NEWS

Ben Hanna speed climbs Grand Illusion (8C+)
Ben Hanna, foremost a route climber with four 9aโ€™s and harder to his name, has completed Grand Illusion (8C+) in Little Cottonwood. The 20 hand moves and 24 foot moves are done in 53 seconds and here is his speed climbing video.

โ€Quite possibly the best piece of Climbing I have done in my life. I spent 5 years trying thinking the 13 [the higher 8B start]. It was impossible for me, and then it just clicked a few weeks ago. I thought coming from the ground would feel a lot harder but l found that the 13 was just about the same whether I was pulling on from the ground or coming from the bottom. Felt like I could do the 13 1/10 times so it was just a game of attempts from bot.โ€

Can you tell us more about the process behind the ascent?
I started climbing in the cave right from the beginning when Drew [Ruana] first started trying GI in 2020. I was able to do the 12 start but the 13 was to hard for me. I ended up putting 20+ sessions into the 13 over the last 5 years and finally did it 3 weeks ago. A week after I decided to start trying GI but as I was getting closer the season started to end, I fell going to the Crimp Wednesday and new I could do it. Sunday was my last day to send before my season was over and the pressure was really on. I was pretty sure I only had one attempt for the day which meant I only had one more attempt of the season. I genuinely think that try was the best climbing I have ever done in my life.

What about your speed climbing tactics?
Because of all the spray wall training I have done in the past I realized it was actually more of a 20 move circuit and should be climbed that way. Which is fast, no chalk no shaking since you donโ€™t face to stop and clip/ and there is no where to actually rest itโ€™s best to just sprint it.

It was something I thought a lot about! Most of my process for this boulder was pacing and body position focused.

Pietro Vidi does Meltdown (8c+) trad
Pietro Vidi, who two weeks ago sent an 8b+ big wall on El Cap, has repeated Meltdown (8c+) in Yosemite (CA). First established by Beth Rodden in 2008, Meltdown has seen only a handful of repeats in the 17 years since and is widely regarded as one of the most difficult trad routes in the world.

Approaching the climb in headpoint style, Pietro spent his first two sessions working out the individual moves before beginning to link sections on day three. It took two additional sessions of lead attempts before Pietro finally clipped the chains on his sixth day on the route and third day of redpoint efforts. (c) Daniel Gajda

How was it to hang dog it the first time, any long falls and what about the grade?
It definitely felt hard for the grade! Took some falls on the upper crux to get to the chains the first time but luckily you can easily aid all the first crux๐Ÿ˜…

โ€œI started making some good links on top-rope on day 3 where I realised I would probably need to skip some gear in the first part and also a crucial nut placement on the second crux - in order to save energy. This made for quite a big runout but still seemed relatively safe. I made my first lead tries on session 4 and got through the first crux, only to fall right after, when I struggled to place a cam properly and got too pumped to continue. That afternoon I actually watched a video on Ethan Pringle ripping the gear in the hollow flake, which is right below the nut I had decided not to place. He almost decked out. This made me quite nervous! The following day, I tested the gear in the flake myself, almost breaking a nut, which I was convinced was bomber and thus, further multiplying my nerves. Luckily I found that a bigger nut would fit and my confidence slowly came back.

On day 6 I started up the route, feeling really confident, only to dry-fire right after the crux move and breaking the trigger wires on the cam. I managed to temporally fix the cam with some tape and then sent the route on my next try, with quite a battle against numb fingers and pump! Meltdown is, for sure, the hardest trad-route I have climbed, apart from โ€˜Tribeโ€™. The climbing is super insecure with horrible feet, extremely technical but still really physical. Bethโ€™s first ascent, more than 15 years ago, was truly incredible and ahead of its time!โ€

Siara Fabbri ticks Salamandre (8A+)
Siara Fabbri, with two 8B+โ€™ to her name, has completed Salamandre (8A+) in Brione. โ€Worth doing just for squeezing those pinches!! Very cool movement in tension.โ€ (c) Simone Tentori

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
This boulder is quite unique for the area because it has a really big perfect pinch sticking out of the wall. You do the entire boulder besides the top-out with your left hand on this big pinch, then a smaller pinch. The moves are very much about keeping tension in the feet and shoulders, and I found that I need to really actively squeeze the big pinch. Once I understood this, it felt very good. 5 star climbing and a classic must-do!

Filip Schenk does Omen Nomen (9a)
Filip Schenk, who made the podium in the Chamonix World Cup in July, has sent Omen Nomen (9a) in Arco. (c) Crimp Films

โ€œAmazing route! Two hard boulders divided by a rest and some of the best moves out there. Omen Nomen was one of the first 9a routes I ever tried, back when I was a kid starting to come to Arco for climbing. Iโ€™ve always tried it just a few days each year, which is why itโ€™s stayed with me for such a long time. Iโ€™m really happy to see such nice progress, since this year it only took me two days on the route to finally get it done!

What are your competition plans for 2026 and how long will you focus on outdoors before the competition training starts?
Probably till the end of November. For sure the European championships and in general all the world cupsโ€ฆ but just lead.

Alex Megos updates his logbook + interview
Alex Megos, one of the best climbers in the world the last 15 years, has added all his hardest ascents to his logbook. The 32-year-old won six consecutive European Lead Youth Cups in 2009, and in 2017 he was runner-up in the European Boulder Championships, his first IFSC competition in five years. The following year, the German won a Lead World Cup and earned a bronze medal at the World Championships. In 2023, he had his best senior competition year ever, being runner-up in the Lead World Cup and getting the bronze in the World Championship.

Outdoors, he became the first ever to onsight a 9a in 2013 with Estado critico (9a) and he has completed three 9b+โ€™.

Can you tell us more about Frei am Fels?
Iโ€™ve been contacted my an agency regarding the book back in 2020, but I told them Iโ€™m too young for a biography. I told them to contact me again in a few years. They did! After listening to what the process would look like I thought it could actually be quite interesting and I agreed. Itโ€™s mostly a biography about my climbing life, how I started climbing, my big achievements, but also the ups and downs of my life as well as the struggles.

What is your driving force and how has this changed over time?
My driving force still is the love for climbing. That has never changed. But was has changed is my willingness to try routes regardless of the outcome.

How have your 2025 season been and what are your plans for 2026?
2025 was not what great on the competition side of things. The two world cups I did both went terrible [17 & 21]. Outdoors it was a bit of a different game. It was not great, but also not too bad. The FA of El Taureg Blanco (9b) and Le Grand Saccage (9a+) were probably two of the biggest achievements this year, but I also found a bunch of new projects Iโ€™m psyched for!

Ah yeah! Plans for 2026 are focus on outdoors. Try a couple of projects in the Frankenjura, probably also get back on B.I.G and maybe explore some other areas with projects.

What are the three best advices you can give to the youngsters pushing hard?
1. Donโ€™t get injured. That it always a big setback in training
2. (unfortunately) rest is often more useful than harmful.
3. Fun is the core.

Rebecca Stephens does Disney production (8A+)
Rebecca Stephens, with eight 8Aโ€™s under her belt, has done Disney production (8A+) in Brione.

Can you tell us more about doing your first 8A+?
I was introduced to Disney Productions last year during my first trip to Switzerland, recommended by a friend due to it's crimpy style. Over 3 sessions I came close but couldn't quite finish it off, as I found the last move to the slot very low percentage.

Returning to Switzerland this year, we based ourselves around Chironico. With bad weather plaguing the start of the trip, and a whole new area of boulders to climb, we limited ourselves to one day over in Brione. The primary goal of this year's session was getting the last move dialled. I repeated that move more times during the warm up than during the whole of last year's trip. A good start. After that it was just a matter of time. Very happy to finish this one off this year and psyched to tick my first 8a+, hopefully the first of many!

Cy McIntosh FAโ€™s World Without End (9a)
Cy McIntosh, with four 9aโ€™s under his belt, has done the first ascent of World Without End (9a) in Beaver Creek. โ€Ahhhh yesss!! Iโ€™m so happy. My hardest for sure. Put so much time, money, and effort into this thing. Feels gooood to finally see it pay off!!โ€

Can you tell us more about your first ascent?
I bolted the route, which is an รผber super low percentage 8c+ direct start to Pillars of the Earth (8c). But you get a kneebar afterwards. Then I was out of town for a couple months but as soon as I got back I was sieging the route every weekend until I finally got it done yesterday.

Michaela Kiersch does Netsuke (8B)
Michaela Kiersch, who last week sent seven 8A and harder boulders including a flash of Hineruage / Deep Red (8A), has visited Murgtal for the first time. During her solo trip she sent Netsuke (8B), Broken bottles sit (7C+) and Starlink (8A)
.
Can you tell us more about your solo mission and your crash pad logistics?
I was driving through the area and knew of a few boulders that I wanted to try. I shuffled my two big and one small organic pads myself from the parking and had a really fun solo day out!

Can you tell us more about Netsuke and how quickly you sent it?
The 8B suits me really well. None of the moves are too big and I use a lot of technical footwork in order to optimize my body position on the small crimps.

I had to work the moves one at a time because it was in the sun when I started. Maybe 5 real tries from the bottom. It took maybe like 1.5 hours.

REBOLT KALYMNOS - Daily maintenance and bigger projects by volunteers
Rebolt Kalymnos has been very active in the last months, equipping almost all routes in Secret Garden with titanium glue-ins, alongside almost daily maintenance: replacing old anchors and bolts, removing or gluing loose rock, and simply adding bolts on runout easier routes. All the daily work is done by volunteers, mainly based on safety concerns reported by climbers on the designated online form. You can follow the team's rebolting activity through regular โ€œRebolt Reportโ€ updates on their Instagram feed.

Their next big project is to rebolt all 34 routes at sector Kasteli (not including two routes that were already recently rebolted). Rebolt Kalymnos is a registered Greek non-profit. Funding for all the work comes from donations, sales of the Rebolt Kalymnos T-shirt, and some bolt donations from hardware manufacturers. In practice, there are a handful of volunteers, who spend most of the year on the island, doing most of the work. They also run board meetings to decide important issues. Throughout the year, they have tried to get in contact with the local municipality regarding a government-funded rebolting project, without success. Recently, they publicly called for the release of more details about the project:

โ€œSince April, weโ€™ve repeatedly asked for basic details: which routes are included, who manages the work, what materials are being used, and the project timeline. None of these questions have been answered. The Rebolt Kalymnos team is at the crags every day, maintaining routes to the highest international standards and addressing safety issues in real time. That daily presence gives us both the insight and responsibility to seek clarity when public work affects the same routes we care for. We believe that transparency and collaboration are essential for climber safety, for the island, and for the future of climbing on Kalymnos.โ€

At the time of this writing, Rebolt Kalymnos is still waiting for answers.

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