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Tuesday, 12 September 2017

Biografiz

Views from the Fiz






















Our hopes of climbing at the Ratikon were quickly dashed by terrible weather on arriving in Switzerland. We could have waited it out for a week, but talked ourselves into driving to Chamonix where we could be indoors and Calum could thrash us at table tennis. After the weather improved, rather than drive back to Switzerland, we decided to check out the climbing on the Rochers de Fiz. I’d been once before, with Calum, when we’d attempted Les Yeux Dans le Bleu and retreated at about two thirds height due to problems with our forearms. This time around we had in our sights an even harder route, but with Angus as rope-gun felt we should have a good chance.

The Fiz isn’t well known amongst British climbers as far as I can tell, or not compared with cliffs such as Wendenstock or the Ratikon. There aren’t as many routes, but the climbing is of similar style and length. It’s a long hike to reach the cliffs followed by a couple of hundred meters of choss. But once the climbing starts the rock is perfect, compact blue limestone and generally slabby or vertical. We had come to try Biografiz, a 9 pitch route up to 8a in difficulty with 7 pitches of 7b+ or harder, that I doubt has seen many ascents.

The first pitch is a monster 55 meters, 7c+ and very run out that felt more like an E7 than a day out sport climbing. The technical style and apparent absence of holds also makes route finding very challenging. Angus went up this pitch bolt to bolt slowly unearthing the holds taking nearly 3 hours, an effort he described as one of his best. I was impressed and relieved, if it had been me our attempt might have ended there! The pitches after this are slightly better bolted and brilliant. The climbing is never desperate but constantly technical and very fingery.

We spent a couple of days reccying the lower pitches before attempting the whole route in a day. We had a great time climbing the 7c+, 7b+, 7c and 8a pitches we’d been on before. This was followed by a bouldery 7b+ that we didn’t on-sight. At the top of this, awkwardly perched on a lump of grass, we contemplated our arms. It had gone well, but the sustained crimping had toasted our forearms and we didn’t have enough left for the pitches still to come. Descending, I had the opportunity to pass another piece of climbing wisdom to Angus, the rope bomb. I believe he was impressed, and neither of us could think of a more efficient way of putting kinks into a rope.

Biografiz was bolted ground up and is a seriously impressive route, a classic of its type. This was my second time making it halfway up the Fiz, next year I hope to make it to the top.


P2, 7b+
P4, 8a
The Rope Bomb!

Tuesday, 9 May 2017

Black Mirror

Moving back to Wales just over a year ago I have been discovering the scale of the bouldering on offer. Growing up here I didn’t give the bouldering much attention, beyond the long standing classic blocs in Llanberis Pass and Ogwen. Since then the number of problems might have doubled or tripled with the development of so many new areas.

After doing Big Orange last year, at the top of my list was another spectacular highball on the same headland. I’d seen a video of Pete Robins on the first ascent of Bytilith Wall a few years ago and being high, vertical and technical it looked like my sort of thing. I went down with Simon and Pete for the first time this winter when Pete started trying Tylwyth Teg. I got another chance a month or so later with McHaffie when he made the second ascent, but still left without having climbed it and nearly got washed into the sea. It has a devious crux finale involving shitty crimps and barn-door foot moves. Third time was the one, cracked it using a combination of some slightly different beta and trying really really hard.


Left: attempting Bytilith Wall; Right: Pete on his new 7c+ right of Bytilith


Left: Tim Peck attempting Bytilith Wall; Right: Finally cracking the crux of Bytilith

Last summer on the way back from Clogwyn Gafr I walked underneath a tall wall just off the PYG track. I thought this looked good and like it could yield a couple of highball lines. I scoped out the area earlier this winter and we found that the wall was doable but hard, and did a few other cool problems in the area. Since then, over this winter, I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve been up to the wall at the top of the pass. It might be about 11 visits. The flaky rock provides crimps, undercuts and small footholds, but most of the footholds fell off! This left just tiny smears that have to be fully weighted when using undercuts.

I’d gotten very close on my own one evening as it was getting dark, falling from the easier finish! It still took a couple of sessions after that to finish it off. I went back with Ray and Glyn and somehow fluked my way up on one of my warm up goes with my jacket on! I pulled on a few times after doing it, for Ray to get a few shots, but could get anywhere! Great problem I think, suggest font 8a, hardest I’ve ever had to try to climb a problem.

Attempting crux moves of Black Mirror
Black Mirror topout finally
New 7b at Seaveiw Walls

Thursday, 12 January 2017

Wadi Rum



Read about mine and Calum's trip to Wadi Rum on the Scarpa blog... New Routing in Wadi Rum