Sebastien Bouin reports on Instagram that he has done the FA of El Gran Cabrón (9b), bolted by David Gambus, in the Shegeng Cave.
“It’s an incredible experience to find such a project and challenge myself in a setting like this. China leaves no one indifferent—I feel like this trip is opening my mind in so many ways. The distance, the unfamiliar culture, and this new way of life disorient me as much as they fascinate me.”
In total, the 31-year-old had previously done twelve 9b’s, out of which seven are FA’s. Additionally, Seb has a further seven 9b+ ascents to his name, as well as the FA of the world's second 9c route, DNA. In other words, the French has an almost equally impressive red point ticklist as Adam Ondra.
Sebastien Berthe has repeated the 32 pitches The Dawnwall (9a) on El Cap in Yosemite. Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson put it up in 2015 after projecting it for six years. Then the next year Adam Ondra did the first and only repeat.
"On January 31st, 2025, at 8 AM, after 14 days on the wall, I topped out El Capitan, completing a project that took me quite some time and investment: tears and blood, 2 trips to Yosemite, 3 Atlantic crossings by sailboat, countless sessions on the wall, and thousands of meters of rope jugging…" (c) Soline Kentzel
“Day 6: Pitch 14 (5.14d - 9a)
The conditions are warm for January, and I know temperature is a key factor for success on
this triple-crux pitch.
So, I decide to start climbing at 5 a.m., before sunrise and before the sun hits the wall.
At 5:30, I take a first working burn to dial in the moves and refresh the chalk marks (without
them, the holds might as well not exist…).
I feel great.
First redpoint attempt: I fly through the pitch, everything feels easy, and within minutes, I’m at
the final crux—it’s happening! I go for the big move left, but just as I reach for the last
holds… I slip.
A scream of frustration tears through me.
I take 20 minutes to refocus and try again before the sun arrives.
Second attempt—same thing: I feel amazing, I get to the final crux, then slip again.
The sun is here, and it’s over for today…
I feel so close, yet I have the sinking feeling that I might keep slipping over and over.
Back at the portaledge, another issue arises—my back is in excruciating pain.
Days 7 and 8: Rest.
I had planned to climb the next day, but as soon as I wake up, I know it’s not happening. My
back hurts too much.
I start doubting whether I can finish this push.
Slowly, with gentle stretching, the pain eases—though not completely.
Day 9: Pitch 14
When I wake up, my back feels better—not healed, but manageable with ibuprofen. It’s a
cold, cloudy day—perfect conditions. I warm up by reworking the final crux to figure out why I
kept slipping. I think I’ve found a solution—it’s all about foot positioning.
First try: I slip at crux 2.
Attempts 2, 3, and 4: I slip at crux 1.
My back hurts. My toes are freezing in my tight shoes, and I struggle to keep them warm.
Thankfully, Soline, the ultimate belayer, warms them up against her body between tries.
Attempt 5: I pass crux 1 but fall at crux 2.
Attempts 6, 7, 8, and 9: I slip again at crux 1.
I start to despair.
It’s 4:30 p.m., and a snowstorm is coming at 5. One last try. I convince myself I can do it.
Attempt 10. It’s not my smoothest go, but I stick crux 1, then crux 2. As I reach the final rest
before crux 3… it starts snowing.My shoes and fingers are getting wet. It feels hopeless. But
I have nothing to lose. I go for it. Somehow, I stick the big move. My foot stays in place. I
reach for the final jug—I’m still on the wall… YES! I sent pitch 14, in the snow!
Pure euphoria.
Back at the portaledge, the snowstorm rages, but I’m ecstatic.
Day 10: Pitch 15
Despite yesterday’s long day, I’m getting ready to climb—I’m obviously super motivated.
Because of the excitement, I didn’t sleep at all last night. My back still hurts, but yesterday’s
session didn’t make it worse.
The day is cloudy, conditions are perfect.
Pitch 15 is the second major challenge of the Dawn Wall after Pitch 14. This is where Kevin
Jorgeson got stuck during the first ascent in 2015. The pitch is rated 5.14c/d - 8c+/9a. I
would personally say more like 8c+
, but a very technical and finger-intensive one. A long
approach around 5.13d - 8b, followed by a precise boulder move requiring extreme foot and
finger control.
First, I do a beta-checking go to mark holds with chalk. Then it’s go time. I feel very strong
on my first attempt and quickly reach the final crux. I feel like I can do it, and then—
“Shit!”
— I
slip, out of nowhere.
Back to the previous belay, 20 minutes of rest.
Second attempt: I make a mistake and slip at the start.
Damn. In my head, I start doubting, thinking I’ll keep slipping again and again like on Pitch
14.
But I manage to pull myself together and focus on what I have to do, not on the result.
On my next attempt—I send it! I squeeze my fingers harder than necessary in the crux, stay
focused on the final moves, and it works! Yes!!! It’s starting to feel real now—I’m stoked!
There’s still daylight left, and I think I have some energy left, so I go straight for Pitch 16, the
Loop Pitch (an alternative to the famous dyno, rated 5.14a - 8b+). Probably the most unique
pitch on the Dawn Wall: it involves downclimbing for about 20 meters to a small ledge, an
easy traverse left, and then a demanding endurance climb back up (slippery and technical
layback)
I haven’t rehearsed these pitches as much as the previous ones. From the start, I knew I
wasn’t fully prepared for them. I spend 45 minutes refining the beta. Then I give it a go but I
fall on the downclimbing boulder problem, which I’m struggling to master. It feels super weird
to have to fight so hard while climbing down.
Lack of strategy: I keep trying over and over without success, until two of my fingers start
bleeding. My skin is completely wrecked.
Day and Night 14: Pitch 21 → 32
For the past few nights, I haven’t been sleeping well due to stress and excitement, and this
night is no exception.
Today is the big day—it's January 30th: I'm going for the final push to the summit. The next
morning, rain is expected to arrive. I take down the camp and prepare a bag with a
portaledge and a fly, just in case we get stuck by the rain for a few days.
In the early afternoon, I do a warm-up on Pitch 21. As soon as the shade arrives, I go for an
attempt. I'm incredibly stressed, but I’m determined. I climb well and precisely, taking my
time. In the crux up high, I grip the crimps harder than necessary—I can feel my fingertips
tearing under my fingers. I throw myself toward the final finger lock and mantle onto the
ledge with a scream of joy! That’s it, I’ve completed all the hard pitches of the Dawn Wall. I
feel incredibly happy and proud.
Unfortunately, there’s no time to celebrate: it's 5 PM, and I still have 11 adventurous and
not-so-easy pitches to climb before morning. Pitch 22 is a long, steep finger crack that I have
to do twice due to a fall near the top. That pitch completely drains me. I move slowly through
the next pitches, trying to recover. Navigating the route in the dark night isn't easy (we had
only climbed these pitches once before, two years ago, with Siebe Vanhee), and some
sections are quite committing and intimidating. There are unprotected sections, offwidths,
long traverses on hollow-sounding flakes, breaking holds, unstable pitons, and the haulbag
getting stuck… We're getting our fair share of adventure.
I start feeling terrible: I struggle to eat, I feel like vomiting, and my body is deeply tired. With
each pitch, I have to fight and leave a little piece of myself behind. Soline is incredibly
supportive and solid. She follows brilliantly through these terrifying traverses. At every belay,
she encourages me and pushes me to keep going. She’s an exceptional support.
At 2 AM, we reach Ship Bow, Pitch 29. Four pitches remain, but I’m utterly exhausted. We
decide to take a 1.5-hour break so I can recover a little. We try to eat and sleep, but I can’t
do either. At 4 AM, we set off again.
I fall near the end of the 5.11d - 7a offwidth in the next pitch due to my poor offwidth
technique. I retry and easily climb it in layback style. Three pitches to go. In each one, I have
to fight, and at every belay, I feel like I might faint or throw up.
Dawn breaks during the second-to-last pitch; it's cloudy, but it hasn’t started raining yet.
Chris Nathalie is waiting at the summit to document the final meters. Pitch 31, a 5.13a-7c+
followed by a 5.12a-7a dihedral full of grass, gives me another challenge. I climb the final
pitch (Pitch 32, 5.12b - 7b) quickly, in a daze. I mantle onto the summit at 8 AM. Victory!
We’ve just lived through an intense and unforgettable night. It’s a strange feeling… Due to
exhaustion, I don’t fully grasp that it’s over, that the Dawn Wall is behind me. It will take me a
few hours, or maybe more, to truly understand and appreciate it."








Amazing ticklist by Jakob Schubert based on two trips to Ticino: "✅ Story of three Worlds (8C+ / V16) - 2nd ascent, ✅ Return of the Dreamtime (8C / V15) - 3rd ascent, ✅ Vecchio Leone sit (8C+ / V16), ✅ Big Paw (8C / V15), ✅ Lion's Share (8C / V15) - 2nd ascent, ✅ Mithril sit (8B+ / V14)"
Laura Pineau sent Greenspit (8b) last October. “After a journey of 4 weeks climbing on one of the most beautiful european roof cracks, I sent Greenspit! This route has always inspired me since I started trad climbing two years ago! My biggest challenge on this route was to pass the crimp moves.“
Guillaume Mignard has completed The Big Island (8C) in Fontainebleau after projecting it for 15 sessions.
Can you tell us more about the ascent?
The first session I understood most of the moves, that I worked on the next sessions. Each separate move felt pretty easy but putting them together was difficult
It took me a lot of work to make it work from the start.
What is your climbing background?
I started climbing about 10 year ago and discovered outdoors 3 or 4 years ago. Been climbing almost only outdoor since then and training/spraywall when its raining 🤷 I'm a routesetter and have always lived and climbed aroud Fontainebleau.
Alberto Gines López, the Olympic gold medal winner in Tokyo, has made the third ascent of Ramon Julian Puigblanque’s El disbarat (8c+) in Montserrat. It was out put up in 2000 and Adam Ondra did the first and last repeat in 2008.
“For many years I've been climbing in El totxo, David was always telling me stories about this route. Few weeks ago my brother Lluc asked me to try together the route to figure out the moves, two sessions after it came down. It's maybe time to check the king line from Montserrat.”