NEWS

Thilo Schrรถter FAโ€™s Tsunami (8C+)
Thilo Schrรถter, who over ten days in August, sent five boulders 8B+ or 8C, reports on Instagram that he has made the FA of Tsunami (8C+) in Lofoten. It is almost ten meters high with the crux at four meters.

"This is the boulder Iโ€™ve invested the most passion into, ever. Itโ€™s also one of the most beautiful and perfect lines I have seen. The difficulty and challenge it presented was exactly what I was looking for. Too good to be true type shit.

The day I sent was another one of those classic Lofoten days with constant showers. I was certain that I wouldnโ€™t be able to give proper attempts, and in my mind I was just having another training session. All of a sudden a strong wind picked up. After a while the rock on the ground which I used as a reference for how wet the top would be, started to look relatively dry. I saw a slight opportunity, and started giving goes. Every go felt better than the last, and on my third attempt of the day I stuck the crux move! Psyched out of my mind I found myself standing on the ledge at the bottom of the slab, which was still a little humid. After waiting for at least a minute to get rid of the shakiness, I turned my focus back up to max, and started questing up to the top. It went smoothly. I took a minute to soak up the moment overlooking the rugged landscape, before I realised that another storm was charging in over the fjords. While rappelling down it started raining again. I stood on the pads looking at the boulder in disbelief - timing couldnโ€™t have been any better."

Tim Wรผrthner ticks La Grosse Tarlouze (8C)
Tim Wรผrthner, with seven 8B+โ€™ under his belt, has repeated Michael Piccolruazโ€™ La grosse Tarlouze (8C) in Magic Wood. The 22-year-old is also a competition climber who this spring was #5 in a Euro Cup.

Can you tell us more about doing your first 8C?
First of all La grosse tarlouze consists of three sections: you do the whole The Never Ending Story (8B+) which consists of two parts (they are considered two boulders themself and are 8A+ and 8A). For me, the first part (8A+ of about 13 moves) never felt that difficult when I had worked my beta well. It just gets you a bit exhausted for the second, more max power intens part. Coming through this without being to tired is the key to do the full line. At the last section you first traverse on a rail to the left, those moves arenโ€™t too difficult. Then you enter a small rest on a slopy jug before the last crux, which mainly consists of a dropdown move to two slopers.

Itโ€™s the longest I ever projected a boulder. Previously I never had the patience to work on something over a longer time but rather wanted to do stuff really quickly, probably within just one trip of a few days. However, I always felt like I wanted to see how far I would progress on a boulder if I tried it for a longer time. Initially I aimed to work and do the boulder this spring/summer, but in the end I had quite many competitions until the Worldcup in Innsbruck in july. At that point I was quite exhausted (physically and mentally) from the season and took some rest. However I also had two important comps coming up in september and thought preparing for those and sending the project would be too much, so I went just for working on it at first. In august I had some rather rough sessions on it because it was to warm.

However, I surprised myself with all of a sudden making it to the last crux at the first proper sending try, as soon as I was there in cooler temps in september. In this moment I realized with some work on it I could already have the capability for it this season and commited to it. I drove to magic wood a few more times to give send goes and at the end of september I finally had the level to climb it. All in all, from first trying never ending story about five years ago, I spend 19 sessions on it, 13 of those from march till september of this year.

Leonidio Climbing Festival 1-3 Nov
Advertorial: โ€The 5th Leonidio Climbing Festival is now an established institution that highlights the unique natural beauties, the rich cultural heritage and the exceptional sports potential of our region", comments the Mayor of South Kynouria, Mr. Emmanuel Dolianitis โ€œThis year, with the Leonidio Challenge and the participation of top athletes such as Neil Gresham and Nina Caprez, the festival is being upgraded to an international event that will attract the interest of the global climbing community. We warmly invite all lovers of climbing, nature and culture to honor us with their presence in this unique celebration that combines sports with tradition and ecological sensitivity."

Leonidio Challenge - A Unique Climbing Marathon
This year, the Leonidio Climbing Festival is offering participants the opportunity to take part in the Leonidio Challenge, a climbing marathon open to climbers of all levels, which will take place on the most beautiful and scenic cliffs in the area. In support of the event, participants will be able to use maps and detailed topos provided by our long-standing partner, Vertical Life. There are many valuable prizes on offer. The minimum requirement to be included in the ranking is to have climbed a total of 250 metres on the crags listed in the APP.

Music Concert
On Saturday night at 21:00, Bliss, a band formed in 2000 in Athens, will close the evening with an exciting concert. The trio, who released their first demo "Bodycode" in 2002, have traveled a long path of musical evolution. After years of live performances and intensive rehearsals, during which the band deeply explored their sound and musical style, in 2011 they released their first album entitled "Gabbatha". The music of The Bliss is characterized as modern alternative progressive rock / metal, with strong influences from the grunge scene of Seattle and elements from Greek traditional music, promising a unique musical experience for the festival participants.

For detailed information, the full program and online registration, visit the official website of the festival: Climbinleonidio

Laura Rogora onsights 8c and flashes 8c and 8b+
Laura Rogora, the double Euro Champion six weeks ago, has had some great days in Verdon, onsighting Spanish Caravan (8c), flashing Le feu occulte (8b+) and Agressif you want (8c), as well as redpointing La flรปte en chantier (8c+). (c) Claudia Ghisolfi

How close were you to fall on the onsight and the flashes?
At the beginning I made a few mistakes and suffered a bit on the start but fortunately then there where a lot of kneebar where I can rest. On the upper part I couldnโ€™t figure out the best beta and I risked to fall several times. It was a 45 min long batte and in the end my calfs where totally destroyed๐Ÿ˜›.

The 8c flash was quite at my limit, there where e few wet holds so I had to give my best. The 8b+ was more under control because it was longer so the single moves where easier.

Evan Hau, 38, FAโ€™s Queen bee direct (9a/+)
Evan Hau, who the last seven years has bolted and sent six routes 9a or 9a+, has done the FA of Queen Bee Direct (9a) in Coliseum. โ€One of the original mega projects envisioned by Matt Pieterson at the Coliseum. I've been trying this route off and on since 2015. At that time I walked away from the direct start thinking it was too hard and ended up climbing a linkup variation also bolted by Matt Pieterson which ended up being Queen Bee 8c. I revisited the direct start in 2020 after doing Sacrifice and was able to do all of the individual moves but difficult conditions made it hard to get quality time on the route. Finally this year I tried to focus in on sending it. I thought I could do it in April this year, it ended up taking until October but I'm happy I got it done. Had some last day vibes and pressure today as we fly to Spain tomorrow. I think the grade is 9a/+.โ€

Can you tell us more about the long process behind and the number of sessions?
I had a lot of sessions on Queen Bee Direct over the years, over 50 easily. I don't keep count when it gets that high.

I had come close a few times about a month ago but couldn't get it done between mental mistakes, deteriorating conditions, foot slips. It was mostly about staying focused and keeping the psych alive to believe I could still get it done. I trained hard for this route all last winter, mostly circuits replicating crux sections, because I thought I could send in the spring but through the summer I mostly just climbed outside.

What is the plan in Spain?
In Spain we are going to hope for good conditions in Rodellar and my plan is to work on No pain no gain (9a+).

Nicholas Allan, 17, sent Khoikhoi (8C) in August. โ€I first tried Khoikhoi in march and was immediately psyched on it. I wasnโ€™t able to try it as much as I wanted because itโ€™s very condition dependent but always had it in the back of my mind. The weather was never good and I wasnโ€™t able to give it any close ground burns until my 6th session where I dropped the top several times. Went back the next day and managed to send it second go from the bottom. One of the best boulders Iโ€™ve done and so psyched for it to be my first 8C!โ€

David Bermudez Carbonell, 15, sends Seta Total (9a)
David Bermudez Carbonell has ticked Seta total (9a) in Cuenca after some ten sessions. Two years ago, the 15-year-old had 8b as his personal best and now he has done 37 routes 8b+ to 9a. "Very proud of sending this 30m endurance testpiece. I started trying this route after the summer but I was not in good shape and I didn't have enough strength to do the lower part, which is the hardest." (c) Javi Pec

What is coming up next?
I'm not really sure but probably try some harder routes here in Cuenca. Also, I would like to go back to Cuenca and start projecting a route that I finished bolting which could be around 9a+.

Can you tell us more about your first bolting experience?
Bolting is an awesome experience. Every climber should try to bolt a route at least once. I like to create a route of a line that I saw there when I was younger. Bolting is a tough activity, especially in Cuenca where there's no high-quality rock and you must clean a lot. It is around 28 meters and is around 35 degrees steep, with 9 bolts plus the anchor. It has very aggressive moves with very poor footholds. The route has not chipped holds.

Laura Pineau does Greenspit 8b (+) trad
Laura Pineau, who had 8a as her personal best four months ago, has done Greenspit (8b) in Valle dell'Orco. โ€œAfter 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. After spending four sessions working on them, I finally passed them from the beginning and knew it was possible! A few days later, conditions finally arrived, I was more psyched than ever and managed to enter a perfect sending flow! What a life! Not only was this day special for me but Marco Sappa also sent La Pura Pura and Giacomo Meliffi sent Greenspit! Dream team action.โ€(c) Emile Pino

The 24-year-old started climbing at age 17 after previously having focused first on tennis and later on boxing. In 2019, she did her first 7a and last year she sent Freerider (7c+) in Yosemite.

Which are your most memorable ascents?
The first one that comes to my mind is doing the first feminine ascent of the roof of San Peyre (8a) in 2021, a deep water solo line that finishes at 18 meters. It was a journey that taught me how to overcome my fear of falling and showed me how hard I could try on a climb.

The second is having my first Big Wall experience on The Nose (Yosemite, California) in April 2023. I had no partner to do it and met a climber from Quebec named Gabriel who was as psyched as I was on sleeping on the wall for the first time. No matter how good of a team we were, we decided to rappel down from under the Great Roof as another party of Italians told us that a waterfall was coming down changing corner. We had no rain gear, no portaledge, no rain fly, so the best decision for us was to bail. Climbing on my first Big Wall lit up a fire in me and made me realize that these kind of adventures were the ones I was meant to live.

Another special moment was climbing Free Rider this past November 2023 which showed me how I can perform under stressful situations. When you are trying to free a Big Wall, you only get a few tries on the hardest pitches. It is either because of your skin, the weather, or even your energy level. Every try matters and having the right partner in these key moments is crucial.

Last but not least, 2024 has been a year where I have allowed myself to dream big and climb hard single pitch cracks. It first started with The Phoenix (7c+) in Yosemite, then Butterfly Circus (8a+) in Ticino, followed by Turkey crack (8a) in Cadarese, and most recently Greenspit (8b/+) in Valle dellโ€™Orco. I am so grateful for all these amazing cracks who have taught me how to become a warrior through adversities.

What is coming up next?
I did not reveal publicly whatโ€™s next yet so Iโ€™ll be waiting a bit longer for whatโ€™s coming but itโ€™ll be much bigger than greenspit and a first female ascent. Thatโ€™s all I can say for now ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿป

Marine Thevenet does Juneru (8C)
Marine Thevenet, with over 100 boulders 8A and beyond, has completed Juneru (8C) in Albarracรญn.

Can you tell us more about sending your first 8C?
I had tried the boulder problem in the fall of 2023, and the move that was giving me trouble was reaching for the left-hand undercling with the heel and toe hook. I had managed to do it only once, during one attempt, but I fell at the top-out... Juneru had stayed in the back of my mind, and when I decided to return to Albarracรญn this year to try it again, I trained specifically for this boulder problem: I did a lot of lock-offs and worked on some weaknesses in my footwork!

The first session on the boulder this year gave me confidence because I quickly managed to do the move that had been problematic last year! Then I focused on the top section, practicing it several times on a top rope to make sure I wouldn't fall at the end. On the day of the send, the conditions were perfect! I climbed the top part on the rope, redid some moves at the bottom, and... I gave it a solid attempt, telling myself, "Crimp as hard as you can," and boom! It was crazy!