Highlights from the day's climbing:
- An anchor works best when the rope is run through it rather than just thrown in its entirety to the base of the wall.
- A 5.5 is apparently harder than a 5.6, according to Mark. I got spat twice off a lousy 5.5 but had no problem with a 5.6. We didn't even try Touch of Class, a 5.7 and my favorite route out there, because both of us were too tired at the end.
- Dom and I had to knock a large block off of the side access wall because it had become too unstable to be considered safe for other climbers. Dom also pulled a cheap nylon cord off of the wall that somebody had put up as aid in climbing it.
This event left several questions in our heads about what our responsibilities were:
- Should we have picked up on the two-minute GriGri lesson and told them not to climb until they had more experience?
- Once the fall happened, should we have intervened and recommended not climbing again until they had more training?
- Should we have gone and talked to the wife since dad didn't?
- We never did see the guy's anchor at the top of the route. That anchor requires long webbing to reach the edge of the cliff, but we didn't see him setting any up. Should we have gone to the top to check his anchor quality?
A few pics from the day here:
Climbing with Dominic Eidson |
- Mark