Worst destination climbing area to be a local?
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Ricky Harline wrote: +10000 There are thousands of routes within a 2 hour drive of Fresno. I have been climbing here for more than 10 years and stil have not exhausted the potential. Everything from stellar bolted sport climbing to massive trad multipitch. I rarely see another soul on the rocks. Yosemite sucks up all the traffic, leaving everything else wide open and empty. |
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Khoi wrote: Yeah but the mountain biking, skiing, trail running, mountaineering, alpine climbing…see where I’m going? |
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Ben B wrote: Sure, but if you want to climb on dry and moss-free rock every week for most of the year you're still fucked |
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Khoi wrote: While most of my trips to the Bugs have been as a part of longer driving road trips, I have also flown into Calgary and rented a car for more 'targeted' trips to the region. I'm sure that others from the east, and other more distant parts of the Continent, as well as overseas visitors, have done the same. |
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Ry C wrote: it's alright if you're psyched on bouldering like i am lol |
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Ellen S wrote: tough to be "local" without having alternative options for when the col or weather aren't cooperating |
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Kings Bluff, Clarksville TN |
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Khoi wrote: I was ready to disagree with you profusely until you said this. If you climb harder than 5.10 on gear, Squamish is one of the better places to be for a long period of time in terms of access to projects big and small. It’s a rainforest with a long cold season. Weather is what it is. Same with the Adirondacks in NY. The climbing however, at the higher end, is impeccable. |
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Ryan Enright wrote: I think people keep missing the point of the thread - places that are great destinations to visit, but would not be great to live full time. Saying "weather is what it is" is kind of silly - the weather is precisely the biggest issue with living there. Weather is inherently one of the most important factors in climbing. Have you spent a winter in the PNW? All that impeccable climbing doesn't mean much when it's been raining every day for a month. |
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Ricky Harline wrote: I was going to say something like this. |
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Shaun Johnson wrote: I moved from Washington to California (a state with 40 million people!) and am continually surprised by how much quieter (most of) the outdoor spaces are in California. This echoes what folks are saying about the Western Sierra. A lot of empty woods (full of rocks) to get lost in. |
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Ryan Enright wrote: Regardless of the grades, you were going to disagree with me about Squamish being more rainy than dry, and about how the vegetation has been winning over the rock for longer than climbing has been happening there? What does it matter that the climbing at the high end is awesome when it's too wet to climb for the vast majority of the year? The cold season is not that long, but even then that isn't really relevant in my opinion. Colder temps makes for better friction. The issue is that Squamish is an overly vegetated rainforest. The reality of that means that its climbing season, in terms of having dry rock, is annoyingly short. Being a local here sucks as a climber. |
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Ryan Enright wrote: as a shit-tier trad climber, I thought squamish was incredible at 5.10 and under. I'm thinking mostly about the smoke bluffs, murrin park, and shannon falls. nice long crack features at every size that eat up gear at low angles... we don't get much of that here in Washington. |
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Alan Zhan wrote: Cat Crack (not long, kinda short) Klahanie Crack Laughing Crack What else? |
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octopus garden, first class, flying circus, easter island, arrowroot, slot machine, mushroom, etc idk what the locals think of those climbs but I thought all of em were great |
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JCM wrote: I lived in grass valley California for a year and enjoyed amazing climbing with almost no crowds. Like others have said, as long as you are not going to Yosemite it is usually not too busy out there. |
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Cherokee Nunes wrote: Destination huh? |
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Acadia NP/MDI, unless you got here before affordable housing disappeared. |
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Not Not MP Admin wrote: When Kings Bluff is local, ALL climbing crags are a destination. That good enough for you, Boss? |
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Cherokee Nunes wrote: That wasn’t my question, Slugger… |