GOlsen wrote:
burp wrote:
Great stuff!
... Mark Smith (Smitty) and Dave Dixon as well as my brother, John Hansen ...
... Mark was a phenomenal climber and I think I knew Dave. ...
I was privileged to climb with Smitty and Dave just as I began climbing (’86). They were friends of my brother and so we climbed with them quite a bit. They were quite the inseparable pair.
Smitty was amazingly solid on everything! We used to call him the iceman, since you couldn’t tell how serious things were just by looking at him. Same expression on his face regardless of the situation! Went along with his quiet personality. He knew about everything in LCC too.
Smitty climbed on an old ratty 11 mm rope. Furrier than a cat and filthy, I honestly don’t know how old it was! It was ancient! I used to tease him about his rope and he would always calmly reply that the core was still good. Sometimes he would joke about how Brian Smoot would use his ropes for towing cars, roof work (tar on the rope), and pulling out tree stumps, then still climb on it. This seemed to imply that his rope was just fine. Now I admit this is probably him just joking around, but Brian is there any truth to this?
Speaking of Brian Smoot … Smitty and Dave also joked about leaving slings at belays. They always claimed that if they did, Brian Smoot would scab them and use them for draws. The rumor was that Brian Smoot would scab some pretty crispy (weathered, sun drenched) belay slings throughout the canyon and use them as draws!
In the guidebook, Smitty is famous for running it out after pulling the crux on the first ascent of Genuine Risk. He didn’t stop to drill a bolt because he was running late and had to get to work. He told us that it was due to the easy climbing (5.7). It may be 5.7, but it sure is run out!
On an early ascent of the SunDevil Chimney in the fisher towers, Smitty used a tent pole for aid tied off like a longggg tube chock. He was always solid, so I figure he probably didn't even think twice. Though he did mention that it was pretty scary.
Smitty messed his ankle up real bad while leading Dark Horse with Brian Smoot. He was heading to the first bolt after pulling the roof, fell, flew over the roof, and hit the slab below. What was believed to be a sprain was actually torn ligaments. He walked out on his own (Brian?) and had to have surgery to repair everything. Must have been a good surgeon, because the ankle didn't slow Smitty down.
Dave was fun to climb with. Always talking. He was in his mid-twenties, but had a wife and a few kids and the responsibilities that go with that. As a result, he sometimes wouldn’t be able to climb for a couple of months, then show up and it would be like he had never been away from climbing. We would then sick him on the scary hard routes that we wanted to do but couldn't lead (Smitty usually declined since he had already led most of them). He was very strong and incredible on LCC friction.
Dave was an anomaly. He would scramble up or solo (ex. Lunge or Plunge – if I remember right?) the most insecure things, then you would give him a rack and tie a rope to him ... then he would get real shaky. He used to say that he had to really get serious about climbing and spend the time or give it up all together because he couldn’t handle it anymore, but then you’d see him in a couple of months cranking up something very difficult and scary.
In October ’86 Smitty, Dave, and Brian Smoot went down to Zions to try and bag an early ascent (2nd ascent?) of Lovelace Crack (Fang Wall). My brother and I helped haul their stuff up to the starting ledge while they fixed the first few pitches. They cast off the next day and climbed up to the big bombay chimney, they decided to bail there for various reasons. I’m telling this to illustrate the funny nature of Dave. He can be real solid and then jelly fish in a heartbeat. At a belay a little below the bombay chimney, Dave jelly fished. The belay was a pod of sorts that went deeply into the wall. Dave crawled into the pod as far in as possible and wouldn’t budge until it was time to bail. LOL.
Anyway … I learned a lot from this pair. We would go to climb something and they would be like …”this would be a good lead for Mike”. I’d only been climbing for a short while, and so I wouldn’t question them. Needless to say, I had some of my most memorable and desperate leads during that period of my life. They knew what was what and when it got too dangerous. They would always say, “ah, you’d be alright if you fell.” LOL. It was a great apprenticeship! They knew everything and I gained a tremendous amount of experience climbing with Smitty, Dave, and my brother.