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Race
Against Time
A round of Lakeland's Classic Rock routes in less than 24 hours
- just!
by Dave Willis
Start
- The Golden Rule pub, Ambleside, 1993
How many wildly ambitious plans have started with an over-indulgent
hour in the pub: I think nearly all mine have. And this was to be
no exception.
An innocent
question to Glen Sutcliffe had prompted an explana-tion of how he
came to be soloing Dovedale Grooves at three in the morning with
his climbing partner Keef Murphy. Apparently they had been attempting
to solo all the Lakeland routes in Hard Rock in under 24 hours,
a feat which had they succeeded would have impressed me as much
as Ron Fawcett's I 00 Extremes in a day.
It took only
a small step and two pints of XB to arrive at plan to convert their
epic idea into all the Lakeland routes in Classic Rock in 24 hours.
Of course we expected a lot of people to shake their heads and mutter
variously, "So what," or "What's the point in that?"
Well of course they're right in their way. But when we realised
it would involve 4500 feet of climbing on 15 of the finest classic
climbs in the Lakes, and more than 25 miles of hill walking, it
became clear it would be difficult to get that much packed into
one day.
Tim Gould proved
the prime motivator in this project, having already notched up a
tally of seven failed attempts, all defeated by the weather. On
our first attempt together in the summer of 1993, we started up
Troutdale Pinnacle, painfully unprepared for the task ahead. With
no real knowledge of many of the route descriptions, descents or
even the weather forecast, we'd merely strolled out of the pub and
into cosy bivvy, arisen early and started.
The Pinnacle
came and went, it was so dark on Little Chamonix I may well have
had my eyes shut, and Gillercombe Buttress was but a shadow when
the early morning gloom turned to rain and surprise, surprise, it
started to piss down. Still, we'd learned a few basic rules for
this sort of rhino mostly relating to the importance of forward
planningl
Fast forward
to July '94 and the team - myself, Tim and Mike Van Gullick - were
gathered once more in the Golden Rule, but with much improved odds.
Tim and Mike had pre-soloed all 15 routes and knew the approaches,
descents and time schedule intimately. I'd done absolutely nothing
in the intervening year, so quite why I'd agreed to participate
was beyond me.
2.30am: Troutdale Pinnacle, Black Crag, Borrowdale
The combined alarms of Tim and Mike's Casios failed to wake
me, for the very simple reason that I wasn't asleep. I'd slept very
little in fact, due to the humidity of the night air and the ferocity
of the midges. But I knew the adrenaline rush of anticipation would
get me off the ground.
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Tim
Gould on Troutdale Pinnacle (S)
© Dave Willis |
The ritual
of lacing up rock shoes, cleaning the soles and, bizarrely,
adjusting head torches calmed my nerves and soon both Tim
and Mike were receding pools of light, muttering and grunting
their way up the first crack pitches of that famous pinnacle.
Success
on an exploit such as this needs a confident mental approach:
soloing Severe in the dark must hold no fears for you. The
climbing itself should be well within your standard, the hard
thing is
to maintain your concentration and keep going for 24 hours.
Of course
on the final pitch I paused and thought about the crux move
off the Pinnacle where you have to reach around to the left
to find that jug. It was where it always is, but it's a move
that gets me every time. With the first route ticked we were
off to a flying start...
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I did have a
problem though. My head torch battery was a dud and turning hack
wasn't an option. I stumbled down the descent from Black Crag with
a failing beam and realised I'd have to climb Little Chamonix without
a light. There was very little moonlight, but having soloed little
Chamonix a number of times in all kinds of weather, I wasn't too
worried. By the time we arrived at Gillercombe Buttress it would
be light.
5.00am: Gillercombe Buttress, Borrowdale
Gillercombe Buttress isn't a route that interests me much, in
fact I am not sure why it was included in the first place, but I
suppose we all have different ideas about what constitutes a classic
route. How-ever, all of us agreed on one thing: it looked like a
hell of a walk over to Pillar.
The sun was
rising over the distant Ullswater Fells. Although there was no warmth
yet, the brilliant colours of a summer sunrise in a clear morning
sky cheered me up. Sunrise is always the best time of day, especially
from a high a high vantage like Grey Knots, and I constantly curse
my inability to get out of bed early enough to appreciate it more
often.
Tim and Mike
are both over six feet tall and they seemed to be making an extra
effort to stretch their legs that morning; I could barely keep up
the pace. Pillar might arrive sooner than anticipated, but at that
rate I'd be too knackered to climb. Maybe I wasn't warmed up enough
yet.
7.30am: Rib and Slab, New West Climb, Pillar Rock, Ennerdale
Rib and Slab was a delight, definitely. The sun had not yet touched
its rock, so it was cold to the touch but you knew when you moved,
every hold would present itself to you, exactly right, there would
be no awkwardness, just a flowing line.
New West shares
a similar line at the start but then branches left. The corner was
dark, dank and greasy, the line felt contrived and once again I
found myself questioning its status as a classic - I didn't like
it. Tim and Mike were climbing like machines, or so it seemed, but
I felt awk-ward and jumpy. I was glad when it was done.
The sun was
now higher in the sky and would warm us on the walk back to Black
Sail Pass. Returning to Great Gable from Pillar Rock, my early doubts
about my fitness were cast away. I felt good and very much awake.
I guess I'm just not a morn-ing person. I had to admit to feeling
a bit smug noticing Tim falling behind a bit - pushed a bit too
hard first thing I thought - and congratulated myself on my sense
of pacing.
Stupid really,
we'd all rely on each other through the day, all of us experiencing
high and low points, and later none of us would be too proud to
admit to having been towed along by the others at some stage. The
trick was to avoid all getting blown out at the same time.
Wasdale Head
lay spread out at Beck Head. Long shadows receding over the green
fells of Yewbarrow and The Screes, like a tide ebbing as the sun
crept over Style Head. Wastwater was still a dark jewel in the last
of the valley mist. A chill breeze ruffled the grass at Beck Head,
hut otherwise nothing stirred. It was good to be in the mountains
on such a perfect morning.
9.45am Napes Needle, Needle Ridge and Tophet Wall, Great Gable,
Wasdale
Napes Needle and Needle Ridge are perhaps just inconveniences
on the way to the real prize on Great Gable's Napes crags. Even
so, reversing the top moves from the Needle's ultra polished top
block was never going to be a moment I'd look back on with fondness.
In the event it proved a mild act of concentration and no real problem.
It's funny how
memories can sometimes blow things out of proportion though. I first
climbed the Needle in 1982, and I remember running up to the Napes
after work, arriving out of breath to meet my mate at the bottom.
I'd been a climber for barely a year, a leader for less than a few
months. I nearly died reversing that top block.
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By now
we were at the base of one of my favourite routes; Tophet
Wall. The picture in Classic Rock says it all. A huge impending
wall with the magnificent bold 'sweep of Incantation on the
left. Tophet Wall is a brilliant route threading a neat line
through the weakness to the right. Though never really diffi-cult
it feels way out there, especially the impressive drop tinder
your feet on the exposed hand traverse, like something on
a big wall climb.
A party
of climbing club members were grouped around the base, teasing
their feet into rock hoots and untangling ropes and runners
from rucksacks. As first Tim, then Mike, stepped from the
scree to the committing and worryingly hollow-sounding flakes
of the first pitch, the group talked excitedly about the route,
the line and the rock. As they became an ever
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Tim
Gould & Mike Van Gulik soloing Tophet Wall (HS)
© Dave Willis |
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receding
babble of talk and gossip, I must admit to a slight feeling of superiority,
or aloofness perhaps from the restric-tions of ropes and runners.
There would be no gear placements or belays to interrupt the flow
of my climbing. I felt very free.
Though this
route felt the most exposed of all, its features and problems concentrated
the mind into a small world of holds and moves. The ground did not
exist and the space all around was forgotten; just the line remained,
changing from bold juggy layaways, to thin finger and toe edges,
to big jams and flake edges. On to that wonderful hand traverse
with its wide hand-friendly crack.
Who can resist
swinging out as if from the roof of the world, above the tiny dots
of people below our toes, almost shouting "look up at me, look
how easy this is"? Of course to actually have yelled like that
would have been so un-cool wouldn't it?
Back at the
start we wished the climbers, still gearing up, a good climb, picked
up our sacks and headed towards Scafell. Slogging up the Corridor
Route towards Scafell Buttress it was Mike's turn to suffer. Eight
routes down, seven to go.
1.10pm Moss Ghyll Grooves, Jones' Route, Scafell, Wasdale
The mood had changed.
Mist had begun
to form, the sky had darkened. The nerves knotted in the pit of
my stomach and tightened, as I contemplated The Grooves and Jones'
Route, solo on traditionally greasy rock.
The only relevant
detail of Moss Ghyll Grooves was the crux move. On pitch two, 70
feet off the deck, you had to slide a pointed toe out to find a
wee hold, polished, rounded and only just big enough, to land on
the 'Pedestal' out on the left arete.
There are no
real hand holds until you make that delicate rock-over, after which
of course the holds are jugs. When you do it you may well give a
shrug of nonchalance, a - 'what was the fuss about' - kind of shrug.
Roped up you wouldn't even think about it. Solo, you can't escape
the horror of a slip; it's a long way down from there. And it scared
me.
Afterwards the
weather brightened again, almost in sympathy. Jones' Route was not
a problem.
5.30pm Bowfell Buttress, Langdale
On the walk over from Scafell the conversation became more positive
with every step. The main difficulties were behind us, there was
no way it was going to rain now and with only three crags and five
routes left it looked like time was on our side. Tiredness was definitely
creeping in, but with seven hours to go we could afford to relax
a bit and ease the pace. Or so we imagined.
Bowfell Buttress
proved difficult to locate from the top, and I must admit to being
privately scepti-cal of the idea of a 'down solo', however much
sense it made from a logistic point of view. Two climbers finishing
what must have been a pleasant sunny afternoon's ascent were startled
to find a trio of soloists moving carefully down towards them from
the finishing groove. In the event down soloing was the ideal solution,
although the crux moves were in different places for down climbing.
Weird.
Tim's brilliant
idea of getting the support teams to drive round to the ODG with
hot food and a brew was a triumph. I have never been so glad to
see a plate of mixed pasta salad. We felt turbo powered with renewed
energy so decided to throw in an ascent of Middlefell Buttress for
good measure, to get us up onto the traverse path to Gimmer Crag.
9.00pm Ash Tree Slabs, C Route, Bracket and Slab, Gimmer Crag,
Langdale
Ash Tree Slabs, followed by C Route, then an abseil down to
the start ledge for Bracket and Slab, and while two of us rapped
off, Tim would fetch the ab' anchor. Another brilliant plan.
The first two
were quickly dispatched. I'd soloed C Route before, but it felt
more exposed than I remembered. I guess I was getting really tired
now. Failing light hurried us onto Bracket and Slab, peering this
way and that for the flake at the start. Two local climbers, waved
and pointed the way - thanks.
The gathering
night actually made life easier in a way. The exposure disappeared
along with the views, shrinking my world to the rock in front of
my face, concentrating the mind. I felt better.
When the route was finished I sat for a moment and exhaled. I felt
that somehow I'd survived something! Up to this point, my day had
been a journey of nervous tension. Some routes I had climbed well,
some indifferently and some I would admit to being downright scared
on.
Only one or
two routes had been enjoyable in the true sense of the word, free
from nerves and relaxed. Technically of course, they were all well
within my limit. But I could never really rid myself of the nagging
sense of being out there without a safety net, route after route.
Now, at last, finally, I relaxed.
There was one
more route to do; Murray's on Dow Crag. There was no way we were
going solo on that at two in the morning. not after 23 hours on
the go. How Tim and Mike felt about this I can not say, but I hazard
a guess that Tim felt a similar relief, though he never looked anything
but completely confident all day, while Mike, who is as competitive
as they come, was secretly nursing schemes of soloing Murray's anyway,
just to make it a clean sweep.
1.25am Murray's Route, Dow Crag, Coniston
I make no bones about this - I crawled up the scree slope to
the blue box. After a treacherous fumbling and time consuming descent
in the dark down the scree from Gimmer, I was knackered. I could
barely walk. Tim was a short way ahead, stumbling a little. Mike
had run up the scree like a puppy. The man we'd towed and teased
up the Corridor Route to Scafell had got his second wind. How did
he do it?
Mike had made
up his mind he was going to solo Murray's. I was not and I made
that clear. Tim agreed, but asked to lead. No problem. Climbing
in a more relaxed frame of mind, my head torch swept over the crux
slab moves, picking out the holds easily.
I made way for
Mike to solo through hesitantly, and then I was across. Joining
Tim on the belay, I was surprised to find Mike tying into the rope.
A few grunts and surprised gasps had given a clue as to how he had
fared, but one look at his face told the story. "I nearly shit
myself" he said blankly. Soloing Murray's in the dark after
23 hours climbing was not going to be on after all.
So in a rope
of three we continued around the traverse and up the final groove.
At every move I was very aware that this route, Murray's Route on
Dow, had finally become an exhausting reality, the culmination of
two years planning and frustration.
"20...
19... 18... 17... 16…" I was determined to finish in relaxed
style, despite the countdown from above and stepped lightly, unhurriedly,
onto the top belay. "12... II... 10... stop," the stop-watch
read 23 hours, 59 minutes and 50 seconds exactly.
That was it.
Finished.
It was 2.29
am.
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Left
to right – Mike Van Gulik , Dave Willis & Tim Gould
celebrate at the Walna Scar car park at 3am
after completing the round in 24 hours
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©
Dave Willis
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First published
in Climber, November 1995
© Dave Willis 1995
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NB: The
above round was completed with the assistance of a motor vehicle
for at least one section. However, on 9th July 2005, Nick
Wharton and Brian Davison completed the entire round without
use of a vehicle of any sort in 19 hours 38 minutes - a fantastic
achievement!
Left:
Nick Wharton and Brian Davison starting to solo Rib and Slab
at Pillar Rock during their round. Above them Chris King is
starting out on the first ascent of Rib and Rib Climb (E1).
(Stephen
Reid)
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