Shaft wrote:
Gary Olsen posted this in the Wasatch History thread: (Gary, I know the night shift sucks, but I was hoping you might continue with the shift so we could get more great stories......)
GOlsen wrote:
I will never forget the first time that I climbed with Les Ellison, talk about an eye opener. Little did he know the impact that he had on my climbing and many other people like Bret Ruckman and Steve Carruthers introduction to rock climbing. The day before I climbed with Les, Bret and I were up at the Crescent Crack Buttress in about 1980. I think we may have done something like the Coffin that day, I don’t remember exactly, but we were headed down and we looked up at a guy climbing out in no man’s land. This guy had his trademark black framed Vuarnet sunglasses on and he was on the edge of the buttress above the Great Chockstone. He was grunting and trying desperately to mantle a sloping hold. The last pro was a ways down and it looked way sketchy. Next thing you know, he’s off. Falling on a mantle when you are going for it is terrifying and Les swung upside down on the rope, nearly loosing those Vuarnet’s. I had never seen anything like that.
Boissal, tell us a missing link story........
Well, if you read that post replacing Vuarnet with headlamp and sketchy pro with bolt, then you got a pretty good idea of what happened to me last week...
I was pretty rattled when I got to the slab section since the route is very heads up and R at first. I thought things would improve but it was without counting on the fact that the next bolt is about 20' up and the route exfoliates as much as the upper pitches in Bells Canyon.
I poked around a bit with my nut tool trying to find spots that sounded solid, then proceeded to pull every other hold off. Things started to look pretty grim so I went for it before the rest of the holds fell off on their own.
I got myself to the sloper that Gary mentions (not bad actually), spent a while skating on the face breaking more choss, got pumped, threw a heel on the sloper to mantle, and as I finally thought I was home broke the hold my other foot was on. My heel stayed on the sloper just long enough to turn me around so instead of falling feet first I went for a gracious dive.
Some say I screamed and since the reports came from as far as Lizard Head wall I will have to believe them
I head butted the wall when the rope caught and my headlamp took the beating. I ended up a bit below the piton (about 30' lower) with a good view of Sam who looked as shaken as I was.
I imagine Ellison fell on the piton, which is maybe 12' below the bolt. That's a loooooooooooooooong ways to go no matter what catches you. The worst part is that he probably shook it off and went back for it, whereas I shook it off, went back for it, broke another hold, and promptly decided that it was too hot to be on a slab anyway and bailed.
Lessons learned:
1. Les Ellison's routes are all hard, heady, and sandbagged. No exceptions. I was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt after Arm and Hammer, but not any more.
2. When grk tells you a route is terrifying, it is probably deserved.
3. The gear list for Missing Link should be expanded to include wire brushes and your choice of steel balls or diapers.
As a side note, we tried to finish on Lazarus but hadn't looked at the topo. I got on the 5.10 variation and thought is was freakin' hard and scary for 5.8, especially around the detached granite "handle". At this point I was so psyched out that I traversed left, over the chosstone route, and probably pioneered a new way up the buttress by finishing on a 60' runout slab (Sam loved it). Belay at a dead tree that threatens to pull if you tug on it, then scramble up the loose and wandering 4th class gully to the anchor of the Final Link.
1.5 pitches, 200', 5.4+ X. FA Boissal & Samg, 09/2008. Will be posted on mp.com soon.
And don't try to claim that some old timer did it back in the day. I guarantee you have to be really desperate to get on it!