Babsi Zangerl, who one year ago did Meltdown (8c+) trad, has sent Magic Line (8c+) also in Yosemite (CA). Including a couple of 8c’s on gear she has one of the most impressive trad tick lists out there.
The 36-year-old made her first 8a/VL headline sending an 8A+ Boulder in 2005. During a couple of years she was one of the leading female boulderers but due to a back problem she had to stop and started focusing more on rope climbing. With achievements that include 9a routes, 8c+ trad, 8c multipitches, and 8b+ big walls, she is the world’s top female climber in multipitch disciplines, matched by only a few male climbers. (c) Jacopo Larcher
”This one means a lot to me. What a stunning line!
I’ve never climbed something this insecure before. Firstly, it took me a while to find out the perfect beta
for all the hard sequences and my initial goal was simply to link everything together on toprope, which is a
still a world away from getting to the next level where you place the gear on lead.
The gear makes everything a lot more uncomfortable and the placements are all very small and fiddly. On
this route, it felt like I could potentially fall at any given moment.
Hard, stiff shoes felt great on the lower crux but then totally useless for the upper one. After 3 days on the
climb my shoes were too soft and the crux then felt impossible. From my La Sportiva Katana laces back
and forth to Skwamas and the other way around, it took a while to find the best formula.
Last Autumn, Magic Line already felt possible, after Lara Neumeier and I spent some days on it. I had
climbed the whole thing on top-rope and made a couple of lead tries but just couldn’t get past the crux on
lead. Then a key moment came during that process when a foothold on the top crux broke, followed by a
really crucial foothold in the lower crux. After this, I really wasn’t sure if it was still possible for me, or if I
had enough power to move through that lower section in a different way. There was still something left to
stand on but it was probably only half of what had already been a very tiny foothold, previously.
With just 2 days left of that trip, I wasn’t able to find the right solution to send the route. Despite this set-
back, motivation was still high and I was excited to return again this year. Jacopo was psyched to try
Magic line as well, we had a great reason to come back.
This year, I had no expectations at all because I was really not sure how it would feel, with that broken
foothold.
I had to change my beta to get over the crux sequence but, after some days on top-rope again, I started to
make lead attempts. The crux shut me down multiple times on that first lead day.
After a rest day, I came back, warmed up and somehow managed to stick the crux move. The middle part
of the line which is actually the easiest, felt so hard and pumpy that I was surprised after every move that
I was still on the wall.
I reached the final no-hand rest for the very first time on lead. I was so nervous because I know everyone
who climbed Magic line fell up there at least once and, at the same time, the huge runout from the last
cam placement to the anchors added an additonal layer of tension to the final section. It was really
stressful. I didn’t want to fail up there.
I told myself it can’t get any more exciting than this, so I should enjoy that moment and try not to freak
out. I knew I was lucky to have made it this far and had to simply take it move-by-move and try not to
think about anything else.
A few moments later I had a big jug in my hands. All I had to do now was to follow those big holds to the
final anchor. Pulling through those last easy moves I could finally relax and appreciate what I’d just done
and why I love climbing so much! You never now what’s possible until you try…very hard.”