Trad catch when ground fall lurks?
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Yeah, I was thinking while belaying again. |
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Ideally, one of the first pieces would be a cam to reduce the risk of reverse zippering of which you are talking about. |
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Yes, if there is a path the belayer can run to, that's what he/she should do. This should be discussed, beforehand, when possible. Generally, a climb like that would get an R or X rating, and the leader is assuming the risk. |
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Stand really close to the wall, and first piece should try and be multi-directional. |
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Jfriday1 wrote:Stand really close to the wall, and first piece should try and be multi-directional.Hard to do when you're running away from the wall. |
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Exactly why it's important that your first piece be good for multi directional pull. |
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I have never had to do it, but I have always thought running along the wall instead of away would partially mitigate the zipper issue. Along the wall is usually a safer path than away (at the Gunks at least). |
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Not the place for your gym taught soft catch - that's for sure. You've got to minimize the length of the fall - use what you've got. Yard in an arm load or two if you are coordinated, run if there is a path, at least sink to your knees. |
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Better yet, try to take in an armful of rope while sitting into the catch. A GriGri makes it a whole lot easier to maintain control of the belay when you do this BTW. |
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Gear popping would actually be preferable to a soft catch in this case. Think about it: you're hitting the ground either way, so it doesn't really matter if you have gear in the wall. That said, obviously a hard catch with no gear pulling is obviously the most ideal (you might not crater), but even if the gear pulls, the fall will be better because it will most likely absorb at least some force. |
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I just did a quick calculation. If you fall from 20 feet, it takes about a second to get to the ground. That allows only an immediate reaction on the belayer's part. Maybe standing on something high that you can jump off when you take? Really, a fall on a trad route in the context you describe is really a no go. The belayer might manage a partial catch, but the climber has ventured into no fall territory. Sometimes, there's no good answer. |
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Honestly you will not have much of any time to react to something that close to the ground. I have only had 1 person fall on a sport route in that type of area (clipped first bolt and fell trying to clip 2nd) and he barely didn't deck from it. There really is no time to run if it happens. It is best to just try to keep the rope as short as possible without short roping and you may have time to pull a slight bit of slack out if your reaction is fast enough, but you will not really have time to "run". |
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Old lady H wrote:Our scenario: Single pitch trad leader, has two small, but good pieces in for the first placement. Climbs up for second placement, gets a piece in. Headed for third placement, hmmm.... Has to climb up and over a ways searching. So, now in ground fall territory. Yeah, don't fall, I get it. But, if it happens? For the belayer, is this the dive down the hill/run like mad scenario before that rope comes taut on the top piece?Hmm. I think it really depends on the route. Second piece is a small stopper in a thin crack? You might be best to try to shuffle one arm length of slack through your belay device when they pop, then jump up lightly for the soft catch. If you run down hill, might overload the pro. But, if they really are in the "don't fall" zone past the second piece? And, you're sure they're going to crater? I guess a quick look behind you and a step downhill quickly might soften the landing somewhat. I'd be worried about the rope being out for them to trip on and turn upside down, which, could be bad. Kinda depends on how far up their first gear is too, then. At the very least...get out of the way so they don't fall on you! Tough scenario. If you're focused on their lead, and, are really paying attention to the rope in the system, your belay, not so much slack that there's too much rope, but, not any tension to yank them off...then, converting that to a run away from the route will be pretty hard to pull off quickly. By the time you actualize (is that a word? Ha ha) them falling, it'll probably be too late to do much other than take a quick step back or to the side. You might get in a couple feet of slack. I think for both sports climbs as well as trad, the most important clip is that 3rd piece. Savvy leader hopefully gets that. Going past that second clip, gear or bolt, is the time when folks can hit the ground and my guess its a subtle thing to some/most climbers. Good you recognize the scenario as risky! Sharing that with a partner prior to them leading a climb where you can't see that option from the ground might be beneficial. Cheers! |
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FrankPS wrote: Hard to do when you're running away from the wall.Nearly impossible to do when you only have a fraction of a second to react. A leader will fall 16 feet in one second, 64 feet in 2 seconds. Running away from the wall is practically a mythical solution that is total science fiction when your leader is close to the ground even if you are an olympic sprinter (unless you are on point and ready to react as rgold points out below). Don't count on this when your leader is very close to the ground. You will not likely improve the situation unless you have lightning fast reaction time and are paying very, very close attention.. And, you will increase the load on the top piece, which may be worthwhile if it doesn't blow the top piece and keeps you off the ground. Your best option is to pay very, very close attention, keep the belay as close as possible without pulling on the leader and drop to the ground instantly if you feel inches and could make a critical difference. |
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A planned "running belay" is possible; folks have done it on run-out slabs and on extreme grit routes in the UK. "Planned" is the operative word: the belayer is all set to sprint, has cleared a path, and set up a special very low multidirectional anchor so that no gear will be zippered and the maximum amount of rope will be taken in by the run. They can only take in a few feet in a second, but that can be the difference between a soft and hard impact. |
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rgold wrote:But this can be dangerous with an ATC, because if the fall impact hits during the yarding process, there will be almost no braking effect from the device, and even if the belayer does lock off, they may not be able to achieve a good braking angle when sitting. A consequence could be the loss of control of the belay (this is not hypothetical).Very important point! rgold wrote:I've actually taken such a near-grounder, and my belayer (Jim McCarthy) instantly grasped the dire situation and jumped off an eight-foot boulder he was standing on, thereby taking in just barely enough rope to make my impact negligible.Welcome to the Gunks? Classic! |
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No Exit at Skytop on a super humid hot greasy summer day. There is a short off-fingers crack after the crux that my hands just slimed out of as I was moving up. I had a piton in the crack at my waist that came out with almost no resistance. (The crack flares inward and is perfect for nuts, but this was before nuts). |
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I've done a running belay on a few occasions. Interestingly enough, it's been on sport climbs when the leader fell while clipping the 2nd or 3rd bolt. I can say you really need to be on it and paying attention, because a fall that close to the ground leaves minimal time for reaction and zero time for a delayed catch. If you dont run as soon as the guy is off, he'll be on the deck before you even knew what happened. Greg D wrote: Running away from the wall is practically a mythical solution that is total science fiction when your leader is close to the ground even if you are an olympic sprinter (unless you are on point and ready to react as rgold points out below). Don't count on this when your leader is very close to the ground. While it is true that you are never going to be able to run as fast as the climber will fall, it would be incorrect to say that running cant improve the situation. On more than one occasion I've kept climbers off the deck by running backwards while yanking in an armful of slack and I am not an Olympic sprinter. In one case the climber fell while clipping the 3rd bolt of a classic sport climb. I ran backwards a few feet and yanked in another few feet of slack. He stopped with his feet on the deck. Had I just stood there, he would have decked before the rope even came taught. You might not be able to yank in 20+ feet of slack, but you can certainly get in two or three yards which can make the difference between a trip to the ER and a fun story for Facebook. You are correct thought that you have to be paying very close attention, which really is something that should be expected of all solid belayers, especially when a fall close to the deck or well past a piece is possible. If you want to see a running belay performed, advance to 5:18 youtube.com/watch?v=Zh-GYMC… There is another angle of this video that's not included, but it shows the running belay kept the climber off the deck. Without it he would have kissed the gound. |
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I have both kept someone off the deck this way and been kept off the deck by it. |
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Dr. Kodos would loudly proclaim that it's the leader's responsibility to avoid a ground fall. I think in general that holds true. |
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Jake Jones wrote:It [slack in the rope] has virtually no benefit, unless it's there so the climber can clear a roof during a fall.Can you clarify what you mean by "clear a roof". I've seen this mentioned several times by various people, but I am having a hard time visualizing how having too little slack in the system can cause a leader to impact a roof when they fall. What is the scenario here. is the last piece on the lip of the roof, under it, or on the face below the roof? When is the leader in danger? When they are still under the roof, pulling the lip, or or above the roof... ? Does the leader impact the roof or the face? I can see a danger if the leader is climbing under the roof, and has a piece tucked into the corner (between face and roof). In this case, if there is no slack in the system and the leader falls, he/she will swing into the face (not the roof). Is this the situation you are referring to? |