NEWS

Sleepwalker 8C+ by Ryuichi Murai
Ryuichi Murai, who already has five 8C+ ascents to his name, reports on Insta that he has done in Red Rock (NV), after projecting it for eight days. (c) Momoka Oda

Sleepwalker was opened by Jimmy Webb and later Daniel Woods added a sitstart, calling it Return of the Sleepwalker (9A).

Did you give the 9A sit start a go? Did you do any special training in order to get in shape for this trip?
Tomorrow is the last day. So the sit start is for the next time. I made some sloper and fat pinch problems at the spray wall and trained sometimes with the Beast Maker 2000. Additionally, I also did full span training from an undercling to sloper hold. (Sleepwalker requires wingspan).
My basic climbing style is training on the gym's spray wall 2-3 times a week. The amount will increase a little more one month before a trip. The content includes max power training with problems of V12 (8A+) and above, and circuit training with problems of V7-9. And I often do finger pull-ups using the Beast Maker 2000. I sometimes do plank training at home on days when I don't climb.

When and where do you plan to travel next ?
Maybe Alphane or South Africa in June-July.

Smoke Wagon 9a by Cameron Hรถrst
Cameron Hรถrst has done Smoke Wagon (9a) in . (c) John Kasaian

Can you give us the lowdown?
I started trying โ€œSmoke Wagonโ€ (9a) in the winter of 2021 but never came back to it until the end of December 2022. Since December, I have taken a couple one week trips to Vegas (from Salt Lake City) to try the climb between training. I havenโ€™t kept track of the number of sessions but I put a good bit of work into it. I chose to work this route, in particular, because it is a pure resistance route (which has historically been my anti-style). The goal beingโ€ฆ that trying this route, in between training, will hopefully help equip me for harder projects in the future!

What's next for you this year?
I have some lingering projects here in the states I want to finish off throughout the year and will be travelling to France this summer to climb in Cรฉรผse!

Cameron made his first 8a news in 2012 when he did his first three 8b+. In addition to excelling at climbing, Cameron excelled at American football in high school.

8c by David Bermudez (13)
David Bermudez Carbonell, who started climbing two and a half years ago at age eleven, has done El calvario del sicario (8c) in , in just ten tries. We spoke to David's mom, Isabel recently. (c) Javi Pec

It sounds like you guys are a climbing family?
We have been fanatic climbers for over 25 years and we still go climbing every weekend and our holidays are always climbing holidays. Within 15 days of the birth of our children, they were already out on the rock and although they didnโ€™t start climbing until about 2.5 years ago, they have always been on the mountain with us.

Did your kids take to climbing naturally?
David and Adriana (16) started to climb at the end of September 2020. Within 2 or 3 weekends they made their first 7b, after we had taught them how to clip quickdraws. Later the pandemic arrived, which forced us to stop for about 6 months. After that, they went back to climbing and got really hooked on it and havenโ€™t stopped climbing until now.

Their progression has been very fast and if they continue climbing in this way, few barriers will be put in front of them. The incredible thing about David is that for his young age, he is a very complete climber, with only 1.45 metres he has climbed very hard and demanding routes. He has climbed 8a/+ on sight climbs and does not disappoint (shy away from). I think David has a natural gift for climbing, as he climbs well on all types of routes regardless of the type of rock (limestone, granite...) He is a self-taught climber, as he has no coach, nor does he do any guided training, his talent is natural and his motivation for climbing is at its maximum at the moment.

As a mother, I want my children to live and enjoy climbing as something authentic, where the grade is nothing more than a consequence. Being humble, respectful and having good attitude are key to life.

Excalibur 9b+ FA by Stefano Ghisolfi
Stefano Ghisolfi has done the FA of Excalibur (9b+) in Arco. It was bolted by Christian Dorigatti and Morris Fontanari who invited Stefano to try it two years ago. Over the last year, Stefano has been trying it with Jacob Schubert, Will Bosi and Adam Ondra. (c) Diego Borello

Can you tell us more about the ascent? Did you do any specific training and did you benefit from trying it with others?
It is a short route but there are 18 moves and the rest in the middle is very important, a huge amount of strength is needed but it is not enough, power endurance is crucial for the last crux. I think it took me from 20 to 30 sessions. I didn't do any specific training but I focus my training more on power and power endurance in the past months. Trying the route with other climbers speeded up the process of finding the perfect beta and helped with motivation in the long term.

With more time, do you think you can go beyond the difficulty that something like Excalibur presents?
Yes, sure! Actually, there is a possible low start of Excalibur ๐Ÿ˜…๐Ÿ˜‰ I don't know if it is possible but seems hard. We start from a rock, it is possible to start further down. There are 3 or 4 moves under probably but we never tried. I'll try it for sure, with some crash pads.

The 29-year-old has previously done three 9b+'. On the competition scene, the Italian has been one of the best performers over the last ten years having won six World Cups and being Top-8, in 39 such events.

El Koala Extension 8b+ and an 8b onsight by Jorge Diaz-Rullo
Jorge Diaz-Rullo has dropped into Santa Linya, and onsighted La Mare del Tano 8b and El Koala Extension 8b+. The 23-year-old has onsighted 29 routes 8b to 8c, out of which, ten he's sent in the last year and he is #2 in the onsight ranking game. The Spaniard has logged 130 days on his mega-project, in Margalef, where he has once has fallen on the final crux move.

Are you training specifically for your project?
My specific training is just to try the route. Doing laps on sections, repeating the crux, doing tries with weight... The rest is training that helps me but it is also for improvement for other projects

Do you think it could be a 9c contender?
I really don't know about the grade because I don't have any reference, I never tried one route for so long like Cafรฉ Colombia. But definitely, I am sure it is the hardest route that I ever tried. l always thought that the grade is just a symbol, the story that I am living to try to send this route is something really (more) amazing.

Sebastien Bouin: "Tautavel is a historical place here in France, close to the Spanish border. There is one particular sector, with an impressive route. It looks like the famous Chilam Balam, a prow of tufas climbing followed by an amazing wall. It's an esthetic line for sure. This route was bolted 30 years ago by Manu Da Silva and it has been waiting for a First Ascent since that time."

3 February 2023

Slabducation #3

Pal Publico 8c by Angie Scarth-Johnson (18)
Angie Scarth-Johnson, who last year did two 9aโ€™s, has done Pal publico (8c) in Margalef. โ€ Great route! The moves felt really far for me so I used a few intermediates that I think made it a little harder.โ€

The next day, the 18-year-old onsighted Rodillar (8a), also in Margalef. Here is an article with Angie, who has been a globetrotter since the age of 9. "I write my own programs and have done this since I was 8. I find that this really works for me."