Thursday, November 20, 2014

The weather couldn't be better

Back in the bosque 

For the past couple of weeks the weather has been fantastic and I've been hiking and climbing almost everyday. Going back three weeks ago, on Sunday I went to the annual boulder festival in Sierra de los Padres, a really cool event that has been taking place for 15 years. Typically, what the organizers do is find an untapped area of boulders in Sierra de los Padres and prepare about 35 new problems for the festival. I've participated in maybe ten of these festivals and my aim has always been to try and do as many of the problems as I possible can. Since I've managed to get in pretty good climbing shape, I was hoping to tear it up at the festival, but life is not without irony. The day of the festival was cold and from the start I was fighting to send the short, stout boulder problems before I got a chance to really warm up. After doing three problems, I bent down to cuff up my pants and suddenly tweaked the muscles in my lower back (probably something to do with the psoas, I imagine). My back stiffened up quickly and I decided I'd better go home right away, before the pain in my lower back made it difficult to hike out. In spite of this problem, in just a couple of days my back was much better and by Wednesday I was outside for a solitary bouldering session.

The following Saturday I went back to the routes in the bosque of La Barrosa with local kid, Fede, and Gaby (who's not climbing at the moment). Fede wanted to have a go at a 5.11 he had tried on the day that I had managed to redpoint it, for the first time in years. .

Fede went back to send this 5.11 in the bosque 

Meanwhile, I thought it´s about time that I should try one of my old 5.11+ routes (Argentine/French 7a). It's been years (eight? or more?) since I've even tried anything so hard, so I was kind of nervous.

I'm thinking it looks kind of steep and hard, but at least it's short and I've done it before

The crux of the route is climbing past that small roof to grab the point up at the top

In the next photo I'm just below the small roof in the photo above. There are two draws on the bolt protecitng the crux because the gate of the draw underneath levers against the rock.

The chalk bag reveals the true angle of the climb


A big move to reach a good hold and clip the last bolt before the anchors
Get the clip

Now grab that hold and get the hell out of there!

After some work, I manage to climb the route with one rest. I was a bit shakey on the exit moves, but I was close to the send and with a little luck I think I can get it next time.

A week latter, I got out two days in a row to climb in the Matrix, on the south side of La Barrosa. This was my first time in the Matrix since my resurfacing surgery.


Climbing in the Matrix

The weather was absolutely perfect: sunny and cool with low humidity and the Matrix, frequently wet (at least some of the routes), was completely dry. I guess I sort of tore it up in the Matrix, sending 13 different climbs (including a new 10d/11a put up by a climber from Buenos Aires and an old 5.11 of mine which I haven't done in years) and then I finished the weekend working out the moves on a hard, new 5.11 roof problem. Martín and Analia showed up to climb with us on both days (after about a month absence) and we aso ran into "la Renga", a climber from Buenos Aires, who was accompanied by a small group of clients from his gym "Realization".

Getting ready to clip the first bolt on a 5.11 in the Matrix


Starting into the crux 


I managed to send this on my second try


Martín worked the route on top rope

My daughter Cecilia came along with some friends and had fun, but she isn't climbing at all, right now. It seems she's entered into adolescence and climbing with Dad just ain't cool anymore.

Ceci and friends goofing around in the Matrix

We also did two new climbs, put up recently by a climber from Buenos Aires. Both routes have three bolts to the anchors. The left hand route (facing the wall) is maybe 10b and requires continuous pulling on steep terrain. The other route is maybe 10+ or 11a with a tricky and powerful crux. 

Sending a new 10d/11a in the Matrix


This is the crux 































Sunday, November 9, 2014

Nine months post-op

In the sector of boulders Aracnofobia, on La Barrosa 
October was a pretty good month. The weather mostly cooperated and I only had to train a few times in my home gym. The rest of the time I was able to get outside, sometimes three times a week (besides the weekends, I make time to climb on Wednesdays, typically bouldering alone for lack of partners). Except for one day when I went to a boulder fest at Sierra de los Padres (we'll hear about that latter), I climbed exclusively on La Barrosa.

A short 10c face route on La Barrosa


Here is a sequence of photos where I'm sending the second half of a V4 traverse problem in the sector of Aracnofobia. Maybe you remember from an earlier blog post how this problem, because of it's aggressive left heel hooks and compressed exist, almost put me in the hospital before my first surgery. Last month I managed to do the thing in two complete parts. However, I still haven't sent the whole problem without a rest, yet.

Getting into the start of the second half of the V4 traverse 


Reaching this hold is one of the bigger moves



That's my revised hip doing those aggressive left heel hooks

Look at what comes next



These are the same last moves as Aracnofobia

Revised hip compression


Getting that right foot up and onto the hold is another big deal for me. 

All and all, in the five months since I began bouldering after surgery,  I've sent around 85 different boulders, from V0 to V4, including a half a dozen problems that I used to do maybe eight years ago, but haven't been able to do since, because of hip problems. 

Another highlight was sending the following short, but stout 5.11. This is a route that I put up and (naturally) used to be able to do on a regular basis. However, once again, it's been about eight years since I've been able to climb it. 

Sending a short but tricky and physically demanding 5.11


The old fat guy getting the clip before entering the crux


Butt shot after the crux


That's all folks


Eight years after losing my abilities to hip problems, I'm back. 

In the nine months since my hip surgery, I've sent about 36 different routes; some onsights and some redpoints, even a little bit of trad climbing. Five of the routes were 5.11s, including a new 5.11 route in the sector of the Autodromo on La Barrosa (no photos) and the following route, which I had also redpointed last year.

Fede trying to redpoint a stout little 5.11 in the sector of the Bosque on Las Barrosa  


Fede on the crux moves. It took him two days of work to send this thing.















Thursday, October 9, 2014

A couple times with ropes before the eigth month mark

The old, fat guy with two artificial hips is still climbing


I recently passed eight months since my hip resurfacing surgery (I'm at two years, seven-and-a-half months since the revision). At this point, in terms of strength, balance and flexibility, the revised THR and the HR are almost indistinguishable. The news is I've started to jog a bit during my regular hikes. Last Tuesday after work, for example, I took the headlamp and went out for a 5 mile jaunt, jogging for 400 meter stretches about a half-a-dozen different times. I think it was something like three or four years before the botched resurfacing when I gave up running for good, because of my hip condition, That means it's been seven or eight years since I last ran, so if these short stretches jogging don't sound like much, it's a pretty big deal to me. I've also been working more on yoga exercises and doing stuff (simple as it might be) that I haven't been able to do for years.

Last weekend it rained and the weekend before I went bouldering by myself. However, I did manage to get out and climb a couple of times with ropes during the past month or so. One time I went to el autodromo with Martín, Hugo and a local kid named Federico.

It took Fede some work to redpoint this 10d


Hugo gives the same 10d a go

Even though the rock drew first blood

Martín scratched his leg

Martín made a good effort on this 10d roof (although no redpoint yet):


Martín managed this 10d roof with a hang or two

That day, I only managed to redpoint routes I'd already done (there are eight routes I've yet to send in el autodromo), although I did go up to try the roof: 

Tim goes up to try a roof

Get the clip

By the time we packed up to leave, the lights of Balcarce were shining dowen below

The end of another beautiful day in the Sierras of Balcarce

The other time out, I went back to the routes in el bosque with Martín and Hugo. This day I climbed a little better and managed to send two different 5.11s (an 11a and an 11b). It's been a lot of years since I redpointed two 5.11s in one day.

Martín and Hugo top roped the 11b: 

Martín on a bouldery 11b face

Hugo eyes the last hard move on the 11b face

I also tried three times to redpoint an 11c face, but I didn´t have what it takes to manage the crux without a hang

Although short, this 11c face has some quality climbing
















Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Solitary bouldering during the sixth and seventh month

A V2 boulder in la Media Tierra

Motivation amongst my regular climbing companions (Gaby, Ceci and even Martín) seems to have fizzled out recently (during the sixth and seventh month post-op) so when I could get outdoors to climb, I mostly went bouldering by myself. Actually, I really enjoy some aspects of solitary bouldering, although I'm somewhat less able to push myself if I get nervous about falling.



A V1 boulder problem in the sector of El Huevo


A V2 traverse in la Media Tierra


Nearing the end of a long, pumpy V1 traverse

All in all I've sent about 70 different boulder problems since my resurfacing (all problems that I've done before but in some cases haven't been able to repeat in years). A big highlight was that I recently sent three problems which I had worked on several times last year without success. These are all boulders which I haven't been able to do for maybe five or six years (or longer). Here's a sequence of shots from one of these problems (the grade is maybe hard V3 or easy V4):

Coming out of the sit start

Move out onto the face then heel hook the left foot 


A left heel hook and pressure with the right leg for body tension on a big move

A knee bar to move past slopy holds


The rest is easy but high