|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() LYNN & THE NOSE da ALP Grandi Montagne - Yosemite di Vinicio Stefanello Can you evoke an ascent from a route sketch? We try to do just this with Lynn Hill, to retrace her mythical free ascent of the Nose. Following the lines on a sheet of paper we relive her adventure on the immense Cap spire that lasted less than 24 hours. "The Nose has it all: slabs, overhangs, cracks". And halfway up the 2nd pitch Lynn encounters the first test: "Two difficult moves to reach the ledge and then relax, climbing the cracks on the 4th and 5th pitch. Each crack is unique. Such as the Stovelegs Crack system, on the 9th pitch, where you start with hand jams and then finish with fist jams". Like the short and wide 11th pitch: "lieback or jams, whichever you choose, its always a strange pitch. And so Lynn climbs on, past the Dolt Tower to reach the Jardine Traverse. Keep left here for the free ascent: "Its difficult, especially at the start where some footholds and a fundamental handhold have been improved. They could have done without these, but it would have been even harder. The race continues to the left of Texas Flake up an interesting crack: "it changes in size throughout, from finger jams to fist jams... I liebacked." Fast. On the 18th pitch theres the small roof which wasnt too difficult to climb free. And so on to Camp IV: "Watch out! If someone is bivying above, youre right in gravitys path. And Lynn too was hit: It brought me luck: I freed the Great Roof. Or rather, the 22nd pitch, one of the crux sections on the Nose. The Great Roof is very long. The curve that leads to the traverse beneath the Roof is extremely delicate and slippery. Carefully dosed moves and perfect balance along an incredible series of upside-down two-finger pockets: Hard and spectacular.
The door to the splendid Pancake Flake is now open: "This is one of the most beautiful sections on the Nose, up a spectacular technical crack. The rock is outstanding and from here you can see the entire route beneath you; youre suspended between what youve just climbed and what still lies ahead! Pitches 23, 24, 25; Lynn fights up a narrow chimney, bridges wide and liebacks the corner crack, (placing natural pro as she goes) to reach the large Camp IV ledge. From here the free version follows the original line. Not the Brookes variation but: you continue up strange but beautiful moves along the corner used during the first ascent. Another nice crack to reach the 30th pitch, a.k.a. Death block, where the wedged block is no longer in place: A friend of mine got rid of it last year... only a couple of slings still held it in place! Almost there! The enormous corner is now followed by the final section. And for a second Lynn almost blows it completely: On the difficult overhang I lose my feet, while holding a small flake and an edge with just two fingers: foot quickly up high onto the jug, stand up, without my left hand. That was close! After a difficult bulge she reaches the last belay, only a stones throw from the top. Final act: one hard move and its all over! Quick look at the clock: 23 hours. This all happened 8 years ago and, as yet, no one has equalled this ascent. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||