A guidebook to the bouldering in Minnesota will be released next month
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Guidebook To Minnesota Bouldering Coming Soon
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→ More 5.15s In Norway By Adam Ondra (Again)∞
It looks like Adam Ondra’s season in Norway has come to an end, but not before he added two more 5.15s up there with the FAs of Hell Racer (5.15a) in Hell and Kangaroo’s Limb (5.15a) in Flatanger. He comments about the latter on his 8a scorecard:
Another season in this beautiful cave is over for me. Many projects left behind. Left exit version of Kangaroo’s dyno project, the cheater’s one.
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Dyno specialists, come and try it!
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I could stick the dyno as a single move, but not very close to link.
At this point Ondra has pretty much lapped the field when it comes to the sheer volume of hard sport routes he has done.
→ Jens Monitor∞
This pretty much made my week.
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→ Monte Carlo And The Quantification Of Effort∞
Interesting post by Jason Jordan about grades and how statistical modeling could be used to analyze something like the 8a.nu database to better understand how people quantify and perceive grades:
The point is, if grades are understood as probability-ranges rather than discrete pegs, the acrimony of grading controversy would be considerably dampened. The ironic fact underlying Monte Carlo is: by accepting factors of chance as well as skill in climbing grades, by acknowledging them to be a range of probability rather than a definitive standard, they become more rather than less accurate.
Two things about this. First, I don’t really think there are actually that many grading controversies going on out there. Sure, for many of us arguing about grades is a fun topic to banter about over a few beers, but I don’t think anyone is losing sleep over whether or not Resident Evil is actually V10. Second, at the highest ends of the sport where there is “controversy”1, there are really so few opinions able to be considered about a given climb that rendering any sort of statistically significant conclusion is impossible.
Maybe this idea of a sliding range could work though, we could call it the Brave & Humble™ scale. All high-end climbs could be rated using it and anyone who goes for the high-end of the scale will be clearly presenting themselves as someone who is not very Brave & Humble™, and anyone who goes for the low-end can be a shining example for us all. Consider it done.
I’ve also always wondered what a smart person might be able to glean from the trove of data stored in a site like 8a.nu, which is why it is especially odd that the person who does have access to it, who is by all accounts a very smart person, seems to make up charts more often than actually basing them on the actual data he has access too. I’m also not sure how useful the database at 8a.nu would be for this sort of thing since I would guess the vast majority of grades entered there are simply what is in the guidebook and if they aren’t they are inherently biased by being based against what was in a guidebook. In other words, the grades being entered aren’t simply objective conclusions reached by each individual climber but in most cases are either just what the guidebook says or 1 grade on either side, ignoring the possibility that the originally suggested grade could be many grades off.
- Controversy that is good for business for both the climber and the climbing media ↩
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→ 5.14 On Mt. Hooker∞
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20 miles from the road, David Alfrey, Nik Berry and Mason Earle put up a free route on Wyoming’s Mt. Hooker with difficulties up to 5.14a:
“The rock is incredible for alpine stone, and for that matter it would be great rock anywhere,” Berry said. “The temps were perfect for sending, and [Hooker’s north face] was not as cold as people say.”
Sendtember In Full Effect On The Front Range
Busy times along the Front Range as hard sends are going down at Rifle, Guanella Pass and Mt. Evans from the likes of Dave Graham, Daniel Woods, Matty Hong and Jimmy Webb
→ Bel Succcesso∞
Final update from Dave MacLeod on his and Alan Cassidy’s attempts to climb Bellavista in the Italian Dolomites:
However, we had one day left. I just wanted to get the gear back and get home. Everything was wrong and I felt a bit fed up to be honest. My ankle hurt on the walk-in, I couldn’t do certain movements with it on the rock, I’d had my fill of climbing wet rock or frozen rock, we’d not had even one good day to try it properly. Worst of all, it was baltic.
And Alan Cassidy on their last day’s efforts:
I was desperately blowing warm breath on my hands with every single move, pressing them against the warm flesh of the back of my neck and getting none the warmer. About 15m up at peg 3, I had a little moment, outwardly expressing my dissatisfaction with where I was:
– “It’s F**%$%^ so cold”
– “I don’t want to be here”
– “F%^* sake, this is so $%&t, nothing gets my hands warm”
– “these pegs are all so F%&*@£$”
They sent, obviously.
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