Crowders Mountain State Park, North Carolina |
Matthew Stephens crushing! |
Matthew Stephens still crushing! |
Once Matthew and Ricky were on the belay ledge, I set forth on what beckoned me. A great crack system under the small roof was calling but as soon as I grabbed what seemed like a great hold, it deteriorated in my hand. I grabbed another hold and it did the same thing. This particular cliff gets a lot of wind rushing through it's gullies and it is no surprise that this rock crumbles this way.
I had asked Matthew and Ricky to study the Topo with me so that I could ask their opinion once we got on the ledge. After deciding not to climb the crack system due to rock quality, Ricky suggested I climb what the book described as Cambodian Holiday. I was too excited to climb what was calling to me that I had failed to realize I wasn't even on route.
First time I met Ricky at Crowders |
Nut-up I did, until it was time to traverse left onto the face above the small roof I had just vetoed. I decided I had wasted enough time. I didn't have a good feeling about it this day so I vetoed the upper section of Cambodian Holiday (for now) and followed the crack system cliff right and climbed onto familiar territory. I was now on the second pitch of Two Pitch (5.4). I belayed Matthew and Ricky as they cleaned the gear on the wall below me. I asked them what they thought.
Matthew and Ricky agree that it is fairly easy climbing with great exposure but the rock quality made it intense. They didn't give me a hard time for not leading Cambodian Holiday but they still thought I was crazy for leading the escape variation. Looking back, what I climbed was mentally challenging more than physically. I don't know why but the feeling of the unknown when you're on a route for the first time is always what I go back for. I love the challenge of having to cope with fears and the honesty you have to have with yourself in order to climb safely.