By Chris Van Leuven / www.cvl.me
Illustrations by Keith Svihovec
4 tips for going light, fast, strong . . . and free
What’s not to love about walls? Climbing sunup-to-sundown, sleeping on a giant face, great views. Oh, and the dreaded haulbag that pig digging into your shoulders on the approach; hauling and docking the massive load; digging water bottles from the pig’s bowels like Oscar the Grouch doing a handstand. And don’t get me started on trying to free-climb while hauling fuggedaboutit! I’d rather help Sisyphus with his boulder.
Whether you’re gunning for El Cap, the Painted Wall, or Zion’s
Angel’s Landing routes, big-wall free climbing is nails hard to date, an
all-free El Cap VI has never truly been onsighted, toe to summit.
History has shown that on free walls, the victors go extremely light, have
a dedicated hauling/jugging partner, and/or strategically stash
loads thus removing hauling from the equation. No wonder, then, that
following traditional (read: heavy) groundup rules, like those used
aid climbing, make these feats all the more difficult. Only in rare cases
like the FA of The Serpent (VI 5.11+ R/X), in the Black Canyon have
groundup, allteam free ascents succeeded.
The same rings true on cutting-edge FA/FFAs; these usually require
miles of fixed line and heavy Mini Traxion previewing. But even here,
savvy climbers ditch the pigs. They’ll also stack the deck with an open
mind about (and proper planning for) rapping in, an escape route back
to the top, sound nutrition, and proper rest.
Kings (and Queens) of Rap
1993: during her nearly successful ground-up
effort to free the Nose, Lynn Hill was thwarted
by a fixed pin blocking a crucial hold on the
Changing Corners (P27: 5.14a). Rapping in, Hill
removed the pesky piece, later making her
landmark integral free ascent. Now, in 2009,
it’s not uncommon to see teams rapping their
way to the Valley floor.
“When I’m prepping to free El Cap, I start
at the top and rap, toproping pitches, leaving
a few gear stashes, and finishing the day at my car in the Meadow,”
obviating the need for the pig, says Tommy Caldwell. Justen Sjong,
Caldwell’s partner on the 2008 FFA of Magic Mushroom (VI 5.14a),
echoes the sentiment: “Hauling up El Cap is more like vertical construction
or baggage handling than climbing!” he says. “The best thing
about stashing is it becomes cragging.”
Still, rapping big walls is serious business. Although steep, sweeping
walls (prime free-climbing territory) keep rope snags to a minimum,
they can and do happen. “When solo rapping El Cap without a rack,
I got the rope stuck once,” says Caldwell. “Luckily, there were only 30
feet of 5.7 to climb to free the snagged line.” The best defense against
snags and other bugaboos is to know your route well scope it closely
beforehand and ask around for Beta regarding anchor locations and
other logistics. Then while rapping, have the leader take the rack; and
on windy days, have him flake the rope as he goes instead of just
tossing it. Also, be sure both team members have proper ascending
equipment, and always knot your rope ends.
Look Before You Leap
Be sure you can climb out (read: don’t get in
over your head). I know teams who’ve rapped
a few pitches down to work crux ropelengths
only to be left fatigued, without proper gear,
and facing either an open bivy or an epic
struggle rimward. If possible, leave a fixed
line through cruxes (if you’re only going
a short way down), and bring extra rack-age
to ensure safe Frenchfreeing. I also take
a minihaulbag with some goodies (see “Mini-
Haulbag Essentials” sidebar).
Eat for Success
Packing canned food was standard issue when
climbers still wore painter’s pants. But today,
we have Tasty Bites® (vacuum-sealed, “cooks
in 90 seconds” Indian and Thai food), and
even tuna in vacuum-sealed pouches so leave
the cans. Also, a JetBoil® stove, complete
with hanging kit and coffee press, makes vertical
cooking a breeze.
Easy Does It
Freeing big walls hurts: it’s like running laps on Astroman (V 5.11c) for
multiple days . . . but harder. Add extra rest days into your schedule both
on and off the rock. Pack extra food and water in the haulbag after all,
you’re hauling down, not up to replenish your muscles, and rest-day
diversions (magazines, tuneage) to pass the time. Who (besides
Caldwell) can climb at max potential day after crushing day, anyway?
Climbing Contributing Editor Chris Van Leuven teamed up with Matt
Childers and Tim Kemple for a near-free ascent of El Cap’s Golden Gate
(VI 5.13a/b) in 2001. Having seen the light, Van Leuven says he now
considers aid climbing “passé.”
MiniHaulbag Essentials
Headlamps with fresh batteries
Windbreaker/light storm gear, warm hat
10 to 15 biners, nuts, a few extra lockers, selection of cams, extra slings, backup rappel device
Alpine aiders, daisy chains, ascenders
Three to four liters of water, energy gel, and a selection of energy bars
Climbing tape and extra chalk, small first-aid kit, ibuprofen