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Messages 1 - 146 of total 146 in this topic |
Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Original Post - Dec 5, 2010 - 03:17pm PT
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I think it was John Sherman that called this the second most famous boulder problem in the world, Midnight Lightning being the first. It's kind of a weird statement, because I almost never hear discussion of the Thimble. Does anyone here have personal experience? How often does it get done? From what I've read it seems like a V4 highball or thereabouts.
Thanks
Alex
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Wayno
Big Wall climber
Seattle, WA
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I have stood at the base and wondered. I was there in 79 and it was crowded. At the time I could maybe climb 5.10. It looked to be way beyond my skill level.
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Gregory Crouch
Social climber
Goleta, California
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There is a guardrail at the base that will decapitate you if you fall.
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Reeotch
Trad climber
Kayenta, AZ
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Maybe "important" would be a better term than "famous".
What about Slapshot? Still unrepeated, I think . . .
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Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 5, 2010 - 03:29pm PT
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Gregory- The guardrail is gone now.
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The Larry
climber
Moab, UT
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Verm said
"The Thimble was the most famous boulder problem in America before Midnight Lightning seized that crown."
He did the second ascent 20 years after Gill.
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Jaybro
Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
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Actually Verm may have done the second solo ascent (full stylee)
It had been toproped (less stylee) by smedley, Todd, archibald? myself and others prior to his write up about it.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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yeah, the thimble seems to have had a lot of ascents, mostly roped but at least a few unroped, before verm did it.
i haven't done it either way, and there's still lingering debate over the exact line. i've heard everything from 11d to 12b on the grade. Very different animal today with pads.
The Needles aren't really on the current bouldering map. The rock isn't the sort that lends itself to double digits, because it's so frickin sharp. Beautiful place, but the rock sucks if you're planning to try hard things that require multiple attempts.
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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I think Verm's comment was intended to include historical context.
The guardrail was there when Gill did it, and there were no pads and no spotters. At the time, 5.12 was two grades harder than the hardest climbs anyone was imagining. Gill didn't do it with a support crew of spotters, encouragers and reporters who would cheer him on and then post dispatches to the media on the accomplishment.
Gill was totally alone, engaging in a private quest, with no expectation of any kind of recognition and barely any vehicle for conveying it. He had nothing even remotely resembling the level of protection enjoyed by modern boulderers, and instead faced not only the hard ground but that guardrail.
If someone now would do a 5.17 highball without pads or spotters and no film crew preserving every move for posterity and then make no effort at promotion other than a passing comment or two to some friends, we might have an analogous event.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Great post rgold.
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Mighty Hiker
climber
Vancouver, B.C.
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Isn't there a photo somewhere of Gill attempting or climbing the Thimble?
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Steve Grossman
Trad climber
Seattle, WA
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The cover shot from Summit February March 1980. Caption reads: "A bouldering route on the Thimble, Black Hills, South Dakota. Climber Jeff Achey. Photo by Jane Presser." Not sure if this is on the Gill route.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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I have done the thimble.... 5.3. On the backside. The gaurdrail is gone, but I don't think that has led to a rash on ascents. There is some great footage Chuck Fryberger taking some huge falls on it. I heard he never got it on that trip and went on to establish a V11 so that should say something about the difficulty. As of about 10 years ago I heard the number of ascents could be counted on your fingers I am sure Midnight Lightning has had many times more people ascend it.
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ß Î Ø T Ç H
climber
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stone crusade from John's site (K. Toshi)
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The Larry
climber
Moab, UT
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klk said
"...at least a few unroped, before verm did it."
Uh wrong, John did the second. I'm obviously not talking about TR ascents. That's kinda ghey.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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I am sure Midnight Lightning has had many times more people ascend it.
Definitely.
But that's mostly a reflection of the way that the Needles have fallen out of favor. Thimble (or Red Cross Rock, for that matter) used to be about as visible as Lightning or The Mandala are today. The Needles used to be a capitol for US rock climbing. For a start, it was more or less en route to the Tetons for climbers driving from the East or Upper Midwest. For those poor souls stuck in Minnesota, it was the first decent thing they were going to hit once they'd escaped the prairie. Heh.
Gill's important routes in The Needles and Tetons aren't currently as famous as they would be if they'd also been in a place that is still thought of as a capitol for rockclimbing.
And Rgold is correct, the sport has changed to the point that it's impossible to imagine anyone pushing a leap in standards that would be comparable to what GIll did with bouldering standards for North America. The context is just entirely different now. If it can happen, it'll be in some obscure specialty that many of us don't even think of as legitimate "climbing," the way bouldering was for Gill's generation.
If it were 1965, this site would be dominated by threads about the feminization of climbing driven by old crusty guys whining about what a coward and lightweight this Gill grom was, always climbing short stupid stuff in sunshine.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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klk said
"...at least a few unroped, before verm did it."
Uh wrong, John did the second. I'm obviously not talking about TR ascents. That's kinda ghey.
Well, unless something has changed, I don't think that Verm is still claiming a 2nd unroped. My understanding is that it had at least two or three unroped ascents prior to that, at least one of which was onsight.
So far as the TR stuff goes, I'll probably see Jaybro in a few. I'll pass along your sentiments.
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mooser
Trad climber
seattle
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I think Verm's comment was intended to include historical context.
The guardrail was there when Gill did it, and there were no pads and no spotters. At the time, 5.12 was two grades harder than the hardest climbs anyone was imagining. Gill didn't do it with a support crew of spotters, encouragers and reporters who would cheer him on and then post dispatches to the media on the accomplishment.
Gill was totally alone, engaging in a private quest, with no expectation of any kind of recognition and barely any vehicle for conveying it. He had nothing even remotely resembling the level of protection enjoyed by modern boulderers, and instead faced not only the hard ground but that guardrail.
If someone now would do a 5.17 highball without pads or spotters and no film crew preserving every move for posterity and then make no effort at promotion other than a passing comment or two to some friends, we might have an analogous event.
...or sticky rubber.
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john hansen
climber
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On page 252 of Ament's Wizards of rock it says Greg Collins repeated it in 1981.
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The Larry
climber
Moab, UT
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klk, yup, I stand corrected I just pulled out Stone Crusade. Verm says Greg Collins likely did the second.
I love TRing btw. I get ghey on the rock all the time.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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If I remember right Pete Delanoy did an early unroped ascent.
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Jaybro
Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
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The other deal with that climb, whether or not the guardrail is currently there, is that you could fall onto a car, or turf on the tarmac and get run over by a 'bago. What fun would that be?
When we rapped off the Needle's eye my partner yanked the rope just as a country sedan wagon oulled up and the rope landed on their Hood!
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Disaster Master
Social climber
Born in So-Cal, left my soul in far Nor-Cal.
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The guardrail was there when Gill did it, and there were no pads and no spotters. At the time, 5.12 was two grades harder than the hardest climbs anyone was imagining. Gill didn't do it with a support crew of spotters, encouragers and reporters who would cheer him on and then post dispatches to the media on the accomplishment.
Gill was totally alone, engaging in a private quest, with no expectation of any kind of recognition and barely any vehicle for conveying it. He had nothing even remotely resembling the level of protection enjoyed by modern boulderers, and instead faced not only the hard ground but that guardrail.
If someone now would do a 5.17 highball without pads or spotters and no film crew preserving every move for posterity and then make no effort at promotion other than a passing comment or two to some friends, we might have an analogous event.
I love it. The most obscure and tenuous ascents ocasionally transcend the norm.
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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un 14, 2010 - 01:15pm PT
John, did you consider your route on the Thimble bouldering?
No. For several years I had been experimenting with what could now be called free-solo exploration. I considered the Thimble to be a climb, and when I first saw it, as I soloed up an easier route to its left, I thought this might be a good test to see how far I was willing to go along these lines. Afterwards, I thought "that was far enough", and went back to easier solos. Another difference: the Thimble had no dynamics, and most of my bouldering problems had some kind of dynamic component. Also, it wasn't as difficult as many of my problems.
How many of your problems met the muster of B-3?
A few. In retrospect, what is now considered V9 or V10 would have qualified, for that was about as hard as I climbed.
These articles are painful to read! They seem incredibly dated, and my writing skills were minimal. But they represent my thinking on bouldering at that time . . . not necessarily what the few other bouldering enthusiasts thought! Hey, it's a sport open to individual interpretation, and hopefully won't be bound by inflexible ethical rules.
Shortly after doing The Thimble, John Gill told me about it in the Tetons as we were bouldering together by Jenny Lake. He seemed a thoughtful mixture of pride in the accomplishment, and still a bit shaken; saying on that climb he had crossed over a limit that he didn't plan to revisit.
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MisterE
Social climber
Bouncy Tiggerville
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I tried that thing a bunch of times in the mid-90's (alone, with pad), and always bailed left at "the knob of commitment".
One of the ballsiest ascents in bouldering history, IMO.
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Gill's comments illuminate a point worth repeating.
The Thimble should really be viewed as a short climb rather than a boulder problem. Gill had done far harder boulder problems.
(The Scab:
just a few yards downhill from the Thimble, being one of many examples).
Given the fact that he had already bouldered---what?---as much as six V-grades harder, the Thimble could hardly be considered revolutionary in terms of difficulty, which is why calling it a "V4 Highball" misses the point. As a climb, it combined difficulty as yet barely imagined with a level of boldness that was extremely rare for the time.
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Patrick Oliver
Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
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Thanks Kerwin and Rich, knowledgeable voices. Gill has always
pondered and reflected, thrown out ideas, called bouldering
this or that and again renamed it or re-associated it. The process
is similar, I suppose, to a math theroum (spelling?), where one
postulates and revises. That's a somewhat typical characteristic of
a creative mind, I'm sure. I wouldn't take any given comment of his as the
final end all. The important things are Gill's humility, his strength
not only as a climber but as a human being, that he is a true
example for us all, was then and is now. I think Gill could have climbed
8 grades harder than he did at his best, had he ever really wanted
to push. He never did, in all the times I bouldered with him, go "all
out." Oh yes, a few moves took that moment's burst of power. There were
times he transcended, if you like that word. He has boulder problems
no one has done, that would tear apart your muscles if you had that
many muscles. But mostly he has continued to have a spirit of play,
to enjoy being outside. Some climbers today, I just happen to
think of Fred Nicole, would spend weeks and days and all-day days at
some problem, finally wire the first few moves, then spend a couple
more days or weeks on the next several moves, and of course standards
are going to shoot up as a result. Standards will rise also as they
always do, with the natural passing of time and each new generation's
inheritance of consciousness. Today a new climber is given bouldering
at a very high standard and almost begins where great climbers of the
far past set their upper sights. That the Thimble does not rate as
high as other climbs today means little to nothing. It takes a very
special climber, even today, to go up and climb it, along the original
line (farther to the right than many do it). Gill had manky shoes,
nothing but his own ability and motivation, as Rich so eloquently
notes. There aren't many among even the best of today's climbers who
can do one-finger pull-ups on any of four fingers, or do a one-arm
front lever, or an iron-cross mount on the rings... especially at
Gill's amazing strength-to-weight ratio, a large man, and also have
amazing footwork and balance (try Falling Ant slab without your hands,
most couldn't do it using their hands...). Gill was known for his short
climbs, and his boulders, but he did plenty of longer routes in both
the Needles and Tetons. As a kid he did such things as solo the East
Face of Longs Peak. He was more well rounded than most thought.
To degrade John by talking about how easy his climbs were by comparison
to the hard routes today is to forget quite a few things, interesting
realities, such as that few of the top sport climbers today have gone
to the Thimble and climbed it... in that bad-shoe, padless, guardrail...
sort of way, and few ever will know what that time and those conditions
were like, for example with no previous knowledge of the route,
the knowledge everyone now has, etc. Lots of people met Gill in the
old days, saw him boulder in the Tetons or Needles, and some claim
now a deeper relationship than actually existed, and some were in
fact among those who could care less about bouldering but now look
back fondly at it. Hell, I'm just rambling now, but I guess my point
is that a few of us have been there with Gill, climbed with him before
his injuries and after, and have spanned the generations, so to
speak, seen it all, and still have the same awe for him we had from
the beginning, an awe no else has inspired or could, in the same way.
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50
climber
Stumptown
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Alex - In the '70s when I was a teen, there were a few climbing books that really left an impression on myself and my climbing buddies. Pat Ament's Master of Rock was one of those books. The story of Gill and the Thimble was legendary. I'm not too surprised that this boulder problem (route?) does not get much traffic these days...too dangerous and too low of a number on the modern rating scale.
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Watusi
Social climber
Newport, OR
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John Gill has been and will always be my hero! The level of climbing that he was accomplishing at the time, with the footgear... So far ahead of the game!! I've bouldered with Sherman and as good as he is I know he'd have to give it up to our master...Posting old shot of me to prove I'm not spraying...We were always trying to emulate as best we could...:)
OOPS!! Almost posted the wrong shot...
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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Yes, Pat, you are wonderful!
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matty
Trad climber
los arbor
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Bonus Trivia - What problem does Verm consider to be "the thimble of the 90's" and who put it up?
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wbw
climber
'cross the great divide
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"And Rgold is correct, the sport has changed to the point that it's impossible to imagine anyone pushing a leap in standards that would be comparable to what GIll did with bouldering standards for North America."
What is less comprehensible is someone not spraying on their blog about how awesome they are in an attempt to impress their sponsors.
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Disaster Master
Social climber
Born in So-Cal, left my soul in far Nor-Cal.
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What problem does Verm consider to be "the thimble of the 90's" and who put it up?
Mandala, Sharma?
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Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 6, 2010 - 11:58am PT
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Awesome. Thanks "50" for scanning and posting those shots. See you around..
Also, apparently there is a route right of Gill's famous line, that is a bit steeper and harder. I am unaware if it's been bouldered. Anyone know?
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matty
Trad climber
los arbor
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Verm's "Thimble of the 90's"
Mandala, Sharma?
Nope, Mandala was put up in 2000, but even so it lacks the character that made the thimble what it was. The thimble was known because it was high, dangerous (the guard rail), and put up alone with no spotter/pad. The mandala is not as tall as thimble and was certainly put up with a bunch of spotters and stacks of pads on a perfect landing.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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The Thimble's in the wrong parking lot.
If The Thimble were in Camp 4 or the Buttermilks, it would be a destination problem, despite its height.
In some ways The Thimble was not as innovative as many of the other parts of Gill's climbing career-- The Thimble was one of the things that came closest to what other traditional "climbers" did-- it was sort of a miniature version of the kinds of things a Hermann Buhl did in the mountains. I think that's one of the reasons it became such a signpost for many of us-- conceptually, it was easier to grasp (if not to repeat) than much of the rest of John's practice.
Eliminates, the super-short obscurities, the serial top-roping, the practice of obsessively designing and polishing moves on some crummy little butt nugget out in a canyon somewhere-- all of those habits were really out there for the period. Still others remain exotic today-- the particular style of movement that Gill carried over from rocks and rings to the boulders just isn't really in evidence at all, anymore.
And the idea that each problem should be considered an aesthetic performance-- more like a gymnastics routine, judged on form and style as opposed to, say, a long jump or sprint where only the numbers count --has fallen entirely out of favor. That's part of John's legacy that is really worth conserving. We're really lucky that Pat trudged around lost canyon with a movie camera documenting a portion of John's middle career.
The Thimble is a highball with a reasonably distinct line to an real summit, with clearly marked beginning and ending holds, and a numerical value attached to it. As a result, it looks a lot more like the sort of boulders folks compulsively itemize in their logbooks over at 8a.nu than do many of John's other "problems." And that's before we try to think about the way John's bouldering related to the bigger alpine context or the "religious" practice and so on.
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ydpl8s
Trad climber
Santa Monica, California
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That picture of Gill on The Scab was one of those classic photos that made me realize "I'm not worthy" BITD. The position, the strength, the shoes, the socks!, I was pretty sure he'd figured out the secret of levitation when I saw that pic. His ability in grey suede shoes required a lot more technique than what people can get away with nowadays in the new sticky shoes.
The other series of pics from Master of Rock, in that cave in Red River (I think), also showed his unbelieveable strength and style.
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the kid
Trad climber
fayetteville, wv
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Thimble is super bad ass. photos do it no justice. I worked it in 2001 and then 2003 with charles fryberger and Verm. Neither Charles nor myself could pull it and yes chuck did take a nasty fall.
That problem is very heady and hard, and Gill is the true MASTER!
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Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 6, 2010 - 01:41pm PT
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Kurt, did Verm do it again? Do you know of anyone else that has done it?
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Some good perspective shots.
I'm surprised that Kurt didn't pull it. What was the worst part, the climbing or the head? Seems like it has to be a bit of both.
Who are the other greats that have been shut down?
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MisterE
Social climber
Bouncy Tiggerville
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Great shots, Survival!
OK, I pulled out my copy of Master of Rock by Pat Ament, and found the section about the Thimble:
In the spring of 1961, he did the first ascent of the daunting Thimble route. The Thimble, a 30-foot pinnacle, brought the first real fame to Gill. This sheer, extremely difficult ascent was completed without the use of a rope or any form of protection, completely solo, and risking a fall onto a parking lot guard-railing.
On an earlier visit to the Needles, in 1960, Gill had climbed the Thimble via another route(5.8?) that followed a faint groove on the left side of the actual overhanging wall. He later spotted a possible line of ascent up the steeper face to the right and scrambled up halfway up the groove route to look over at the holds on the bulging wall. It became apparent what sorts of moves he would be responsible for if he were willing to commit himself to the climb. He felt that it was time he do something more committin, with more of an element of risk, than the usual difficult but relatively safe boulder routes he enjoyed. The route of which he was thinking was not a suicide mission. There was a possible escape halfway up where he could, if necessary, move left to the easier groove of the original route.
With an image of this unclimbed, overhanging wall of the Thimble in his mind, he returned to Glasgow Air Force Base and started to devise ways, around the gym, in which to train for some of the moves that he anticipated doing on the Thimble. He squeezed nuts and bolts sticking out of the gym walls to prepare for the nubbins that he would have to squeeze high up on the Thimble. He could do seven regular one-arm pull-ups, three finger-tip one-arm pull-ups, and of course his one-finger/one-arm pull-up, and he continued to train at these.
The Thimble remained on his mind during the winter, and he returned to it on leaves from the base. His approach was to climb up and down the bottom half of the route until he had that much wired. Once or twice, he jumped from a respectable high point. He had developed skill at leaping down from high places, as related by Richard Goldstone in regard to a different climb:
"Gill jumped off from about twenty feet up and landed like a cat in the midst of jagged talus boulders."
At last Gill worked himself "into such a fevered pitch" on the Thimble route that he committed himself to the top portion of it and, as he admitted, "very fortunately made it."
Gill stated later in an interview, "You not only get psyched up but almost become hypnotized or mesmerized to the point where your mind goes blank, and you climb by well-cultivated instincts. You do it." John can't recall if a young airman named Higgins accompanied him on that culminating trip to the Needles. Higgins had certainly served as a spot for Gill at an earlier time on the Thimble.
At the top, knowing it was over, and in a world by himself, Gill felt "a peculiar absence of feeling." Little was said by him about the route, before or after. He did not brag.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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In his day, Kurt was one of the best knob climbers' alive.
I know that coz. But let's not make it like he jumped out of the car, tried it once and left either. He did go back twice. If you go back twice for multiple attempts, yeah, that's getting shut down.
Thimble 2, Kid 0
No disrespect Kurt, I'm just curious that's all.
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rrrADAM
Trad climber
LBMF
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Bouldered the bottom half, but was unwilling to commit to the upper part, due to the guardrail, and wasn't willing to insult the 'boulder problem' by setting up a TR as I've seen others do.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Kurt, just curious if you think the proposed V4 is the correct grade? I have heard 5.12b mentioned a lot, but if that corresponds with the rest of the needles grades then I would say it is harder than that. I climb a lot there but not that hard. I climbed a Gill route just past the tunnel called Gill Net that is given 5.6 in the Piana book but I would equate it to 9+ at Devil's Tower, and this seems to be the rule more than the exception. It seems odd that all these great boulders can't pull it off or have and hold it in such high esteem and it is 6-10 V-grades(what ever that means) below their limit. Even when it is 35 feet tall. Any chance you can post the video of the falls Chuck F. was taking on that thing it was quite impressive
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Mighty Hiker
climber
Vancouver, B.C.
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So next spring will be the 50th anniversary. Kewl.
Maybe I'm missing something, but how do you get back down the thing?
I really enjoyed the film of Gill bouldering in "Disciples of Gill". Especially the gymnastic-style manoeuvres.
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dogtown
Trad climber
JackAssVille, Wyoming
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Photo’s of The Thimble don’t do it justice it’s a pretty cool piece of stone. Big time high ball. I to a big Gill fan.
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Steve Grossman
Trad climber
Seattle, WA
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Nice shots! Wonder how many folks have scoped out the exit moves from the backladder on a Winnebago! LOL
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LongAgo
Trad climber
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Thanks to Gill
I recall days in the Needles when I would see Gill alone on some unclimbed wall, way up, no one around. No fellow climber, photographer, hikers, observers of any kind. No one. Bob Kamps and I would look up on our way to a climb knowing Gill some from campground chats and trying out his easier boulder problems, knowing he now was likely on something beyond our capability, never mind the absence of protection. While these were not the times of working the media to the max or making a living from climbing, Bob and I were well aware of our place in the small pack of avid climbers of the day. Competition, achievement, getting the good first ascent or first free ascent, status -- these were part of the game. And so what Gill taught me, increasingly in memory and consideration with time, but beginning then as Bob and I shivered a little and bowed our heads at the vision before us and went to our climb through deep grasses, feeling a bit smaller as we went ... what Gill taught me was the power and significance of the inner world.
It was not so much the grade he achieved, but his manner in achieving it. He was there for the pure act of climbing, the emersion in his moment of strength, focus, barely but fully stuck to his set of crystals no one else touched, filled with the stark, radiating beauty of the ageless Needles. It took time, but a silent message went between that high up figure and me, still young enough to be captured by distractions of ego and check off lists, but thereafter and ever after closer to knowing where the deepest joy of climbing rests: with the glory of rock and high air, determined, calculating movement no matter the difficulty, all distilled into absorptive, lasting moments, ours for as long as we have.
Thank you John, if you are looking on.
Tom Higgins
LongAgo
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jogill
climber
Colorado
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Half a century away from the Thimble . . . how time flies. Perhaps I can clarify a few points:
Also, apparently there is a route right of Gill's famous line, that is a bit steeper and harder. I am unaware if it's been bouldered. Anyone know?
I don't know if it has been done without a top rope, but I think it was put up years ago by the late Kevin Bein. He told me he had done it with a rope, and I am certain it is harder than my route (which is well - illustrated by the photo of John Sherman on this thread.)
. . . or sticky rubber
Actually, I wore the 1950s version of PAs, which closely resemble modern rock shoes, but without the sticky rubber. They had a good, tight fit and boosted my confidence. The photo of me playing on the bottom part of the climb in the mid 1960s (on this thread) shows the RDs I wore for several years. They were good shoes for the Needles, but stiffer than the PAs.
. . . short climb rather than a boulder problem
Yes. I was careful at the time to distinguish bouldering, which I considered pure rock gymnastics with minimal risk, from solo climbing (free soloing in current vernacular), which I considered very risky, especially the exploratory variety. It was all part of a spectrum of "3rd class" climbing, which Chouinard and I used to chuckle about.
Thanks, everyone, for the kind comments. Happy climbing!
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50
climber
Stumptown
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"Hats off to John Gill" - Royal Robbins in the summit register on the Thimble ca. 1965
Agree!
More Thimble anecdotes from John's website to add to this thread...
My most demanding effort was the 1961 rope-unrehearsed, free-solo FA of a particular line on the thirty foot high Thimble Overhang in the Needles. At the time I was a junior USAF officer stationed at Glasgow AFB in northeastern Montana. I made a number of trips down to the Black Hills from Glasgow, roaring along the highway in my 1957 Studebaker Power Hawk (which tended to overheat). On a couple of these excursions I was accompanied by a young airman from the base who was interested in learning to climb.
On several of these trips I ended my climbing day by bouldering on the lower part of my projected Thimble route - getting it wired - before I finally commited myself to the complete ascent. I had visualized this particular line while earlier climbing (essentially soloing) an easier route(5.9?) to the left of it, accompanied by Bill Woodruff. The obviously more severe route to the right became, in essence, a personal challenge to determine to what lengths I was willing to go as an exploratory solo climber. In retrospect it seems an insane aspiration and I am very lucky I didn't get wiped out in the process . However - and somewhat ironically - this ascent proved to be a turning point in the general recognition among the climbing community of my paradigm of bouldering - what has been called modern bouldering . Some see this as the first modern hi-ball problem, but to me it was a climb. ("When your feet are ten feet off the ground, you're climbing!" - Jim McCarthy, 1964, Tetons). At the time there was a wooden guardrail beneath the overhanging face, so that jumping off the upper half was no option. Even had it been, it would be thirty years before bouldering crashpads would appear.
When I am asked about its difficulty, I usually say that it seemed to be the hardest free-solo first ascent I've ever done. However, I found I had previously done boulder problems with moves on them quite a bit harder than those I encountered on the Thimble. I'm told it goes at a consensus V4 or 5.12a, maybe the first climb at that level, but with the nature of the Needles' granite, it might seem a bit easier or a bit harder to different climbers at different times, and making a short traversing step to the left would certainly make it easier. In the recent film, Friction Addiction (2003), a very talented young boulderer takes a long fall from the upper part of the problem. Pat Ament, in his climbing history book Wizards of Rock , says "This was likely the hardest short free climb in the world, at the time". During the 1970s the late Kevin Bein worked out a top-rope route between my route and the right edge of the overhang which was somewhat more demanding.
Here is Pete Williamson in the mid 1960s at the start of my route on the Thimble . I understand that the 2nd ascent (in the style of the 1st) was done about 1987. It's not known precisely how many such ascents have been made - John Sherman made one in 1991, and in 1993 the Japanese climbers Kusano Toshi and Tsuge Motomu recorded a solo ascent on video that displays an elegance and grace I certainly never felt!
But the Thimble is off the beaten track for contemporary boulderers, modest by current difficulty standards, and a little risky to boot, so you don't hear or see much about it these days. In addition, it's been climbed a number of times on top rope, which makes it a somewhat less attractive target for a serious modern climber/boulderer.
That was it for me. I found my personal risk limits - and I didn't want to approach them again. After the Thimble I came to realize that the personal appeal of solitary climbing was, specifically, the continuity of motion and disinvolvment with equipment . So, from then on I usually avoided demanding lines and focused on scrambles and easy ascents when I got pretty far off the deck.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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what Gill taught me was the power and significance of the inner world.
Nice, very nice.
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Patrick Oliver
Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
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Thanks, Tom and John. Good to hear your voices, as always.
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Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 7, 2010 - 09:13am PT
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Thank you John for taking the time to amuse us. It's pretty amazing how a person and a sequence of events can make a small piece of rock like the thimble seem meaningful. I grew up 30 minutes from the thimble and I've never looked at it, knowing some of the history. I'll hike up there when I visit home this month to gaze.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Alex, your gonna have to walk a couple of miles as the gate is closed at Sylvan Lake for the season. Mike
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Alex Baker
climber
Portland
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 7, 2010 - 01:35pm PT
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Thanks Mike! I like trudging up there in the winter.
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matty
Trad climber
los arbor
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Only one person has answered (incorrectly), so I'll ask my super bonus trivia again. According to John Sherman, what boulder problem is the thimble of the 90's? Someone must know, he mentions it in one of his books.
EDIT: to be clear, Sherman does not call this problem the thimble of the 90's, just says that if any problem deserves to be called that, this one would come closest.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Is Moonlight Butress and Half Dome the Thimble's of the 2000's?
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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thimble of the nineties--
it's that sandstone deal that paul & jeff did up in the condor reserve. can't remember what they called it. and don't have the time to pull the book off the shelf.
all those deals back in there were really sporty. good rock, too. i gather that a lot of those disappeared in subsequent storms?
these days hard ultra-highballs are a dime a dozen.
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matty
Trad climber
los arbor
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klk hits it. It is a route called "The Handicapper" that Jeff Johnson put up at the swimming hole (mostly gone now)
Verm describes "the swimming hole" in Stone Crusade (p.88)
"Jeff Johnson and Paul Anderson did the bulk of the development. On several occasions one or the other would go out alone, knowing that breaking a leg would precipitate a Southern California version of Joe Simpson's Touching The Void survival crawl.
A worse scenario almost happened on a solo trip when Anderson snapped the edge off a pocket at the lip of the Sage Boulder. He bounced off another rock ten feet lower, and cartwheeled headfirst into a gap between boulders. The gap fit like a tux. Amazingly he was unscathed; a few feet left or right and his head would have looked like a vandalized jack-o-lantern.
Anderson's close call did not deter Johnson from putting up The Handicapper on a solitary trip. The first few moves up to the three foot roof are fun, then the crux sequence starts. Laid-out moves over a chopping block landing, followed by a coiled-spring-high-step-at-your-chin barndoor lie-back up a vertical arete to a dirt and leaf topout (well) over twenty feet up. If any problem deserves to be called 'the thimble of the 1990's,' this is it."
Read the full description of the swimming hole from of Stone Crusade over at google books
In January 2005 a series of storms hit southern california that flooded the swimming hole and literally swept it away. Hundreds of boulders (some the size of houses) were flipped over and moved hundreds of feet, broken in half, crushed, or just plain disappeared. Too bad i never got to go there before that happened.
The Handicapper is still there, the landing is even better than it used to be, although it's also lower than it used to be. And while there are many highball boulder problem these days, they are generally done in a different style often involving stacked pads, pre-inspection/cleaning and even toprope rehearsal. Johnson (like Gill) put the route up in the best possible style and to me that says something. The swimming hole may be gone, but Johnson has other spots and has put up a ton of hard high-stakes problems. Repeating several of these in that same style has been some of the most rewarding climbing I've ever done.
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Patrick Oliver
Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
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Of course difficulty alone, or even boldness alone, or the fact
that something is a runout, would not
necessarily qualify a route to be a modern Thimble equivalent.
It would have to do with a lot of factors, the person, the genius,
the technique, the style, the climb in relationship to the time
period, gear used, a whole lot of factors that, with all
due respect, do not seem to be met in any of the climbs mentioned.
I'm too tired at this moment to go into much more detail on the
subject, and again not to offend anyone, but it seems to be
a kind of silly question anyway. It's a little like trying to find
a modern equivalent to one of Da Vinci's masterpieces, and naming
Sydney Pollack, or something... Everything is so different now...
There are no real comparisons... Give the new stars credit for their
own brand of art, hats off to them, leave the great achievements
of the past in their own incomparable light...
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Paco
Trad climber
Montana
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Gill was totally alone, engaging in a private quest, with no expectation of any kind of recognition and barely any vehicle for conveying it. He had nothing even remotely resembling the level of protection enjoyed by modern boulderers, and instead faced not only the hard ground but that guardrail.
not to mention stiff, slick EBs (or something in that neighborhood) on the slick, small crystals of the needles.
edit: like you said...not much of a vehicle.
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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Very well said, Pat!
The amazing accomplishments of the past are very difficult to relate properly to the amazing accomplishments of the present...
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matty
Trad climber
los arbor
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Pat- No disrespect to Gill or the original thimble intended, and you're right, there really is no way to compare the routes because Gill did The Thimble before anything like it had been done, he broke the mold and everyone since has had his vision to lean on.
I have not climbed on or even see the thimble nor do I know Mr. Gill, so I cannot speak to that matter. However John Sherman has done a ton of bouldering in different areas, has climbed with a slew of talented boulderers, and has a respect for the style in which a climb is done. He knows both Gill and Johnson and has climbed The Thimble, and has at least been to the swimming hole to check out The Handicapper. So I think it is noteworthy when he says "if any route deserves to be called "The Thimble of the 1990's" this (The Handicapper) is it." Sherman's not saying it is equal to the thimble, just that of the one's he's encountered that is the closest. I thought it was a neat side note to the conversation.
Matt
EDIT: Good use of words Tom, very hard to relate the two, but interesting to think about.
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MisterE
Social climber
Bouncy Tiggerville
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leave the great achievements
of the past in their own incomparable light...
Exactly.
There is no comparison, no "Thimble of the...(whatever)".
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WhiskeyToast
Social climber
Hawaii
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Maybe not, but discussing it sure beats the Politcal/Religious threads that are so common here.
Bump for a climbing / history thread.
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hobo_dan
Social climber
Minnesota
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.........it felt special being in the Needles and seeing a small painted arrow pointing the way............made you feel like you were part of history......
Thanks John for posting
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MisterE
Social climber
Bouncy Tiggerville
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Yeah, I remember visiting the June Lakes boulders and feeling the same way about the little chalk arrow...
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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I don't know much about the Thimble except what Gill told me about it shortly afterward in the Tetons. His description then seems to me a little different from what is being said here. I recall he told me about doing a series of one arm mantles on widely separated knobs; reaching up from one to the next. I imagined that this involved dynamic moves. I figured that played very well with his rope climbing gymnastics, and didn't have a lot to do with footwork. But it seems I misunderstood, based upon what Gill has said elsewhere about there not being dynamic moves on this climb.
However I know a little bit about a somewhat similar climb in the same time-frame; below the Tetons on the steep limestone face of Black Tail Butte. Again I am sure I don't know the whole story; and I never saw someone do the complete route. I understood it was first done by Gill and then repeated by Kor and perhaps by Royal.
Fitschen and I went up there once or twice and worked on it with a top rope. I was rather proud of my mountain goat characteristics, and I recall being very impressed by how fast the wiry Joe Fitschen scrambled up the steep scree to the rock wall.
At the time I was solid on 5.9 and pushing into the 5.10 region; sort of an upper standard at the time. This was clearly far short of Gill or Kor, as we found out when we attempted this route. Joe and I were pushing hard at our limits just to get part way up this face. We were very impressed by the quality of the climbing and by the fact that it had been climbed.
The characteristics of that route remind me of a much later route: The East Face of Monkey Face at Smith Rocks.
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NinjaChimp
climber
someplace in-between
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@ Patrick Oliver:
Have you climbed with Fred Nicole, because spending "all-day day(s) at
some problem" does not fit his MO these days. Rather he is known for flawlessly executing moves with minimal rehearsal. In fact I feel like Fred's attitude toward climbing more closely resembles that of John Gill than of any other well-known contemporary climber. His attitude may have been different when he was younger perhaps?
Certainly though your point is not lost. The specialization of climbers has lead to increasingly difficult climbs. Gill was and is one of North Americas finest climbers (people).
-Justin
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tarek
climber
berkeley
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Great thread bump.
What about the pre-pads ascent attributed to Greg Collins? Anyone know anything? If true, and onsight--as implied--it would rank with any bouldering ascents of the last several decades. Early repeats of iconic climbs are difficult.
Gill was and is one of our greatest climbers--not boulderers, but climbers. There can't really be a modern-day Gill, or Thimble--by definition. There's not enough open space. But it's worth noting, as others have done here, that very hard boulder problems existed in other parts of the world in the 50s.
Tiresome, continual recounting on ST of how strong someone was in gymnastics, one-arm pullups, etc., however, shows a tremendous lack of understanding of what climbing has become (thanks to what Gill did on rock). I certainly don't think of Gill's strength on bars/rings/wood edges when I think of Gill (though he himself likes to catalog this stuff).
Also, people do extremely risky climbing (Gill's dynamic movement) waay above pads that guarantee nothing. You'd think that gymnasts don't use pads the way some go on here. Maybe try ranting about how some Chinese guy did flips on a granite plaza with no pads in 1450 AD on some gymnastics forum instead.
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jogill
climber
Colorado
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Tiresome, continual recounting on ST of how strong someone was in gymnastics, one-arm pullups, etc., however, shows a tremendous lack of understanding of what climbing has become (thanks to what Gill did on rock). I certainly don't think of Gill's strength on bars/rings/wood edges when I think of Gill (though he himself likes to catalog this stuff).
Good point. When I quit artistic gymnastics in the mid 1960s, I started doing bodyweight exercises just because they were challenging and appealed to me. They represented a kind of continuum of gymnastics after leaving the gym. Of course, they did give me some strength for climbing, but if I had simply wanted to climb, I would have lost some weight and focused on the sorts of training procedures climbers follow today. I like the muscular stuff, though!
However I know a little bit about a somewhat similar climb in the same time-frame; below the Tetons on the steep limestone face of Black Tail Butte. Again I am sure I don't know the whole story; and I never saw someone do the complete route. I understood it was first done by Gill and then repeated by Kor and perhaps by Royal.
Tom, my recollection is not terribly good, but I do remember hearing about Royal doing a playful top-rope route on the right side of the face, up a fold in the limestone. He even did it with one leg! I wasn't there at the time, but I was told this impressed everyone. I don't recall exactly where Layton's climb went, but I suspect it may have been just to the left of Royal's. I don't think there were any bolts on the face by the end of the 1950s (I could be wrong), but there was some sort of anchor over the top for top-ropes.
I did a couple of routes as free solo exploration, and I think the Blacktail Butte Guide may have it about right: Royal's-#18, Kor's-#17(?). The "bolt route" may have been something I did; I do remember starting straight up about where the guide indicates the route goes, but above that I wandered a bit, possibly where the dotted line goes, but I'm pretty hazy about it. There were no bolts, of course. I think I also did what the guide calls "Raven Crack", #5, and I did something easy and short off to the right of #18. There was some bouldering at the bottom of the wall, but subsequent generations developed that area. [A little editing as the memories drift back]
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Dec 10, 2010 - 12:19am PT
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I'm not so sure Gill's amazing strength didn't play a significant role in bouldering as he conceptualized it. Various people who spent time with Gill have mentioned the grace and style that was characteristic of much of his climbing. And Gill himself refers to striving for an esthetic component to his performance, as opposed to simply topping out, or sending, as folks would say now.
Personally, what always struck me about Gill's climbing was the space between him and the rock. Other boulderers would be squished tight up against the face, but Gill would appear to be skimming the surface with finger and toe-tips. Doing things like that looks beautiful, but isn't necessarily technically optimal; Gill's extra strength went into those amazing body positions.
It isn't a matter of right or wrong or better or worse. That was the game that Gill was playing---the game that he was defining, since there was no one else around really in his league until Jim Holloway showed up.
Gill's version of bouldering never really caught on, in his time or subsequently. And this is not to say that other climbers do not look graceful on occasion, but it is a different genre of grace, the gracefulness of competence, not the almost theatrical separation Gill achieved.
I'm not saying that one or the other is better, just that Gill was different, and his strength was, I believe, an integral part of that difference and not just an irrelevant additional fact about an already remarkable man.
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tarek
climber
berkeley
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Dec 10, 2010 - 01:47am PT
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I'd wager that the type of strength Gill exhibited on the rock benefited from all of the non-climbing exercises (especially due to his size) but was largely developed by exercising his style on the rock. Strengths are so specific. You don't work your toes/ankles/calves much on the rings or bar.
But the man is here and can tell us himself!
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Mighty Hiker
climber
Vancouver, B.C.
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Dec 10, 2010 - 01:52am PT
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Rich has an excellent point. The footage of Gill (and Holloway) climbing, in Disciples of Gill, shows him with a very distinct style. One aspect of it being separation of body and rock, for lack of a better descriptor. John and the rock weren't exactly at arm's length, but he certainly didn't look like he was wrestling either. You can always see space between him and the rock.
Does anyone now boulder in such a style?
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tarek
climber
berkeley
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Dec 10, 2010 - 09:32am PT
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the matter of Gill's particular style is interesting, but it's hard to imagine it was much in evidence on the crux of the Thimble.
No one on Greg Collins' possible ascent?
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Dec 10, 2010 - 10:42am PT
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Alex, you may have to walk farther than the couple of miles from Sylvan Lake. i saw on the news the other day they are doing helecopter logging and the road to Sylvan may be closed until Feb.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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Dec 10, 2010 - 11:45am PT
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I'm not so sure Gill's amazing strength didn't play a significant role in bouldering as he conceptualized it.
I think that's exactly right, at least on many of the shorter overhanging things where you can approach the problem as if it were a gymnastics routine. Even for those of us who didn't climb with John back in the 50s and 60s, it's very clear from talking to John, breaking down the still photos, and then esp. in the film footage, that his performances were as much about a particular form of movement and a particular kinesthetic experience as they were about problem solving or summiting.
Gymnastics, too, is about more than efficiency. Pointed toes and straight arms aren't actually mechanically efficient. But they produce cleaner visual lines and change the feeling of the motion.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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Dec 10, 2010 - 11:50am PT
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Personally, what always struck me about Gill's climbing was the space between him and the rock.
Yes, that's one of the things that strikes me, too. Lots of really clean straight lines, which was on eof the aesthetics you always sought in a good gymnastics routine.
On really overhanging things, it's also one possible result from initiating movement primarily from the shoulders and arms, rather than legs. Any of the straight arm mounts on bars, rings or p-bars move the body through a very different plane than what you would get from a simple pull-up.
I used to spend a lot of time trying to work out bouldering equivalents to kips and butterfly mounts.
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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Dec 10, 2010 - 11:59am PT
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the matter of Gill's particular style is interesting, but it's hard to imagine it was much in evidence on the crux of the Thimble.
No one on Greg Collins' possible ascent?
That's one of the things I meant by saying that The Thimble was so influential in part because it was conceptually more accessible to period rock climbers-- it was more like the easier things people were doing with ropes or even as solos than were, say, Gill's eliminates on Red Cross Rock.
Re Collins-- I don't know about it. Part of the cool thing about the period was that folks didn't video, tweet, or scorecard ascents. (If there'd been an ST in 1962, it'd be filled with threads saying that Gill was a liar, why wasn't there video, etc.) I heard about ascents through grapevine and rumor. We will never know for certain if or how many repeats the thing got.
One example: Early 1980s I was top-roping a 5.12 route in Icicle Creek (about the size and probably difficulty as the Thimble), and feeling pretty good about getting it with a bit of work, when some random from the East Coast shows up and asks for a belay. He was on a West Coast road trip-- he tied in and floated the thing (maybe 12b/c) first try. That was still unusual then. We got to talking and he said that he had done The Thimble earlier in that road trip. Given what I could see of his ability, I had no reason to doubt him.
No-one you'd recognize from the magazines. Bouldering wasn't high profile then. Nice guy, low-key. Can't remember his name. Who knows? Part of the mystery of the route.
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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Dec 10, 2010 - 01:07pm PT
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Thanks Jogill, it's fun to connect the dots!
I think the route Fitschen and I worked on was #17. So I guess we can judge that 5.10C was beyond me in 1961, but accessible to Kor. At the time I knew very little about what people were doing there other than comments that you guys had fingerprints it.
In 1961 I had not yet been to Yosemite, Tahquitz or Stony Point. (I also had not yet met Kamps or Higgins.) Blacktail Butte was similar to some small walls that I was practicing on solo in Idaho, in the realm of 5.8-5.9. So Blacktail Butte stood out as my measuring stick and inspiration for what masters of the sport were able to accomplish at the time.
I have memories of you on the Jenny Lake boulders that I sincerely wish could be shared, if we only had a technology for the digital capture of visual memories. Your style on the rocks was truly artistic.
Perhaps we could do virtual reality visualizations of you aided by Pat's movies and a motion capture suit. We can imagine some of the idea from the movie 'Avatar' (where my nephew was an assistant to James Cameron).
One recall in particular was watching you complete a route on Red Cross Boulder by smoothly one-hand mantling a small scooped handhold near the top, flopping once like a fish onto the top, up into something like an inverted front lever, then slipping a foot up next to your right hand, and gracefully standing on that foot into position to walk away.
Edit: klk, could that have been Kevin Bein from the Gunks?
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klk
Trad climber
cali
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Dec 10, 2010 - 01:30pm PT
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klk, could that have been Kevin Bein from the Gunks?
no, it wasn't kevin or any of the folks i met (then or later) from the gunks. skinny, blondish, beard, really low-key dude. can't recall his name.
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jstan
climber
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Dec 10, 2010 - 01:50pm PT
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Early eighties is out of my time frame. The only skinny, blondish, and low keyed climber that comes to mind is John Bragg. I did not meet many of the Boston people, people from Ontario, New River people or others from the SE. Al Rubin should have a candidate shortly.
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jogill
climber
Colorado
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Dec 10, 2010 - 02:48pm PT
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. . . would appear to be skimming the surface with finger and toe-tips . . .
A perceptive observation about the game I was attempting to play, Rich. Minimal contact, whether climbing the rope in the gym or moving up the rock. And I recall you doing exceedingly well at that game when we bouldered together!
Chris Jones (the powerful American boulderer, not the wandering Brit) and I used to talk about this aspect of style, which approached its zenith on no-hands problems, like Falling Ant Slab at Jenny Lake - just the tips of the toes. Bob Kamps and I enjoyed doing these problems, spending hours making a five foot passage. Miss that guy . . . one of America's greatest pioneer rock climbers.
Dynamic technique also improved the general game in this regard. Chris even took this a step further, doing dynamic problems with one arm only . . . no other part of the body. I did one arm problems occasionally (with feet!), but Chris took the game to a spectacular level.
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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Dec 11, 2010 - 02:04am PT
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I just had a chance to ask Layton Kor about Blacktail Butte. He was surprised to hear that there was a guide to multiple routes on "that little thing!"
Layton's understanding was that there was only one route at the time. He thought John Gill did it first, followed by Royal; and then he did the third ascent. Layton said it was the hardest thing that he had climbed back in the early 1960's time period. He did a straight up line with a top rope and didn't think it was anything he would consider leading. He thought it was like a tall stack of boulder problems and his hands were burning by the time he topped out. He thinks 5.10c is about right for it in retrospect.
Layton mentioned that around the same time period he had been going up above Boulder Colorado into Boulder Canyon and working some top rope problems that were pushing his limits. But none of those problems were as hard as Blacktail Butte.
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Dec 11, 2010 - 02:08am PT
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Whats harder The Thimble as done by Gill or Midnight Lightning?
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Dec 11, 2010 - 02:36am PT
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Midnight Lightning is V8, the Thimble is V4. Gill did a V8 on Red Cross Rock at Jenny Lake in 1958, three years before the Thimble ascent. I think it was about twenty years until that standard was reached again.
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ß Î Ø T Ç H
climber
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Dec 11, 2010 - 03:55am PT
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"Minimal contact" . . . I'm digesting this morsel as we speak.
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Evel
Trad climber
Nedsterdam CO
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Dec 11, 2010 - 02:31pm PT
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Randisi mentioned a fellow with a cat on a leash.
Pretty sure that would be Kris Kline of Southern Rock fame.
Don't know if he sent the problem or not, but wouldn't doubt it as Kris is one bad man on the stone.
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jstan
climber
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Dec 11, 2010 - 02:45pm PT
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There are million different forms of climbing. A fact made very clear by this discussion.
That was made very clear to me once on Goldstone's boulder tour when someone did a lunge and Rich complained as if into his cup of coffee,
"Doesn't anyone climb anymore?"
Based upon the belief this is somehow not true
we get all involved with so much that is nonsensical.
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tom woods
Gym climber
Bishop, CA
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Dec 11, 2010 - 07:04pm PT
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This thread is getting me interested in the less famous history of Gill soloing stuff.
The boulder problems hold their own to this day, but it sounds like, there is more to this already fun story.
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TomCochrane
Trad climber
Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey Bay
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Dec 11, 2010 - 07:17pm PT
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so i have the impression from jogill bitd that he did 'solo exploration' of a number of aretes on the south side of disappointment peak in the tetons (?)
i think he has been reticent about it because you had to pass these big park service signs that said NO SOLO CLIMBING!
this didn't slow me down, and i soloed irene's arete and the direct exum ridge and others, inspired by talking to him
but i never heard john confess or elaborate although he did draw me a little diagram of the various aretes and dropped some hints. (he did tell me about doing surprise arete with chouinard (?))
John??
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tarek
climber
berkeley
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Dec 11, 2010 - 08:08pm PT
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interesting how the move shown in the middle photo posted by rgold, wherein Gill's feet have cut loose, is similar to the move to the lightning bolt hold on ML. The move shown is clearly longer than the move on ML, though. To me, ML seems like a Gill problem.
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funkazzista
climber
Italy
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Sep 19, 2011 - 06:45pm PT
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It was 50 years ago.
What an amazing accomplishment!
Perhaps jogill remembers the exact date of the FA?
Or the season?
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Russ S.
climber
Seattle, WA
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Sep 19, 2011 - 08:41pm PT
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As far as pre-Verm ascents, I remember hearing about some guy with a cat on a leash.
Randisi mentioned a fellow with a cat on a leash.
Pretty sure that would be Kris Kline of Southern Rock fame.
Don't know if he sent the problem or not, but wouldn't doubt it as Kris is one bad man on the stone.
Great thread on the Thimble and history. And just may have answered one of my personal mysteries... Around '78-79 a group of us were attempting a bouldering problem in JT without truly committing to the moves. We noticed a couple, dressed in black walking across the desert toward us. As they got closer we see the guy has a cat on a leash. They walk us and ask if they can give to problem as try. The guy floats it without effort, then boosts his gf(?) up to the start holds and she floats it as well. They then turn around and walk back where they came from.... Their ascent gave us the courage to commit and at least a couple of us climbed the route. Always wondered who they were - like MisterE's story...
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jogill
climber
Colorado
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Sep 19, 2011 - 10:11pm PT
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Thank you for mentioning the Thimble, funkazzista. I wish I were able to give you a blow-by-blow account, but the current thread on the Superpin has exhausted me! I wandered into an ethical area where I had, relatively speaking, but minor experience over a very long climbing career and provoked some criticisms from my old friend RGold and others whose commitments to ethics and style are both profound and admirable.
I’m on surer ground regarding bouldering, but even there my views are hopelessly antiquated. For example, I always considered the Thimble a climb and not a bouldering problem, eschewing risk in the latter. Highball bouldering has added an element of danger to what I thought of as pure and relatively safe rock gymnastics.
When I was just getting started in the early to mid 1950s I made a decision to always look forward and not dwell on the past, so I didn’t have a journal, although I did have a collection of photos in an album to remind me of the boulder problems I had done.
As I approach 75 my memory, never top drawer, gets a bit muddled. For instance, I remember the delightful bouldering session I had with Pete Cleveland as we tried to get up the Outlet Boulder at Sylvan Lake. But I don’t recall the year (mid 60s ?) or the date (probably in the summer, for the weather was mild). Pete was an extraordinarily determined and capable bouldering companion. I do remember that.
I can recall doing a longer climb, a FA with Bob Kamps where we climbed a tree next to the rock and put a sling in the branches to get a belay and avoid a bolt placement. I’m not sure where this was (in the Needles). I also remember belaying a well-known climber as he examined a proposed route using a similar protective measure – I’m not going to say who that was, because the ethics have evolved in the area to the point where I doubt such shenanigans would be condoned! Even ex post facto. Besides I don’t remember where in the Needles this occurred.
As a retired mathematician I still putter around, attempting to produce new theory, much like an older climber trying for a FA. But there have been occasions (thankfully rare) where I spent several hours working up some original result, then getting the feeling it was just a tad familiar, then going through my published papers and finding I did it 20 – 30 years ago!
As I said a moment ago, the Thimble was always a climbing and not a bouldering challenge. 50 – 55 years ago I was very interested – even enraptured – with what I considered the end game in our sport: free solo exploration (of course, the expression “free solo” didn’t exist then). I had done much milder versions of this sort of thing in the Tetons in the mid to late 1950s (e.g., several paths I discovered on the south buttress of Storm Point and never spoke of, partly because of the ban on soloing in the park) and a little in the Needles. The Thimble was a kind of ultimate test to see how far I was willing to go in this direction. It took several trips to work out the physical aspects of the climb as well as the mental ones.
I reached my limit on the Thimble, then put this sort of activity behind me . . . way too dangerous for a person who was actually a very conservative rock climber. Chouinard, Kamps, Rearick, Robbins, and, later, Ament, Goldstone, Cleveland, etc. were bolder climbers on their longer climbs, and I was happy to see them receive the recognition they deserved. Little did I suspect that others would view the Thimble as a “highball” bouldering problem – times do change.
Well, it’s been a long day, and I see on the John Gill entry on Wikipedia that I am deceased. So, from the other side - as Houdini would say – greetings, fellow climbers. Surprisingly, things seem much the same over here . . . weird.
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Kalimon
Trad climber
Ridgway, CO
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Sep 19, 2011 - 10:37pm PT
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Bow to the master!
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Mike Bolte
Trad climber
Planet Earth
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Sep 19, 2011 - 10:39pm PT
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Hi John - sorry to read that you passed away this year. I'll fix that.
EDIT: OK - no longer dead according to wikipedia
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Sep 19, 2011 - 10:45pm PT
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Thanks for the writing John.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Sep 19, 2011 - 11:27pm PT
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Dang, I didn't know you were gone either John!
We miss you already!
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dogtown
Trad climber
JackAssVille, Wyoming
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Sep 19, 2011 - 11:48pm PT
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Gill is still KING, No Bullshit!!
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Inner City
Trad climber
East Bay
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Sep 20, 2011 - 12:24am PT
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Dang, the taco abides...John Gill! A great post! Thanks.
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MH2
climber
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Sep 20, 2011 - 12:39am PT
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Pretty good post for an exhausted 75 year-old.
Let's see, now, extrapolating into the past...
Hey! This internet stuff wasn't even around, then. Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid, more like.
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tarek
climber
berkeley
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Sep 20, 2011 - 12:57am PT
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John Gill--
Many thanks for your post.
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Sep 20, 2011 - 01:22am PT
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John, I feel bad about the sense of criticism. You rightly admonished me for tarnishing your observations with a facile slippery slope argument. We are both of us too old for even the tiniest hint of discord to come into our lives, and I beg your forgiveness.
The tree you climbed with Kamps to avoid placing a bolt was probably on the regular route on the Incisor, around the corner from your North face boulder problems.
Your story about discovering the same theorem twice reminds me of stories about McCarthy, who was remarkably bad at remembering climbs, and who on several occasions managed to make the first ascent of the same route twice. We decided that this would be one of the stringent entry criteria for the OFMC, the Old Farts Mountaineering Club, of which Jim was, of course a charter member.
The real joke about that was that we were in our forties at the time. We had no idea what old fartdom was about. Our farts may have been well-seasoned, but were years away from being old.
Lots of luck changing your Wikipedia entry. You probably have little or no standing to do so, and will have to defer to the real experts, who know far better than you whether you are alive or not.
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philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
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Sep 20, 2011 - 01:38am PT
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Well, it’s been a long day, and I see on the John Gill entry on Wikipedia that I am deceased. So, from the other side - as Houdini would say – greetings, fellow climbers. Surprisingly, things seem much the same over here . . . weird.
Yeah, posting from the 'other side', weird!
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Jaybro
Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
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Sep 20, 2011 - 02:22am PT
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The Thimble is still there, as of August. Here it is with my secure bouldersaabpad to catch you
I climbed it the ghey way (toprope) in '88. That's as close as i'll ever come to doing it. i'm glad to have even that connection. What an amazing, bold, ahead of it's time climb!
It gave me an outsider's view into a specialist's world in a time long ago. -I was in kindergarten that year-
Just knowing the story of that climb informed the way I've done many new climbs, infusing them with a knowledge of boldness I would not otherwise have been aware of. I was clearly channeling that when i did a freesolo fa of a .12 ow in the supes once, though i had a spotter...
Cheers and thanks, john.
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Patrick Oliver
Boulder climber
Fruita, Colorado
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Sep 20, 2011 - 02:22am PT
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John,
You are a humble man, as we all have long known. No need to worry if
someone disagrees. Your opinions are valuable. You and Rich and I
are eternal friends, and that's just the way it is. No little tit for tat
commentry on some rinky dink thread means anything alongside that.
It seems strange that so many questions must be asked on a thread,
when virtually all such questions are answered right there in
Master of Rock, or in Wizards of Rock. People prefer their memories,
vague as they sometimes get. I understand, because I too get lazy
and don't want to go to the bookshelf and look things up. Whatever.
I have held off this thread for the most part because it would take
hours, possibly, to deal with all the inaccurasies and so much that
simply isn't exactly right, or the questions for which no ones seems
to have answers. I would come across as a know-it-all,
if I even made half an attempt to deal with all that, so I pick
my battles. I preferred recently to write some more on the
Walter Bonatti thread or to utterly
waste time by discussing my favorite guitarists....
Let me say here, though, that if a voice exists to which
I would listen... it's yours, and it would be Goldstone's
or Higgins'.... those who were there.... Yes time passes,
but your insights are as sharp as anytime before. Cease and desist
from saying you have no right to speak, being so far removed,
and such. We all want to hear your thoughts, even if there is a senior
moment or two. I had to stop worrying about that, because there have
been so many dumb things I've said. I do what I can, what I have
energy for, and hope people will forgive. I have mostly come to realize
if I write more than about two sentences people don't read on. By now,
most have skipped to the next entry.... Let's hold to those sayings
I have always liked, first Wordsworth: "Man, if he do but live within
the light of high endeavors daily spreads abroad his being with a
strength which cannot fail." And e.e. cummings: "Above all, you shall
be young and glad, for if you are young whatever life you wear
it will become you; and if you are young, whatever's living will
yourself become."
I still see myself, certainly at least at times, as that young lad
who was discovering climbing, and I'll always see you as that person
I bouldered with on all those sunlit days....
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funkazzista
climber
Italy
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Sep 20, 2011 - 03:18am PT
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jogill, your memories are priceless.
Thank you
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mcreel
climber
Barcelona
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Sep 20, 2011 - 03:45am PT
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Jaybro: "Just knowing the story of that climb informed the way I've done many new climbs"
That's a good summary of the impact of Gill on the Thimble, and how it has affected all of climbing, not just bouldering. If the problem was an FA today, it would have a 3 foot thick layer of pads at the bottom, with a posse of spotters, and would have been rehearsed on TR. For example, that arete in South Africa of which Adam Ondra was trying to get the second ascent - a very impressive, bold and hard line, but I doubt we'll hear much about it in 10 years.
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jogill
climber
Colorado
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Sep 20, 2011 - 02:01pm PT
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Thank you, one and all, for your kind remarks. Special thanks to Pat and Rich, old and good friends - pioneers of our craft and brilliant writers.
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shady
Trad climber
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Chris Jones and I used to talk about this aspect of style, which approached it's zenith with __no-hands_ problems, like falling ant slab at Jenny lake. Just the tips of toes. Bob Kamps and I enjoyed doing these problems, spending hours making a five foot passage. Part of John's legacy still to be realized.
As a very young boy in the '60s, I would watch the rock wizards at Stony point ascend problems, sans-hands. Later in the '70s (?) I saw an interview where John spoke of it. So throughout my climbing career I had always accepted hands free bouldering as a legit style.
Try to demonstrate a hands free problem to my peers and it would end with, "hey...that's very good....Soooo what-do-you-say we go climbing now."
Although Kneecapitation, High squeak of low heeled boys and Big shoe dance have no doubt been reclaimed by the chaparral and sagebrush in which they sit, all were done with a sense of WWJGD?
John, thanks for the inspiration.
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gonamok
climber
dont make me come over there
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EBs may be slick and stiff compared to modern rubber, but BITD we called EBs "magic shoes" after climbing in PAs and RRs. Lots of hard stuff has been climbed in EBs. They felt plenty sticky back when that was the best free climbing boot available.
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shady
Trad climber
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Before seeing the thimble in person I had only seen the one picture posted here. The one with the dots outlining the route, face-on. Seeing it in person I was shocked as to how big it is. Next was to see how overhanging it is. I stood in shock with my mouth agape, I only regained consciousness when birds began to build a nest in my mouth. I left thinking this had to be an urban legend type of thing.
gonamok...
When boreal fires came out I started calling them Free-Ways. =)
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Smokey
Trad climber
Colorado
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Has Kevin Bein's .12 Thimble toprope right of Gill's route ever been done solo?
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mike m
Trad climber
black hills
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Apr 27, 2014 - 11:46pm PT
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Good stuff!!!
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Jon Clark
climber
philadelphia
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Sep 16, 2015 - 06:58am PT
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I recently started reading John Sherman's "Stone Crusade", dug this thread up, and am giving it a bump. It's well worth a read.
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MikeMc
Social climber
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Sep 16, 2015 - 08:59am PT
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^^^Nice bump for a great thread.
I remember walking up to the Thimble, looking up, touching the stone, smiling, and walking back to my truck. All I could really do actually.
The Needles were a nice part of a 126 day, 32 state road trip inspired by Rock N Road.
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John Mac
Trad climber
Littleton, CO
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Sep 16, 2015 - 09:18am PT
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I was up there last week and touched the Thimble! I can't imagine what it would have been like with the hitching post there.
John Gill ... simply amazing.
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Mungeclimber
Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
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Sep 16, 2015 - 10:10am PT
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+1 here that has walked up to it twice, and just walked back to the truck. Oh, the other time I climbed the Hitching Post nearby. That felt Thimblish for 5.2. lol
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Brokedownclimber
Trad climber
Douglas, WY
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Sep 16, 2015 - 02:41pm PT
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It's been a fun journey down memory lane, reading these words from many of the Masters! I only had one brief time at Dixon Springs State park in Illinois where I was highly honored to spend a few hours in the presence of our Grand master. When I look back, that was now 50 years ago in either late 1965 or early 1966. No one has mentioned the impression I had of watching John at that time; he not so much "climbed" the rock as he floated above it in an effortless and flowing manner. I was indeed shamed by my own lack of style and grace that day, and it caused me to self-evaluate my own style of climbing (for the better, I still hope!).
I'll close here with the words "Thank You for your contributions," John. They have made a difference in making artistic style important to climbing.
ATB, John!
Rodger
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Mungeclimber
Trad climber
Nothing creative to say
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Sep 16, 2015 - 03:17pm PT
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btw, why doesn't anyone go up the groove left of the Thimble problem?
It looks easier. Is it really? Might be more awkward.
Right of the Thimble problem is way cruxzilla. How hard?
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Sep 16, 2015 - 07:35pm PT
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People do go up the groove and have for a very long time. The first person to do this was...John Gill in 1959, two years before the main event. BITD, we called the groove 5.8, but I wouldn't be surprised to hear it is really more like 5.9.
Right of the Gill route is a route toproped by Kevin Bein. I don't know how hard it is, but it is harder than the Gill route.
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steve s
Trad climber
eldo
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Sep 16, 2015 - 07:55pm PT
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The groove to the right felt like 5.10 to me. That was a long time ago. Bouldered up the "main event" on the Thimble a few times but always backed off. John Gill was truly inspirational and it was always cool checking out the problems he climbed at various areas over the years. Thanks John!
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DWB
climber
Madison
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Jun 20, 2018 - 07:41am PT
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Jun 20, 2018 - 08:13am PT
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John Gill: Far ahead at his time and innovative in many ways, also by being the one who first started using resin to get better friction. Resin/poff now mostly connected to Fontainebleau in France...
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Brian in SLC
Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
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Jun 20, 2018 - 08:39am PT
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Not resin...chalk...as used by gymnasts...
"One immediate consequence of my introduction to gymnastics in the fall of 1954 was to adopt the use of chalk in rock climbing and buildering activities - a simple innovation that, once introduced to fellow climbers, evoked a more athletic view of rock climbing."
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Jun 20, 2018 - 08:44am PT
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Brian.
That is strange. A French Font guide written and/or edited by Font noblesse Montchaussé and Godoffe is crediting John Gill for resin. But thank you for correcting me. Climbing history is extremely full of "fake facts".
Ed: Resin/poff should have been magnesie. The guide is perfectly alright on this point. It was my quick reading jumping too fast forward that took magnesie for poff. Thanks, Brian.
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Jun 20, 2018 - 06:53pm PT
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That is strange. A French Font guide written and/or edited by Font noblesse Montchaussé and Godoffe is crediting John Gill for resin. But thank you for correcting me. Climbing history is extremely full of "fake facts".
Resin never really made it to the US. Gill never used it as far as I know---nor did anyone else. Although French climbers got it on their hands, it was primarily used to help with shoe rubber adhesion (in the days before "sticky rubber" probably made resin obsolete). Resin was made to keep rubber drive belts from slipping on pulleys. It was balled up in a bandanna and smacked on the shoe soles. It seemed to me to be a little too effective; the boulder problems in Fontainbleau developed characteristic black smears from resinated shoe rubber.
As for chalk, I bouldered for a week or two in Fontainbleau in 1970 and saw no evidence of chalk anywhere and met no French climbers who used it.
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Brian in SLC
Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
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Jun 20, 2018 - 08:12pm PT
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Funny...I've got a 1991 (translated into English in 2001) "Fontainebleau Climbs" guidebook.
In a history box on page 36 it talks to the debate between resin and chalk. Says:
"Chalk is widely used by gymnasts because it absorbs sweat and not surprisingly it was a gymnast - John Gill - who started using it on climbs in the United States in the fifties."
In the history section in the front of the book, it talks about shoes:
"1982 Sticky Rubber
Yvon Chouinard revolutionized climbing when he injected resin into the soles of rock shoes." (etc).
Good stuff! Ha ha...
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Jim Clipper
climber
from: forests to tree farms
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Jun 20, 2018 - 11:32pm PT
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Maybe that last video should be a part of the safety orientation in every climbing gym,(and pay that poor kid a few shekels).
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plund
Social climber
OD, MN
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Jun 21, 2018 - 06:58am PT
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That vid is also on the "Black Hills Gold" DVD, along with some other pretty crunchy stuff, including a dude busting off a crystal sidepull & somehow managing to hold the barn-door. Definitely a palm-sweat inducer.
Bonus footage of Verm shotgunning a breakfast Pilsner Urquel...
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DWB
climber
Madison
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Jun 21, 2018 - 07:13am PT
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Great film - friction addiction black hills gold. That was Curt Love breaking a hold on Iron Lingerie at Sylvan Lake.
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MH2
Boulder climber
Andy Cairns
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Jun 21, 2018 - 10:36am PT
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There may have been a time when the USA resin, or poff, was tincture of benzoin, used to keep the chalk on but having its own properties, including stickiness. I was told by a Valley climber that they could tell which holds Bridwell had used by the aromatic odor of the benzoin.
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plund
Social climber
OD, MN
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Jun 21, 2018 - 12:26pm PT
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Yeah, the "F.A. - Black Hills Gold" is chock full of good stuff, and not just climbing. You get a Vermashave segment as well. And I do covet the Homer motion-activated bottle opener.
As for the Thimble, I like many others have stood at the base and wondered "How TF?". Even the '5.9' 'easy' groove is full-value, especially for a lame-ass like me. Can't even get both feet off the ground in the Gill area.
For this hack, just sitting by the Sylvan Lake boulder swigging a brew & spectating is fabulous, especially harking back to a photo of Bob Kamps doing the same. So even if I can't climb well, my buttcheeks have had their own brush with historical greatness, "In the Assprints of Giants" if you will.
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Jim Clipper
climber
from: forests to tree farms
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Jun 21, 2018 - 12:30pm PT
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"In the Assprints of Giants" that really needs to be on a t-shirt.
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rgold
Trad climber
Poughkeepsie, NY
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Jun 21, 2018 - 08:30pm PT
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I think it was I-sack Nude Tone who said, "If it has been my privilege to lounge longer and more effectively than others, it is because I have sat in the assprints of giants."
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Jim Clipper
climber
from: forests to tree farms
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Jun 21, 2018 - 09:38pm PT
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Serially, kudos to all those that got on that rig, and rode it for what it's worth. No matter how far.
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hobo_dan
Social climber
Minnesota
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Jun 22, 2018 - 06:49am PT
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The Assprints of giants indeed!--there is an old guy who lives west of Minneapolis. Near his house is a sauna repair business. The old groover makes it a point to check their dumpster every night. He finds a huge batch of 2 X 4's- clear cedar:Taken out of the Minneapolis club. Their only flaw is they are soaked soft from 40 years of ass sweat. No worries- I buy all of them for $2.00 each, take them to the shop and plane off about an 1/8" of DNA from the chamber of commerce. And now they live happily in my sauna-sometimes at night I can hear their ghosts still arguing about light rail transit or whether or not that bolt should have been placed.
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