Sunday, 23 March 2008

Day 44

44 is the smallest number which is the sum of a reversible pair of non-palindromic primes, 13 + 31.


Firstly, the blog is moving home to www.unclesomebody.com/blog so check it out! Blogger is doing my head in with it's lack of flexibility. Wordpress all the way!

I kind of felt like I needed a bit of a rest so I had 2 days off, but Friday I ended up doing 30min on the board to loosen up. I just don’t want to rest at the moment because I’m too psyched to be trying great blocs. The conditions looked really good for today, with chances of snow in the afternoon, prompting me to head out in the morning to Rempart. It’s a great crag, as I’m always banging on about, and there is enough there to keep me entertained, challenged, perplexed, and fulfilled for a good while.

Today’s challenge was Gourmandise, 8A+/B. I tried it last year with Danny Cattell, aka Longshlong, but we were having issues with the move to the lip. What a difference a year makes. Today I did that crux move 4th go. It actually felt easy, just a matter of timing, and of flowing through the move correctly. It’s a long move whereby you have to reach out from an undercut but as you are reaching out you also reach over yourself to the lip. The photos don’t do it justice, but give some idea of the movement. Once I’d done this move I knew I could climb the problem. I climbed it from the lip to the end (missing the first 2 moves) and then started trying from the undercuts. There are two different starting points, which is why there is a slash grade. The lower start adds two hand movements and you get 8B, which is what I’m planning to do next time. Today I was trying to do the 8A+ version mainly because I realized I could do it, so wanted to get it done fast. I did have one go from the lower start and climbed into the 8A+ start without too much difficulty. The lower starting moves simply cause you to have less chalk on your tips for the crux, and mean you can’t adjust the holds as well as you like when you get there. I have to say that it was feeling easy today, perhaps because of conditions, perhaps because I was light, but mainly because I think I’m going well at the moment, physically and mentally. I think that I’ve fallen into the magic of font (as Marc Le Menestrel goes on about) and as a result I’m climbing much better. I’ve got a good feeling on the rock at the moment, both in the hands and the feet. I was getting so close but at the same time my skin was getting thinner and thinner. I reached a point where I should have stopped, but I was so close that getting it done would make up for the loss of skin. Unfortunately, after many goes getting closer and closer, I eventually fell one move from the end. No tick and no skin! EEK! I was pretty gutted, but it was because I wasn’t appreciating what I was doing. I was nearly climbing an 8A+, which I should have been psyched about, but I wasn’t. I was sacked because I had failed. Normally, getting so close on something so hard leaves me psyched, but not today. I had to really concentrate and give myself a good talking to in order to take the positive from the situation. Anyway, I’ll definitely do it next time I go up there, which will be next session. I think I will also start trying it from the 8B start because I’m sure that when I’m fresh I’ll find it no more difficult.


I think that in my head I’ve done something very dangerous. I’ve raised my expectations of myself to another level. I’ve gone from being very psyched by doing well on an 8A, to thinking I should be able to do 8A’s without too much hassle, and really I should be pushing much harder. It’s a dangerous thing to do because if you make a mistake you end up just being upset all the time that you are falling short of your expectations. That is where you should assess if your expectations are realistic. On the other hand it is a great motivator. I have been climbing alone a lot since being in font, and even before font. I don’t know why, but I guess I ended up being psyched and not wanting to slow down waiting for others. By raising the hypothetical bar in my head I am once again pushing myself harder, and I think I’m being realistic. I’ve always been my greatest critic, and also my greatest motivator. I have been so lucky to climb with beasts like James, Cattells, Simpson, and seeing them made me want it more. I came to font really hoping to be able to do an 8B before I leave. After today I am 100% sure that I will leave with one, but now that I have that in my head, an 8B is suddenly not enough. I want to climb more 8A+’s, more 8B’s, and perhaps try something harder. I hope this isn’t a case of sprinting before I can crawl, but time will tell. I also came here with a list as long as my arm of things to try, but I am now refining that list in my head. Tomorrow I will refine it on paper.

Aristotle said “He who is unable to live in society, or who has no need because he is sufficient for himself, must be either a beast or a god”. Today, whilst walking alone to the crag I was thinking about this quote, and I decided that with all the time I spend alone I have only one choice, to become a beast. Here’s to hoping.

Thursday, 20 March 2008

Day 41

Forty-one is prime in so many ways! It is regularly prime, it is the 12th supersingular prime, a Sophie Germain prime and a Newman-Shanks-Williams prime. That is PRIME!

Lying isn't a good thing. Making bold statements about the future is a dangerous game that you should only play when you can accept the risks, which so often means accepting failure. Today, failure is something that I know nothing of. The only taste I have in my mouth is success (and Bolognese, Parmigiano, olive oil) because I managed to pinch my way up the (arguably) best line in the forest.

I was supposed to be doing uni work today, but it's Sara's last full day in font so I wanted to go out with her so she could climb. The first thing I saw this morning was a blue sky and I felt a cool wind blowing my face as I lay in bed. I did not want to be resting, but really felt like I needed it. We spent the morning doing small jobs that needed taking care of and in the afternoon Sara and I headed down to Buthiers. The weather had steadily declined as the day wore, but it was remaining dry. Sara warmed up, and was soon into the groove of things. She despatched a 6a slab without even thinking about it and moved on to a highball black 5+. Unfortunately a long move and weeping skin stopped play, but I'm sure she'll do it next time.

By 4:30pm Sara was finished, the weather was getting worse, but I was getting more psyched. I was feeling very shaky though, like I was down on calories or something. I felt like I had no energy and had been cold all day, despite it being 10C. The solution? A quick trip to buy some pastries and get some sweet sugar inside me. A pain aux raisin and some chocolate thing later I was on top of the world and was warming up. After a number of red/black problems I was feeling good but then it started spitting. I looked to the sky and just pleaded "please, give me 1 hour, it's all I need". It was obviously coincidence when the rain stopped, but I didn't wait any longer and rushed over to Partage. I gave it a quick brush, set up the camera, and had a go. First try was good, I felt much better on the second right hand hold. Feeling good on that means you can look at your feet more easily, which means more accurate placements, which ultimately means progress and eventually success. Another go or two and I could really feel that my skin wasn't great, but I knew I had some good goes left in me. Next go I got up to the slopey right hand hold with a hole in it. I fell stabbing my hand into the hole/crimp thing which only meant one thing... I could do this problem. All doubt was erased from my mind and I let myself accept the inevitable conclusion. Only one more go was needed and I was stood on top. I've not been shouting at the top of boulders recently, only quietly acknowledging success. However, once I had the jug at the top I screamed. I screamed not because I had simply found success, or because it's 8A+, or because it's famous. I screamed because I had climbed something totally outstanding. Perhaps this is the first thing I have climbed which I genuinely think is incredible. The movement is practically perfect (slightly harder and it would be perfect) with the most sublime combination of power, technique, and control. I think I've dreamed about doing Partage for many, many years, long before I had the ability to do it. Today was the realisation of that dream and I'm pretty happy about it.

Addiction is a dangerous thing. Climbing can easily be an addiction, where the highs are success and the lows are failures. As I said yesterday though, the line is so badly delineated that it's often confusing. Perhaps it's because in climbing there is only one judge, and that is yourself. Since I was 15 I had a piece of paper on my wall that said "I'm the athlete. I'm the competition. I'm the distinguished panel of judges". I think that sums up so much about me, my game, my life, and my climbing. The names and numbers are one thing, but the personal judgements are the real yardstick. I'm just hoping that I can continue to climb well, meet good conditions, and complete some more of my projects.

Bonne Grimpe.

Wednesday, 19 March 2008

Day 39 and 40

39 is the smallest number whose sum of digits is larger than that of its square.
40 is a boring number, but in English, forty is the only number whose constituent letters appear in alphabetical order.

Now I’ve been here as long as Jesus was in the wilderness. I don’t know much about what Jesus did, but I know that I feel I haven’t done very much. What’s most fascinating about keeping this blog is I can easily see the ratio of climbing days to non climbing days. At the moment I’ve climbed 18 days out of 40. That’s a low percentage in my opinion, but that is how I must suffer due to horrific skin. Everybody has their weak spots, everyone must pay the price by accepting the bad that accompanies the good, and for me it’s my skin. I’m not complaining, simply realising that I have this defect which can hinder me.

I didn’t get a chance to update this yesterday, which is very lazy of me, but Sara made a last minute decision to come down to font for a few days. To rectify this, I have pulled out a couple of stills from the video I've been shooting, so you can see the amazing things which I have the privilege to climb. However, no blogging has in this particular case not implied no climbing. Conditions were fairly good both yesterday and today. Temps were around 7-9˚C and there was a bit of wind to boot.

I was determined to make the most of conditions so decided to head to Karma in the morning. This bloc is so great but at the same time so frustrating. It all boils down to a blind slap, which translates to many, many goes getting the move incorrect. However, as posted previously, I watched Lebreton absolutely destroy Karma, so strength, technique, and font magic probably make it easier. I’m just trying to increase the levels of each... My first few goes were good, and I felt very strong. I was able to hold the nothing next to the crimp when I didn’t get it right. That gave me a lot of confidence because I figured that if I could hold on to nothing then when I did get the crimp I would probably finish the problem. My goes continued, strength/power decreased, and accuracy became a problem. I think that it’s too physical a problem to have a lot of goes. My left arm soon gave up, and I had a bit of pain in my elbow from over exertion. Essentially that one move is just asking your left elbow to lock off 1-5 static (but much wider) and hang there whilst you faff about. I was disheartened because I really would love to do Karma, be like Ben Moon, and get the hardest tick in the real thing. Perhaps such a feat is just awaiting perfect timing... who knows, but I do know that I’ll be going back to try again. I don’t care how many sessions I spend on it, I see them as great investment. Sara also made an impressive ascent of an unnamed white problem, 6A, in just 2 goes. If you have ever been to Cuisiniere you have probably walked past it as it’s just before Misericorde. It’s kind of high, with a kind of bad landing. Both these things only add to the intimidation of a boulder problem, and whilst Sara is learning to climb and improving constantly, I want her to assess these things with total rational. The only thing to look at is the boulder. Can you climb it? Yes. Don’t let the fall put you off. Simply remain a master of your climbing and the boulder will subdue. I had to do the same thing myself later in the afternoon, which was a good personal test!

After some lunch back at the ranch Sara and I had to go to Nemours for some car stuff. On the way back we stopped at Sablibum so I could check out Pierre, Feuille, Ciseaux, 7B+. It’s a very cool highball, which would probably be E7 7A if you wanted to use an outdated and archaic grading scale. There is a new high quality video on bleau, and the chap in it was smart enough to have tripled up pads. I wasn’t. I only had one layer, which was fine, and I didn’t hurt myself, but I certainly didn’t want to FALL off. After some pre-emptive goes I figured out what was necessary and got through the crux. I reached the jug from which it is a jug haul to the top, but the jugs were filled with sand, filth, moss, etc. I was trying to blow it off but I was getting pumped, getting sand in my eyes, and did not want to slip off. All of these excuses amounted to one thing, me backing off, reversing a few moves and then jumping off. I was happy because I knew it was in the bag, but wasn’t willing to press on into dirty, sandy ground. Sara said she’d ab off and clean the holds which will help. I’ll do it next time I’m down there, because it’s a stunning feature. You can see something of the line in this still from my footage;

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The second photo shows my highpoint, which is a couple of moves beyond the first photo.


Today was another day that looked good on the meteofrance forecast. I had booked my car in the garage but wanted to get to Buthiers in the morning for a session on Partage, 8A+. At about 9:30 we were just getting ready to leave and the clouds starting crying. A combination of hail and rain forced a quick change of plan. We headed to the garage and after a bit of faffing about we left in a courtesy car. The French really know service, and our courtesy car was a 15-year-old Citreon AX with serious problems. A VERY loud knocking noise emanated from the engine, but we ignored it and pressed on, just happy to have transport. The weather had cleared up a bit so we headed to Buthiers so I could try Partage and Sara could continue her onslaught of 6th grade problems. We warmed up on some easy things, and after a sandy flash of La Rampe, 7A, (which I exited directly and not the the left!) I felt good to go. I walked over to Partage, got psyched up for my first foray onto such a wonderful problem, and proceeded to flash the thing. Not really. I fell off the first move, getting your right foot nice and high. I've waited a long time to try this problem, and for no good reason. It's incredible though, and perhaps I felt a bit intimidated by it's (non physical) stature. In the course of the next 30 minutes I had found the method, and I have to say that these are some of the best moves I’ve ever done, anywhere. It’s so excellent that I think I will stop recommending anything to anyone, bar Partage. Damn it’s GOOD! I actually did rather well on it, and thought I was going to do it in one session. I even said at one point “doing this in one session will be the greatest thing I have ever achieved in climbing”. What a shame it didn’t happen. I even climbed through the crux, which is a left hand move in the middle, and fell going for the big sloper with a hole in it for my right hand. I kept trying, but my skin was tiring, my body was weakening, and after a last ditch effort I had to give up. The high point was thus;

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I am absolutely psyched out of my mind to do this problem, and without sounding too confident, I know I am going to crush it. It’s just so perfect, the moves, the line, the height. If I wasn’t already sitting down I would need to right now. I decided not to try anything else until I do this, so next climbing day will be at Buthiers. I am nearly certain I’ll do it with another few goes, but let time be the judge of that. Tomorrow brings rest, possibly rain, and definitely more uni work for me. I hope the next blog entry brings good news and not broken dreams. Danny, I do it for you.

Saturday, 15 March 2008

Day 36

36 is the smallest number (besides 1) which is both square and triangular.

The weather always plays a part when making plans for rock climbing. Yesterday's forecast predicted alright weather for today, bar the blazing heat that would be descending upon us. Of course, everything is relative, and by blazing I mean the prediction was for 16°C. As it turns out, they were wrong (a rare occurrence for the boys at MeteoFrance). The car was reading 17.5°C as we drove away from the crag today...

Saturday is normally a busy day here at Maisonbleau because people are leaving in the AM and arriving in the PM. Once all the jobs here are taken care of Neil and I head out to the crag. Before I went to bed last night we were discussing a plan for today and I was in the mood for closing projects, not trying new things. With that in mind I declared my intent to slay La Coccinelle, 8A, at Buthiers. Why do I want to do this problem so much? Perhaps it's the Staminaband of Fontainebleau, by which I mean it's one of the most famous traverses, and so maybe it's a rite of passage in the traverse department. I'm not exactly known for my cosmic levels of Stamina, but La Coccinelle is a 2 move problem with some easy moves before and after, so it was a ripe challenge. Plus, Jerry does it in The Real Thing which is reason enough to want to do it!

Armed with the pressure of being like Jerry we headed to Buthiers. I plopped my pads beneath it, and did the end a couple of times to warm up, which also served as a reminder as to where the footholds are. I was beginning to feel warmed up when the first drops of impending doom fell from the sky. I wasn't quite warmed up enough to get involved with the crux move, but the prospect of rain forced my hand and I had a go from the start. Needless to say it wasn't very good, but perhaps my desperation to climb this bloc showed, and the rain held off for a few more minutes. I tried the crux move a couple more times, but it just felt hard, and then more drops of failure fell from the sky. Neil declared the last couple of slopers to be getting bad, but I didn't care as I knew I could hold on if I ever got there. In a moment of pure desperation I even reverted to trying the heelhook method (forgive me Jerry) but after 5 goes I sacked it off. I'm happy I gave up on that method for 2 reasons. It makes you feel close to the move when really you're not, and also because that's not how Jerry did it. If he didn't need a heel, then why do I? The rain had stopped, and I was busy brushing the holds with a bit of chalk, still determined to slay this dragon. I had some good goes where I got the pocket but only with the tips of two fingers, and I slipped straight out as soon as I tried to move off it. I really needed to get 3 fingers squeezed in to make use of the good bit of the hold, but it wasn't happening. I kept trying though... Persistence is a quality required in this game (as the great Doylo taught me). Eventually, with a smile on my face, I set off. Before I set off I remember saying to myself that if I was doing it easily it just wouldn't mean as much to me. The beauty and the joy is in the struggle itself. Failure is actually the path to true reward. With that in mind started. 2 moves later I was at the crux and not feeling particularly good or bad, but I managed to get 2 fingers in the pocket. However, I hadn't fallen off yet, my foot was still glued on, and a quick foot change enabled me to jump to the pinch (essentially the end!). By some miracle I stuck the pinch and my 2 fingers were still clinging to the lip of the pocket! Wow. I was actually surprised to still be on the rock. Just a plod to the end remained and I must have seemed a bit mental as I climbed along saying things like "don't fuck up now", "you're feeling good", etc to myself. Sure enough I got to the top and felt quite chuffed. I had to try hard to get it done, but the failure only added to the sweet taste of success. I knew I could climb it, from my very first go to the very last. It was a matter of persistence.

With it in the bag I was ready to head back home. I wasn't feeling in great shape, and conditions weren't exactly good, so I came home, and had a good stretch. My ass is feeling nearly pain free and a day of rest (uni work) tomorrow will mean I'm 100% for Monday.

Thursday, 13 March 2008

Day 34

34 is the smallest number to be surrounded by numbers with the same number of divisors as it has.

The last few days have been spent driving to crags, putting on climbing shoes, and then watching as the heavens open and rain drenches the perfect sandstone blocs. There isn't much you can do with wet sandstone boulders so a step back is required, and I've been doing a couple of fingerboard sessions to try and make sure all this outdoor malarky isn't going to cause me to get burned off by Dobbin upon returning to the school.

Yesterday evening I was really feeling like I should be climbing as the conditions were excellent and Lorenzo was trying Sale Gosse, 7C, which I really want to do. Luckily I'd pre-empted myself and left my boots at home on purpose! I felt rather torn because I felt like I was wasting good conditions but at the same time I was determined to let my skin recover to a decent state. Lorenzo made good progress on Sale Gosse, reaching the last move after a few goes. Unfortunately the last move provided the crux, and he was stuck between an all out jump for the top or a tricky balancy move to the hold just below the top (as used by Catherine Miquel). Next time...

Today I woke up nervous about the weather, because I was missing climbing, but my first view of the world through bleary eyes revealed that things were allright. The magic piece of wood in the garden was dry (a sure sign that there is dry rock out there!) and the skies weren't full of grey clouds. I was psyched, rushed to get dressed, eat breakfast, drink tea, and then went out to get Lorenzo. The guy was asleep, probably dreaming about climbing. 20 minutes later he was in the car and we were off to Cuvier Rempart whilst listening to Breakthrough by Queen. BOOM! The rocks were dry, the sky was clouding over, but things were looking alright. I walked straight up to the big four area and remembered just how great they are, also thinking how Graham crushed them on his first day in font back in 2001. I harbour a deep desire to climb Big Golden and Atresie, two great benchmarks, and two serious challenges for me. I warmed up by doing some very easy things, then a Nameless 7B, then went over to try and flash Noir Desir, 7C. I hadn't tried it on purpose because I knew I could flash it, but was sick of waiting to try it. I just walked over, plopped the pad down, and sorted out a sequence. Whilst figuring it out I had my hand on the first hold and was reaching up with my other hand when all of a sudden my hand ripped, I lost my footing, came crashing down, missed the pad, and my left arse cheek landed on the corner of a sharp rock. I'm sat here 12 hours later having to sit on a cushion cause of the bruise on my left cheek. I could barely walk down from Rempart due the pain. But anyway, after this setback I was determined to flash it so I set off, only to grease off on the hold after the undercut. Damn it! I was a bit disappointed but I knew I could do it. Next go I fell on the move to the jug, DAMN IT! The last holds before the jug felt so greasy and as soon as I looked at my tips they were devoid of any trace of chalk. Oh well. I had one more go and my hands just slipped off so I gave up. The move up from the undercut went static, so I did feel strong, but strength isn't everything (am I serious?). I chalked up one last time and climbed it from the undercut to the top to make sure the move was easy and it was, when you aren't greasing off from lack of chalk. Anyway, It's a great problem and I'll include on the warm up circuit next time I'm up at Rempart.

Now that I was warmed up attention turned to Atresie, 8A. I thought I had a good chance of doing it as the previous session I felt really strong. Today was a different story altogether. I didn't once manage to get the kneescum in correctly, leaving my flailing and pulling way too hard on the undercut. One go this resulted in me ripping off the undercut, the first point of contact with the ground (not the pad!) was my ass which only added insult to injury. From this point on my ass was seriously debilitating. A few more goes and I was ready to quit. Conditions felt bad, I felt bad, and sometimes that just the way the cookie crumbles. I accepted my fate for the day and packed up. Lorenzo wanted to try Ouzo, 8A, so I walked down there with him to give him a spot (or rather, to watch, since it's quite low). Once down there I was sucked in to giving it a go. I'm too weak to say no sometimes, especially when I have the opportunity to try a problem with somebody rather than alone. It didn't take too long to figure out a sequence. I had seen pictures of Adam Wood (check the link) on it, but I ended up freestyling and using a rather different (read; simple but powerful) sequence. I managed it without heelhooks and without matching if that gives you any sort of clue. Sometimes I think I take school rules a bit too far (like outside the schoolroom). I had a number of goes getting closer and closer. Then a bit of tea and a piece of chocolate gave me the required psyche to latch the crux hold and I was on my way to the top. Success! I was a bit surprised to have done it, because it felt kind of hard, but also because I had stopped climbing for the day due to feeling like I was a sack of spuds. I was pleased anyway, and also pleased to have got it on film. Too often I forget to switch the camera on or never get it out because I'm unsure if I can do something. Doing Ouzo saved my day in a way. It turned a failure (not in a particularly bad sense) into a success. It's a fine line in climbing, between success and failure, but one so clearly marked that it's something painfully obvious. Truly, success is a personal battle and not entirely dependant on reaching the top of a piece of rock.

With a now very, very painful ass I hobbled back down to the car park. It was 6pm and I hadn't eaten since 9:30am apart from a Pain au chocolat. I got home bruised and starving, starving to the point where I did eat something but immediately felt sick, as if I was about to throw up. It took me a lot longer than usual to eat something due to this sick feeling. That pain eventually passed, but my ass is still killing me. I'm sat on a pile of cushions and it still hurts. It's never hurt this much before... Tomorrow is Lorenzo's last day so fingers crossed for good weather, pain free ass, and much crushing.

Monday, 10 March 2008

Day 31

31 is the third Mersenne prime! RAD!

Late lastnight Fontainebleau felt a small tremble when the Italian Stallion, Lorenzo, rolled into town. After a whirlwind tour of Britain he was ready for some sandstone action. His first nights decent sleep saw him awake and ready to crush, but the forecast was iffy. It had rained a little during the night but the wind had arrive in the morning to solve all our problems. We drove to Cuvier (surprise, surprise) cause Lore was psyched for La Balance and I thought that Rempart would be a sure fire bet for dry rock. We started the warm up circuit which now involves Coup de Bambou, 6C+. I love slab climbing, not more than I love overhanging subtle power problems, but I love them none the less. The weather didn't look too good, but before the boulders were actually soaked, we'd keep going! We moved over to Bicep Mou, 7B, I was psyched because I couldn't remember ever having tried it, and it's a real thing tick! I think I just want to tick everything in that film, which is sad but probably true. I had a couple of goes to figure out what to do, and then Lore came over to test himself against Jo Montchausse (he did the FA). Once I'd established where the finishing jug was I did it next go and even paid a little homage to Ben and Jerry (wait for the video). Lorenzo struggled with the first move citing lack of height, but I'd put it down to still being a bit tired from the travelling. Soon thereafter the rain began, first the persistent spitting and then the dreaded downpour. That settled that, and we headed home.

After a bite to eat the weather turned, the rain had stopped and wind was blowing like George Michael. Charged up we headed out to try L'Homme Fossile. I knew everything in the roof would be dry and the final move to the jug would be drying quickly, so I was hopeful. Upon arrival it was clear that it was climbable, and it was drying at a ridiculously fast rate. It didn't matter even if the final jug was wet since the moves at that point looked so easy. I pulled on to do the 7A+ to the left called Feel du Logis, but after doing the first move I felt something moving in my right hand. I let go and sure enough, the entire starting jug was peeling away. All the holds in this roof have been glued, which was completely necessary to preserve the holds, but the glue was become unbonded. It was bonded to the hold, but not to the roof. It was quite a large chunk of rock, so neither of us pulled on that hold again. We climbed it from the next move in, and did it in the original eliminate way which is really fun moves. Then on to the main meat. The crux move was obvious, and took a whole heap of power and a bit of thinking, but it was solved. The rest was steady, powerfulish undercut moves leading to the lip. I did all the moves quickly and was psyched to have a go when Lorenzo realised something rather alarming. Whilst brushing one of the holds he noticed a bit of movement... uh oh... And upon closer inspection, and a bit of pulling to test it out, we realised that a crucial hold in the middle of the roof was very loose. Not only that, but the crack along which this chunk of rock was planning to detach was about 45cm long. A few taps revealed just how hollow it was, and there was no doubt that if I pulled hard on this hold it would break, and being an undercut, it would break right into my face/chest. I didn't fancy a 40kg piece of rock landing on me so I quickly quit. The moves were so good though so I was doing the rest of it when we realised that all the holds, bar the first and the last were loose. They were all flexing like Daniel Smith! The death zone suddenly came over us, and we both stopped. They were getting worse and worse, with a potentially serious injury if one of them did break. It's a real shame because it's a cool problem, but I don't know how you'd solidify these holds, other than drilling a huge steak into them and affixing them deep into the rock. The bottom line is, don't climb there!

There was still daylight left, and we were psyched, so we drove to Buthiers. I wanted to finish of La Coccinelle, and Lore wanted to humble magic bus. La Coccinelle was completely dry, bar one finger on one hold. Unfortunately, it was a crucial finger on a crucial hold! Magic Bus was dry though, and after a bit of fannying about figuring out just how he wanted to crush it, Lore despatched in fine style.

It was a day of rain, wind, and power, but it goes to show that if you persevere a bit you can always find some good rock that will be dry. It's all about the knowledge, knowing where to go in what conditions and I think I am starting to learn these mysteries of the forest.

Friday, 7 March 2008

Day 29

29 is the smallest multi-digit prime whose product of digits of its cube is also a cube!

Just a short entry, because rainshowers were intermittent all day so only the smallest amount of climbing was done. We went over to have a look at L'Homme Fossile which is something I've wanted to see/try/do for ages! We got there and it's a fairly small little roof, with plenty of glue/cement, but it's still cool. There aren't many roofs like it in font, and probably not many sandstone roofs like it anywhere, since sandstone isn't the best material for crimps in a roof! Anyway, I hadn't taken my boots thinking it would be a bit wet, but it wasn't and so I trekked back to the car to get them. Unfortunately, upon arrival at the car it was already raining so we gave up and drove on to Recloses.

I'd seen a video recently of Olivier Lebreton doing Narcotic Direct, 8B, and it looked very cool. Since Recloses was on our way home it was worth a bash. Unfortunately there was nothing to warm up on, and the holds were slightly damp, but I had a quick bash and can sum it up as a 1 move problem. It's 3 biggish, powerfulish, but ultimately easy moves into a hard 1 move throw, then 1 tricky move, followed by a lunge to the finishing jug. I came close to the crux move, which is crazy. I'll try to get a photo when I go back. Watch the video to see what I mean. The intermediate crimp is sharp, but I think I can try it with tape on! My skin is just such a wuss, it can't take any level of sharpness without ripping.

More soon, I hope!

Monday, 3 March 2008

Day 26

26 is the only number between a square number and a cube number, which was first proved by Pierre de Fermat (genius mathematician!). 26 is also the maximum number of moves needed to solve a rubiks cube, which is neat. I used to be able to solve a rubiks cube in under 30 secs.

I always end up writing these blog entries late at night and usually with sore tips. Today is no exception as I have both sore tips and heavy eyelids. This morning I awoke to see grey skies and very light rain. It soon rolled in and the rain poured for a couple of hours, but there was still some hope as the wind was blowing and if it did stop raining we'd surely find dry rock. We headed to decathlon so I could buy a skipping rope which I'm planning on utilising every morning! Sara said I could lose some weight so I'm going to get on the case and get my heart rate up every morning pre breakfast. There's no point lugging excess weight up all these boulders so if I can lose a couple of kg then all the better. After purchasing the rope we grabbed some lunch and drove down to Cuvier. It had stopped raining at the strong winds meant that many blocs were dry already. In fact, I would hazard a guess that it hadn't rained that much at Cuvier since there was way too much chalk about... unless there is a man who waits until the second the rain stops and then heads out armed with plenty of chalk to whiten up every hold. It was only 2pm so I chilled and Sara climbed. She crushed more red problems and also did another 6A which is great for her confidence. I wonder when the day of 7A will arrive?

As the day wore on I decided to get my boots on and warm up. The plan was to warm up at Bas Cuvier, have a couple of tries on Apotheose then head up to Rempart. That plan went straight out the window within 10 mins. I have pretty much devised my warm up circuit now, which involves a red problem or two, then Carnage, Berezine, Carnazina, etc. I thought I'd have a quick go on the Carnage-Berezina Assis, 8A, link up as I hadn't done it and I'm aiming to tick the block, but that quick go turned into a siege. There was a crucial point where it changed from a quick go to a must do siege attempt. Conditions weren't great and so my skin wasn't lasting long. I had lost just a little too much skin on the Berezina-Carnage assis link up so that I knew my goes on Kheops would be wasted, but I had enough skin left to fight on through with this problem. I had no choice but to press on. Conditions on the crux hold on Berezina were atrocious, as normally I can get it every go and get to the top but I was getting it and just sliding off, which was killing my skin. I also changed my hand sequence slightly so that when I got to the start of Berezina I was holding the holds a little lower. It made the move up easier on it's own but wasn't helping on the link. After way too many goes I realised just what I was doing wrong. Something so subtle that I fear it's too difficult to explain. It had to do with the trajectory my hand and my body was taking throughout the move. Utilising the hand holds in method 1 would give my body and hand a certain trajectory, but method 2 gave it something different. I was using method 2 with trajectory 1. Not until I was really concentrating did I realise that this was the crucial mistake. Only a few goes later I was stood on top. I wished I'd realised earlier as I really have no skin left now on my right hand. I think I'll have to take 2 days off and get intimate with the climb on. I only have Apotheose to do and I'll have ticked that block which would be a pretty cool feat.

After that epic I was keen to get on something else, but light was fading fast and my skin was weeping the tears of a thousand virgin mary's. I saw someone on Coup de Feel, 7C/+, the other day and thought it looked amazing so we headed over there for a quick burn. Within a few goes I'd done the crux move, and was one move from the top jug but I let go due to lack of carrot vision to see the footholds, and a fear of slapping for a hold that I thought was very very bad. It turns out the hold is good and I should have slapped, but that's part of living and learning! I'll get it done next time I'm at Cuvier (which I still think is all too often at the moment!).

Tomorrow the forecast is for rain, which I'll welcome actually so I can let my skin recover. Also scheduled is the man to empty the septic tank, so let's hope that works out without a hitch!

Saturday, 1 March 2008

Day 24

Day 24

24 is the smallest number with exactly 8 divisors and it is also a semiperfect number.

Another couple of days of rain/drizzle meant another couple of days of rest. Fortunately I spent the time finishing the climbing wall at Maisonbleau. The thing has just grown and grown like a cancer and it's at the final stage of evolution now. I did a few deadhangs yesterday and a tiny bit of climbing to loosen up for today (and to test the new section of wall). Luckily the wall held fast and I was able to head out today.

It seems like I'm spending way too much time at the Cuvier areas, and missing out on the more esoteric venues. I kind of feel like I'm the guy who just goes to Plantation and never anywhere else, except that Cuvier has more 5 star problems than I can count and Rempart happens to be quick drying so it's a win-win situation. Early afternoon was spent watching/spotting Sara faff about on Orange problems and then fail on a red problem that was so far beneath her. Things weren't going great, but I had a plan for her... We walked over to La Marie Rose, 6A, and she immediately started going on about how hard it was and how other good climbers she knew couldn't do it. After a pep talk about winners only think W-I-N (and there is most definitely an I in win) she started her attempts. Soon enough she had a good sequence but was struggling with a long reach right at the top. I knew that if she could only do that final reach she would have this problem wrapped up. After a few goes trying different beta we'd settled on the way and only a few goes afterwards she was stood on top! It highlighted that with the right beta, the right motivation, and the right approach people can climb things a little harder than they think. Sara and I knew she could climb 6A in font, but La Marie Rose is a super classic, the forest's first 6A climbed in 1946 by Rene Ferlet. That is a benchmark and no one will ever tell you that it's a soft touch. I'm really happy for her, and I think that attaining something like that is great motivation for Sara. People who think positively will always climb positively and will always get more done. I have no doubt about that (and neither should you).

After she had crushed we moved over to the Carnage area so I could get warmed up and I harboured desires to get all the problems I did previously on video. First up was Carnage, then Berezina, then I tried the Carnage-Berezina Combo Assis but fell off in Berezina cause the holds were a tiny bit greasy and I was a little bit pumped. I didn't want to waste skin so I quickly did the stand start so I had it on video and then I had 3 goes on Apotheose. Damn I want to do this problem! First go my fingers were less than 1cm from the hold. 1cm!!!! I suppose that is about the distance I am way from doing 1-5-9 as well... if only I'd trained harder. If only I could do 1-5-9 every go then I could crush Apotheose! The next 2 goes were horrific. It felt like the second hold had suddenly turned into Teflon and my hands were covered in oil. I gave up, we packed up, and legged it up to Rempart. I wanted to get on Kheops before the sun set. The first move (which I originally flashed) was feeling rather hard, mainly because my ring and pinky fingers were slightly thin and the right hand hold isn't very good (using the sloper not the crimp). I mainly wanted to try the next move anyway (the crux I think), and luckily I had brought Sara along for a small push. I had one more go from the start but my right hand ripped off rather violently drawing blood from 3 knuckles and flinging me down the hill. Thankfully Sara's slender yet powerful arms just about kept my head off the rocks. I then started trying the next move, which is a move that perplexes me greatly. It's hard to explain, and I don't really need to, but it's a move that requires intricate body position and exceptional balance (with the regulatory level of power too). I got into the right position, but my plumb line must have been slightly out as I couldn't reach up statically enough. I'll find the position though, and when I do, Kheops will be Keithops. My skin started getting really jaded and I fell off the right hand hold a couple more times. It was turning black and my skin wasn't playing nice so I gave up for the day. Luckily it's going to rain tomorrow (so say the weather Gods at Meteo France) so I can get some skin back and then head out Monday for more skin sapping action.

We watched a wonderful round orange sunset disappear behind the horizon and then headed home for a yummy dinner.