Preplaced draws on a sport route
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Pnelson wrote:It's often irrelevant in modern gear-protected climbing, because most folks who consider themselves "trad" climbers while placing gear on lead nonetheless still project their climbs by hangdogging, sussing out gear placements, etc. That may be true for trad climbers who are trying to put up the hardest possible (for them) climb on gear. In my experience, though, this is not the base for most folks who consider themselves trad climbers, or at least, not for most of the climbs that they climb. Many to most of them are doing either un-rehearsed climbs, or repeats of climbs they've climbed on gear before, but which were first attempted unrehearsed. (Repeats because they may have access to limited climbs, so they have to go back and repeat stuff, or because they enjoyed it enough to repeat it.) |
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Matt St. Peter wrote: This thread gon' be good! Probably lots of reasonable arguments. Hahahha... I love the sarcasm. Probably the best thing that would result from this "discussion". Carry on gents, I want to hear more about how projecting the warmup climb while hanging your very own draws makes you a better human being. |
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Draws are for posers. |
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lame. |
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I understandt the need to have draws up while projecting the route. It would be pain to clean them after each attempt. But, why not place them on lead when you are ready for the send? All I'm trying to say is that,in my honest opinion, any hard route is more difficult if you are placing draws on lead. I'm just pissed off because I read someone's comment that placing draws on lead is effortless and that is why most climbers leave them up. |
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Jon H wrote:The only thing more irritating than a 5.13 climber spouting off about ethics is a 5.9 climber spouting off about ethics. These comments baffle me. What does climbing hard have to do with knowledge about climbing ethics? You're telling me a 16 year old gym rat that can send 5.13 knows more about ethics than a middle aged person that's climbed longer than the gym rat has even existed? |
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Fehim Hasecic wrote: I'm just pissed off because.. idiotic, inconsequential reason. I'm not sure I could get through the first 7 minutes of my morning commute without murdering someone if my tolerance for frustration was this low. |
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Fehim Hasecic wrote:I understandt the need to have draws up while projecting the route. It would be pain to clean them after each attempt. But, why not place them on lead when you are ready for the send? All I'm trying to say is that,in my honest opinion, any hard route is more difficult if you are placing draws on lead. I'm just pissed off because I read someone's comment that placing draws on lead is effortless and that is why most climbers leave them up. You obviously haven't projected routes much. When you are truly projecting a route you really have no idea when you are going to send, it might be next try, it might be 10 tries from now, there is no way of knowing. |
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Tapawingo wrote: These comments baffle me. What does climbing hard have to do with knowledge about climbing ethics? You're telling me a 16 year old gym rat that can send 5.13 knows more about ethics than a middle aged person that's climbed longer than the gym rat has even existed? Well, when the topic at hand is ethics of hard sport climbing, I think someone with any experience on hard sport routes is going to know more about ethics related to hard sport climbing than someone with absolutely no experience with hard sport climbing regardless of how long that person has been chuffing their way up gnarly 5.9's. |
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Tapawingo wrote: These comments baffle me. What does climbing hard have to do with knowledge about climbing ethics? You're telling me a 16 year old gym rat that can send 5.13 knows more about ethics than a middle aged person that's climbed longer than the gym rat has even existed? Who's to say that the 5.13 climber is a 16 year old gym rat? And why do you assume that the 5.9 climber is some middle aged chuffer? |
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can this not turn into another MP ethics thread. It was a simple question. |
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Fehim Hasecic wrote:I understandt the need to have draws up while projecting the route. It would be pain to clean them after each attempt. But, why not place them on lead when you are ready for the send? Do you not see that you can't places draws on lead if you don't clean them after each attempt? |
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While I would say the prehung draws are the accepted method ascent for sport climbing it sadly appears that this is no longer limited to the realm of sport climbing. |
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Jon H wrote: Who's to say that the 5.13 climber is a 16 year old gym rat? And why do you assume that the 5.9 climber is some middle aged chuffer? There are good climbers and mediocre climbers across all age and experience brackets. Not to mention that some of the "old school" climbers grew up in an era where accepted ethics are significantly frowned upon today. Who's to say that the old guy knows any better? You're missing the point. I'm saying that there is no correlation between how hard one climbs and their knowledge of the subject matter. But I get what you're saying about the old school climber frowning upon today's ethics and who's to say what's acceptable. |
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Karsten wrote:While I would say the prehung draws are the accepted method ascent for sport climbing it sadly appears that this is no longer limited to the realm of sport climbing. Exhibit A: Dawn Wall No longer? Who do you think left the fixed gear & tat? Much of it I'm sure Tommy & Kevin didn't even touch. But apparently adding draws on traverses pushes over the boundary. Tapawingo wrote: I'm saying that there is no correlation between how hard one climbs and their knowledge of the subject matter. Of course there is, it just isn't the sole indicator. |
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Anyone who seriously cares about this shit is a twat |
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Karsten wrote:While I would say the prehung draws are the accepted method ascent for sport climbing it sadly appears that this is no longer limited to the realm of sport climbing. Exhibit A: Dawn Wall If another party comes back and does Dawn Wall without pre-placed gear it will be that much more of an awesome ascent. There is nothing wrong with a pink-point, it is just significantly weaker sauce than an actual red-point, which is much wimpier than an on-site. Should we start saying that a TR lap is just as good? Just a pre-placed rope after all... |
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Five15Factor2 wrote:Anyone who seriously cares about this shit is a twat I laughed when I onsighted this line. |
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Maybe I'm trying to compensate for my mediocrity in climbing by asking frivolous questions. All I wanted to know was would it be harder to lead sport while placing draws on lead vs leading on hanged draws. I guess I hit the cord with some folks and they think that I'm trying to downplay level they think they're climbing at. Mission accomplished. |
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Fehim Hasecic wrote:Maybe I'm trying to compensate for my mediocrity in climbing by asking frivolous questions. All I wanted to know was would it be harder to lead sport while placing draws on lead vs leading on hanged draws. I guess I hit the cord with some folks and they think that I'm trying to downplay level they think they're climbing at. Mission accomplished. Yes, in most cases it'd be easier. But for most sport climbers, it is easier in an aspect that is irrelevant to the goal of sport climbing; that is climbing harder, not clipping harder. If you place value in clipping as part of climbing, then by all means don't pre-hang your draws. Just don't be surprised when nobody else cares. |




