Thursday, August 23, 2012

Redeeming the prize



M and I headed up Saturday afternoon to Stone Ridge for a beautiful late summer weekend of quality time with G and Ariane, arriving just in time for some Canadian craft beers and late afternoon sunlight. Started the weekend off with excellent food at the Red Onion in Woodstock - I have the vague memory of multiple calamari dishes and some tasty steak, but mostly recall being stuffed to the gills.

Of course, the primary goal of the weekend was to get some climbing in, with the added responsibility of showing Nikita (and his wife) the beauty of the great outdoors. In a charity auction, Nikita had won the envious opportunity to climb outdoors under the tutelage of none other than G himself, and we wanted it to be worth his money (price unknown, but I'm sure it was worth it).

Nice leisurely start, relaxed enough for a breakfast of coffee and sandwiches from the deli (mmmm. Mountain Man) eaten at the swankest digs around - the bed of G's new old pickup. With Nikita meeting us later, we packed up and headed in to put up a rope on Herdie Gerdie (5.8). G having climbed it before, I took first lead of the day, though I admit thinking that it was a pretty stiff warm-up climb. The crux is low, situated between the ground and a big ledge 20-25ft off the ground, coming after a right leaning crack peters out. Having stuffed the crack with as many tiny nuts as it would take, negotiating the crux involved getting my feet high up on the greasy ramp and working up to the ledge, with a balancey mantle to surmount the lip. The rest of the climb was straightforward, with plenty of pro available.

The only casualty of the day


With a mind on the first day outside for Nikita and Liuba (and one that was prized!), I took my time and set up a careful, redundant anchor: good tree, girth-hitched rock, and solid cam, all (relatively) equalized. Was pretty proud of myself, until I came down to find that I had kicked down a rock that targeted my phone like a homing pigeon with ill intentions. In any case, G made quick work of the climb on TR and we soon had Nikita tied in and on the rock. Tough intro to the great outdoors, as the crux moves were delicate and crimpy, with crappy feet - determined, he eventually figured out the moves. From the same anchor (though we really should have put in a directional), we next TR'ed Dirty Gerdie (5.8+) immediately to the right. Super fun, with balancey moves and a technical mantle on crappy feet down low - not a lot of pro opportunities till halfway up, can't believe G led it in the past.

Nikita below the crux on Herdie Gerdie



Tricky mantle on Dirty Gerdie





To find something a little more enjoyable, we looked at Double Chin - which was taken - and settled on Boston (5.5). Though the moves are fun, the offwidth moves are not straightforward and the climb is difficult to protect without large gear (#5 or #6 BD), which we didn't have. G did an admirable job with the lead, though I was biting my nails the whole time belaying. He managed to fiddle in a decent amount of smaller pro outside the wide crack (including some ballnuts thrown up to him), but would definitely have benefited from some super small gear. Crux move is high off the deck, involving layback moves to get up and over a small roof near the top - excellent heady lead, toughest 5 I've been on for sure. Both Nikita and Liuba took multiple turns on TR - congrats to N for his first day outside, and L to her first day climbing ever, I think I see a future climbing for those two.

G wishing he were in Boston


Looking for small pro at the crux


First time climbing!




Wrapped up at the crag by 2, was back poolside with the ladies and mojitos by 3. Capped off the weekend with tasty burgers fresh off G's backyard grill. We need to do this again soon...

Why, yes, it's a very nice chair...

Some Canadian craftiness


6 comments:

g said...

Great TR K. You need to select some pics before I can forward it to your biggest fan though.

kenny g said...

Promise, I'll have them up tonight...

g said...

Next time you lead this, thames the c3s and the micro nuts.

Nice chair indeed.

kenny g said...

OR better yet, a big honking cam (time to get a #5?)

g said...

I think I'll double up on my green cam before buying a cam we'll use once every other year.

kenny g said...

Do you mean the BD 0.75? If you do, I *love* that cam - have doubles of it.