59-inch Drill*itch
59-inch Drill*itch
Here's my favorite unsung hero -- Squeezindlemmon, aka 59-inch Drillbitch.
It takes a lot of grueling work -- more than most of us realize or appreciate -- to develop a new route. This is not a posed novelty photo. It was taken as I watched Karla wrestle a heavy, bone-chattering Boshe hammer drill to put in ten Dynabolts on a new route. Some of you macho jocks try hanging and drilling for an hour with half your body weight in equipment and hardware suspended from your harness. Rock dust, sweat, fatigue. It ain't fun.
When you're up sending your favorite RRG climb, remember the folks whose efforts made it possible.
PS
Because this photo was taken with a telephoto lens, it looks like the bolt hole is going in 2 feet below another hanger. Actually this other hanger, with a draw on it, is about 10 feet back on another route, and the crack is about 30 feet back.
We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand. - Randy Pausch
None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm. - Henry David Thoreau
None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm. - Henry David Thoreau
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That crack has not been climbed yet and as far as we know nobody had any plans for it. I thought it might be 5.8 or 5.9 by the looks of it. The rock is good and the route is more than 100 feet long. Whoever does the the FA will have the honor of cleaning it (there is one short green section) and installing anchors. Also, it ends under an enormous arch. 8)
"Those iron spikes you use have shortened the life expectancy of the Totem Pole by 50,000 years."
--A Navaho elder
--A Navaho elder
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- Posts: 1452
- Joined: Mon Apr 12, 2004 7:02 pm