Why not stop for a selfie? |
On our third day of climbing the Salathe Wall on El Capitan things were going quite well. Andy and I were in good form for climbing, had our hauling system down, and had the right amount of food, water, and gear to make an honest bid for the summit. Andy had volunteered me to lead the notorious Hollow Flake pitch, and I was happy to punch the hero card and act as rope gun. After climbing to a fixed piton, I lowered and swung into the flake. Over a thousand feet off the ground, I did my best to wedge myself into the crack and begin working my way up. The term I would use to describe my movement is "udging", very physical, awkward, and slow. To minimize rope drag and make it easier to clean, this entire pitch is done without leaving any protection behind. This means a fall would by very big. I carried a #6 cam with me and pushed it up the crack as I progressed, which provided something to pull on as I "udged" my way up the flake. I battled my way inch-by-inch, up the crack until the tipped out #6 Cam no longer fit in the widening crack, and I would have to run out the last 25 feet to the anchor. Frustrated by the mass of cams getting in my way, I decided to reorganize for the last push to the anchor. I pulled the gear sling off my shoulder, clipped it to a sling on my belay loop and let go. The gear went taught on the sling for a fraction of a second, and then it continued to fall. The sound of over 20 cams dropping into the hollow flake was the realization of one of my greatest fears. I yelled, "ROCK" followed with, "that was the rack." I had just thrown a couple thousand dollars worth of equipment, and my chances of accomplishing a major life goal into the belly of El Capitan. Not only that, I was still unprotected for an entire rope length and 25 feet from an anchor. I wanted to throw up, I wanted to cry, I wanted the gear back, but I needed to finish the pitch before I could do any of those things. I fought back the feeling of devastation, and tried to focus on climbing. Beaten, sweaty, and afraid, I "udged" up the chimney, pulled myself over the top and clipped into the anchor. At that moment, the weight of what had just happened, settled on me like an elephant sitting on my chest. I fixed the rope so that Andy could ascend the line to me, and began pulling up the haul bag. I went through these motions, but my mind was a million miles away. All I could think about was the sound of equipment disappearing into the crack, and how I could have let this happen.
Even as I write this, three weeks later, I am sick with grief. I spent hours fishing with ropes and hooks trying to recover the equipment, but the chasm seemed to extend to the center of the earth. Andy, waited on the ledge, certain that our trip was over, dreams smashed, and defeated by El Cap (again). As I lowered and pulled up hundreds of feet of rope, I knew the equipment was gone but a glimmer of hope began to form. Maybe, between the two of us, we could scrape together enough gear back at camp to finish the route. I gave up fishing, got back to the ledge, and told Andy my plan. We would leave our equipment, fix ropes down to heart ledges, and rappel fixed lines to the ground. Without any of the specialty offset cams, and micro stoppers, it would be hard to climb the route, but not impossible. We agreed to not give up just yet. We spent the afternoon descending, and after returning to the car, we immediately took stock of what we had. What we lacked in micro stoppers, and offset cams we would make up for with aid climbing shenanigans and stubbornness.
A quick stop at Sentinel Beach to jump in the Merced River provided some relief from the stress of the day, and allowed us to wash the aluminum oxide off our raw and swollen hands. A massive pizza in Curry Village helped to fill the hollow feeling in my gut, and then we prepared to get back on the Salathe early the next morning. By the time we were finished packing, it seemed like everyone knew what had happened, and thus began my rise to fame as "that guy who dropped the entire rack into the Hollow Flake". I was not ready to laugh about it, yet, so it was mostly embarrassing. Going back up there, with a minimal rack, helped me keep a shred of dignity, but the days ahead would prove a hard row to hoe.
View from above El Cap Spire |
Andy peering 3,000 ft down from Long Ledge |
Cheers
On the top of El Capitan, with Half Dome beckoning to be climbed in the distance |
never mentioning my grigri again
ReplyDeleteHaha, great story man. I was there at the time, and you were indeed "famous" ;) Way to go on not giving up! For that I would be happy to donate a cam that I found on el cap.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ryan. I'm glad you got to read about the whole story. I'm not shy about bootied gear, and could use the help rebuilding my rack. How do I contact you?
DeleteProps to you guys for making it back up there and topping off with what sounds like mega-minimal gear which was compensated by conversely-sized balls.
ReplyDeleteAnd if it helps at all ... that whole dropping the rack thing is a good story ;-)
Waw, cute and a crazy stubborn climber? Impressive man.
ReplyDeleteWhere I climb these days - Mt Arapiles in Oz, arguably the world trad Mecca - if you came back to the camp grounds with your rack story, half the dirtbags would gladly lend you their entire rack for the following day.
But I guess the size of the camps and the mountain make for a different vibe.
In the end it's probably better, as you got an amazing experience out of it, one that is obviously character building.
Hah! Great story, way to stick with it. I still hear talk about the incident to this day. I'm pretty sure we climbed WA Column with you shortly thereafter. The food bucket you provided was key beta and responsible for about 80% of our big wall success down there.
ReplyDeleteThis writing is awesome, brother! Keep up the stoke and consider giving my blog a peep. That is, when I launch it; I'm currently in the process of writing it as we speak. Good work, dude!
ReplyDeletegreat read
ReplyDelete