By Mike Thompson From amherst NH Jul 18, 2009
| so i was reading a different topic on a different forum and i saw a picture of one of the worst anchors i had ever seen. so i decided to get others input :) what is the worst anchor you have ever seen? fixed or placed by your gumby leader that you were horrified to climb up to :) post away!
this is the anchor i saw :)
| Rappel anchor found in Poudre Canyon Submitted By: Greg Hand on Apr 24, 2009
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By John Maguire From Boulder, CO Jul 18, 2009
| Got run out nearly one pitch up the second flatiron while also running into some pretty horrific rope drag. I couldn't take another step foward and was not able to downclimb. After about 45 minutes of struggling to move a thunderstorm came in. In the pouring rain I managed to get 2 or 3 stoppers in placements that would have never held any type of fall. The placements were so bad I didn't even want to weight them. My partner made the decision to climb up to me even though we both knew I wouldn't be able to catch him if he fell. I think I was belaying him with 1 hand. Eventually he climbed past me and set a better anchor (about 15 feet higher there was bomber gear) Instead of cleaning the anchor, I just shook my waist back and forth a few times and all the protection fell out. |  FLAG |
By Luke Wakefield From Prescott, Az Jul 18, 2009
| <<< Invalid image id: 106492298 >>>
Actually quite good compared to the first pic. |  FLAG |
By Allen Hill From FIve Points, Colorado and Pine Jul 18, 2009
| | baby angle Submitted By: Allen Hill on Jul 18, 2009
| it looks worse than it was |  FLAG |
By John Hegyes From Las Vegas, NV Jul 18, 2009
| Here's a pic of the old anchor on Hop Route in Red Rock at about 175' up.
| This is the belay station at the top of Hop Route. Submitted By: John Hegyes on Nov 22, 2005
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Someone came along and chopped it so you have to climb a second pitch and do the sketchy walk-off now. That was two years ago, I don't know if the situation has improved. |  FLAG |
By Ben Kiessel Jul 18, 2009
| | Old anchor crappy anchor. (Photo taken by Jesse Brown) Submitted By: Ben Kiessel on Jun 18, 2007
| The rappel anchor on church rock in Moab. Luckily I took this down and replaced it with this bomber anchor.
| New bomber anchor (Photo taken by Jesse Brown) Submitted By: Ben Kiessel on Jun 18, 2007
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By Guy Humphrey From Fort Collins CO Jul 18, 2009
| I think this one must make the the list.
| Pin at the top of the second pitch; I'd say it could hold a falling cat tied to a bungee cord. Submitted By: batman spaghetti on Aug 23, 2008
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By Greg Hand From Golden, CO Jul 18, 2009
| Mike,
You stole my picture!! We saw that anchor while putting in new routes in the Poudre. We have left it there for historical (hysterical?) purpose. Someone must have really been ready to die to have used it.
Greg |  FLAG |
By Mike Thompson From amherst NH Jul 19, 2009
| Greg Hand wrote: Mike, You stole my picture!! We saw that anchor while putting in new routes in the Poudre. We have left it there for historical (hysterical?) purpose. Someone must have really been ready to die to have used it. Greg
haha sorry greg :) i was reading the other forum and it inspired me and i had to put something up haha :) but thanks for the background :) |  FLAG |
By Mike McHugh From Denver, CO Jul 19, 2009
| | Rope teams heading up to Brown's Tower after we fixed ropes. Never you mind that one of the anchors we found is a crapass plastic kid's sled with the yellow nylon rope. Submitted By: Mike McHugh on Jan 1, 2008
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That skinny little edge is called the coxcomb. About 2/3 of the way up, buried in the snow, there's a pretty beat up old static line.
Higher up, that beat up old static line is tied to some sweet braided yellow plastic rope (I didn't take a pic when I was there, perhaps this will help you visualize it).
So I thought to myself, "Self, that looks like the rope on a plastic kid's sled. Hmmm."
Sure enough, a few feet further up, sticking out of the snow, was the top end of an orange plastic toboggan. Nice anchor.
Fixed line, indeed. |  FLAG |
By Shawn Mitchell From Broomfield Jul 19, 2009
| McHugh probably wins.
When I was 16 and stupidly invincible, my partner--also 16--and I bailed from about 6 pitches up something in Yosemite. There was nothing fixed on the first anchor and to save $, we left two pieces: a stopper and the knot in a tied runner. They both looked pretty good.
With another buddy we top roped the Geronimo finish in Joshua Tree off of one good hex. We thought it looked solid.
Nowadays, If I don't have at least three pieces I'm in love with, I sink three or four more. |  FLAG |
By Evan1984 Jul 19, 2009
| ^^^Haha, yeah, how many of us look back at some of the things we did when we were younger and dumber and pucker a little bit? |  FLAG |
By Mike McHugh From Denver, CO Jul 19, 2009
| Shawn Mitchell wrote: McHugh probably wins.
Not the best competition to win. Where do I collect my Piolet de Merde? |  FLAG |
By Joe Santambrogio Jul 19, 2009
| Mike McHugh wrote "Not the best competition to win. Where do I collect my Piolet de Merde?"
My french is pretty rusty, but isn't that french for pile of shit? |  FLAG |
By Shawn Mitchell From Broomfield Jul 19, 2009
| Mike McHugh wrote: Not the best competition to win. Where do I collect my Piolet de Merde? Merde...is that piton of death or piton of sh*t? Or do the French enjoy a wry ironic cognate? |  FLAG |
By Braxton Norwood From Tucson Jul 19, 2009
| Luke's pic of the PBR anchor wins, hands down & bottoms up! |  FLAG |
By Mike McHugh From Denver, CO Jul 19, 2009
| It's the "Ice Axe of Crap". As the sole mountaineering entry in a trad rock climbing thread, I believe that I still win it, along with the "Piton d'Inappropos". |  FLAG |
By Anthony Milano From Denver, CO Jul 19, 2009
| Along the same lines.... How many of us can still recall the first time we looked up and/or down and saw a piece we had placed fall out??
Mine wasn't too bad---at least I had placed a bomber piece before looking down and seing the nut wiggle out... |  FLAG |
By Mainah Jul 19, 2009
| the first time i lead on gear my first piece was a nut (woops) i was a few moves above it and my belayer says "ummm hey..." i looked down and the nut had slid out, down the rope, and was sitting on top of her belay device. I was only 15 feet off the ground but, Doh! Multi directional first piece! |  FLAG |
By Allen Hill From FIve Points, Colorado and Pine Jul 19, 2009
| There's a route in Escalante canyon we called "The Blow out crack." It's a classic six or seven inch off width. Hard eleven maybe even a twelve. Anyhow after working on this thing one winter afternoon Chuck Grossman stacked some hexs at our high point and rappelled off them and we left the rope fixed. The next day the rope and the anchors where all in a nice pile at the base of the rock. The only explanation was that the wind had knocked the pieces out of the crack. Thus the name. |  FLAG |
By Buff Johnson From Coniferous, CO Jul 19, 2009
| first place goes to a top rope through only webbing and then telling everyone on national tv, no, I really am a moron.
cliff bar as a snow anchor -- beat that allen, |  FLAG |
By Rich Farnham From Nederland, CO Jul 19, 2009
| Just came across this picture.
| Anchors on Castles Made of Sand that could use replacing. The wires are actually glued behind the washer making them a touch better. Submitted By: Jason Haas on Jul 24, 2007
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Doesn't beat some of the others in this thread, but maybe gets an honorable mention... |  FLAG |
By Joe Santambrogio Jul 19, 2009
| IDK Rich, if you read the caption
"Anchors on Castles Made of Sand that could use replacing. The wires are actually glued behind the washer making them a touch better."
I mean they are glued, that makes them better, so i don't think it counts. |  FLAG |
By Rich Farnham From Nederland, CO Jul 19, 2009
| Hey Joe! It's been a while--hope all's well.
Joe Santambrogio wrote: IDK Rich, if you read the caption "Anchors on Castles Made of Sand that could use replacing. The wires are actually glued behind the washer making them a touch better." I mean they are glued, that makes them better, so i don't think it counts.
Oh well, in that case...
Maybe the ARI folks will start using this method. Rather than their typical announcement ("bolts replaced with 1/2-inch SS anchors donated by ARI") we would start to see: "manky old stoppers donated by..." |  FLAG |
By springs Aug 7, 2009
| A partner and I did a less-done (read: almost never) ridge in Big Cottonwood Canyon a few days ago.
My partner got to the top of the 3rd pitch to set up a belay... the area was slanted towards the cliff with a bunch of several ton boulders on it. After checking them out, he picked the second largest one and tied the climbing rope around it because it was too big for runners.
I get up, get the gear, and get ready to take the lead... suddenly, the largest ~2ton block (the largest one) that my partner had been going to sling starts sliding... zomg, HUGE slide.
Moved his belay ASAP. Scary moment, realizing that if he had slung the other one, both of us could have been pulled down the cliff... and mostly because it was a time bomb. He had stood on it earlier, testing it out... just took 5 more mins to actually go. Definately a good wake-up call.
Natural anchors can be some of the most unpredictable :Q |  FLAG |
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