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Chockstone Forum - Crag & Route Beta

Crag & Route Beta

Area Location Sub Location Crag Links
VIC Buffalo Gorge North Side Wilkinson's Lookout Environs [ Gorge Guide ] 

Author
Holden Caulfield beta
butters
17-Feb-2004
7:31:37 PM
another beta request: has anyone climbed holden caulfield on the north wall at buffalo? what gear does the pitch through the roof require?
any info would be great
thanks from chris
Onsight
18-Feb-2004
5:51:12 PM
Chris, there are two photos of this on that Buffalo link to my web site that I gave you in the Ozy thread. I took some photos of Steve Monks on the roof pitch, looked great, and I didn’t notice anything peculiar about the gear. Haven’t hear of that monster fall you referred to, however I reckon there is a chance that Steve would have replaced a rivet or two with carrots if he thought they were particularly unsafe for leader falls (gosh, would that be retroing?).

Simon

nmonteith
18-Feb-2004
5:57:17 PM
Holden Caulfield is the aid route squeezed in betwen Ozy Direct and Lord Gumtree. It climbs a line of bad rivit things direct through an almost blank roof. I has seen it as i passed by on Ozy and Lord Gumtree - i havn't been on either in 3 years so maybe someone has ripped them since then. I would bring a drill and some proper bolts and fix it up if they are missing. Nothing stupider in my opinion than a line of 'body wieght' bolts. Whats the point??

IdratherbeclimbingM9
19-Feb-2004
6:23:55 PM
I thought that RURPs were also needed for the roof.

The belay immediately above the roof is apparently a single bolt; see excerpt from Buffalo Guidebook thread below.

>A warning note about the missing rivet on pitch 7 of Holden Caulfield and the loose flake at start of P6 ? with potential FF2 back onto the belay below it, would also be good !
butters
22-Feb-2004
11:03:48 PM
thanks alot for the info on holden caulfeild.
to A5iswereitsat: what would be your top 5 favorite aid routes in the gorge? as youve probably guesed ive just caught the aid bug and as you said aid climbers in aus are definateley a minority! oh well more routes for us!

IdratherbeclimbingM9
14-Dec-2004
4:36:16 PM
On 22/02/2004 butters wrote:
>thanks alot for the info on holden caulfeild.
>to A5iswereitsat: what would be your top 5 favorite aid routes in the
>gorge? as youve probably guesed ive just caught the aid bug and as you
>said aid climbers in aus are definateley a minority! oh well more routes
>for us!

Just found this unanswered request while retro-reading old stuff.

Top 5?
Hmmm, anything you can walk away from (afterwards) and which was considered fun while doing it !

It's a dificult Q to answer because there are many levels that it can be answered on;
eg Done as a team of 2, or 3, or solo; Short and sweet; long and hard; scary; safe; tricky moves; funky moves; speed ascent; slow 'for the experience' ascent, etc

To generalise-answer your Q. ~> I do not have a specific 'hit-list'.

I once considered setting myself the challenge of completing every known route on the Nth wall of the gorge. I now doubt I will achieve that because I find myself going back to climbs that I have already done and enjoying them again, plus other things in life gobble my time!

My preference at present is for maximum time in exposed climbing with a variety of move types, but tending toward the thinner-moves end of the spectrum, & with minimal bolt ladder clip-ups!
Long, sustained, exposed climbs generally fit the criteria, & I like the classics for their history. I enjoy spending time on these simply for their sense of time-warp location.

I enjoy challenging moves eg equalised thin gear to take bodyweight, and the challenging mental discipline involved in roped-solo, but equally also enjoy the 'camaraderie of the rope' when climbing in a team.
I am happiest when in the 200 to 250m zone on a 300m climb, ie maximum ground up commitment with an uncertain outcome still a possibility.
Buffalo fills all the above criteria.

There is sufficient on the Nth Wall of Buffalo that mixing and matching sections of climbs into a long route can be fun.

My suggestion then is to 'Go for it', starting with what is manageable for your timeframe, budget and commitment level.

PS there are plenty of other places that also give similar long Adventure aid climbing; (Bungonia, Warrumbungles, Blue Mtns come to my mind readily!).

There are 6 messages in this topic.

 

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