Honnold record broken?

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Ghost

climber
A long way from where I started
Sep 12, 2013 - 09:54am PT
G'Dammit, all that hunting around for Riley's post and it's not even here anymore?

He was angry at Tami for "enabling" a young person to do something dangerous, and said she had no right to an opinion. Something like "when was the last time you climbed, let alone soloed."

No big deal. Just business as usual on Supertoprope.
micro_marc

Gym climber
Squamish
Sep 12, 2013 - 10:45am PT
You guys are funny.... here hope this helps.

http://marcleclerc.blogspot.ca/2013/09/the-grand-wall-and-general-summer.html

Tami, Brownie, Big Mike, Nathan F'in Roberts... love you guys :)
MH2

climber
Sep 12, 2013 - 11:36am PT
That DOES help. He wanted to wait until the time changed from 10:32 to 10:33, but couldn't wait that long. I laughed at that because I know the feeling. Also because Marc-Andre is a funny, high-energy, knows-what's-important guy.
The Larry

climber
Moab, UT
Sep 12, 2013 - 01:49pm PT
Yeah fortmental. That sounds like some sound logic.
The Larry

climber
Moab, UT
Sep 12, 2013 - 03:23pm PT
G'Dammit, all that hunting around for Riley's post and it's not even here anymore?

He must have sobered up.
couchmaster

climber
pdx
Sep 12, 2013 - 04:49pm PT
^^^ possible but doesn't seem to be very often around here ^^^

Marc, congrats: any pics ?

MisterE

climber
Sep 12, 2013 - 05:03pm PT
Strong and stoked!

Here's a Vimeo video. I recognize "This Monkey's Gone to Heaven" at 2:00.

http://vimeo.com/28252455

Chief

climber
The NW edge of The Hudson Bay
Sep 12, 2013 - 10:32pm PT
Excellent.
Relic

Social climber
Vancouver, BC
Sep 13, 2013 - 12:24am PT
Thanks for getting us weenies all psyched Marc. You're killing it!
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Sep 13, 2013 - 01:04am PT
Yeah Marc! Nice work buddy!


Then Borderline to high plains- proud.


I'd be surprised if that's not the first time that link has been third classed.


Btw Mr E, that's a lower harder start to "this monkey", think its called grinch goes to heaven or something v8/9ish. Really cool teaser actually, where's the full length vid???
saa

climber
Bleau, cham, pink granite coast
Oct 4, 2013 - 04:30pm PT
relic = troll





in 2010, a touron asked in el cap meadow:
why do people do something so dangerous , so crazy?
climbing el cap that is.
i answered: why do athletes compete in the olympics, why do soldiers go to war?
ok, i get your point, he said.

for those among you who understand the gap between the general public and the el cap climber, it shouldn't be too hard to understand the gap between you and alex honnold, mason earle, or marc.

.... unless you re a taco touron that is.
Rudder

Trad climber
Costa Mesa, CA
Oct 4, 2013 - 06:26pm PT
Agreed, JL... but sometimes there is also that feeling that you just don't want someone as likeable and unique as Alex Honnold, for instance, to get hurt. I never worried about you, I always figured the ground wasn't hard enough to do you any damage. :)
Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Oct 5, 2013 - 12:46pm PT
I honestly don't know how some of these guys never get hurt. That alone is amazing to me.

JL
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Oct 5, 2013 - 03:25pm PT
Relic ya troll!!






Riley, what route u crater on in Squamish?? What happened?








Rudder

Trad climber
Costa Mesa, CA
Oct 5, 2013 - 03:32pm PT
In my opinion magazines, intelligent leaders, and video makers should not be promoting this kind of stuff.

Yes. No one even cares what you do on a rope anymore unless it's 15.5c... and even then it's boring compared to solo'n Half Dome with nothing more than a chalk bag and a power bar.

I think it was Louis CK that said kids are so stimulated now that they can't even enjoy five minutes looking at the wonders of Yosemite.

How far off are we from the futuristic movies where TV shows are an actual game of Russian roulette?

Filming Dan Osman dying didn't change anything. Would filming a free solo death finally change things? Doubtful, I suppose.

Not that I don't want boldness, climbing has always appreciated boldness. I'm blown away by the free solos of these amazing routes. It is totally exciting and fun to watch. I just worry, and personally don't want to encourage it.

I honestly don't know how some of these guys never get hurt. That alone is amazing to me.

I know. I just got a wasp sting up on Tahquitz a couple weeks back... I jumped and started swatting. But I was on an easy route with a rope. If I was close to my limit and free soloing...
climbski2

Mountain climber
Anchorage AK, Reno NV
Oct 5, 2013 - 05:01pm PT
If you were good at free-soloing, focused on something difficult you would easily ignore a bee sting. That focus is part of the allure of extreme sport.

I don't have a good answer for any of this. I do think folks should be free to do as they like in the mountains foolish or not. That judgement of foolish is a slippery slope. It is quite reasonable to say that any climbing activity is foolish on some level.

I KNOW some folks are soloing more foolishly than others however.

Recently I made the judgement that I was not at all impressed by a certain wingsuit stunt. I felt that there was no way to be certain of the uncontrollable variables such that even perfect mental/body control could ensure a very high probability of survival. Relying on a large helping of luck for survival is a place where I simply tune out and think.. IDIOT! Is that different than the successful familyman who looks at any climbing and thinks IDIOT.. I'm not truly sure. Different values certainly.. but the conclusion is perhaps no less valid.

Relying on hard earned skill and mental focus while accepting some basic level of objective hazard such as random rockfall impresses me. I spent a great deal of time in that arena in ski-mountaineering. No regrets and in many cases I was probably safer when I couldn't make a mistake than some days at the resort.

Fact is I'm a fraidy cat. I don't do something unless I am damn sure I can do it safely. I've done a few pretty cool things that others would have thought rediculous and that many of todays best have not repeated in as good or difficult a style. I was able to do those things because I was damn skilled and spent pretty much every day living that type of skill.

I'm no longer that competent because I don't have the burning desire and singleminded focus for those things that I once had. I miss that ability sometimes though.

I enjoy the hell out of seeing it displayed so well in folks like Honnold.
nah000

climber
canuckistan
Oct 5, 2013 - 05:11pm PT
a couple thoughts:

1. non-soloists trying to understand free soloists is as non-climbers trying to understand climbers, as the sedentary trying to understand the lives of the nomadic, or as the bureaucrat trying to understand the life of a warrior.

in all cases it's easier for either extreme to dismiss the motivations of their counterpart than it is to be open to the validity of the internal mysteries which, individually, we all have to accept.

2. how quickly some forget john bachar on that's incredible, henry barber on wide world of sports, or the newspaper coverage of expeditions to the himalaya in the mid-twentieth century...

i.e. the more things change: the more they stay the same. as humans we will always be fascinated by those living their lives on the fine line between the "known" and the "unknown", especially when that is coupled with the fine line between being and not-being. the only change, through time, is where the line is at.

tl;dr: "I'm the one that's got to die when it's time for me to die, so let me live my life the way I want to" applies equally to the other, as it does to ourselves.
Rudder

Trad climber
Costa Mesa, CA
Oct 5, 2013 - 06:34pm PT
I do think folks should be free to do as they like in the mountains foolish or not.

Me too, definitely.

i.e. the more things change: the more they stay the same

Our nature?... yes. But, in how extreme "extreme sports" have become?
Karl Baba

Trad climber
Yosemite, Ca
Oct 6, 2013 - 03:24am PT
"I honestly don't know how some of these guys never get hurt. That alone is amazing to me.

JL"

I think it's because there is a Spirit that is everywhere and there are no coincidences.

It's not the soloists who die usually. It's in the high mountains or ordinary climbers making a mistake.

And despite people who worry about people free soloing for the wrong reasons, I find that when you are unroped and doing anything that feels dicey or scary, it gives you a quick reality check. Only the truly confident stay with it unless they have a death wish (an those guys seem to prefer hard aid)

Peace

Karl
Chief

climber
The NW edge of The Hudson Bay
Oct 6, 2013 - 12:21pm PT
Some more perspectives:

Big Jim just turned eighty this year and questions the notion that we might gamble fifty years of living for a climb; any climb, rock, alpine, roped, unroped.
He says he'd hate to have missed the last fifty.

There was an excellent line here on ST that went something like this;
"If some chimp swaddled in free stuff finds themselves climbing with a photographer dangling nearby, they might not be climbing just for themselves."

The great Pedro Croftini ventured that (and I'm paraphrasing here) "If you find yourself falling through space to your demise, clothes flapping, because you wanted to impress someone, you've made a big joke of yourself."

I'm not sure when the climbing sponsorship game began and although it's definitely older than Mountain (now there's a stab from the past!), Climbing or Rock and Ice magazines, the concept did take hold with the advent of modern climbing media.
Now with I Phones and the Internet, you don't have to wait eight weeks for global profile.
The stakes in rock climbing seem to be pushed much higher and it would appear if you're not in danger of decking off of 13+ or free soloing, you're not going to have a profile worth attention or sponsorship.
The same is true for a lot of other high risk sports and if you're not putting it all on the line, it's not worth watching (or sponsoring).
The point is that this dynamic could put a lot of pressure on today's impressionable young athletes hungry for their fifteen minutes of fame.

In the context of this thread, Marc doesn't appear to be driven by recklessness or the pursuit of media profile.
I've had the privilege of talking to him a couple times as he did me the courtesy of asking my thoughts on routes he was interested in.
He shared a great piece on his experience soloing an aid route I put up years ago and collectively, these engagements suggest he's motivated primarily by the love of climbing and adventure.

I suggest Marc, like many other great examples in our sport, is following the age old "Warrior Athlete" path common to many high risk adventure sports unique to a society protected from the challenge of daily survival.
Hopefully he'll keep it in perspective, stay solid, know when it's time to change his focus and avoid becoming a tragic statistic before his time.

Respect


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