NEWS

Will Bosi FAโ€™s Brain Rot (8C+)
William Bosi has done the first ascent of Brain rot (8C+) in Magic Wood. โ€Really cool crimp power bloc, basiclly slap bang in the middle of the forest. Dave G project just 10 metres left Jackโ€™s broken heart. Unsure on grade either soft 8C+ or hard 8C I think. Decided to propose the+. Starts in the obvious crack at the back of the roof.โ€ (c) Dave Graham

Sam Watson breaks Speed WR twice in Bali
At the Speed World Cup in Bali, world record holder Sam Watson claimed victory after setting a new record of 4.67 seconds in the semifinals, which he then surpassed with an even faster 4.64 in the final. The American climber has now set a total of six world records on the 15-meter wall. Among the female, Alexandra Miroslaw won.

Michaela Kiersch does Everything is Karate (8c+)
Michaela Kiersch has repeated Ethan Pringleโ€™s Everything is Karate (8c+) in Pine Creek. 18 routes graded 8c+ and beyond now feature on The Doctor in Hand Therapyโ€™s impressive tick list, alongside 17 boulders graded 8B or harder. Remarkably, nearly all of the 30-year-oldโ€™s hardest ascents have come within the past 3 years. She also holds the distinction of being the first woman to climb both a 9a+ route and an 8C boulder.

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
I visited Pine Creek for the first time a few weeks ago after leaving Spain due to unending rain. Everything is Karate was an obvious choice. The first few days I was battling extremely windy and cold conditions but I returned to Bishop for 2 more weekends and was able to float my way up on the send.

Jon Cardwell FAโ€™s Scorched Earth (9a)
Jon Cardwell, who did his first 9a back in 2008, has done the FA of Scorched Earth in New Mexico. โ€Bolted by Tom Ellis. Beautiful route, super technical and complex! Took a little while to decipher the cryptic crux and then it was a battle with the sun.โ€

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
The route was an existing project that I was shown by a good friend of mine. Itโ€™s a very unique route, not only for its quality but the very technical and cryptic movement. Itโ€™s also completely natural which is always a nice bonus. Figuring out the sequences took a couple days and after that I could climb it with one fall more or less every try. It was just a battle against the sunny conditions. Itโ€™s also one of those routes thatโ€™s pure power endurance where every move is difficult once you enter the hard climbing so it leaves very little margin for error.

Is there a reason this is your first 8b or harder route since climbing your first 9b a year and a half ago?
Well, I canโ€™t say itโ€™s due to not trying! However, last year was big for me, I bought my first house, got married, among other things. I traveled a bit less but i still carved out time to train and try some projects. My motivation for climbing is always there and as I get older I just sort of go with the flow. I put another 6 weeks into my big project at the Fortress, the extension to wind up bird and actually ended up getting really close. I hope to finish that one later this year, itโ€™s something thatโ€™s the cumulation of everything Iโ€™ve learned over the years. I also have quite a few more projects here in NM, and thatโ€™s pretty much been my climbing goal since moving back, to bring my experience and seek out those kind of routes, something that doesnโ€™t really exist here. Turns out finding cutting edge first ascents isnโ€™t that easy!

Andrea Kรผmin ticks Tuataket (8B)
Andrea Kรผmin, currently on a year-long road trip, has just sent Tuataket (8B) in Sirevรฅg. So far on her trip, sheโ€™s logged around 20 problems graded 8A or 8A+. Three years ago, she claimed a 3rd place finish in a Boulder World Cupโ€”and this June, sheโ€™s set to return to the competition scene for three World Cups.

Can you share more about this ascent and what it means to set a new personal best?
The goal of bouldering 8B (or harder๐Ÿ™ƒ) had been on my mind for a while๐Ÿ’ญ but I had never actively pursued it. My priority has mostly been climbing as many different lines as possible: Challenges that pushed me, but that I could still send relatively quickly. Iโ€˜m really excited that it worked out now during our trip! And since Tuataket went relatively quickly too, Iโ€™m curious to find out what else might be possible. But all in good time โ€“ Iโ€™ll discover it at my own pace๐Ÿ˜Œ

There were times in my life when everything revolved around performance. Training, nutrition, sleep, regeneration etc. I tried to optimize everything in order to climb as hard as possible. Tuataket showed me, that this is not the only way to climb at my best. I can climb well without optimizing everything and by taking a more relaxed approach. I can trust my body, trust the process, and still grow stronger๐ŸŒธ

Weโ€™ve now been living in the van for over half a year. I was on plastic two or three times and didnโ€™t do any training at all. Just rock climbing. Sometimes two days on, then one day off and sometimes one on one off. @david_firnenburg has always been convinced that climbing outside would make him strong and Iโ€˜m happy it works out well for me too on our roadtrip! Our secret? Itโ€™s excitement! When we do what truly excites us, weโ€™re able to put in so much more energy. And itโ€˜s double the fun when we share it together!๐Ÿง—โ€โ™€๏ธ Excited for the journey ahead!๐Ÿš๐Ÿ‘ซ

How will you prepare for the World Cups being on a roadtrip?
This season, Iโ€™m going to approach competitions a bit differently and wonโ€™t be preparing specifically on plastic. I want to fully enjoy our road trip and focus on rock climbing without putting pressure on myself when it comes to comps this season. So Iโ€™ll approach the competitions with a relaxed mindset and just have fun.

You donโ€™t get out of shape climbing on real rock, and you donโ€™t lose your technique either. During a session on plastic back in January, I noticed that after so many years of competition experience, I donโ€™t lose my feeling for coordination and slab climbing that quickly.

The Swiss Championships take place one week before my first World Cup and will be a good way to get back into competition mode. Iโ€™m already qualified for the World Cups based on my 2024 results anyway. And in comps, there are so many factors that come into play โ€” so why not give it a try? Iโ€™ll just see how it goes โ€” never try, never knowโ€ฆ

Katie Lamb does The Dark Side (8C+)
Katie Lamb reports on Instagram that she has repeated Carlo Traversiโ€™s The Dark Side (8C+) in Camp 4. (c) Eric Bissell

โ€Itโ€™s easy to fall into the trap of treating friction on this boulder like passive resistance - a force that each scaler is at the whim of. But I learned to reshape this narrative: friction is something to sit with, to actively attend to, and to ask for help in understanding.โ€

In the past two years, the 27-year-old has previously sent three 8C and five 8B+ boulders, firmly establishing herself as the world's leading female boulderer.

Nigel Armino ticks Sever the Wicked Hand (9a)
Nigel Armino, who sent his second 9a two months ago, has done Sever The Wicked Hand (9a) in Frankenjura.

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
I climbed Sever the Wicked Hand in three sessions. The route starts with a tough boulder and finishes in Battle Cat (8c). I first climbed Battle Cat to get a feel for the ending, then worked out the boulder section the same day. The next day, I tried the boulder again but decided to restโ€”weโ€™d been climbing three days in a row after a six-hour drive.

Today, after the rest day, I managed to send the full line. The key for me was gripping the right-hand undercling tightly with my thumb, which gave me enough tension to get through the crux (see photo). Itโ€™s good to see the recent adjustments I made to my training after Margalef are starting to work for the style here in the Frankenjura.

Katalin Paertan does Obszรถner Zwerg SD (8A+)
Katalin Paertan, who last week did her first 8A+, has completed Obszรถner Zwerg SD (8A+) in Hirschwรคnde. โ€Nice line with cool tricky moves, really had to fight through the last few moves. Very glad I could finish this one up today after gassing out at the end on Monday.โ€

Can you tell us more about the ascent and your great progress in 2025?
I did the stand start a year ago, so I was very motivated to get the sit done this season as well. I had a lot of fun figuring out the sequence in the first session, then it still took me a few sessions to put all the moves together as it drains quite a lot of energy and it gets basically unclimbable once the sun comes in.

This season I have felt quite a lot of improvement in my climbing as I have been working on getting better at my antistyles. Additionally, I have completed most of the physically demanding courses at university (Physical Education) so now I've finally had more time and energy to train more consistently, which seems to be paying off!

Owen Whaley completes Sosa (8C+)
Owen Whaley has done the second ascent of Zach Gallaโ€™s Sosa (8C+) in Little Cottonwood Canyon (UT). โ€Satisfied with this one. Tried in the fall with Adam, couldn't touch the sit moves, felt psyched in the spring, and dug it out of the snow, which was fun. A bunch of really fun sessions with good friends. Shout outs to Zach and anyone who put in work. Great way to kick off the summer.โ€

Can you tell us more about the ascent?
So I first tried the sit moves in the fall after doing GI. It felt very hard at the time, trained all winter and was really psyched going into fall to start the projecting process. Dug it out from under snow, which took 4 days. By the time the boulder was fully dry I had good links and was ready to start giving ground rips. I think 8 or 9 sessions. Really cool boulder, sustained power endurance all the way through. Definitely very in my style.

Hamish McArthur comments Megatron (9A) - UPDATED
Hamish McArthur, who was #5 in the Paris Olympics, reports on Instagram that he has done the second ascent of Shawn Raboutouโ€™s Megatron (9A) in Eldorado Canyon. The 17-move test piece adds an 8C/+ low start to Tron (8B+). Hamish sent it after five sessions, having fallen seven times at the top on the day of the send. (c) Jess Glassberg - โ€One of the most amazing moments Iโ€™ve filmed in climbing.

Hamish skipped the first World Cups in China but he will be back on the comp circuit starting with the World Cup in Salt Lake City, then Innsbruck and finally the World Champs in Korea.

How did you come up with the idea of trying Megatron, how was the first experience and the following process?
I was always planning on doing a big outdoor climbing trip in the states. I have a van here and itโ€™s a shame not to use it. As for Colorado and Megatron, well that boulder seemed to have a slight mythical status. First of all it was unrepeated - and not for lack of trying to - so I wanted to see what that was all about. I love climbing that allows for creativity, and the 3D nature of the climbed seemed like it would allow me to climb with style.

The first time we went up to the boulder I got pretty shut down on the start. My tactic on session 1 is to be as creative as possible. I tried every kind of beta I could imagine. It was hot but I managed to fight my way up the v14 end section โ€œTronโ€ towards the end of the session.

The process was spiritually intense. I figured out the moves on session 2 and started putting them together into promising attempts in session 3. Getting over the finishing line with this boulder was the crux. I knew I could do it, but actually doing it took a lot of energy. In session 4 I made it to the second last โ€œhardโ€ move and at the start of session 5 I dry fired after doing the last of these hard moves. It took 6 more attempts climbing almost to the lip before I managed to keep everything together. So, 5 sessions total - but I donโ€™t want to see climbing as a purely efficiency problem. I want it to be about depth and appreciation instead of how quickly you can get into and out of.

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