Saturday, April 14, 2012

Oscar and Charie on a horse

To take advantage of the warm weather predicted for Saturday, G and I stayed at his house by the Gunks on Friday night and got up before the crack of dawn, at 5 AM. We didn't quite beat the sunrise to the Trapps, but did beat pretty much all the climbers, arriving at an empty carriage road.

Friday night entertainment

Alpine start on the carriage road

G was generous enough to give me first lead of the day on Horseman (5.5), a climb I've been eyeing for a while and one that G led the last time he was here. Extremely fun lead and a good start to the day, Horseman goes up a huge right-facing corner to a small roof where you can exit out via a solid traverse to the left. There's an optional belay there of two old pitons, but I strung it out through the face above into one long pitch. The first part in the corner is solid and thoughtful, requiring some stemming on imperfect footholds to the right. Good place for a big cam on the way up (BD #4). Leaving the optional belay requires a few funky moves including a highstep, but once you're on the face above it's easy cruising on good holds up to the ledge.

Laid back start
In the initial Horseman corner
Jedi belay
Midpoint, at the optional belay

We headed over with the aim of doing Shockley's Ceiling next, but as expected the crowds were queued up - two parties headed up via Shockley's proper and another party of 2 headed up the start of Oscar and Charlie to cross over to the ledge below Shockley's roof. We decided to wait it out and do Oscar and Charlie (5.7) in its entirety instead, which is a fantastic link up of the best parts of three climbs: p1 starts out with a left-facing corner (Oscar variation), p2 rejoins Strictly From Nowhere and to go through the pumpy Strictly roof, and p3 joins Travels With Charlie on the face above.

G led up the first pitch, which is a tricky left-facing corner with small gear close to the ground and a bulge crux. Nice work on delicate protection and funky moves, requiring insecure stemming and finger-locks in the corner seam. G even got his #2 ballnut slotted solidly on the way, and set up his gear belay past the pine tree rap station at the top of the corner, up and right on the large Strictly ledge. I geared up for the short but adrenaline-inducing second pitch, which goes up and a little left from the belay towards the overhanging left-facing corner of the Strictly roof. I found the pro a little sparse, and ended up fiddling in two cams into a downward-facing horizontal crack at a steep section right below the corner. Probably could have gotten another piece in once I was up and stemmed across the corner, but I could feel the pump clock ticking so I climbed through up and right to the hanging belay chains. Good solid jugs at the crux, but I wish I were more level-headed about the protection.

G leads up the p1 corner of Oscar and Charlie
You talking to me?
G follows p2, Oscar and Charlie
In the crux
Showing off the guns

G was nice enough to take the last pitch, where the route-finding was the hardest part. Williams says to head up the face and traverse 12-15 feet left to join the end of Travels With Charlie, but I think we ended up exiting the overhang a little to the right, which might be the end of Strictly From Nowhere. G did an admirable job of sussing out the different possibilities, which were not clear at all. Either way, good climbing and we made good use of the double ropes (which also got us back down to the ground in one rap from the GT). Nice climb, I think we might go back and swap leads on the pitches - you can also link up the first two pitches up to the hanging belay, as long as you have the juice and mental focus for the pumpy moves at the end.

Wandering on p3

We took off a little before 2, as the crowds were starting to fill the popular routes and we had to get back to the city. I loved the early start, it was great to get some climbing in before things heated up (temperature- and crowd-wise).

Full set of pics here.

Ticklist:
Horseman (5.5)
Oscar and Charlie (5.7)

6 comments:

g said...

That pro on your second pitch was crazy scarce! You had a tiny Jesus nut at the anchor. Another tiny nut a few feet later. Then Something like fifteen feet to your two crummy small cams in the roof and that's it...

I think the way I climbed the last pitch might have diminished the rating... We can see next time we're on it.

Great day, and starting early was perfect.

kenny g said...

Hey those cams weren't crummy!

I think I definitely could have gotten something in before I headed up to that stance. More importantly, looking at the pics, it would have been good to get a piece high in the corner before heading out right - would have protected you from a swing into air if you fell at the crux.

kenny g said...

Yeah, would be nice to do that climb again, switching leads. Have to get myself psyched up for the first pitch though...

brian said...

Awesome. A bit worried by how good the pics are...

kenny g said...

Ha! I thought that might come up.

A lot of G's pics were before I got my first piece in on Horseman (dead tree stump 20 ft up). When he was following p2 of Oscar and Charlie, I was shooting blind with one hand around the corner, camera on a sling. Easy to set up an autoblock for the follower too (not that I had).

g said...

I had climbed it a few weeks before so I knew K would not fall before the first piece.

But those pics are indeed surprisingly good given it was only the two of us.