Sunday, March 31, 2013

Spring Break : Dolt Tower to J-Tree

On Thursday 3/28 I was finishing my business capstone midterm, but that was the last thing on my mind. As soon as I finished that test it was spring break! Now most college kids think of something like this for spring break....


I was thinking more along the lines of this....

I had to guide a climbing class on Friday, work at the bike shop on Sunday, and then leave for J-tree on Monday, so Saturday was looking like a Yosemite day trip kind of day.

I called my buddy John and we agreed that a trip up the Nose to Dolt Tower sounded like a good way to spend the day.

The rock and crack quality on this route is just amazing!



Not stoked about 50mph winds blowing us all over on the stovelegs.


 Two pitches to go up to Dolt!

 Splitter up to Dolt.

When we started the climb I realized John didn't bring any etriers (or jumars for that matter). I didn't know but John planned to free climb the whole thing. This kind of caught me off guard as I was planning on aiding the first 4 pitches and probably french freeing later on if I had to. After he freed the first four pitches I decided it was John's day to send and let him keep going. It definitely changed my view point of the route. It went from how can we climb this faster, to oh, get stronger and free more! Seems obvious, but watching him onsight 5.11d pitches really made me rethink my strategy for this route, and inspired me to get stronger this season. By free climbing a lot and simulclimbing through pitches 5, 6, and 7, and linking 10 and 11 we were able to get to Dolt in six and a half hours. Definitely not a speed record, but not bad for our first go at it, especially when we weren't really going for speed.

Up on Dolt


 Vitaliy spotted some climbers on Dolt, and what do you know, it was us!!! Thanks for the shot!

 Not so sure about the camelback next time...


A day of working on bikes on Sunday and then it was time for a road trip to J-Tree!!!

Whitney had never driven down California via highway 101, so we decided to take the scenic road down.

You have to make a stop at the Madonna Inn on the way down. I'm not sure why.....

Oh yeah to pee on a waterfall!!! haha

And to get a little bouldering in...



 Whitney is very confused by this place on her first visit haha

I dislike the Chick-fil-a owner's view points on social issues, but man I like those chicken nuggets.

Whit was worried about running out of gas at one point, but I told her we were fine......it's a 15 gallon tank.



The next day we were climbing!!!


 Whitney getting her shutterbug on.



 Top out photo of
Walk on the Wild Side

Me goofing around....I'm starting to like the wide..... slippery slope I know.


Home away from home


Alan soloing some wide next to Walk on the Wild Side


 Brad Young belaying Whitney


 Whitney cruising "The Kid" her first 5.10a slab!




Alan crushing on Grit Roof 5.11a at the Hall of Horrors


Me following


Desert moon rise


Not Forgotten 5.10a/b on the Hidden Tower


Whitney following her first 5.9 crack, Wild Wind, on the Hidden Tower


Me leading Fisticuffs 5.10b



































Solid fist jam right before it gets wider






































Alan leading Martin Quits 5.10c


On the last day we headed over to the Rusty Wall. The rock here was amazing. Way smoother than anything I had seen in Josh before. I didn't even tape up, which is usually suicide for your hands here.

O'Kelley's Crack 5.10c/d
The start of this route is freaking hard, I believe it's a 5.11a start, but felt a little harder. An awkward flared fist leads to tight fingers and basically no feet, but then it turns into a great hand crack.

Wangerbanger 5.11c

 Alan leading Wangerbanger 5.11c



After the Rusty Wall we ran back for one more climb....
Tonya leading Heart of Darkness 5.11a



Desert skin is in full effect.

Well there you have it. Spring break 2013 in the books. Dolt Tower was a great training run, and Josh was a great time as always. 2013 is going to be a good one :)

I have wayyy more photos that I might post later...

Friday, January 18, 2013

Valley Day Trippin' mini trax solo 1/17/12

This isn't a tour de force of trip reports, but I had a fun day in the Valley the other day so I though I would share.

With one week left of winter break and most of my friends / climbing partners back in school I was riding solo and contemplating what to do with my free time. The surf was flat so that was out. I had solo aid climbed Guadalupe rock too many times in the last week...so what to do... go to the Valley of course! The weather showed warming in the forecast so five and dime it was!

Sometimes the solo drive to the Valley is really peaceful (once I'm out of the city)


The roads were in far better shape than a week ago. Still really slippery on the Valley floor though.

I arrived at the Reed's parking lot at around 10am. I met "surfer Bob" there and we shot the sh#t for awhile before I headed down to five and dime.

I fixed a line on Mockery 5.8 to warmup on. It was a pretty fun face climb that was quite different from most climbs in Yosemite. Make sure you stay on route because there are some dinner plate jugs ready to break off. The crux for me ended up being a mantle move to the anchor. Overall, it was a fun route and I would go back and lead it. BTW there is a second anchor installed next to it, so I was able to do some relatively easy scrambling to get to it and then move over to the Mockery anchor, instead of having to rap from a tree first.

Three guys showed up and they said they were going to setup on Keystone corner, so I decided to fix a line above Five and Dime. Oh boy is that climb sweet!!!

It was my first time climbing it, and it was a perfect climb for a solo winter day. It was t-shirt climbing weather and I was able to do a few laps on it with my micro trax setup. The crux on it is pretty damn hard. Looks like it might be tight hands for some, but it went fingers, to rattly fingers, to shitty tight hands for me. I was able to hang for a bit and figure out some beta for my feet which helped out a lot. It ends with a great hand crack that widens to about a #3 size at the end. The funny thing was, the crux pumped me out so much that the sinker hands felt hard at the end haha.

The 3 guys I met there lived in the Valley and were really nice people. They let me take a ride up their rope on Copper Penny (which was awesome and I got clean!) and I let them use my rope for a few laps on Five and Dime. I took some shots of them which I said I would post here.



After Five and Dime I quickly went over to Fern Spring to fill up my water bottles and then it was off to Arch Rock before the sun went down. The guys I had climbed with earlier said there were some fixed lines in good shape over there, so I was stoked to sneak in another climb before dark. I ran up the talus field, and saw a fixed line on English Breakfast Crack. Score! I pulled my gear out of my pack and was set to start climbing. The 5.9 finger crack start is probably one of the more beautiful lines I've climbed IMO.


I was laughing my way up the finger crack and then got into the OW and chimney section. I had cruised the 5.10a OW earlier so I thought this 5.9 OW would be a cruise. WRONG!!! I didn't realize how tired I was before I got into, but man I was grunting my way up this thing. I guess I have less practice in "tilting" OW than straight ones, so I had to improvise some new techniques. With every move up my technique got a little better, but my strength was diminishing. At the end of the short chimney section after the OW, there is a rattly overhanging finger crack and then another chimney (did I mention this climb is awesome). By the time I got to the anchor it was starting to get dark and I was pretty spent from the wide section, so I decided to rap instead of doing the second pitch in the dark (I'll be back). I kind of f*#ked up though.... In my rush to get on the climb before the sun went down, I fixed the lower end of the rope to a tree so it would feed well through my jumar and micro traxion, instead of just weighting the rope....well I didn't leave myself enough slack. I couldn't get the rope into my belay device to rap...shit did I seriously do that?! I contemplate what to do and then came up with a plan. I brought a couple extra sling just in case (good thing) so I made a prusik with one and attached it to the anchor and to the rope above me. I weighted the rope with my jumar and moved the prusik up every time I did this. Eventually I pulled all the stretch out of the upper section of rope and it gave me just enough slack to get into my belay device....woohoo self rescue!! hahaha.


On the way back I celebrated with a bowl from Panda Express. Gotta love MSG! (It stands for mega super good right?)



 Winter day trips are always hard to motivate for, but I'm glad I got out there and had some fun!