Jon Cardwell and Matt Wilder have made the 5th and 6th ascents respectively of Fred Nicole’s Terre De Sienne (V14) at Hueco Tanks, TX.

Terre De Sienne (V14) Repeated Twice
Posted In: Asides, Bouldering, News
Climbers: Jon Cardwell, Matt Wilder
Areas: Hueco Tanks
8 Responses to Terre De Sienne (V14) Repeated Twice
Leave a Reply Click here to cancel reply.
loading...
2012 Dominion River Rock Women’s Climbing Highlights
May 22, 2012 1 Commentloading...
The Hardest Move Excerpt: Woods & Robinson At 2010 Vail World Cup
May 16, 2012 2 Commentsloading...
Hayden Kennedy Climbing Carbondale Short Bus (5.14-)
May 14, 2012 7 Comments-
Andrew Krueger: Interesting. You find the discussion of that part...
-
Jesse: "I think that breathing is something that is very...
-
Hugo Watt: I prefer watching Hayden doing the route over Nick...
-
Chris V.: on an unrelated note...thanks for the stickers, Na...
-
Kenny: Just noticed that most of these pictures are in th...
-
Narc: I think it's pretty clear that Keith's focus lie...
-
Andrew: I'd pay for a book like that if he got someone to...
-
UBC Pro Tour Heading To The Northwest
May 24, 2012
-
Oz
May 23, 2012
-
“You think it will be cool till it isn’t fun anymore”
May 23, 2012
-
Bad Girls Club (5.14d) Repeated By Jon Cardwell
May 22, 2012
-
Regular Dude Climbs Just Do It (5.14c)
May 22, 2012
-
What Did You Do This Weekend?
May 21, 2012
-
Ethan Pringle On Jumbo Love
May 18, 2012
News & Notes
Oz
This incredible photo essay by Keith Ladzinski from his trip to Australia last year with Dave Graham, Nalle Hukkataival and Ian Dory would make a great coffee table book don’t you think? (h/t Josh on twitter for the link).
“You think it will be cool till it isn’t fun anymore”
The North Face catches up with their athlete Alex Honnold to find out a bit more about his and Tommy Caldwell’s big day in Yosemite, his plans to rope solo the same feat for his segment in the Reel Rock Tour and a casual mention of how he free soloed the West Face of El Cap. As to how the idea for the triple link-up came about:
You do one route and you have a lot of time left in the day and you think, “Oh maybe we should have done two.” And eventually you do two with time left over and you say, “maybe we could do three…” and we did three and we didn’t have any time left over so we said, “we’re over it.”
More detail and pictures from Kelly Cordes on the big day here as well.
Bad Girls Club (5.14d) Repeated By Jon Cardwell
According to his 8a scorecard, Jon Cardwell has repeated Bad Girls Club, a 5.14d in Rifle, CO first done last summer by Matty Hong.






Thanks for the update! Inspiring for those of us stuck in the snow in Jersey…
My only request is that you might include the names of the 2nd-4th ascents in these posts when you report on them. It’d help me keep the history of these problems straight in my head.
loading...
Of course! 2nd-4th in this case are Graham, Woods and Robinson.
For boulders V14 and harder you can always see an updated list of ascents here:
http://climbingnarc.com/2008/02/hard-unrepeated-american-boulders
loading...
Thanks, that’s an awesome resource. Is there a reason that the date, or at least month and year of those hard first ascents aren’t mentioned? I think that’d be a really interesting way to track individual, regional, and general progression over time.
Also, do you think there’s any chance of this information making it’s way onto wikipedia some day? I understand that websites and blogs like yours and 8a.nu and moonclimbing and others tend to take care of this sort of information for insiders and fans, but I’m surprised that there is so little useful data on wikipedia.
loading...
I suppose I could go back and add those, but I’ll have to do some research first.
loading...
Does the difficulty of bouldering problems increase exponentially or are they all about the same once you reach a certain level? For example, is the jump from a V7 to a V8 much harder than from a V6 to a V7? And what is the beginning level for professional status? V9, V10?
loading...
new level for “pro” would be more near v12/13 i’d think… v12 in a day. all the days. no excuses. that’s the emerging standard. v12 in the wet, cold, hot, with bunny slippers and without chalk.
v9 and 10 was noteworthy when i began in 1999, but alas, it is now a joke.
and i think an honest response to your question about the incremental steps in bouldering grades is that no one knows for sure, and if they know, they are either 1) lying to you; or 2) delusional; or 3) an idiot.
basically every v grade should feel harder than climbs of a lesser grade, but less than a higher grade.
amorphous?
quite.
just know this: it is either v7 or it is crap.
loading...
Thanks for the insight. I just started climbing about 3 months ago and have notice a lot of people can do some V7′s but not certain V5′s. I know each route has different moves requiring different technique so that creates uncertainty in the grading. And i’m sure lower level indoor grades are more abiguous than established outdoor routes. I really am just trying to figure out how fast i should be progressing and at what level will i find either a breakthrough or a road block. I now can do a few V3′s each session and am ready to try V4′s. How much harder will it be for me going forward? Will technique or strength help me more at the V4 to V5 levels?
loading...
I think it’s fair to say that both will help you to climb increasingly harder and it depends on the problem. To be honest I could still get shut down on something technical that is in the v5 range but have climbed many things that are more physical at harder levels… why not work on my technique you ask? Because I’m lazy and not that intelligent. Good luck in your quest buddy!
loading...