John Bachar - In memory of a great man 1957 – 2009

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Gobee

Trad climber
Los Angeles
Jul 7, 2009 - 10:08pm PT
Back in the day in Yose we would whisper "Wow, their's Bachar"
He was the Dude! I just lead Outer Limits for the first time, and felt good about myself, then John walks up and floats up Crack A-GO-GO, and I got wicked snail eye, and my hands started to sweat, just watching!


FTOR

Sport climber
CA
Jul 7, 2009 - 10:30pm PT
so sad to hear of john's passing. he was truly an inspiration to a generation of climbers, myself included. had the honor and pleasure of climbing in the meadows with him on a few occasions and the audacity of going after some of his routes early on with al nelson, who is also no longer with us. can't say we were ever close, but i'll be missing him all the same. hope he's found the peace we're all looking for, he was a true master. -fierce tiger on rock
TJrock

Sport climber
Jul 7, 2009 - 11:22pm PT
I met John through Dave Yerian a few times and heard many stories over the last three years. So sad to have lost him, a superhuman climber that could do things I would never imagine possible. I was fortunate enough to have known him through Dave and to have been able to see a slideshow of his that offered a small glimpse into his mind and his world. I'm very sad for Dave to have lost this man with whom he shared so much.
Mighty Hiker

Social climber
Vancouver, B.C.
Jul 7, 2009 - 11:37pm PT
Los Angeles Times obituary: http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-john-bachar8-2009jul08,0,7890954.story

(Once again, the MSM tells us that climbers "conquer" a climb or mountain... Won't they ever learn?)
Rick A

climber
Boulder, Colorado
Jul 8, 2009 - 12:19am PT
bootysatva

Trad climber
Idylwild Ca
Jul 8, 2009 - 01:20am PT
It was around 1975 and I was leading Toe jam in josh for the first time and here comes Jb down soloing the route. when he saw me he just casually traversed and down climbed a 5.10 c to the side of toe jam. I was stunned and changed forever. thank you John. I am very sad that he is gone and glad that he lived so fully. Ernesto ale
Peej

Trad climber
NY
Jul 8, 2009 - 01:59am PT
I never knew the man, but I feel as though I did through stories from friends of his. He was definitely a dear friend and an inspiration to both the hard and the novice. And flights of angels sing thee to thy rest. There leaves us a noble prince in the vertical world. Christina and I are thinking of you Anastasia and our condolences to you as well as the rest of his family and friends.

Andrew Jackson

Marc Dubé

climber
Vancouver, BC
Jul 8, 2009 - 03:14am PT
I am really saddened by your loss Tyrus. What a shock.

Those that knew John are very aware of how much he influenced people and a generation of climbers. On a personal level, JB encouraged me "to go for it" and have no regrets. It changed my life forever and I owe it all to climbing, so in some way I really owe a lot of it to John and his influence.

I am grateful to have known him and to have been inspired......what else can I say?

Thank you and RIP. Positive memories!

Lynne Leichtfuss

Social climber
valley center, ca
Jul 8, 2009 - 03:45am PT
So here I am again tonight trying to process the death of someone that was not only life and light to his own family, but a big piece in my own life recently.

Unusual situation today took me back to a place I went last night but had not been to in months....La Jolla Village Cove. Decided to find a quiet spot and ask God ..."what the heck are you doing ? "

So I did....thinking, processing and praying I asked God..... Would you please send me something special tonight to let me know that you are still in control. That this life that is gone, that so many needed in their own life will be taken care of. Jess askin' here as we be devastated.

May not mean much to yo out there, but minutes later I heard bagpipes playing.....playing songs of hope and grace. Whoa, I thought...what a grate CD.

But no CD, it was the answer to the cry of my heart for help. For a special measure of Grace. For a ....hey there I am still here and love you all.

There on the cliff was a bag pipe player, a real live bag pipe player.



Watchin' the swells come in I realized I didn't have a clue ....Some just die out and some waves break big. John's broke big on the outer swell. So we'll miss his inside break.


A man that was instrumental in big and small ways in so many lives. Gifted by Grace. Thanks Dude. Miss your mails and ideas. See ya in the heavenlies. Lynne
tojo

Sport climber
Lake Norden, SD
Jul 8, 2009 - 08:54am PT
Had the previledge of bouldering with John in Joshua tree, and camp4, man what the hell.......my heart goes out to his family.
EP

Social climber
Way Out There
Jul 8, 2009 - 09:18am PT
When I woke up this morning, my first thought was that John couldn't be gone.

I remember sitting in the Garden Grove library in 1983 and reading the LIFE magazine article about John.

Later, I was shown an impossible boulder at the Kern Slabs that John was seen to have made short work of. He was everywhere it seemed..

He still is.

Here is to Tyrus and all who knew and loved John Bachar.
ron ray

climber
seattle
Jul 8, 2009 - 09:59am PT
Humbling to even post as I saw John climb maybe 2 times over 25 years -- in Josh, and under an overpass that sheltered a makeshift climbing wall near Palm Springs. I'm just one of the many who followed his bootprints around southern california, though seldom up the same walls.

But I have to pay tribute to someone who lived his life exactly as he choose, no compromise.

And I'll bet the Pearly Gates were climbed, free solo, on July 7 at 12b.
survival

Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
Jul 8, 2009 - 10:03am PT
This was sent to me by an old military buddy.
It was written by a fellow named David Ritchie.
I like the way it came across, so I'll share.


One of my heros died yesterday……









This is not to indict those who were, or are, simply, climbers. In the climbing community there have always been other sorts of characters too—for some, climbing was the end in itself, and what the world did with that was up to them. John Bachar, who died yesterday while climbing solo in California , was one of those. He was a pure rock climber who redefined the sport by ascending sheer rock faces of extreme difficulty without ropes to protect him in the event of a fall. What he did was athletic achievement at the highest levels of human ability and training, on par with the skill and discipline of Nadia Comeneci, Michael Phelps, Lance Armstrong, or Michael Jordan. His climbs, only a few years earlier, had been deemed impossible, even roped; climbing them without protection was as absurd as if a man had presumed to fly. But Bachar did fly. And as a result, one can’t compare his numinous climbing to climbing: instead, you have to compare it to art. To explain it best requires words used for Beethoven’s transcendent ninth symphony; it was an “expression of the divine.”



Rick A

climber
Boulder, Colorado
Jul 8, 2009 - 10:08am PT
John’s contribution was nothing less than profound To those who could appreciate his absolute mastery on the rock, he revealed a glimpse of nearly unbounded human potential. Just as a Miles Davis recording can astound new listeners, future climbers will struggle up a route John soloed, and gasp in wonder at how much is possible.

Rick Accomazzo
TwistedCrank

climber
Ideeho-dee-do-dah-day
Jul 8, 2009 - 10:38am PT
I am nobody in climbing.

I spent a fall in Tuolumne once - my partner and I overlapped with John, his parther (Ron Peers) and Brenda during the last climbable weeks of the fall.

One of my fondest memories of John was him chuckling at my partner and I as we showed up at the gym with pockets loaded with beers and the stench of ragweed clinging to us. It was a contrast in styles.

Almost 30 years later and in an email John recalled that day and was saddened to here that my partner had left early in a motorcycle accident. That was so cool of him.

I can easily say that John's spirit and drive made him one of the more influential personalities in my life. Right up there with the likes of Muhammad Ali.

It interesting how some individuals can transcend greatness. COrny but true.

--Dirk Vandervoort
Janet Wilts

Trad climber
Moose
Jul 8, 2009 - 10:57am PT
Really sorry to hear about JB. Lots of memorys and good times.
Thoughts and prayers go to his son.....At least he was out climbing, doing what he enjoyed in life....

Janet Wilts
Brian in SLC

Social climber
Salt Lake City, UT
Jul 8, 2009 - 12:05pm PT
No one to fill these shoes...


(I never had the Farrah poster…)

Below, from the same trip as "Chasin' the Train" in the Frankenjura? After that trip, folks were chasin' John!


Leaves a void in the community for sure. Tragic loss.

Heavy sigh…

-Brian in SLC
JuanDeFuca

Big Wall climber
Stoney Point
Jul 8, 2009 - 12:34pm PT
This tragic event reminds me how the clock is ticking for us all. We get at most a hundred years. It is not fair. Why worry about the small stuff, enjoy life.

I first met Bachar at Intersection rock after he soloed Left Ski Track.

It was like meeting a God.

Juan
WBraun

climber
Jul 8, 2009 - 12:38pm PT
Brian in SLC

That's John in Verdon, France, on the cover of that 85 catalog.
Stainless

Social climber
SLC, UT
Jul 8, 2009 - 12:57pm PT
This is a great thread. Thanks to everyone for sharing. John will be missed. For what it's worth, my respects are paid here:

http://steve-edwards.blogspot.com/2009/07/johnny-rock.html

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