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PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 12:57 am
by graham
Sorry for the interruption, but I thought some might enjoy this interview with Reinhold Messner talking about Cerro Torre & Cesare Maestri.
http://www.trentofestival.it/webtv/eng/ ... =330&bck=1
Now back to your regularly scheduled program :wink:

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 1:46 am
by The Chief
graham wrote:Sorry for the interruption, but I thought some might enjoy this interview with Reinhold Messner talking about Cerro Torre & Cesare Maestri.
http://www.trentofestival.it/webtv/eng/ ... =330&bck=1
Now back to your regularly scheduled program :wink:


Reinhold's point in this interview is not about the manner in which Maestri climbed the route on his second attempt in '71.

Rather, that if he actually summitted or not on their first ascent in '59. This was a long controversy for over 40+ years. In this case, Reinhold says he did.

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 3:52 am
by The Chief
YUP....

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 4:16 pm
by Guyzo
I find this topic quite fascinating, the heated discussion is exactly the point of Ethics, Spray, and Slander.

If you don’t wish to look at the dead bodies please don’t.

But I think the whole bolting issue goes deep into the heart of rock climbing and that’s why we go on and on and on and on………. because there is no right answer.

Some climbers still go for the “no bolt” at all style. This will work for tons of trad climbs; mountain climbs and is the ethic in some countries.

Great Britain is a good example, they have world class, destination climbs on 60-foot tall rocks. I don’t think they would have them if the “grit” was bolted up like “Holcomb Valley Pinnacles.”

In Italy, at the Val de Melo, they have crack climbs on solid granite, with bolts running next to em.

If you listen to California climbers, the world is supposed to end when that happens.

Jeff Lieberman just returned from a vacation in Mexico, the only gear he needed to take were “draws”.

If you look around the world the “first accent” ethics are different from place to place.

So now we have a fine climb, the voting is about 10 to 1 if it’s a good climb or not.

But what really amazes me is this; it’s not really about “the bolts” rather the method of placement…… :roll:

The guys who did the climb should be commended because they honestly told the truth about what they had done, they hid nothing and they have nothing to hide.

In my book, that is the best you can do.

Only time will tell if the MSMR will become a classic, all this other crap will fade away.

Sorry to scratch "the scab" somemore, but I can't help myself.... :wink:

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 4:25 pm
by The Chief
Stop talking about it Guy sell yur trad gear.

Yur world has turned into a Gym.

Not mine....

I choose to not let it. Don't force yur gym in my neck of the woods.

Please keep it down in the city of concrete walls.

The only good climb for me is the one that is far far away from all them gym looking folks.

Thing is, "The Man" doesn't like them Gyms on his land.

Watch and see.

Who ultimately wins and loses then.

ACCESS DENIED!

Then what...................

Oh how wonderful the Mechanized Concrete Man is.

2012.




PS: No wonder Norman ran to the hills. He saw it coming a long long time ago. No wondering what so ever what he would think today about the "Method".

Remember that client that got him fired?



MSMR is just a small symptom of the spreading disease.....

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 5:20 pm
by Guyzo
Yawn :roll: :roll: :roll:

How do you "edit" without a trace??? :wink: :wink:

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 5:26 pm
by TheOrglingLlama
Image

:mrgreen:

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 5:36 pm
by graham
The Chief wrote:Yur world has turned into a Gym. Not mine. I choose to not let it. Don't force yur gym in my neck of the woods......

Ah’ come on Chief, don’t you enjoy a day of clipping & climbing at ORG, Pine Creek, A-Hills…..and many other Eastside sporty areas?