It’s the time of year that I start
to plan trip out of state. Trips to Texas and California, desert places
intolerably hot most of the year. For the next couple months though, I think
I’m staying home.
I just bought a house, and though
the first round of painting, flooring and other domestic-type activities have
come near an end, I want to enjoy the fruits of our labor. And of course spend
time with Christina.
I’ve never lived someplace like
Flagstaff before. There is so much I haven’t climbed here, so many areas I’ve
yet to visit, that I want to get out on the forest roads, see the roofs find
the bulges, and of course climb them. Gates and locks—so often the enemies of
climbers, will close off Cherry Canyon and Woody Mountain in about two months.
For these next two months I will be
climbing at only these areas and on Elden. Projects are everywhere, there are
numerous new things to be climbed and my old reasoning to leave doesn’t work
anymore. The desert can wait.
Matt on a project on Renegade Roof |
Yesterday I went out to Renegade
Roof and Choss Roof with Matt Gentile. In the last year or so, a resurgence of
development has swept across Northern Arizona, much of it spearheaded by Matt.
He’s visited the areas already found and written off and climbed many new
problems. Choss Roof alone will probably host around 40 problems from V5 to V14
in link-ups and variations, many of which will be among the best in the state.
Renegade Roof |
Renegade Roof, which was abandoned
after one line was climbed because of a hugely bad landing, is much like the
famous Mars Roof, only bigger and with a far more impressive backdrop. There
are only three or four finished problems on the roof, but it’s covered with
two-finger pockets, pinches and jugs. There will be another half-dozen problems
by the time the roof is climbed out.
At Renegade I worked on the
original line, which shares its name with the roof. The problem climbs through
a series of pinches and pockets with good toe-cams for feet. Matt worked on a
project that climbs out the center of the roof to a tricky and treacherous lip
encounter.
Getting closer to the lip |