room at the Happy boulders hotel
Sep 25, 2012 - 07:37pm PT
never been to the aforementioned gyms, but what I know of Planet Granite, you will probably be disappointed with the ARC.
ymmv
phile

Trad climber
SF, CA
Topic Author's Reply - Sep 25, 2012 - 07:37pm PT
Thanks for the info! I guess there's no substitute for checking it out in person, but I'm trying to decide how much I'd be willing to give up in other aspects (commute time, price, neighborhood, etc) to live within biking distance of a gym (in the general Pasadena area).

I guess my more objectively phrased question would be, is it decent enough that people who regularly climb outside find it worth going to. And in your case, it sounds like the answer is yes. So--thanks.

phil
10b4me

Ice climber
dingy room at the Happy boulders hotel
Sep 25, 2012 - 07:41pm PT
you will get a workout. like all gyms though I find the routes to be pretty contrived.
phile

Trad climber
SF, CA
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 8, 2012 - 08:53pm PT
Just got to ARC for the first time. A humble facility, but overall I was pleasantly surprised. Good vibe, uncrowded, inexpensive, and most importantly, thoughtful route setting--problems that were, on average, at least as good as Mission Cliffs, I thought.

p.
TGT

Social climber
So Cal
Nov 8, 2012 - 09:22pm PT
Who cares about the gyms!

You're two hours from the Monument and an hour and a half +/- or so from Tahquitz.
Mark Sensenbach

climber
CA
Nov 8, 2012 - 09:47pm PT
I agree with TGT, there is also good climbing locally in the san gabriel mountains. Some great areas above Sierra Madre which is above Arcadia. Really cool town with good hikes.
TGT

Social climber
So Cal
Nov 8, 2012 - 10:38pm PT
not really that much technical climbing, but plenty of workout material right up the street.

Not a whole lot has changed since Muir.

After saying so much for human culture in my last, perhaps I may now be allowed a word for wildness — the wildness of this southland, pure and untamable as the sea.

In the mountains of San Gabriel, overlooking the lowland vines and fruit groves, Mother Nature is most ruggedly, thornily savage. Not even in the Sierra have I ever made the acquaintance of mountains more rigidly inaccessible. The slopes are exceptionally steep and insecure to the foot of the explorer, however great his strength or skill may be, but thorny chaparral constitutes their chief defense. With the exception of little park and garden spots not visible in comprehensive views, the entire surface is covered with it, from the highest peaks to the plain. It swoops into every hollow and swells over every ridge, gracefully complying with the varied topography, in shaggy, ungovernable exuberance, fairly dwarfing the utmost efforts of human culture out of sight and mind.

But in the very heart of this thorny wilderness, down in the dells, you may find gardens filled with the fairest flowers, that any child would love, and unapproachable linns lined with lilies and ferns, where the ousel builds its mossy hut and sings in chorus with the white falling water. Bears, also, and panthers, wolves, wildcats; wood rats, squirrels, foxes, snakes, and innumerable birds, all find grateful homes here, adding wildness to wildness in glorious profusion and variety.

Where the coast ranges and the Sierra Nevada come together we find a very complicated system of short ranges, the geology and topography of which is yet hidden, and many years of laborious study must be given for anything like a complete interpretation of them. The San Gabriel is one or more of these ranges, forty or fifty miles long, and half as broad, extending from the Cajon Pass on the east, to the Santa Monica and Santa Susanna ranges on the west. San Antonio, the dominating peak, rises towards the eastern extremity of the range to a height of about six thousand feet, forming a sure landmark throughout the valley and all the way down to the coast, without, however, possessing much striking individuality. The whole range, seen from the plain, with the hot sun beating upon its southern slopes, wears a terribly forbidding aspect. There is nothing of the grandeur of snow, or glaciers, or deep forests, to excite curiosity or adventure; no trace of gardens or waterfalls. From base to summit all seems gray, barren, silent — dead, bleached bones of mountains, overgrown with scrubby bushes, like gray moss. But all mountains are full of hidden beauty, and the next day after my arrival at Pasadena I supplied myself with bread and eagerly set out to give myself to their keeping.

http://www.yosemite.ca.us/john_muir_writings/steep_trails/chapter_11.html

Get this book

http://www.amazon.com/Trails-Angeles-100-Hikes-Gabriels/dp/0899973779

then get off the paths once you get the hang of the place.

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