Teenagers that Aid?
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Just curious if there are any other younger people who have gotten into some aid climbing. Are me and my bro the only ones?? Finessing micronuts into cracks seems more fun than pulling plastic on a rainy day, but not many people my age seem to agree. Anyone else that did some aid climbing at a young age? And if so, what's the story behind it? |
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Since you edited your post, I'll edit mine. |
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I think perhaps there is also a distinct privilege in having permissive parents who are willing to LET you go and aid climb. When I have kids, I probably won't let them go mess around on any big walls for days at a time... It is objectively more dangerous than pulling plastic, particularly when you look at the tail end of the distribution (i.e. death) and teenagers aren't the best with risk assessment. |
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I think like anything these days, it boils down to the fact that there are way too many factors that play into it. The community in which you reside may be comprised of a certain wealth class, or just be lucky enough to have a ton of climbing access nearby. I think you're asking a good question, but I'm just not sure that it should be asked in a general forum given that your target audience will surely include people from all walks of life. I get what you're saying though. Just hard to give you a definite answer. |
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No one cares what you climb bro. Be happy for yourself and your ascents. If you want to spray get some bigger ascents under belt first. Most people find aid climbing monotonous, slow, scary, and boring all at the same time. Also aiding with that ghetto equip = Ur gonna die. |
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Hans Radish wrote:Just curious if there are any other younger people who have gotten into some aid climbing. Are me and my bro the only ones?? Finessing micronuts into cracks seems more fun than pulling plastic on a rainy day, but not many people my age seem to agree. It's nice to hear that you enjoy getting on the rock in wet weather, even if it means aid climbing. Seems like a good attitude for a western Washington climber. |
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Climbing is cheap. It costs 1200$ for a surfboard and a wet suite. How many thousands and millions of kids surf? |
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"That's great that you and your brother have the privilege and ability to aid climb over "pull on plastic," but personally I think it's pretty lame to post about it. Mostly because money is the limiting factor and the large majority can't help that" |
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I think this is an awesome post. Good for the kid, and kudos for bringing it up. Why did this immediately go to privilege and class? Who cares and what does that have to do with this kid? |
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You may not realize it Hans, but you are following in a tradition that goes back to the 70's when teenage climbers like Bill Price and Charlie Row were doing El Cap testpieces. Chris Mc Namara was doing El Cap routes as a teenager, I did a couple with him before he hit 20. In January of 2014 I did a push of Tangerine Trip, and that December, Lurking Fear IAD with Mickey Sensebach who was a Senior in High School. Keep at it, a lifetime of El Cap and other big wall ascents await! |
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Russ Keane wrote:I think this is an awesome post. Good for the kid, and kudos for bringing it up. Why did this immediately go to privilege and class? Who cares and what does that have to do with this kid? Aid climbing is a dying art. To have young climbers messing around with it, getting out of the gym, and being adventurous... I can't applaud this enough. At a time when we honor Royal Robbins, this is a perfect sentiment! +1 JB |
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Daniel Evans wrote:That's great that you and your brother have the privilege and ability to aid climb over "pull on plastic," but personally I think it's pretty lame to post about it. Mostly because money is the limiting factor and the large majority can't help that. In 2017, posting about a gear-intensive climbing pursuit is lame because of the privilege of owning gear. |
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I'm willing to bet all the people on here talking about privilege are pretty privileged themselves... |
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"Being able to climb, I recognize that I am inherently privileged, but there are so many kids (that I know) who spend a lot more money flying to national competitions and trips to major sport climbing areas." |
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first off, its awesome that you are into it at ur age. im 17 as well and have been climbing for about 5 years started in sport, but about 2.5 years ago fell in love with trad.... i do understand where these others are coming from, it has taken me all of 2.5 years to build up singles in everything with a few doubles... building up a rack the way i did required saving and working hard in order to obtain what i have, that's probably the reason you don't see many 16-17 year olds with rack. my parents have not helped me at all. so every piece of gear i have i can attribute to each job i have worked at. |
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OP, I'll flip your question right back at you. How many people your age (or any age, for that matter) pursue being outdoors and active? |
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We are out there... |
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Daniel Evans wrote:Since you edited your post, I'll edit mine. It is likely because most kids your age can't afford to drop hundreds of dollars on aid/trad gear. I grew up in a middle class family and there is no way that my parents would have ever supported me had I asked them to pay for aid climbing gear. Soccer? Football? Sure, but not thousands of dollars for me to go kill myself (how they view it). Climbing gyms are relatively cheap, provide easy access, and offer a social platform for many kids to interact. It's a pretty simple concept and business model--not rocket science. Not to sound like a dick or anything. That's great that you and your brother have the privilege and ability to aid climb over "pull on plastic," but personally I think it's pretty lame to post about it. Mostly because money is the limiting factor and the large majority can't help that. Case and point, my friend takes his 10-year-old girl climbing and she just became the youngest female to climb one of the ice routes up Mt. Kilimanjaro. Their ability to fund that trip and escort her up that route is a rarity and not very common among your average American household. My point being, that I don't think you will see them make a post about why other 10 y/o aren't following in suit. First, there was nothing wrong with his original post. It read like an honest inquiry and he wasn't bragging. It's a correct observation that more teenagers prefer ripping tendons than learning to aid. |
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I'm older than you, but still not old. I'd rather use the youth I have left to pursue physically hard climbing. Youth will run out. |
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https://www.mountainproject.com/v/aid-climbing-to-practice-trad-placements/112543293__2 |
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My post had nothing to do with "white privilege" - I was simply presuming that the reason most teenagers the OP's age do not aid climb is due to financial ability. For the very same reason that most college students I know tend to sport climb over trad climb. I used the word "privilege" in a sentence by its root definition, not in an attempt to shame the OP for his whiteness. |




