Date: 13th February 2010
Norway! I love climbing in the land of big new routes with my friend Andreas Spak. Yeah!
Posted in: Blog
Great tips WIll. I was fortunate enough to hear most of this in person during your clinic in Ouray and it has changed my climbing radically. We have been climbing a lot here in Ontario since returning from Colorado and I can't believe how much better I am since implementing this stuff. It is somewhat painful to watch some of the locals with their side by side placements and chicken wing swing. Once you 'get it' it is so obvious. Watching people crawl along the old way (or whatever) looks so ponderous, tiring and unstable. Worse yet is that is is probably a lot more dangerous too as they get tired and pop off all over the place.
Though I am far from an ice meister like yourself I am consciously working on my technique. Thankful once again for the lessons.
TC
Hi Will, thanks a lot for these simple to understand tricks. I enjoyed reading your book on the subject of ice and mixed climbing as well as drytooling some years ago during an ice trip to Italy. My far more experienced partner and your book helped me a lot to get started. Those tricks you just posted are a good completion to your book and actually put in words what i see most people doing here at our little ice spot in Thuringia, right in the middle of Germany. I am thinking about translating your tricks and putting them on my blog so our locals can benefit from these useful hints as well if that`s ok for you?
Sporty regards,
rob
ps: impressive effort in Ouray!
Nice trick for cliffhangers, i wonder if it works in solid rock. I my favorite hobby you know.
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