What is the origin of the term "pitch"?
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Could you please point me at why do you use this word - pitch - for a segment of a long climb in between two belays? |
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It comes from the days before ROCK climbing, when "climbers" used to get their jollies by climbing large trees. Pine and spruce trees for the most part (they have lots of branches to pull on). The custom of the day was to climb as far as one could until an accumulation of tree sap on one's hands prevented further progress. Then the leader would stop and clean their hands of the accumulated pitch i.e. tree sap, before continuing. Trees like that have a lot of sap so a "pitch" was typically short. Ropes are longer now so pitches are longer. |
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Gunkiemike is on the right track in that it originally comes from tree climbing. However, the tree climbing style back then involved throwing a rope (as high as possible) over a branch, and then essentially top-roping the tree climb until you were able to get to that branch. Climbers would measure the height of a tree by the number of times that they had to throw, or "pitch", the rope to get to the top of the tree, and would therefore refer to the height of the tree in "pitches". |
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Thanks a lot! |
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Just in case. A word on the origin of the topic. Being a kind of "CA climber" I am receiving a lot of questions on the second Dawn Wall Free ascend. The thing is climbing cultures in the U.S. and here in Russia are that different so even climbers cannot fully understand what was happening in Yosemite recently. Today I was asked why they call it "pitch". That awkward moment you have no idea how to answer a seemingly stupid question :) |
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lmgtfy.com/?q=define+pitch
or, easier the steepness of a slope, especially of a roof. synonyms: gradient, slope, slant, angle, steepness, tilt, incline, inclination "the pitch of the roof" |
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Pavel Burov wrote: Today I was asked why they call it "pitch". That awkward moment you have no idea how to answer a seemingly stupid question :)Say, what is the equivalent of "pitch" in Russian? |
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amarius wrote: Say, what is the equivalent of "pitch" in Russian?There is no direct equivalent. Russian climbing culture is very sporty. We enumerate belay stations, not pitches. We count belay stations (goal), not pitches (process). More or less equivalent to pitch is segment in between two belay stations or belay anchors. There is a word "участок" which could be translated directly as "section", or "piece", or "segment", although it is (almost) always an "участок" in between two belay anchors. There is another term for pitch in Russian. "Верёвка" - more or less direct equivalent to "rope line". P1 is "1-я верёвка" = "rope line #1", P2 is "2-я верёвка" = "rope line #2", etc. It is very common among climbers respecting process (pitches) more then goals (belay anchors), although this term is rarely used in trip reports or route descriptions. |
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Pavel, |
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amarius wrote: Say, what is the equivalent of "pitch" in Russian?In Russia, rock makes you it's "pitch" Serious answer: One definition of "pitch" is a relative point, position, or degree. Which makes sense as you're climbing to multiple points or positions to get up to the top. |
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Gunkiemike had it right. There are a lot of saps in climbing. |
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In german it's just "seillange" : rope length |
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Daniel, thanks! |
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I would guess the term came from the British cricket pitch (playing field), which is a narrow strip between two wickets. |
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In French it is "longeur" or length (noun usage of length). 1st length, 2nd length and so on. |
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While European climbers tend to use the word in their language for "length" or "rope length", I think it's better to follow the English / American custom of using a word without implications of length, because |
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Hobo Greg wrote:I've heard that "belay" comes from old sailing days, when a guy had to go out on deck in a storm and would be tied in and belayed by another sailor. True?Word Origin and History for belay Expand v. from Old English bilecgan, which, among other senses, meant "to lay a thing about" (with other objects), from be- + lecgan "to lay" (see lay (v.)). The only surviving sense is the nautical one of "coil a running rope round a cleat or pin to secure it" (also transferred to mountain-climbing), first attested 1540s; but this is possibly a cognate word, from Dutch beleggen. Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper |
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M Sprague wrote:I would guess the term came from the British cricket pitch (playing field), which is a narrow strip between two wickets.That was what I'd imagined too. Football (aka soccer) and I think rugby are also played on pitches. |
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Once I put an Italian route description into Google translate, whatever word they use for pitch came through as "shooting". |
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Optimistic wrote: That was what I'd imagined too. Football (aka soccer) and I think rugby are also played on pitches.Interesting question. 19th century British climbers would have been more cricketing types than footballers. A cricket pitch is 66 feet long, a typical pitch length in the early days of climbing. |