Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Santa Cruz Dome - The Boardwalk Chimney (FA) 5.8, 540 ft

With the start of the New Year came a few more interesting outings. Pathetic levels of precipitation left the south facing walls dry and extended the rock-climbing season well into January. Since First Ascents and climbing obscure climbs is the thing I enjoy much more than a really hard red-point, I found time to get on one of the peaks that got my attention a year ago while climbing The Watchtower. Santa Cruz Dome sits right across the canyon and even though a few parties have climbed on it, the new route potential was still there.
Our new route goes up the prominent chimney to the left of the roof. Tom and Hunter's line goes over the roof.
Daniel is entertained by the size of Tom's pack. 50lbs of cookware and 20 lbs of bolts.

Beautiful chicken heads that we found while climbing our line






About a year ago I saw the Santa Cruz from the Watchtower. SC Dome is the lower dome in this photo.
The team from the First Ascent of The Fortress re-united. Tom, his dog Sunny, Daniel, me and a new member of the gang Hunter decided to come along. Weekend had perfect weather forecast and we had three days to work with. Before hiking up to the base of the dome Tom, Hunter and I climbed an awesome four pitch route up Chimney Spire. It was a tough four pitch 5.10d called Kitty From Hell. Rarely climbed, but definitely worth a visit. I was really bummed I didn’t bring my camera along since there was a lot to photograph!

Kitty From Hell (4 pitch 5.10d) on Chimney Rock Spire goes up this side of the formation.
Photo by David Hickey (summitpost.org)
The area seemed like a smaller version of the Needles with a little more lichen. The cracks were steep and climbing really fun. I would like to return to climb a few more routes in that area when it is a little warmer…After a good day of climbing we drove to Lodgepole and did majority of the approach in the dark. Bushwhacking and side-hilling wasn’t too enjoyable with 50 lbs of shit on our backs, but what waited for us in the end did not disappoint.
First and second roofs on pitch one.
Me going over the second roof on pitch 1
Daniel about to start pitch two!
Looking down the chimney. No munge in here!


More granite around...


The line Daniel noticed on a previous trip took a massive chimney system up the west side of the Dome. It did not take much work to find it. After examining rest of the rock in the area Daniel and I decided to take the chimney system. Tom and Hunter picked the thin face just right of our route. The climbing in our chimney system looked a bit intimidating at first with a couple of big roofs blocking the way. To my surprise the roofs were not too difficult and the climbing turned out to be very enjoyable. After the second roof was passed with a few cool face moves on the right, the climbing became incredibly fun. A mix of knobs and chicken heads covered the face and allowed me to be very creative with my movement. I had several options – chimney deep inside the crack, OW on the outside or fun stemming on knobs and chicken heads. I took the first pitch for about 50-55 meters and built a belay from slinging the knobs and using a crack to the left of the chimney. Daniel also stretched his pitch for about 55 meters and belayed me on top of a cool flake. What surprised me about our chosen route is the lack of choss and quality of rock. There were really large chicken heads, knobs and dikes all over the place.
View of Alta Peak
On pitch 3 I slung a dike for protection. Thank god the climbing didn't end up hard.
Fun face climbing on pitch 3
Daniel giving birth on pitch 2
Daniel and I were happy with the way our route went.
Daniel was extra happy..
Climbing on the route is varied and could be anything from friction slab, to chicken head pulling and chimneying. While leading the third pitch I did a thin traverse right and followed enjoyable knobs, to a spot with 5.6-7 friction which I protected by a tied off chicken head. Since I did not know how hard the climbing would end up this section seemed a little spicy. I was able to take a deep breath after I got to a cool dike and slung one of its components. This pitch was cool and a total rope stretcher! After belaying Daniel, we gathered our gear and made it to the summit for a few poser shots. Hunter and Tom also completed their line and reported fun climbing. They named their line "Welcome to Wallmart." On the following day all four of us attempted another line on the upper dome but decided to avoid an epic and return for it on a different trip. The year just begun, but there are already countless dream routes waiting...
The Watchtower on the right and Alta peak on the left.
 

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Tick List for 2014-2015



I will try to update my tick list as the time goes on. But this is a general list of some of those classic climbs I would love to get on at some point. It can happen in 2014, in a few years or never...who knows. I included some big climbs that I have done to the list.

Walls (aid climbs):
Goldwall - Silent Line 5.10 C2 [X]
La Esfinge - Reg. Route (V 5.10d-5.11a) [X]
Lost Arrow Spire - Direct route V C2+ 5.9 [X]
Washington Column - The Prow 5.9 C2 [X]
Liberty Cap - SW Face 5.10 C3 [X]
Half Dome - Reg. NW Face 5.10 C1 [X]
El Capitan - The Nose C1 5.10 [X]
Lurking Fear C2+ 5.9 [X]
Salathe Wall
The Shield
Sunkist
Leaning Tower - West Face or Wet Denim Daydream
Mt. Watkins - South Face C3 5.10
Whatever


[X] = Send - onsighted or redpointed
[O]= Led the crux but did not get it clean
[o]=followed and/or didn't get the pitch clean

Single and multi pitch climbs in the order of difficulty:
On the Lamb (Toulumne) 5.9
Vendetta 5.10b [X]
Outer Limits 5.10c [X]
Lunatic Fringe 5.10c [X]
Bombs Over Tokyo [X]
Salathe pitch 1 5.10c [X]
Generator Crack [o]
Lambert Dome - Direct NW Face 3 pitch 5.10b/c
Sherrie’s Crack (5.10c) [O]
Fairview Dome - Lucky Streaks 5.10c/d [ ] and Great Pumpkin 5.8 R [ ]. Reg Route 5.9 [X]
Washer Woman - In Search of Suds 6 pitch 5.10c/d
Mr. Natural 5.10c/d [X]
Twilight Zone (5.10d) [X]
Catchy (5.10d) [X]
Finger Licking (5.10d) [X]
Five and Dime (5.10d) [X]
OZ (4 pitch 5.10d)
The Good Book (5 pitch 5.10d)
Steppin Out (5.10d)
Chimney Spire - Kitty From Hell (4 pitch 5.10d) [X] 
The Fracture (5.10d)

Etude 5.11a (Suicide)
The Vampire 5.11a (Tahquitz)

Catchy Corner (5.11a) [O]
Hardd – pitch 1 (5.11a) [X]
Waverly Wafer (5.11a) [X]
Big Baby (5.11) [o]
Middle Cathedral - DNB (IV 5.11a R)
Lower Cathedral Spire - South by Southwest (5 pitch 5.11a)
North Face Route (Lovers Leap) 4 pitch 5.11a
Don Juan Wall (5 pitch 5.11b) [O]
Hardd (pitch 2) (5.11b) [O]
Enema (2 pitch 5.11b)

Rostrum pitch 4 (5.11c) [X]
Butterballs (5.11c) [O]
Pinky Paralysis (5.11c) [o]
Espresso Crack (5.11c) [o]
Kaukulator 5.11c
Blind Faith 5.11 c/d
Red Zinger (5.11d) [o]
Fish Crack (5.12b) [o]

Alpine climbs and big multi-pitch routes: 
Mt. Winchell - West Arete (5.8+)
Charlotte Dome - South Face 5.8 [X] Beauty and the Beast 6b
Clyde Minaret-SE Face direct 5.9+ [X]
The Watchtower - Moonage Daydream Wi4 M4 [X]
Merriam Peak - North Buttress IV 5.10b [X], Croft-Rands IV 5.11
Picture Peak - NE Buttress 5.10b
Mt Russell - Western Front 5.10, Bloody Corner 5.10
Sentinel Rock - Steck Salathe IV 5.10b [X]
Mt. Langley - Rest and be Thankful V 5.10a
Temple Crag - Moon Goddess Arete (III 5.8) and Planaria V 5.10 R

The Citadel - Edge of Time Arete IV 5.10+
Mt. Conness - SW Face IV 5.10c [X]
Keeler Needle - Harding Route IV 5.10c
South Howser Tower - Beckey Chouinard V 5.10+ [X]

Wind Chill to Wind Fall link up V 5.11
Middle Cathedral - Ho Chi Minh Trail V 5.11a, North Buttress IV 5.10a [X/O], Kor Beck (done first 6 pitches), Central Pillar of Frenzy (done only first 5 pitches), North Face, Bircheff Williams, and more.
Incredible Hulk-Sun Spot Dihedral (IV 5.11b), Escape From Poland (III 5.10+), Positive Vibrations 5.11a [X], Red Dihedral 5.10b [X], Beeline 5.10a[X]
Long's Peak (The Diamond) - D7 IV 5.11c, Black Dagger 3 pitch 5.11a, Ariana 6p 5.12a and Casual Route 5.10a 
Red Rocks - Levitation 29 5.11c
Mt Wilson Inti-Watana to Resolution Arete V 5.11
Freeblast IV 5.11b [o]
Middle Cathedral - Beggar's Buttress IV 5.11b
Basket Dome - Basket Case IV 5.11b
The Rostrum ( IV 5.11c)  [X]
Calaveras Dome – Silk Road [o] to Karakoram Highway link up (V+ 5.11b)
 Donner Summit - Imaginary Voyage (4 pitch 5.11+)
Astroman (V 5.11c)
Higher Cathedral - The Crucifix IV 5.12, North Buttress IV 5.9 [X], Book of Job 5.10b [X]
Ribbon Falls Area - Gates of Delirium V 5.12 [o], Ribbon Candy IV 5.11c, Silent Line 5.10 C2 [X]
Cerro Torre
Fitz Roy

Traverses:
Palisade Traverse
Evolution Traverse [X] 27 hrs car to car
Minarets Traverse
Sawtooth Traverse

First Ascents:
The Fortress - The Siege IV A0 5.10c
Santa Cruz Dome - Boardwalk Chimney 540 ft 5.8 
Mt. Hood - Ravine WI3 M4 - rating is very conditions dependent
Laurel Mountain - SE Rib 2000ft 5.5
AS MANY AS POSSIBLE! 

Thursday, January 16, 2014

2013 - Year In Review


Since I started mountaineering in 2010 I been trying to figure out my identity. What do I like the most out of many sub divisions that make up what we call “climbing?” What am I good at? Should I focus on ice climbing? Crack climbing in Yosemite? Big walls? Long free climbs? Scrambling in the Sierra Nevada? High altitude mountaineering in preparation to tackle conga lines on 8000M peaks? I can’t do it all and continue improving on all the fronts, right? Wrong! I finally figured that true reason I fell in love with climbing is because there is so much complexity to it, however it could be as straight forward as getting a crash pad and walking up to a boulder. My mood changes, so does the type of a climb I seek. In 2013 I had an enormous mix of experiences which did not only lead to appealing photos, but changed the way I view myself and the world.
 
Alpamayo - one of the most beautiful peaks in the world
Cheburashka on "Thank God" ledge (NW Face of Half Dome) . He invented Honnolding before it was cool.
Chacraraju Oeste and Este as seen from Chopicalqui
Mt. Darwin as seen from Mt. Mendel. It is one of nine peaks along the Evolution Traverse. I completed this traverse car to car in 27 hours. One of the most challenging days of my life.

There were some unexpected surprises, especially when it came to climbing big walls. Although climbing El Capitan was on my bucket list, I did not know I would meet my climbing partner while carpooling with a few strangers. “My friend and I want to climb Lurking Fear next weekend, you should join us,” offered always-enthusiastic Alix. Even though it was winter, I did not really know her and she had no completed walls on her resume, how was I gonna turn down that offer? Nevermind that I met her friend (our third partner Daniel) in the Bugaboos when he soloed Pigeon Spire’s West Ridge in a rain storm – the guy was legit, he was wearing swimming trunks! We ended up having an epic time on El Cap and topped out during a winter storm. A mix of wind, snow and rain prevented any sense of accomplishment or safety, we were forced to resume roped climbing on the summit slabs. Harsh conditions and lack of daylight forced us to bivy on top of the formation. After this experience Alix and I became friends and on our following climb had much less of an epic – a few weeks following the Lurking Fear in a push outing, we climbed the mega-classic Nose over four days. Aside from these two outings Hamik and I continued preparing for Peru by climbing SW Face of Liberty Cap, NW Face of Half Dome and The Nose on El Capitan (all car to car without sleeping on the walls). Season of climbing walls in Yosemite paid off and we finished it with a speedy ascent of La Esfinge in Peru.
NW Face of Half Dome (Hamik and I climbed it car to car in early Spring)
Alix super excited about climbing on El Capitan (The Nose)
Hamik getting hit by a small slide on Moonage Daydream WI4 M4 (The Watchtower). Climbed this route twice.

Climbing big walls is more gear intensive, but when things depend on climbing skills training more and eating less helped me lead my first WI5s on ice, and 5.11s on rock. Before the year begun, I put Ho Chi Minh Trail (V 5.11a) and Positive Vibrations (IV 5.11a) as goals that I did not think were really doable for me in 2013. These goals seemed way harder than difficulty of climbing I was used to in 2012. My rock climbing highlight for that year was climbing the Beckey-Chouinard, North Buttress of Merriam and leading clean a 5.10b crux on the Red Dihedral. Climbing seems very unpredictable and cards could not have aligned better. I made a return to the Hulk and climbed the Positive Vibrations with my good friend Hamik. We alternated leads, both got to lead a 5.11a pitch and completed the route without falls. We met another SPer Dow Williams and a pro-climber Joe Kinder. The latter made a small movie where my photo and I appear. The climbing, setting, company and experience was incredible. Year was so good that I totally forgot about including SW Face (Harding Route) of Conness in this report. Onsighting that while leading the OW pitch with no trouble gave my self esteem a little boost after I read this.

Huandoys as seen from high up on Chopicalqui
Dow Williams and partner P. Valchev climbing on a spire across from the Incredible Hulk
Beautiful Alpine Lake in Peru
The experience that makes me a bit more proud however is climbing the Ho Chi Minh Trail a few months prior with Gleb. This climb takes a proud line up the North Buttress of Middle Cathedral. It follows the DNB for six pitching and splits off taking a more direct and more sustained line of climbing. The route is almost 20 pitches long and difficulties continue to the top. Even though there was only one 5.11a pitch (crux pitch of DNB) the difficulty of pitches rarely drops below 5.10. After topping out we descended the legendary Kat Walk. Both of us were thirsty, hungry and beat. Even though there were many things that could have negatively influenced my mood, I was in high spirits after onsighting my first 5.11a and every pitch of this beautiful climb. There were many other long free climb but these two really stick out.
At the moment I am more excited than ever about technical climbing. In the end of 2013, I put together a training program which should produce even more results, and by the end of 2014 I am hoping to have some of the legendary free-climbs like Astroman and Levitation 29 within my grasp. Saying my tick list is long, is a big understatement!
Hamik rappelling after we climbed the North Face of Quitaraju
Cleopatra's Needle was my first WI5 lead on ice
Me leading a 5.11c fingercrack on The Rostrum

Hamik enjoying the sunset after we climbed a 20 pitch rock route on La Esfinge (5325 m)
Major progress on high altitude peaks was also made. Hamik and I summited Chacraraju Este, which is a very difficult/dangerous 6001M peak in Peru. When looked at from below difficulties of the route seemed moderate, but the hardest climbing was found in the last 200 ft of climbing. Unstable near vertical powder snow climbing, giant cornices, snow gargoyles and thin ice pillars guard the summit and bump up the rating of this mostly moderate AI2-3 climb to ED1. After we finally managed to summit we were faced with a game of rock, paper, scissors to determine who will rappel from the summit first. Even though neither of us wanted to use the buried picket in powder snow as the anchor, neither of us wanted to be the one stranded on the summit if the picket failed. Fortunately we made a safe descent and climbed many more peaks in Cordillera Blanca. Chopicalqui 20,846' (6,354 m) became one of my dream peaks because my friend Scott had a few incredible photos of the peak’s summit pyramid up on summitpost. On this trip I was fortunate to see it in real life and stand on top. Alpamayo is considered as one of the most beautiful mountains in the world by just about every list that mentions the “ten most beautiful mountains.” Climbing it and a peak across (Quitaraju) was one of the most enjoyable outings I have ever had. Huascaran Sur, wasn’t really a big goal of mine for this trip, but it is the highest peak in Peru, and became my new altitude record. What I liked the most about the Huascaran outing is the style of our ascent – Hamik and I stood on the summit less than a day after a taxi dropped us off at the trailhead (3000M). Summit of Huascaran is at 6,768 M, so we climbed a mountain that is 2000 ft higher than Mt. Denali, and gained 12,500 ft in under a day (with only one bivy).  
Me leading the Scepter (WI5)

Rapelling from Eichorn Pinnacle (photo by Chad T)
Alpineglow hitting Alpamayo - incredible mountain. Hamik and I climbed it and many more while we were in Peru
One climb that without a doubt I am MOST proud of is finishing the Evolution Traverse car to car in 27 hours. Here I was challenged on multiple fronts:
1) Soloing long stretches of 4th class with difficulties up to 5.9,
2) Nine mile ridgeline that covers nine peaks whose height is over 13,000ft,
3) Completing a day with 36 miles hiked, and about 16,000ft of elevation gain.
Golden Triangle on the Evolution Traverse. Soloists love a good selfie :)
Leading Cleopatra's Needle (WI5)
Golden alpineglow hitting the tip of the Incredible Hulk
It was an incredible physical challenge. When I mention these numbers I still have a heard time understanding how massive this climb is. Mental challenge here was even greater – believing that on my first attempt I will find my way across terrain that took Peter Croft several attempts before he completed the First Ascent in 1998 seemed a bit ridiculous. I soloed one 5.8 in my life prior to this outing and 18 miles with about 8,000 ft of gain was probably the biggest day I had in the mountains. Majority of strong parties take 3-6 days for a round trip from the parking lot. Voice of reason I heard told me to keep dreaming, but the dreamer in me reminded me of my friend Ben’s mantra – glorious failure is better than mediocre success.
At times I see people talking about climbing as if it isn’t a selfish activity, but some quest for divine knowledge. On this particular climb I learned more than a few things about my will power and how much my body was able to endure. I came out of it physically beat, but excited about the future and hungry for new challenges. For the first time in my life I identified that sky as the limit.

Summit of the Incredible Hulk
Hamik and I on top of Chacraraju
Alix and I after we topped out The Nose :)
Alix and Daniel on our first ever trip up the "Big Stone"

On a summit of Quitaraju 6040 M
More glorious selfies. Almost filled a 48 ouncer!
At last, I would like to say thank you to the partners and people I met climbing in 2013. It is thanks to you the year was so memorable for me. Since climbing attracts people of all walks of life, it is awesome to get to know and understand what drives some of you. It is interesting to learn about your goals, find out how you got into climbing and some of the things you guys have done outside of climbing. I continue to get motivated by some of the things you do! Meeting new people and keeping the old partners is another big goal of mine for the year ahead. Thank you for reading and happy climbing in 2014!
Happy Vitaliy
Happy Cheburashka

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Beyond Lunacy (7 pitch 5.11c)


Unlike many I find winter to be as enjoyable as any season, especially for climbing in Yosemite Valley.  With decreased amount of daylight it is much more difficult to complete long climbs, but it gives me an opportunity to focus on shorter climbs of higher difficulty. Also it is a great time to sum up the favorite climbs of the year and pick a few goals for 2014, but more on that in the next blog.  
No matter how much I go here, I keep coming back
Cool snow flakes on Merced river
Reed's. Beyond Lunacy goes pretty much up the middle and tops out on top of the formation
So aside from going to Indian Creek, Red Rock, and flailing at Arch and Cookie cliff, I got to complete one of the newer multi-pitch climbs in the park – Beyond Lunacy (7-pitch 5.11c).
Established in 2008 as a 5.10c A1, it was climbed free in 2009 and rated as 5.11c at the crux. This climb is a continuation to Lunatic Fringe, which is already one of the most classic single pitches in the Valley. I found a few posts about several attempts at Beyond Lunacy, but none that actually completed all seven pitches. Even though no report described the whole route, all people who attempted it agreed that pitches they have done were really fun and worthy.
With an available topo and positive reviews, it was not hard to convince Tom to give this route a try. Even though it snowed only about a week prior to our attempt and morning temperatures kept us wrapped in down, by 10:30 we finished our coffee and decided to make our way up to the base. The approach was exhausting – two minutes! Since I never led Lunatic Fringe I asked Tom if I could take the first pitch, and he was more than happy to let me have it. After the first pitch we swapped leads all day and continued to the top of the formation. To my surprise we both led and followed the whole route completely free and without falls or takes.
Lunatic fringe is the obvious crack with a white streak. Pitch two goes up from pedestal up the broken up cracks above
Tom cranking on the 2nd pitch.
The monkeys don't place gear
First pitch is stellar and involves all sizes from fingers to perfect hands. The crux of second pitch involved a really thin crack and a lot of stemming. Delicate pitch of high quality. Midway up the thin section there is a little flake that was flexing, I wonder if it will stay there for long.
To start the third pitch I walked left and around an arete. Short handcrack in a corner was a little wet but after I reached the second tier it was quality dry climbing to the top. Pitch four required a committing step left off the belay and a mantle to a decent knob, before you get to clip the first bolt and exhale. Tom and I thought the crux was when the knobs disappear around the third bolt. I thought I was gonna fall on this section but some miracle kept me climbing. The roof in the middle of the pitch was really fun and not as hard as it seemed from the bottom.

Tom on pitch 3
Climbers climbing Reed's Direct
Tom on pitch 4
On pitch five I had a WTF moment. To protect the move over a roof I tied off a knob above it. After taking a long time to figure out the move over, I went for it, and in the process knocked off my "protection." I was in the middle of the not so easy crux with another knob tied 20 feet below. The sequence I figured worked good enough that I mounted the knob and was able to tie another one before clipping the "thank god" piton, there was a happy ending to this mini epic. Another roof that was less dramatic and a sea of knobs took me to the belay below the crux.

Me on pitch 5, trying to figure out how to mount a knob without any footholds above it
Tom on the crux 5.11c
Traverse to the anchor is fun
Tom led it without looking too bothered. On the other hand it took every little gram of strength and endurance to keep my half of first knuckle in a jam and a lie back to pass the left facing corner above. With a pump through the roof, the "hammock traverse" was super exciting following it with 20ft between protection pieces. I was happy the pads of dirt allowed my passage, and am sure someone in the future will not be as lucky :) Per topo the last pitch is a 5.10d/5.11a and was my last lead. I knew it was the only thing that stood between us and climbing the route all clean so I fought the temptation to forfeit my lead to Tom and did my best not to screw it up by climbing with confidence. Mounting a knob to a first stance was exciting since it is right off the belay ledge and involves climbing an overhang. Than you get to clip a bolt and do a few more insecure moves before you clip another two and come up to the final mantle.

Other crags seen from Beyond Lunacy
Campfire was also a success
I have not done the mantle on the Nutcracker, but with the last bolt way below me I worked hard not to f-up the exit. Tom followed clean and we both took in rays of sun before starting the rappell. Both of us were really excited about climbing this not yet well-known, but soon-to-be classic.