Monday, May 5, 2008

SOLID WHITE GRANITE (& some extras)


Who doesn't enjoy that view? Lou and I spent all day (17hrs) last Saturday looking at El Capitan while climbing our first 10 pitch trad climb together in "the valley".
It was a great day although looooong.


I learned a few things from it though,
  1. yellow is bigger than red
  2. 10 is a lot of pitches
  3. Australians call pants "trousers" and have a great way of pronouncing BEEE-LAY
  4. start Early, especially in Yosemite
  5. And, climb often if you want to be home for dinner.
The climb was the east buttress of middle cathedral.
It is a great climb, good fun, great ledge for lunching. We recommend climbing it a little later in the season, as the decent went from the normal three rappels to 9 due to all the snow still in the canyon (see the "ss" of Northeast Butress route). We got to the top of the climb at 6pm, and found the first rappel without too much effort. The second rap was not as obvious to us. We found it just as sunset turned into night, Lou got to the bottom in darkness. The second rappel was more complicated than we anticipated, but with a little resourcefulness and patience we got to the first of the snowpack. By this time of day the snow had re-hardened into an un-walkable ice-sheet. From there we had 7 more rappel stations to find in the dark. There we were zig zagging across from one side of the canyon to the other looking for the top of the next rappel. When we finally got off the rope our friends were waiting at the edge of the snow pack next to a warm crackling fire. We enjoyed the fire, finished our snacks from the day and hiked down the rest of the way to the road. We got back to the jetta at 1am. It was an experience, slow and steady we went. For a short 5 minutes I thought we'd be sleeping on the top of the cathedral, but never scarred or uncomfortable with what we were doing. The route just took much longer than either one of us had anticipated.I guess when you don't have a dog you take pictures of your charismatic car instead. Yosemite falls at full flow in background

The next day we awoke hungry and sore. After a delicious brunch we set out to do some mellow hikes. There is a ton of water flowing into the valley right now, every where we looked there was a new fall we hadn't seen on previous trips.
Bridal veil falls, too bad you can't hear things from pictures.
I know this isn't an original shot, I know it is far from being a flattering picture at that(of the scenery, Lou is damn sexy), but maybe it will entice someone to come play with us in Yosemite. The weather was perfect, not too hot not too cold.
Then we went to see some big, big trees. This one was part of the old road used to get to Yosemite Valley. Horse draw carriages went through it.
This tree fell in 1983. It had a burn scar that weakened one side so after a big winter storm it toppled. You can crawl through about 2/3 of it. I am not even that far down the tree and Lou look like a bug in comparison to its size! We love trees!
We spent the first weekend of May back at Pinnacles. I practiced placing some gear and Lou rocked an 11a. The high light, as it often seems at pinnacles, was the wildlife. This snake was a great climber and pretty good looking too. Snakes are cool. We also saw some red headed wood peckers and a few bees (there are 400 kinds of bees at Pinnacles national monument!)

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