and damn dustin, i was sure you were a covert operative when i learned your last name was Stephens, doth thou?

Also, this paragraph is not true. The biners were steel, and the quicklinks and chain were the same grade steel you see on thousands of anchors on routes throughout the Red and the rest of the world. That said, it is obvious that consent should have been obtained before they were placed, although I believe it was more an act of ignorance rather than willful disregard for the landowners' wishes.GStephens wrote:We noticed that what appear to be homemade permadraws have been installed on several route without our knowledge. I would like to know who took it upon the self to install these. They are unsafe as they appear to all have hardware store quick links connecting a few line of chain to the bolt hangers. These are not rated for climbing and have not been tested. In short, there is no quality control of these, nor do they appear to be stainless steel. At the end of the chain is an aluminum carabiner. This carabiner should be stainless steel so that it has the same materials properties as the other components - that is, steel. We all know about the cut rope at Muir last year due to carabiner wear. Think about the aluminum carabiners on these homemade permadraws and how the ones at crus sections will see hundreds of falls as compared to those on your own rack.
The RRGCC worked together with the GFNP to apply for an Access Fund Grant. This grant is contingent upon a plan for reopening for public access. At this time, as no plan is in place, the funds from this grant have not been distributed. The RRGCC is still hoping to work with both Grant and John in the future to reopen access to Roadside.KD wrote:Oh my god! " All you goddam hippies need to get your permadraws and hammocks the hell out of here Now ... "a guide service is available for paying customers." This is some funny shit for sure. AND a an Access Grant to top it off...