rydra_wong: A woman boulderer lunges up towards the camera for a hold. (climbing -- puccio!!!)
rydra_wong ([personal profile] rydra_wong) wrote in [community profile] disobey_gravity2011-10-21 10:33 am
Entry tags:

Friday glee is keeping an eye on Yosemite

The Friday post of glee is where you get to tell us about your climbing-related happiness this week.

It can be a new achievement or adventure, or just that you climbed and had fun; it can be that your favourite climbing wall is expanding or that you bought new rock shoes or that you found a cool ice-climbing vid on YouTube. No glee is too small -- or too big. Members are encouraged to cheer each other on and share the squee.

N.B. Please feel free to post your glee on any day of the week; the Friday glee is just to get the ball rolling.

To enhance this week's glee: Lynn Hill climbing in Yosemite, talking about focus and body position when setting up for moves.

And apparently Hazel Findlay has just sent Golden Gate (5.13b) on El Cap.
fadeaccompli: (departure)

[personal profile] fadeaccompli 2011-10-21 03:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Overhangs! That's the word I was looking for. I'm not really sure at what point a wall transitions from "a kinda tilty vertical" to "a not-too-bad overhang", but the ones I'm falling off have definitely been overhangs.

Is there a particular word for the outright horizontal bits? The gym has a few small sections of those, just below overhangs or verticals. If it follows the pattern, I suppose "horizontals" would make sense.
fadeaccompli: (Default)

[personal profile] fadeaccompli 2011-10-21 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahah! In that case, I've been doing overhangs that are something like 5-15 degrees off vertical, but now I'm trying to tackle the walls that are more like 30-50 degrees away. It's sort of impressive how fast the route goes from "do I have the skills for this" to "do I have the physical capability for this" (no!) as the angle of tilt gets worse.