Friday, May 2, 2014

Reality check....






OK, every blog is just an opinion. And everyone has one. An opinion that is. Some are just more ill informed than others. Some are simply ignorant.



"Don’t make this into something it’s not.

Tito’s death has nothing to do with many of the larger issues being bandied about online. Tito’s death has nothing to do with whether or not children should be climbing, or if they understand risk to an acceptable level that would, in your judgment, permit them access to a crag. Tito’s death doesn’t have anything to do with the so called grade-chasing, gym-bred mentality judgementally assigned to many of today’s youth climbers. Tito’s death has nothing to do with your fears and insecurities, and nothing to do with your self-affirmations about your own smug sense of safety at the cliff."

Andrew Bisharat





http://www.rockandice.com/lates-news/dumb-climbing



http://www.dpmclimbing.com/articles/view/tito-traversa-report-reveals-cause-accident



http://www.rockandice.com/lates-news/12-year-old-tito-traversa-dies-in-climbing-fall



http://climbing.about.com/b//07/13/analysis-of-tito-traversa-climbing-accident-and-quickdraws.htm



Sad as Tito's death is let's not make it something it is not. That much Andrew has right.



Some more opinion?

The rest Andrew hasn't clue about and totally missed the point. In my opinion of course and with all due respect. Andrew has at least earned that respect. He's simply wrong from my perspective.



About once a year I get the chance to mentor some kid. (anyone under 40 is a kid to me these days btw) Pity the poorsouls!



Hell I am a only a shadow of my previous self, literally half the man I use to be when I was leading trad .12s from the ground up. And those ascents few and far between mind you!



Every time I start a new mentorship I am reminded of and generally am enticed for the obvious reasons into recounting all the injuries and deaths I have seen or been privy to in 45 years of climbing. And I have a damn short list by comparison to a few friend's intimate lists.



This is as close as I have come.



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//02/injury-recovery-and-death.html



Mind you I have takendozens of falls rock climbing. No clue how many... but dozens sometimes on just one climb!And only been hurt 3 times. Two early on and only the one recentlythat wasserious. My longest? A 70' footer. Which had me pumped up on Adrenalin for hours after wards. (another mistake btw)



So why the opinion?



Every single person I have mentored in any fashionhas beena relative new climber not just a new leader...on rock or on ice. And every one of them is in such a hurry to lead...it boggles my mind.



Why? Leading is harder in every way imaginable. Leading is more dangerous. Leading can get you killed if you make a mistake. And it doesn't even have to be a big mistake. Tie the knot wrong. Rig your hardware wrong.Misjudge your own abilities. All unhealthy things to do climbing or leading.



Climbing is a serious and likely fatal sport if you make a mistake. Just because a lot of people do it these days...doesn't make climbing SAFE!



Take some time. Enjoy the top rope and try to learn what you can while you are there.



You just don't know what you don't know. But the secrets come easily and quickly if you open your eyes and mnd.



I could so easily argue all of Andrews points...but why bother?



Face it. Climbing is some serious chit. You fook it up and you'll likely die. You fook it up and you are likely THE idiot because it will be YOUR own mess.



Climbing and gravity don't care how old you are or how hard you can climb. Make a mistake and you will pay the price. Simple as that.



That is what I have learnedclimbing.



The rest of the opinions?



"Don’t make this into something it’s not."



I feel the lossof each dead friend and I have felt the pain of each of my own injuries and mistakes and sometimes another's mistake!



"Don’t make this into something it’s not."



We all make choices and mistakes. If you fook it up? Own up to it......if youare able. And move on. I'm proof even an idiot can live through a lifetime of climbing and still (mostly) enjoy the effort :) It is having the patience tolive through, "the you don't know, what you don't know" part that can be difficult.



"Don’t make this into something it’s not."



and for the exprienced alpinists out there anothercheeriereport of life after death and other fool things to do in the mtns.......



http://blackdiamondequipment.com/en/tripreports-colinhaley-alaskacrevasse.html?q=colin%20haley

No comments:

Post a Comment