Never boring...
One to go...
Gym climbing at a chipped choss pile. Erik Massih estimated this variant to have "maybe three natural grips". Is a variable ethic somehow justifiable depending on the quality of the rock?
1/200, F5.0, 105 mm, ISO100 © 2010 Shawn Boye
Old Man
"About that time when I wrote Heart of Gold, and I was touring, I had also -- just, you know, being a rich hippie for the first time -- I had purchased a ranch, and I still live there today. And there was a couple living on it that were the caretakers, an old gentleman named Louis Avala and his wife Clara. And there was this old blue Jeep there, and Louis took me for a ride in this blue Jeep. He gets me up there on the top side of the place, and there's this lake up there that fed all the pastures, and he says, "Well, tell me, how does a young man like yourself have enough money to buy a place like this?" And I said, "Well, just lucky, Louie, just real lucky." And he said, "Well, that's the darndest thing I ever heard." And I wrote this song for him."
—Neil Young
1/640, F4.0, 82 mm, ISO125 © 2010 Shawn Boye
He sells ropes...
We've all heard of the mechanic who drives the beat up car and we hold a certain skepticism for the climber with shinny gear. So, where is the middle ground? Erik Massih on the variable traits of gravity: "Why would I waste a 70 or 80 meter rope at a crag like this?"
1/200, F5.0, 105 mm, ISO100 © 2010 Shawn Boye
Take!
Getting warmer...
Uringe
Split Personality
Anomalocaris
The spring belay...
Slabs
Another hand model...
I had no idea...
That Swedish climbing was so serious. Well, I knew all along and that's why I did what I've done. I doubt you'll understand. But I'll try, if you say a route is dangerous and it proves not to be, all you have demonstrated is that your judgement is flawed. That is dangerous. If it's ok to bolt because you're a big fish in a little pond, that's segregation. Climbing gives us access to a whole dimension that most never experience. We should not take this lightly and demean it with self-glorification. I wish you all the best. Good luck.
-2010-04-10, 12:46 am, after watching Crackoholic
Hand model
Bistaberget
1/800, F4.5, 24 mm, ISO125 © 2010 Shawn Boye
Just moments before...
Den ofullbordade
1/250, F5.6, 105 mm, ISO100 © 2010 Shawn Boye
When I was young...
Run out?
Contrary to the guide book, the obvious line to Skriet från vildmarken, Bistaberget, is straight up the crack, or at least that's how I climbed it, placing a couple of cams after diverging from the described line.
After several attempts at the traverse and not intent on a big pendulum, Oscar, who didn't have any gear with him, decided to run it out straight up the crack, if you call 3m between bolts running it out. Just as Oscar finally managed to clip a bolt on an adjacent route, Kapten Krok, one of his feet popped, adding a bit of drama and making for a memorable climb.
1/125, F9.0, 24 mm, ISO100 © 2010 Shawn Boye