Home - Destinations - People - Partners - Forum - Photos - What's New
 ADVANCED
Holderness Corner
Show routes:
Select route...
Escape From Reality 
Flesh For Lulu 
Holderness Arete 
Holderness Finish 
Holderness School Corner 
Hope For Movement 
White Rhino 

Hope For Movement 

5.12d

   

FA: 
Type: Sport
Consensus: 5.12d [details]
Length: 1 pitch, 80 feet
Views: 358 page views

Submitted By: Maurice Liddy on May 31, 2007


Add Photo  Add Comment 

You and this route  |  Other Opinions (2)
Your todo list:
Your stars:
Your rating: -none- [change]
Your ticklist: [add new tick]
 Printer Friendly View

That one strong indian dude thats always around ru...


Description 

The route immediately to the left of Flesh for Lulu. Long and excellent also although not as perfect as its neighbor. Easy start to a somewhat tricky bulge. Rest on the ledge before heading up and left through another 50 feet of really fun, sustained climbing. Awkward finish detracts from the route in my humble opinion. But still very high quality.


Protection 

10 bolts to fixed clips.



Comments on Hope For Movement Add Comment
Show which comments
By lee hansche
From: goffstown, nh
May 31, 2007

So, a start from the ground has been added I take it?
It was 6 bolts starting from the ledge/boulders up and left of the start for Flesh....
It makes sense to start from the ground....

By Jay Knower
Administrator
From: Plymouth, NH
May 31, 2007

I've always started from the ground. It seems less sketchy than scrambling up on the ledge.

By lee hansche
From: goffstown, nh
May 31, 2007

Even when there weren't bolts?

By Jay Knower
Administrator
From: Plymouth, NH
May 31, 2007

I think some bolts have been below the ledge for a while now. I'm not sure about the history of the bolts on this wall. After all, Flesh for Lulu seems to have grown bolts over the years (not that I'm complaining, mind you).

By Ladd Raine
Administrator
From: Plymouth, NH
Jun 1, 2007

I've did a fair amount of belaying for this climb about 2 years ago, I think that the bolts were relatively new when my climbing partner was projecting this route, maybe as little as 6 months old.

By matthewWallace
From: plymouth, nh
Jan 7, 2009

The first ascent was done by Duncan McCallum 5/88, and was originally called Hope For Donna and was a less direct route that it is now.