Gunks!
Brian looks up from the chimney to the P2 belay on Minty (5.3)
With a cold-front dropping in overnight, Brian and I headed out to the Gunks for a little late fall climbing. After getting by the massive Black Friday traffic jam near Woodbury Common, we were home free - empty roads and blue skies straight to the Trapps!
When we pulled into the parking lot below the hairpin turn at 10 AM there were only two other cars in the lot and no ranger in sight - it was clearly going to be a quiet day. Our first choice of warm-up was Beginner's Delight (5.3), which even in this weather had a party on the first pitch, leading us to head over to Minty (5.3) - an excellent climb for the grade, with a bouldery height-dependent start to P1 and an awesome chimney on P2 that shoots you up to the GT ledge. We chose the 5.5 variation of the last pitch, which travels through a roof protected by a single piton - much more fun than the regular corner finish.
The solitude of the cliffs (we ran into maybe 5 parties all day) tempted us to try our luck on High Exposure, THE classic 5.6+ at the Gunks. There was two guys on the bottom of the climb, but we chose to wait it out and push quick to try and fit it all in. We linked the first two pitches into a single rope-stretching drag-inducing gear-conserving pitch, going up the wet corner from the ground, up over an overhang, then trending right and up on good holds and occasional pro. The topout to the High E belay ledge came not a moment too soon! By the time Brian cruised the pitch, the sun had dropped over the horizon and the cold and dark came in fast. After a few longing glances up the third pitch, we traversed over to chains on the right and rapped to the ground by moonlight. Fun easier initial climbing, but that third pitch looks awesome - definitely on the list next time (perhaps a morning, on a weekday)...
6 comments:
Sorry, Brian, incredibly crappy photos off the disposable camera, especially at low light. I'll see if I can do some Photoshop magic, but don't hold your breath.
I'm thinking of investing in a little durable digital camera...
I had a great time, despite leaving the best pitch unclimbed. Something to look forward to. And there's always the good feeling of having chosen wisely; I'm pretty sure that had we chosen to top out on High E, I would have been climbing by moonlight.
That photo of the top of P2 on High E is awesome. I remember turning the corner and looking up and thinking, "That's still a long way to go!".
Oh, I just ordered a Petzl Tikka XP headlamp. I think it's the same on Eric picked up. If you can find a reason to spend 100$ at REI, the light is on sale there, and this coupon code will get you 25$ off (will work on sale items too, I just tried).
Looks really fun! Sorry I missed it. (Albeit, I don't think I would have climbed in shorts there! I'll have to look into fall/spring climbing outfits.) Was there any problems with leaves or fall detritus? The rock looks just jam packed with holds (especially the easier routes). Some of the rock looks likes it's even more likely to come loose under the load of a fall onto gear than those hallow sounding scales at JTree--or is all that cracky stuff really solid?
And yes, we need a good, cheap digital camera--preferably one that is specifically good at hi ISO and on automatic so that it's easy to use in lower light and one-handed.
Next on my list tho, let's get me belay trained and I'd like to read up on cleaning as a second.
Headlamps for all! I might get one of the Petzl Zipkas to keep on me at all times.
Yah, maybe we can sneak one more trip out - we can always keep an eye out on the weather. Eric we'll get you trained this week for the next trip to New Rochelle.
The rock's very solid at the Gunks, the routes are extremely well-traveled and most of the loose stuff is gone.
The updated Black Diamond Ion would also make a nice lightweight choice. You might even keep it on you ;->
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