Do you stick clip? Why or why not?
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Russ Keane wrote: Good point to ponder. High end sport routes seem almost a different sport than lower end trad - does the "do not fall on lead" even apply. Back in the day, you would never see a bolted route lower than a 9 or 10. Upon returning to climbing, I was surprised (and grateful) to see lower grade bolted routes on days I do not want to mess with pro. |
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stick clip everything all the time, it would be so easy to slip off 5 feet up and break an ankle, nothing like 2 months in a boot to ruin a season. I've never once felt judged or ashamed to stick clip a bolt. |
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befozz wrote: A luxury of sport as compared to trad. No judgement, just the reality. |
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Russ Keane wrote: so what about 5.8 projecting climbers?? what about 5.9 climbers who make mistakes? what about when the fall is absolutely atrocious?? |
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Russ Keane wrote: This is an outdated view of the sport. Adventure trad climbing, alpine, ice climbing are all still places that this mentality is required, but to me sport climbing is a place to push physical limits, which means falling, sometimes alot. Sport climbing has been that way for a while now. |
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If I offer my stick clip, you turn it down and you go and break your ankle, Im not carrying you out. |
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Bread Pirate Rahsahbi wrote: hahaha I wonder how many of you guys have heard of CLIMBIRD |
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Jef Anstey wrote: Is that Aleks Z's invention and site?
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befozz wrote: Maybe a good comparison of differences between types of skiing. All are forms of skiing (alpine, Nordic, tele) and each requires different gear and applications if the gear. |
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Jacob Schutt 1 wrote: Holy crap dude. You are a serious stick clipper, I guess! You are more into stick clipping than actual climbing. Legit climbers support someone's intention to climb the line as clean and pure as possible. Would you not help Alex Honnold if he had a fall while free soloing? Weird stance. By your logic, anyone leading is going over the line. Top roping is the only safe option. |
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Russ Keane wrote: Wasn't the phrase "sport climbing" coined to describe that type of climbing. |
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Mason Stone wrote: You're conflating climbing a route cleanly with *learning* a route's sequences in blocks and then putting those blocks together for an eventual redpoint. It's a different style of climbing with different tactics than what you're used to. Sure, climb it how ever you like, but you'll feel pretty foolish if your attachment to old-school trad dogma causes you to nurse a broken ankle that puts you out of action for a year. |
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Jake Jones wrote: I know. I often wonder if people expousing those views ever really climb at their absolute limit. |
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Mason Stone wrote: Actually, that's not true at all. There are a lot of routes where the portion before the first bolt is the crux. I recall a route where the 11b crux was at around 12' off the deck - and you'd land on your side or inverted among a bunch of blocks - after that, the hardest other moves were a 10a and a 10b. The first bolt was at 15'. |
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Jake Jones wrote: I started wearing a helmet on sport routes after a couple of trips to RRG/MFRP - had holds break on 5.7,5.8, 5.10a, 5.10c, 5.11a - friend took a flight from anchors when his foot holds went. Another friend took a fall while clipping 2nd bolt on a 5.7 at NRG - hand hold ripped off the wall on a recently bolted climb, he ended up ~2-3ft off the ground.
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Sport is supposed to be safe, there is no need for unnecessary risk. For sport I almost always do. Trad obviously not. |
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Really wish I had a stick clip this past weekend. The first bolt on jasonbecker.com at Shelf Road is about 20 feet off the deck. Super easy climbing, with a fat ledge two moves shy of the clip (for 5'10). This route has been a goal of mine for the past couple of weeks as I break into 10s. The moves to the bolt were easy (even easier the second time around), however not two days earlier I was climbing a 5.9 I've done a few times. I was being a little cocky and wound up slipping, forgetting that I hadn't even reached the first clip yet, and took some minor flesh wounds on the way down. Realizing how easy it is to slip on something I know, getting to that first bolt wasn't putting me in the greatest mindset. I'm not climbing for an audience, I'm climbing because I love the puzzle, and I'd really like to continue working on new puzzles. The girlfriend and I invested in a Trango beta stick yesterday. No more sketchy first bolts for us. |
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Mason Stone wrote: Amen man. We need more people like you posting simple views responding to the OP, not yelling at others for their opinions. |
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Jake Jones wrote: Yeah, I hate when people do anything but top roping around me too man. It really pisses me off when I see people taking unnecessary risks by taking a fall on lead or gear, who the hell do they think they are, they brake their ankle by a bad fall and I have to carry them out. |





