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Nick
climber
portland, Oregon
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Feb 10, 2011 - 11:33pm PT
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Ssssssssssssssssssssssss!
Figures is a great route Craig, I appreciate your vision.
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lucander
Trad climber
New England
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Feb 10, 2011 - 11:35pm PT
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Ksolem is an odd fellow. Next time I post a High E thread, he'll write that the route wanders, is terribly easy, and ponder why anyone would have a good time on it.
Then, he'll say how much better Graveyard Shift, Fat City, and Yellow Wall are - just to let us know that he climbed them.
Figures on a Landscape - worth basing a trip across the continent on. Nuff said.
D. Lucander
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caughtinside
Social climber
Davis, CA
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Feb 10, 2011 - 11:42pm PT
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THis is the thread that just keeps on giving. Thanks to murf for going to the clipboard and keeping score for us.
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Ksolem
Trad climber
Monrovia, California
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Feb 10, 2011 - 11:53pm PT
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Good grief! Doesn't anyone here have a sense of humor anymore?
Christ Almighty you are a bunch of up tight geezers ;-)
(But you know I'm right)
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Ksolem
Trad climber
Monrovia, California
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Feb 10, 2011 - 11:56pm PT
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By the way, Lucander, I love High E. And one of my fondest memories lies up there.
It was a few days after my wedding, I was sitting under the overhang with Julie Lazar in a light drizzle. We were waiting for the rain to let up, when up comes Fritz Wiessner.
"Isn't this a fine day for a climb!" he says to us as he passes by and solos on up the last pitch.
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StahlBro
Trad climber
San Diego, CA
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Feb 11, 2011 - 12:00am PT
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There ain't too many 5.7's like High E on the left coast.
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Rudder
Trad climber
Long Beach, CA
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Feb 11, 2011 - 12:06am PT
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pretty easy except for the bottom, getting to the second bolt
That's what I remember, the climbing between the first and second bolt takes some focus.
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henny
Social climber
The Past
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Feb 11, 2011 - 12:21am PT
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Sense of humor?
Joking around?
Strictly forbidden.
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BrassNuts
Trad climber
Save your a_s, reach for the brass...
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Feb 11, 2011 - 01:12am PT
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philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
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Feb 11, 2011 - 02:02pm PT
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Pretty pic BNuts.
It is always curious to me when people with the benefit of inch by inch beta and the knowing a route goes and has been done innumerable times already start to down talk the difficulty of the climbing. "It wasn't that hard", "It was easier than it's reputation", "I crushed it" ! Whatever Yadda yadda tips your canoe. But when you go up first without the knowledge & road map it is a much bigger deal. Putting in the bolts is much harder than clipping them after.
The envisioning is the first creative move followed by the will to carry on.
AND... The greatness of a route is not solely a measure of It's difficulty.
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philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
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Feb 11, 2011 - 02:19pm PT
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Craig, even though FOAL is a much more lyric and beautiful name it is clearly less apropos than MOMB.
I am sorry for my part in stealing the name from you.
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hashbro
Trad climber
Mental Physics........
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Feb 11, 2011 - 09:06pm PT
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Randy and Dave are two of the most visionary climbers I have known......
In the case of Figures on a Landscape (for what it's worth), Craig Fry (having found the route and collected the balls to start up the thing), has my vote of one of the most visionary
climbers I have known........
And Craig certainly was the visionary behind Figures on a Landscape!
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Wade Icey
Trad climber
www.alohashirtrescue.com
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Feb 12, 2011 - 12:28am PT
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drljefe
climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
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Apr 25, 2012 - 11:27pm PT
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Astro bump
I feel like I did some time travel!
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wstmrnclmr
Trad climber
Bolinas, CA
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Mar 28, 2014 - 02:29am PT
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Bump......Sorry for the photo size. Mark Wagner and I,'93. Cool to learn Tar put in new belay but Wagner was old school. I got the crux off the hanger.....Also interesting to learn that Todd Gordon hasn't done the best climb in the park. Must be on his bucket list..........
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RyanD
climber
Squamish
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Mar 28, 2014 - 04:45am PT
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Lol i just started reading this thread & I have to quote this post from way back. A super classic tale & tribute.
zip
Trad climber
pacific beach, ca
Oct 29, 2007 - 08:15pm PT
The first and only time i climbed this route was with Jeff Perrin, and Walt Shipley as audience, and chief heckler.
Jeff lead the first pitch and i was seconding.
We lost Walt on the hike in, and had no idea where he was.
I start climbing and was immediately aware that Walt has arrived, because he starts heckling me.
I am focused on the moves and i don't look down to see where Walt is, but i am very aware of his presence.
He is critiquing my every move, and yelling up suggestions.
"Dyno, lieback, smear, edge, mantle"
The climbing is not very difficult, and i am not having any trouble with the moves. Walt is just entertaining himself by trying to make me fall.
I get up to the traverse section of the first pitch, and i get a little gripped looking at the possible penji that i am going to take if i fall.
This route is well within my ability, but at that time i was a little light in the nerves department.
I have found that as i get older, i am a lot more cautious, and lot less bold than i was twenty years and twenty pounds ago, but that is another story.
As I start off on the traverse, Walt launches in to a new tirade.
"You're blowing the sequence, you're gonna fall, you're gonna die"
I am slowly inching across the traverse and trying to count how many moves i have left to the belay.
Walt doesn't let up, "if you die, can i have your car?"
I finally tell Walt to shut the f@#k up, and he does.
I am one move away from the slings and in my haste to get there, i have actually messed up the sequence. I want to do this clean, but it would be so easy to grab the anchor. I am trying to find a way to reverse the move, and i hear Walt yell, "Grab the sling ya poser!"
I am able to reverse the move and finish the pitch cleanly. I clip in to the anchor, and immediately look down at Walt.
I was not prepared for what i saw.
Walt is semi crouched, and leaning against a rock in the sun.
He is naked, and holding a beer.
I look at Jeff, shake my head, and then look back at Walt and ask him, "what in the F#@K are you doing?"
He does not respond, and he is just staring out in to The Wonderland.
I again call out to him, "Walt, what are you doing?"
Without looking up, he finally responds: "I am coping some rays, taking a sh#t, drinking a beer, and laughing at you. I am enjoying life, man"
I miss you Walt, and will never forget all the good times that we had on and off the stone, and our great conversations.
Zip
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10b4me
Sport climber
www.tenbeephotography.com
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Mar 28, 2014 - 10:41am PT
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^^^good stuff
Wish I had climbed this when I was younger. Don't think I have the skill anymore.
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Tan Slacks
climber
Joshua Tree
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Mar 28, 2014 - 10:58am PT
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I have only done the route a few times. It was the cover of Mountain Magazine that got me there the first time. Not sure I will ever get back on it, but the memories are all there.
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Todd Gordon
Trad climber
Joshua Tree, Cal
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Mar 28, 2014 - 11:34am PT
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Bump......Sorry for the photo size. Mark Wagner and I,'93. Cool to learn Tar put in new belay but Wagner was old school. I got the crux off the hanger.....Also interesting to learn that Todd Gordon hasn't done the best climb in the park. Must be on his bucket list..........
Correction;.....I HAVE done the best climb in the Park.......(Figures on a Landscape)..the FIRST attempt I fell at the crux and bailed....just after the FA.....but a couple years later (early 80s), I went back with Kelly Vaught and led all the pitches.........cruised it....
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Jon Beck
Trad climber
Oceanside
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Mar 28, 2014 - 11:55am PT
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Definitely a climb that will not fade from memory. We did it in 1989. I led the first pitch and we planned on swapping leads. My partner bailed on the 2nd pitch lead so I took it. I offered him the third pitch and he said no way, you might as well lead the whole thing. Great partner, he had a history of avoiding leads :)
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