NEWS

Access and Ethics changes on the (Fanatic) climbing scene
Pierre Dรฉlas has been an influential climber on the french climbing scene for 20+ years, although just being 41-years-old. He started out by writing articles in Grimper magazine and later wrote on the internet for Kairn.com. In 2015, he started Fanatic Climbing mainly covering the french climbing scene. For 15 years he is also on the board for one of the most active climbing clubs/gyms in France (Massy) when it comes to competition climbing. Furthermore, he is interested and concerned about access and ethics in climbing and here is a great article on these subjects. (c) Sam Biรฉ (First Pierre sent over a picture from an 8c but later commented. โ€œI am sorry but you should not publish that picture as climbing ethics say you should only publish pictures of sent routes ;)โ€.

Could you please say something about your climbing background?
I started climbing in 1991 in Toulouse, southern France at 11. I was lucky, my middle school had the first indoor climbing wall in the city. I first climbed outside in 1993 and became addicted in my teenage years, at the end of the 90s. My father would bolt new routes during the week and let me bag the FAs at the weekend. I also climbed with a lot of people around Toulouse, especially some strong locals like retiring Eric Siguier, Robyn Erbesfield and Didier Raboutou. Now Iโ€™ve been living in a Paris suburb for the last 15 years but with my girlfriend, we rock climb on our numerous vacations, and I try to go to Font as often as possible between trips. My goal is to climb the hardest I can every day and outside as much as I can throughout the year. In my best years, I manage to climb approximately 150 days outside.

What are the biggest positive and negative changes on the scene over the years?
For me, the biggest positive changes are the training tools and indoor walls, the increase in level and also the many hardcore crags developed around the world. The facilities/accommodations that have appeared this past quarter of a century also give us a huge playground with a lot of King Lines everywhere. Other improvements in my view are the current marginalisation of chipped holds as well as the amount of information and content you can find about rock climbing. Itโ€™s pretty striking now compared to 2 decades ago.

The negatives changes are, again in my opinion, the lack of curiosity regarding climbing cultures and environmental impacts, which are more and more lost and ignored by the climbing world. Also, ethics is often unknown or questioned, like the use of fans in bouldering now. For me, taking care of nature and ethics, develop a curiosity about what is done in climbing should be the pillars of our practice. For example in Font using brushes and telescopic booms, cleaning our feet on mats, cleaning the boulder before leaving, taking care of the rock, having an idea of the main ethical rules such as proper stand/sit starts from the ground and not a big crashpad, not staying at carparks overnight, not lighting fires or climbing at night because itโ€™s strictly forbidden. An example for rock climbing, buying the local guidebook when I plan a trip. I see a lot of people who donโ€™t know or donโ€™t care, just climbing for their own outside of all other considerations like they do when indoor training or shopping. Itโ€™s definitively not the practice I experienced at the beginning. We are now a rather large community and climbing has become an object of instant consummation with a lot of gyms, brands, gears, Olympic Games and so on.

In my opinion, we act outdoors more and more like consumers, like we climb at the gym and therefore donโ€™t care about whatโ€™s around, local problems or restrictions, nature conversation. We just want to climb and go home having tried some routes and ticked some sends like after any training session. The result is marginalising the process and uniforming the experience. The development of social media also generates a weird thing: every climber can do their self promotion, where โ€˜be the heroโ€™ replaces โ€˜be aware of the climbing worldโ€™. Besides with all the vlogs and videos of climbing, especially in bouldering, everyone is exposed to questionable habits, like climbing with speakers on, at night, using fans, dabs, cheating beta or without any clue, wearing kneepads at all times, which goes to show that the emphasis is squarely on the performance aspect and none of the rest. I canโ€™t say โ€˜it was better in the pastโ€™, but I can clearly state that I find sportclimbing values quite different now. And I donโ€™t exclude myself from the lot, because we have our responsibility in the content we publish as climbing media.

What can be done and how do you see the future ?
I hope for a change in the mentalities, with more consideration for the context. We should try to kickstart a new (i-e old) approach. For example, educate the younger generations more, or do more for nature. Spread more content about climbing culture/spirit and the significance of looking after nature. Who developed the place where Iโ€™m currently climbing? What was the vision here? What are the local climbing rules ? Is the area where I climb fragile? What does โ€˜good behaviourโ€™ mean for a rock climber in nature? What can I do in order to minimise my impact as a climber when I climb outdoors? What about my carbon footprint? I think the future of climbing should consider these aspects first. Our rocks and our history are very important and we need to preserve our heritage as long as we can. If we donโ€™t act all will be polished, dirty or forbidden in a few decades. Itโ€™s quite a pessimistic report, but at a time when climate change is starting to really bite, itโ€™d be good to open our eyes and ask the right questions.

C'รฉtait pas assez tassรฉ 8c by Amandine Loury
Amandine Loury, who started 2022 by sending her first 8A+ boulder, has done C'รฉtait pas assez tassรฉ 8c In St Lรฉger. Previously she has done one 8c+ and seven 8c's and her big goal according to her Insta: Objectif ๐Ÿ‘‰ 9a

"Cโ€™รฉtait pas assez tassรฉ is a connection and to sum up, you do all the hard section of ยซ Illรฉgitime engeance 8b/+ยป, then a crux with a big move to the right and you finish in the pumpy section of Cรฉtacรฉ 8b+. I did some tries last year and I have finished the process this year. One day, after my sport teacher workday, I went to Saint lรฉger. I had 2h30 before the night for climbing. So after two routes for warm-up, I did a try and I sent it. It took me about ten sessions in all."

What are your next plans?
In May I would like to try Mollasson 8c+/9a in Mollans. I hope to have opportunities to try it. For this summer, I do not really have a plan for the moment. I think return to La Roche Moutche for bouldering and climbing in the Hautes Alpes. I would like to try again San Kukai (8c+), but like Mollasson, I donโ€™t know if I will have the opportunity to have a belayer in Entraygues ๐Ÿ˜….

Super Circo Abusivo 9a by Luca Bana
Luca Bana has repeated Berni Rivadossi's Super circo abusivo (9a) in Paline. "It was one of the unfinished business I left behind on that perfect wall, after the first ascent of "Abusive Love" in 2018. Then, this month I decided to get back to give it some tries, as the conditions were simply great. Since I already knew the main sections, the process for the send has been easier and quite fast, managing to clip the chains on my 4th session of work. For sure a high-level must-do!"

Gypsy Blood 8c+ and JoeDan 8c+ (9a) by Domen Skofic
Domen ล kofic, overall Lead WC winner in 2016, has spent the last six weeks mainly climbing in Santa Linya. In the last few days he has done Gypsy Blood (8c+) and JoeDan 8c+ (9a). "I definitely agree to be 9a. Especially without kneepads." (c) Jonathan Siegrist

How come you do not use kneepads? Have you ever tried to adapt to this style?
I like to climb as free as possible and if I feel like I can do a route without a kneepad I prefer to do it that way even if it takes longer to send. I believe that as long as I compete, this climbing style doesnโ€™t help me much.

How was the process taking down the two 8c+' and what happened to your big 9b project?
My power went down the last two weeks and I just wanted to have more fun on the last days before I leave. I actually had to stop trying Stoking the Fire (9b) 3 weeks ago because my knee was getting to painful at the dropknee crux at the bottom. Actually my best attempts were on my first week of coming to the cave and then I felt like Iโ€™m doing no progress but I decided to keep on trying. Itโ€™s hard for me to project on one thing for more than a week but I want to learn this. I admire people that can stay super focused on one route and make progress. Since my knee started to hurt I switched my focus to and I hoped my knee will get better for Stoking. I feel tired from being in the cave that long but Iโ€™m motivated to try hard the last two days and I will be very happy if I can finish Catxasa before I leave.

How do you compare Stoking... 9b with the first 9b you did (Ali Baba sit start extension)?
They are not even close. But I do believe that Stoking is a very hard 9b. Before coming to Spain I was even considering going for either Stoking or Perfecto Mundo because I think this two are not too far apart. Catxasa without kneepad is much harder than Ali Hulk thatโ€™s for sure ๐Ÿ˜…

Prince of Thieves 8A by Isabelle Gibbs
Isabelle Libbe has done Prince of Thieves (8A) in Joe's Valley (UT). "Mentally demanding more than physically. Probably light in the grade but it suited me well. Regardless, a stellar section of rock."

What is your climbing background?
I grew up in the Midwest climbing indoors. Competed in the youth series but never got great results. At 18 I started sport climbing outside a lot, mostly in the Red River Gorge. This past fall I sent my first 8b+ route, Omaha Beach. I recently moved to Los Angeles and have been checking out all the climbing areas out west. Iโ€™ve generally focused on sport climbing but recently have tried to progress in bouldering so decided to spend two weeks in Joeโ€™s Valley.

Could you please say something about how you took down your first 8A?
On the first day of the trip, I sent my first 7C+. The last couple of days of the trip I started trying Prince of Thieves. Perfect sandstone crimps up a tall face to an insecure top out with a bad landing and friction slab to finish. It fit my style well except for the fear factor. I bailed off the top my first day not able to commit. On the third day I tried the moves on top rope and sent first go from the ground. One of the best in Joeโ€™s and my hardest boulder to date!

Primitivo 8C by Dave Graham (40)
Dave reports on Insta that he last month did Primitivo 8C in Valle Bavona. "One of the most technical sequences I have ever accomplished ๐Ÿ˜…" As always, he shares the detailed beta and the full process making you eager to watch the video coming out next week.

The 40-year-old has been one of the very best climbers for 20+ years and he has been featured on 8a probably 150 times. The great story is actually that he has had great progress in the last years. In 2016, after having done countless 8C's, he did his first 8C+, out of two. Two years ago, he did his first 9b route. The wizard is also known for his strong opinions and in 2005 he made the FA of The Story Of 2 Worlds (8C). The name refers to the different grading scales at the time and in practice, this classical FA stopped the grade inflation.

Two months ago, Epic TV made a great 48 hours portrait of one of the most psyched climbers out there.