Jacopo Larcher and Babsi Zangerl have done the first repeats of Alex Luger's seven pitches The Gift (8c) in Rätikon. The 350m route mixes traditional protection on the lower sections, with bolted
protection on the crux pitches. Jacopo and Babsi led every pitch during their respective ascents, without falling. All in all, it took them 6 days
of work. Regarding multi-pitches and big wall climbing Babsi's resume puts her among the five best climbers in the world. (c) Rene Fischer
Babsi comments; "This summer, we decided to spend time on a project in the Austrian part of the Rätikon, which is conveniently
close to us. We rode our e-bikes for 35 minutes in Turbo-mode through Gauertal to Sporaalpe and then hiked for
about an hour to the base of the climb. Our goal was "The Gift", a challenging alpine route with seven pitches, first
climbed by my brother-in-law, Alex Luger, in 2015. He named it "The Gift" because Pio Jutz started the route but
passed it on to Alex, finding it too difficult for himself to finish.
The climb begins with traditional alpine climbing, with the hardest sections in the upper part of the wall. The crux
pitch is graded 8c, and the pitch after is 8a+ with a tricky boulder problem. Those two pitches are the hardest of
the climb. Jacopo and I had a first taste of the route 3 years ago when we climbed up to the crux pitch and then
spent some more days on it this season.
On our first day on it this summer, we climbed up to the crux pitch, which was nerve-wracking due to the limited
protection in the lower part of the route. The crux pitch is a stunning grey overhanging stripe on perfect
limestone. It can’t really get any better! A 5-star line, which offers power-endurance climbing with hard, bouldery
sequences. It took us the rest of the day to figure out the different betas and brush all the holds, which get very
dirty and slippery after the winter, as the grey stripe is often wet.
After a few more days of practice and having checked the last pitches, Jacopo made a successful attempt, leading
all the pitches without falling, looking very solid.
I had a different solution for the crux compared to Jacopo and definitely more struggle trouble with a long, reachy
move. I needed to spend one extra day in the hope of finding an easier solution. Eventually, I found a small adjustment
that helped a bit to make that crux move a bit less risky. After one rest day, despite still feeling tired, I decided to
give it a try. We started in the morning but we were waiting for the sun to ease off before I started to climb at 1
p.m. I felt nervous when I reached the crux pitch but somehow managed to save some power for the low
percentage crux, reaching the final hold with a big pump. I clipped the anchor and all the pressure fell off my
shoulders. I was just happy to have lots of time left and no rush for the last two pitches. Everything came together
well and we both stood on top of the wall, which was such a fantastic experience to complete another great
project together."