Rope soloing and ground anchors: ethics discussion (uh oh)
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J Ewrote: Ethics are about moral principals, there are no morals at play regarding a climber disagreement about where bolts can go on a piece of rock. At best you have a “tradition” that says who ever vandalizes the rock first gets to decide. It’s madness. Any access threatened is about all the bolts and climbers fighting over who “owns” the rock. It’s so dumb. |
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Tradibanwrote: Uh, no… access is threatened by damage to the ecosystem (functionally and/or aesthetically), inconveniencing or bothering the locals, trespassing. Not because of squabbles over route ownership. Honestly I feel you’re derailing the discussion anyway because this isn’t a discussion about route bolting, but drilling holes at the base of the Crag where everyone (including non-climbers) will see them |
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J Ewrote: Yes, all the bolts are what bring the “damage to the ecosystem, inconveniencing or bothering the locals, trespassing”. These extra holes in the wall mean nothing considering what sport climbers have already done to the area. |
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Princess Puppy Lovrwrote: Yes a lot of routes are screwed. But the dmg we have done to these rocks, cant be taken away. To re-purpose these into something that can be objectified as something as good is wrong.. Yes some have to be re-worked.. 9th pitch NW Buttress middle Cathedral comes to mind. But we cant as climbers in the now, subject to any of that. We've had had what 60yrs of climbers before us that thought they knew what was right? FUG, I'm a proponent of once a route is put up it stays up. I'm also a proponent if u cant set it on lead (Get the F off u fuggen sport climbers). Sorry nervous twitch. BTW had to edit and come back to say am I in love with U. lol Yeah like it's fugged on some routes. Over the history of climbing I don't think anyone has said, here is the guide 1 tech book on how to place anchors.. You would think it would be easy and common sense. But through all these yrs it's like still fugged isn't it? We do the best we can at the time. Sure I've placed some bad ones.. And seen bad ones. If only there was that 1 tech book. |
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Tradibanwrote: You should go to pinnacles some time. You keep on making this artificial distinction between trad and sport. Every route at Pinns is a trad route, and they're almost all bolt protected routes, with quite a few of them having many bolts to the point that they're indistinguishable from a sport climb. Again, your separation of trad and sport as having different ethics is ignorant and counter to all history and tradition. "who owns what" is no different from trad to sport and you damn well know it, stop playing. There are squabbles over trad routes just as often as there are over sport routes, this has nothing to do with the bolts. Stop being such a used, second hand lint roller. |
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Tradibanwrote: BS. Sport or trad doesn't matter. It's not the style of climbing that causes environmental damage. It's the climber and the act of climbing that causes all the environmental damage. |
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Ricky Harlinewrote: Several people, including you I believe, have stated they bolt to open climbing to more people. More people equals more enviromental impact, plain and simple. Using more traditional methods of development greatly diminishes bolting and narrows the access. If people want to “climb” but can’t or won’t accept traditional style climbs they should remain in the gym. |
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Tradibanwrote: But bolting predates using moveable protection so that is the traditional method. |
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J Ewrote: J E wrote: "I’m interested in what the Climbing community at large thinks". I'm kinda thinking you didn't really come here for other climbers opinions unless they match your own. |
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Jim Tittwrote: That doesn’t make it right, and your use of specious rhetoric defies logic. And besides, natural features, threads, slings, removable chockstones, pitons predate bolts. Not all of the old soft-iron pitons were left in situ, and those were often removed when no longer solid. |
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Brad Jwrote: I'm kinda thinking you're just here to argue anonymously. |
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Drilling holes to make an anchor near they ground where other methods could be used is lame, but like many bolting discussion the reason it's lame is not as simple as some people think. It's not inherently wrong to drill a hole in a rock or place a bolt. A big reason bolts are minimized in trad is to preserve difficulty (could be mental difficulty of risk). Sport climbing usually doesn't have this component. It should be protected to make it relatively safe to climb. And there's often a dozen bolts on a climb. So leave no trace is already kind of out the window. But having bolts near ground level where other users groups see them even more is an impact to them, and could jeopardize access. Not knowing all the particulars, I'd prefer the soloist figured out a way to protect it without adding holes (although the impact is probably very low might as well avoid it if possible). But if he couldn't protect it another way leaving a couple holes there is pretty low impact. And I'd prefer he left the holes open so they could be used again instead of filling them up so he/no one else could use them again. A 3/8" hole in a rock isn't inherently bad. It's the impact of those holes on different user groups you need to think about. I doubt the holes would cause any ecological impact and the rock is an inanimate object. |
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Tradibanwrote: No, ethics are about how your actions affect others. |
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George Bracksieckwrote: Nothing to do with my comment. |
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Marc801 Cwrote: I think ethics also extend to the alteration, management, and use of shared, public natural resources. |
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Here, another hypothetical to ponder: |
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Ricky Harlinewrote: "Shared resources" for me but not for you, I think I get it now. Its like all the anti abortion /pro lifers who support the death penalty, it makes sense to them. |
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M Mwrote: A blatantly obvious attempt but I'll still give you a T3. |
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M Mwrote: There have to be some ground rules to prevent abuse of our shared resources. Again, this ground anchor is completely redundant and unnecessary. Are you in favor of anyone getting to alter our shared natural resources for any reason even if it's of little or no benefit? |
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Brad Jwrote: I can be interested in what you have to say and still think you’re wrong and make an argument why.
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