NEWS
2 April 2022
White Stripe 8A+ by Marine Thevenet
Marine Thevenet reports on Insta that she has repeated Fred Nicole's White Strip in Brione. In total, the full time lawyer, has now done some 70 boulders 8A to 8B. (c) Clรฉment Lechaptois
"White Stripe is just one hard move; good holds and a jump up to a big crimp. I tried the basic beta but I couldn't even imagine touching the good crimp! So I am pretty happy that a little crimp decided to exist between the first hold and the good crimp! It allowed me to figure out my own beta and not miss my chance in this super line ;)"
"White Stripe is just one hard move; good holds and a jump up to a big crimp. I tried the basic beta but I couldn't even imagine touching the good crimp! So I am pretty happy that a little crimp decided to exist between the first hold and the good crimp! It allowed me to figure out my own beta and not miss my chance in this super line ;)"
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2
02 April 2022
Lexicon 8b+ R (E11) by Dave MacLeod (44)
Dave MacLeod reports on Insta that he has done the second repeat, after Steve McClure, of Neil Gresham's Lexicon in Pavey Park. The original grade was E11 (7a) using the British grade which takes into account both how hard and how dangerous it is to onsight. Neil has said the climb itself warrants 8b+ due to the risk of falling 25 meters doing the final 7C boulder crux, which is the reason why R has earlier been added to the grade. If it would have been a risk of death then it would have been an 8b+ X, while it would probably have been an E12.
Dave reports that he found an extra gear placement and also that he did it on his first attempt having worked on it since last autumn.
Noteworthy is that the average age of the three climbers is 47 although Dave is just 44 years old. He has been cutting edge for 20+ years and just recently done 8B+ and 9a. Full detailed story on Dave's blogspot:
"Unfinished climbs have always been a source of chronic pain to me, an ache I can tolerate for long periods when there is no other option. But the minute I can change the picture, Iโll do anything I can to resolve it. When I say ache, I mean that in a good way, like the ache of burning muscles in training. Itโs good pain! The minute I resolve it, Iโm almost instantly looking to cause it again and have lived this way for 25 years. There is an expression that pain is the cost of being alive and as far as Iโm concerned, itโll stop when Iโm dead."
Dave reports that he found an extra gear placement and also that he did it on his first attempt having worked on it since last autumn.
Noteworthy is that the average age of the three climbers is 47 although Dave is just 44 years old. He has been cutting edge for 20+ years and just recently done 8B+ and 9a. Full detailed story on Dave's blogspot:
"Unfinished climbs have always been a source of chronic pain to me, an ache I can tolerate for long periods when there is no other option. But the minute I can change the picture, Iโll do anything I can to resolve it. When I say ache, I mean that in a good way, like the ache of burning muscles in training. Itโs good pain! The minute I resolve it, Iโm almost instantly looking to cause it again and have lived this way for 25 years. There is an expression that pain is the cost of being alive and as far as Iโm concerned, itโll stop when Iโm dead."
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7
02 April 2022
Malleus Maleficarum 9a+ and three 9a's by Flor
Jonatan Flor reports on Insta that he has done the second ascent of Alex Garriga's Malleus Maleficarum 9a+ in Cuenca, which was bolted by Dani Andrada. (c) Javi Pec
A few days ago he also did El Subnormal Del Antihydral 9a and earlier this spring he has done El carnicero de Rostov 9a, Cordia Maleficarum 9a and more than a handful of 8c/+ to 8c+/9a. On the 8c+/9a and harder list, he is #7 with some 65 such hardcore routes. The 25-year-old started making 8a headlines ten years ago when he did his first 8c. Interesting is that almost all of the hardest routes he has done since 2019.
A few days ago he also did El Subnormal Del Antihydral 9a and earlier this spring he has done El carnicero de Rostov 9a, Cordia Maleficarum 9a and more than a handful of 8c/+ to 8c+/9a. On the 8c+/9a and harder list, he is #7 with some 65 such hardcore routes. The 25-year-old started making 8a headlines ten years ago when he did his first 8c. Interesting is that almost all of the hardest routes he has done since 2019.
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4
0Onsight training article commented by Adam Ondra below:
It's hard to not feel vulnerable when onsighting which is possibly one reason why many of us avoid it. This will make you climb slower as your highest priority is to minimize the risk of every move. Instead of trying your luck pushing through the crux, you often hesitate and try every hold and sequence that in the end, even if you go for the optimal sequence, will make you fall anyway due to fatigue. As a matter of a fact, even if you make it to the top, you are probably so pumped that you can not go for a hard climb the same day and actually you might even need a rest day.
Your more "crazy" friend just might fall early on the same onsight but if she/he will continue with the same strategy, at the end of the day or during your climbing trip, her/his onsight ticklist is probably better. At the same time, being able to go for more onsights, means that such training ultimately, in the long run, produces a better climber, which Adam Ondra is an example of.
So how do you train your head to be willing to accept bigger risks of failure while climbing onsight? One way to practice this is simply by climbing faster and falling more often during training. If during your training you think you cannot not even reach the next hold and you are about to give up, just jump and try to get as close to the hold as possible and you might be surprised by doing the move or at least touching the next hold. It is about changing your mindset and trying to remove all these warning signals your brain sends out. It will take some time but once you start, you will get more adrenaline in your system, adding to the fun.
One easy way to be able to have more onsight possibilities at your gym is to combine harder routes with different colours. Alternatively, you can opt for one colour for your hands and another with your feet etc. Another option is to climb with just one foot in order to create new "onsight" sequences that you need to solve quickly.
The best onsight climber in the world is Adam Ondra and he has been since age 14, when he he did five 8b+ and one 8c onsight. Currently, he has onsighted close to 100 routes 8c and harder and meanwhile the closest runner ups have done just a handful of such hard onsights. We asked Adam if he could comment on a draft of this onsight training advice article.
"You definitely have the point. In general, I would say that people dislike onsighting because if they are going really "safe", they are hanging there forever, it is tiring, climbing has no flow and they do not enjoy, (climbing) and that is exactly the point. I would not enjoy onsighting in this way either! I love onsighting when I am just flowing up the route, when everything feels automatic and natural. Very good practice and a way to improve is to climb ALWAYS with flow and without hesitation even on your warmups or warmdowns, even if it means you end up falling off very easy routes below your limit. Don't be embarrassed in case it happens. On the other hand, be happy if you manage to onsight an easy route with perfect flow.
Your last suggestions I do not find very useful in the long term point of view - it could be an interesting refreshment of training from time to time, but climbing a lot on different new routes is impossible to replace. The solution for training is having a good spraywall and climb a lot of different new boulder/circuits, including figuring your own boulders. That helps with the visualization and reading of new sequences."
How has your onsight focus helped you grow as a climber?
My approach has always been to be the most complete climber, and I have always thought of onsighting as the complex climbing style where you get to learn the most. And today, despite admitting that working on a route for a long time has its beauty as well, I strongly recommend to the youngsters to focus on onsighting. Up until I was 11-years-old, I rarely gave a route a 2nd try and my onsight and redpoint level was very similar. The other important thing is to climb in different styles, not only the style that fits you well but try to climb as hard and as much as possible everywhere. I was lucky to grow up in my home crag where I was struggling a lot at the beginning, but I had no other option than to accept the style and today, the climbing fits me really well and I love it.
All in all, to be a good onsight climber, you need to climb a lot and mostly onsight. And lead competitions are about onsighting, and my onsighting experience from the rock might actually give me the cutting edge there.
It's hard to not feel vulnerable when onsighting which is possibly one reason why many of us avoid it. This will make you climb slower as your highest priority is to minimize the risk of every move. Instead of trying your luck pushing through the crux, you often hesitate and try every hold and sequence that in the end, even if you go for the optimal sequence, will make you fall anyway due to fatigue. As a matter of a fact, even if you make it to the top, you are probably so pumped that you can not go for a hard climb the same day and actually you might even need a rest day.
Your more "crazy" friend just might fall early on the same onsight but if she/he will continue with the same strategy, at the end of the day or during your climbing trip, her/his onsight ticklist is probably better. At the same time, being able to go for more onsights, means that such training ultimately, in the long run, produces a better climber, which Adam Ondra is an example of.
So how do you train your head to be willing to accept bigger risks of failure while climbing onsight? One way to practice this is simply by climbing faster and falling more often during training. If during your training you think you cannot not even reach the next hold and you are about to give up, just jump and try to get as close to the hold as possible and you might be surprised by doing the move or at least touching the next hold. It is about changing your mindset and trying to remove all these warning signals your brain sends out. It will take some time but once you start, you will get more adrenaline in your system, adding to the fun.
One easy way to be able to have more onsight possibilities at your gym is to combine harder routes with different colours. Alternatively, you can opt for one colour for your hands and another with your feet etc. Another option is to climb with just one foot in order to create new "onsight" sequences that you need to solve quickly.
The best onsight climber in the world is Adam Ondra and he has been since age 14, when he he did five 8b+ and one 8c onsight. Currently, he has onsighted close to 100 routes 8c and harder and meanwhile the closest runner ups have done just a handful of such hard onsights. We asked Adam if he could comment on a draft of this onsight training advice article.
"You definitely have the point. In general, I would say that people dislike onsighting because if they are going really "safe", they are hanging there forever, it is tiring, climbing has no flow and they do not enjoy, (climbing) and that is exactly the point. I would not enjoy onsighting in this way either! I love onsighting when I am just flowing up the route, when everything feels automatic and natural. Very good practice and a way to improve is to climb ALWAYS with flow and without hesitation even on your warmups or warmdowns, even if it means you end up falling off very easy routes below your limit. Don't be embarrassed in case it happens. On the other hand, be happy if you manage to onsight an easy route with perfect flow.
Your last suggestions I do not find very useful in the long term point of view - it could be an interesting refreshment of training from time to time, but climbing a lot on different new routes is impossible to replace. The solution for training is having a good spraywall and climb a lot of different new boulder/circuits, including figuring your own boulders. That helps with the visualization and reading of new sequences."
How has your onsight focus helped you grow as a climber?
My approach has always been to be the most complete climber, and I have always thought of onsighting as the complex climbing style where you get to learn the most. And today, despite admitting that working on a route for a long time has its beauty as well, I strongly recommend to the youngsters to focus on onsighting. Up until I was 11-years-old, I rarely gave a route a 2nd try and my onsight and redpoint level was very similar. The other important thing is to climb in different styles, not only the style that fits you well but try to climb as hard and as much as possible everywhere. I was lucky to grow up in my home crag where I was struggling a lot at the beginning, but I had no other option than to accept the style and today, the climbing fits me really well and I love it.
All in all, to be a good onsight climber, you need to climb a lot and mostly onsight. And lead competitions are about onsighting, and my onsighting experience from the rock might actually give me the cutting edge there.
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4
41 April 2022
Ghisolfi introduces 4 new remarkable products
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1
01 April 2022
Goosfraba 8c+ flash and two 9a's by Adam Ondra
Adam Ondra has enjoyed some great days in Padaro, close to Arco, where he flashed Goosfraba (8c+), "Climbs better than looks and all natural! Pretty happy to do it." The day before he sent Omen Nomen (9a). "What a bummer not to flash it! With a broken hold on the top, I did not know which beta to choose and ended up choosing the worst one... casual 2nd go."
One week ago the 29-year-old also made the FA of Pungitopo (8c+). "Bolted by Francesco Morandi. Epic line, epic rock! Hard to say the grade, tried one day with soft skin and wrong beta, then did next day with better beta. Could be 8c+." (c) Petr Chodura
One week ago the 29-year-old also made the FA of Pungitopo (8c+). "Bolted by Francesco Morandi. Epic line, epic rock! Hard to say the grade, tried one day with soft skin and wrong beta, then did next day with better beta. Could be 8c+." (c) Petr Chodura
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6
11 April 2022
Sean Bailey success documentary
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7
01 April 2022
Prada announces new outdoor line and fragrance
(April Foolsโ Day) In addition to clothing and accessories inspired by climbing, the 2XTREME4U line also features Pradaโs newest fragrance: The Essence of Sending HRDSHT. Pradaโs renowned designer and the projectโs principal overseer and oversprayer, Gianvittorio Grandestronzetto said, โIn all my years working in the fashion industry... How do you say? Ah yes, this is for sure my proudest line yet! I had moments of self doubt but I looked down at my hands and I said out loud and to the cameras: Grandestronzetto, tho itโs hard, you still gotta send it! Letโs go! Letโs go Grandestronzetto!โ
โWe named the fragrance The Essence of Sending HRDSHT because it was this projectโs crux sequence. To balance out the patchouli, we had to bottle that suffocating chalk cloud mixed with perspiration that you often find in climbing gyms, along with Janjaโs tears of triumph from the Olympics. Iโm telling you, this is really next level! Gucci, Fendi, Dolce and Gabbana... I donโt think they can repeat this let alone downgrade it!โ
Prada will be presenting the 2XTREME4U line this weekend as well as announcing their 2XTREME4U Super Humble Ambastardors. Rumour has it they aggressively bought a handful of climbers out of their existing endorsement contracts and are offering their top signings five-year contracts worth over seven figures.
One of Pradaโs 2XTREME4U Super Humble Ambastardors who, out of humility, didn't want to be named said, โErm, I was pretty sure Prada and Grandestronzettoโs line was going to change climbing when I saw it. Immediately I was thinking like, oh man who is going to appreciate this new age, no sending, low point stuff that's been coming out when now thereโs like this all-time super complete line. It's full send, total high point. You guys at 8a.nu are going to have to make a new Time Comparison Grading and Fashion Scale.โ
โWe named the fragrance The Essence of Sending HRDSHT because it was this projectโs crux sequence. To balance out the patchouli, we had to bottle that suffocating chalk cloud mixed with perspiration that you often find in climbing gyms, along with Janjaโs tears of triumph from the Olympics. Iโm telling you, this is really next level! Gucci, Fendi, Dolce and Gabbana... I donโt think they can repeat this let alone downgrade it!โ
Prada will be presenting the 2XTREME4U line this weekend as well as announcing their 2XTREME4U Super Humble Ambastardors. Rumour has it they aggressively bought a handful of climbers out of their existing endorsement contracts and are offering their top signings five-year contracts worth over seven figures.
One of Pradaโs 2XTREME4U Super Humble Ambastardors who, out of humility, didn't want to be named said, โErm, I was pretty sure Prada and Grandestronzettoโs line was going to change climbing when I saw it. Immediately I was thinking like, oh man who is going to appreciate this new age, no sending, low point stuff that's been coming out when now thereโs like this all-time super complete line. It's full send, total high point. You guys at 8a.nu are going to have to make a new Time Comparison Grading and Fashion Scale.โ
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15
631 March 2022
Close Encounters 9a+ FA by Jonathan Siegrist
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5
031 March 2022
No Sleepwalker for Schubert
Interview Katrin Strobl: Your latest YT video shows you in an unusual situation - Jakob Schubert struggles for weeks with a single boulder. Do you win or lose in the end?
Definitely both! It was a last-minute decision to fly to the US at the end of January with two very good friends, Nicolai Uznik and Michael Piccolruaz. The destination was the Red Rocks near Las Vegas and a relatively difficult boulder. The video shows the process I went through on Sleepwalker, an 8C+ boulder. In terms of difficulty, it's the hardest boulder I've ever tried, and yet I thought I had a chance of doing it relatively quickly. In the video you can see the struggles, but also how great the atmosphere is when we boulder together.
You came home from that trip 'with no result' - in hindsight, would you approach the project the same way again?
I am still convinced that I would have been able to climb the boulder and that a few slightly different decisions would have changed the result. In such a process you always learn a lot about the boulder itself. On the first days it was much too cold and therefore much too dry, actually impossible to climb. We certainly invested too much physically and destroyed skin that I simply missed at the end. Going into a boulder like that with two cuts on your fingers is anything but ideal. One or two more days of rest and more skin for the better conditions towards the end of the trip - that would have been the better recipe.
For a fortnight, your whole focus was on one boulder. You set your mind on it and want to do it at all costs, even if it means coming home 'empty-handed' - is that doggedness or stubbornness?
In the past, I always enjoyed climbing many lead routes on my second or third attempt - difficult enough that I couldn't do them onsight or flash, but not so difficult that I had to try them forever. Sending as many of them as possible in one trip, that was my goal for a long time in bouldering, too. Of course, it's cool when you're in the Rocklands in South Africa for the first time, you have all the classics in one pile, and you just go through and do a lot of bouldering that is just below your level. That also fascinates other people, when you can practically do everything in a very short time.
In the last few years, I have increasingly started to look for a very difficult project and work on it. Perfecto Mundo is a good example - it made me realize how much I'm learning about my own climbing on the rock. Everything has to be perfect when you go to the limit like that. This approach is not necessarily more fun, but it helps if you want to improve. That's what makes it exciting for me. In bouldering, I have done relatively little projecting so far, and Sleepwalker was my first trip from this other point of view. Certainly, it wasn't as much fun as if I had tried a different boulder every day. However, I came back with the feeling that I had learned a lot. This time it actually didn't turn out well, normally I still get up there somehow and have this insane feeling of happiness. Now I've had to learn that you can't always get that and would therefore say that it was the right decision.
How do you explain this meticulous approach to outsiders? How does it look in your head when you are in such a project?
I still believe that 8C+ doesn't have to be my limit, it always depends a bit on the boulder and how much it suits me. With the Sleepwalker, I had this hope that I would succeed after a few days, but I quickly realized that I would have to invest more and that was a bit frustrating. After all, you have your ego in your luggage too. As a climber, you want to be good in every style, you want to have few weaknesses. On this trip, I and the whole team were shown a few deficits. Especially on the undercuts, I felt very lost at the beginning. In the evening after a session, I think a lot about what I can do better. In the beginning, it's a lot about finding the right variation for yourself. What can be the trick that works for me? Before I go to sleep, I go through the boulder several times in my head. On the day itself, it's all about timing everything very well, always concentrating fully on the attempt at hand and getting everything out of yourself in that go. After that, you need a break, not only physically, but especially mentally. You can only put yourself in beast mode a few times in a row.
In 2021 you did practically everything 'in passing', also downgraded many routes, were untouchable and now you start 2022 with a 'negative' result. Untypical for you. What do you learn from this?
Untypical situation - yes and no. It always depends a lot on where you spend your time. La Cappella, for example, has been extremely accommodating for me, Red Rocks with the Sleepwalker not quite so. Also, you're not equally fit in every phase, but it doesn't immediately eat away at your self-confidence. I feel very good again in training now and have concentrated on World Cup preparation, even though I have a lot of plans on the rock this year. What I certainly learned is that I'm nowhere near as experienced in projecting a boulder on the rock as I am in route climbing. Next time I will definitely have to approach it tactically better, in terms of rest days, attempts and mental preparation.
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5Favorites
Jorge Diaz-Rullo reports on Instagram that he has made the first ascent of Cafe Colombia in Margalef. At 27, heโs already stacked four 9b+ sends and now heโs adโฆ
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81Janja Garnbret has added another milestone to her remarkable climbing career by becoming the first woman to climb Bibliographie (9b+) in Cรฉรผse, one of the hardeโฆ
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โI stopped focusing on competition bouldering after last yearโs World Cup in Prague, partly because I can already feel it on my body, especially in my shoulders. The modern competition style, with a lot of jumping from one hold to another, is very demanding for the shoulders.
Outdoor bouldering isโฆ
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Jorge Diaz-Rullo reports on Instagram that he has made the first ascent of Cafe Colombia in Margalef. At 27, heโs already stacked four 9b+ sends and now heโs adโฆ
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81Sean Bailey reports on Instagram that he has done the first ascent of Duality of Man (9c) in Dry Canyon. โ After four total years and three seasons of climbing,โฆ
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69Jorge Diaz-Rullo elaborates on the reasons for him to suggest 9c for Cafรฉ Colombia on Instagram, which he took down last week after projecting it for 240 sessioโฆ
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