Route at Octopus' Garden
Route at Octopus' Garden
Anyone know the name/grade of the bolted route between Edible Panties and Octopus' Garden?
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I believe it's called Leonissisation and was first graded at 12a but consensus seems to be 11+. A fun route according people who posted here:
http://squamishclimbing.com/squamish_cl ... pus+garden
and here:
http://squamishclimbing.com/squamish_cl ... php?t=1975
http://squamishclimbing.com/squamish_cl ... pus+garden
and here:
http://squamishclimbing.com/squamish_cl ... php?t=1975
Dave Jones - site admin
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
When you reach the top, keep climbing -- Zen proverb
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If it didn't already have a name, something like "Pointless Grid Bolt Squeeze Job That Should be a Toprope" might work. There are some crags - Burgers & Fries, Neat & Cool, a lot of the Apron (especially right of Diedre), Octopus' Garden - where where adding new bolts should be discouraged. It tends to detract from existing routes, and may not add much of value.
Hmmm, Anders preaching about squeeze jobs, after squeezing in a wet dirty no-star tree filled crack climb four feet feet to one side of Partners in Crime? I guess age really does affect your memory.
I haven't managed to redpoint Leonissation yet but have worked on it a few times since it went up, and indeed, had eyed it before it was bolted too. It's a quality, independent natural line IMHO. A thin seam and then shallow pockets in glacier polish. Good climbing.
I haven't managed to redpoint Leonissation yet but have worked on it a few times since it went up, and indeed, had eyed it before it was bolted too. It's a quality, independent natural line IMHO. A thin seam and then shallow pockets in glacier polish. Good climbing.
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The Ugly American, which is one to two m right of Partners in Crime, follows a crack for its entire distance. No bolts, natural line. It's no more a squeeze job than say Corner Crack and Flying Circus are.
The only possible squeeze job I can remember being involved in is Bran Flakes, which is only a few m left of A Question of Balance. But we only placed one bolt on each pitch, plus the belay - no grid bolting involved.
The only possible squeeze job I can remember being involved in is Bran Flakes, which is only a few m left of A Question of Balance. But we only placed one bolt on each pitch, plus the belay - no grid bolting involved.
I led "ugly anders" as robin calls it this summer. I found it to be a quality crack which takes good gear and had a pleasantly hard start. I also found it in very clean condition, so it must have been renoed recently.
I would recommend it to any 10a leader as a good challenge. I also found it an excellent way to get on partners, which i love and will definetly make a project next year.
I would recommend it to any 10a leader as a good challenge. I also found it an excellent way to get on partners, which i love and will definetly make a project next year.
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Glad that it's getting some traffic - I'd meant to do it for years, and finally Kevin Wallis and I got around to it in 1998. We probably could have done a bit more cleaning, but did what was needed and it was clean enough, particularly the hard bits at the bottom and top. If Robin further cleaned it, then it seems a reasonably constructive outlet for some of his energy.
The route was given its name as a comment on a climb done in Cheakamus Canyon soon before, called Captain America (uggh!). The term has its own wikipedia entry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ugly_American), and was the title of a bestseller (in the USA) in 1958. FWIW, one of my grandmothers was born in the US.
Robin's ad hominem remarks aren't to be taken seriously.
The route was given its name as a comment on a climb done in Cheakamus Canyon soon before, called Captain America (uggh!). The term has its own wikipedia entry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ugly_American), and was the title of a bestseller (in the USA) in 1958. FWIW, one of my grandmothers was born in the US.
Robin's ad hominem remarks aren't to be taken seriously.
I thought the slab route at Octopus's Garden was great. In my books "squeeze job" means something that can be reached from adjacent routes. So if you were climbing on a harder route, but had to make a conscious effort not to grab the bigger holds on the easier route right beside you that's a bit tight for me.
I concur that the route is very different in character than most of what's there already. Diversity is good isn't it? What I find interesting though is the interest is generates from the 5.7 to 5.9 single pitch crowd. That kind of thing is what's going to plant the seed for a few future hard slab climbers.
If someone today flails their way up it and has a great time, they might start dreaming about all of those central Apron slab classics like Dancing in the Light and Dream On for future adventures. (I had a formative experience like that once, and now it's one of my most rewarding forms of climbing)
Kris
I concur that the route is very different in character than most of what's there already. Diversity is good isn't it? What I find interesting though is the interest is generates from the 5.7 to 5.9 single pitch crowd. That kind of thing is what's going to plant the seed for a few future hard slab climbers.
If someone today flails their way up it and has a great time, they might start dreaming about all of those central Apron slab classics like Dancing in the Light and Dream On for future adventures. (I had a formative experience like that once, and now it's one of my most rewarding forms of climbing)
Kris
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