Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Kalymnos 2010 - Trip Report 3 (Ghost Kitchen and Kastelli)

Second day on, and tired muscles would be rejuvenated by the big breakky buffet! Yum! Living the life of climbing bums sure is hard.

Ghost Kitchen sits high above Skalia village and looks down on the blue ocean with its high-domed, arching roof which protects a gently overhung main wall with the most unbelievable stalactites and tufas. It's the cliff that has "6c's as far as the eye can see". If you're climbing the 6c-7a (22-23) level, this area is primo.

Owen and Glenn were first up to the cliff and both dispatched the four star 30m Resista 6c+. (Kalymnos doesn't actually have the fourth star in the guidebook - it uses a musical note symbol - for when stars simply aren't enough!) Owen smoothly onsighted which was a top effort. I thought the route was pretty bloody hard actually, I think I underestimated it. Some long locks off two finger pockets when you're pumped at the top. Owen said the top section "might be the best 15m of climbing I've done - ever!" Glenn flashed it, and also loved it. I haven't found anyone who hasn't gushed over that climb. It does have some cool crossover sequences and monster pockets. Sheree enjoyed Joy In The Garden 6a+, another long slab and wall route.


Matt had been jonesing for Dafni 6c+ (not to be confused with Dafni 7b at Odyssey) since seeing the pics of Susy wrestling the deer on the 2008 camp. The bizarre climbing which switches between monstrous stalactite blobs and technical pinches and slippery footers meant the onsight was foiled. "That's the only onsight I really cared about!" Bummer. But then again, climbing isn't meant to be easy. The best ones are the ones you have to fight for. To his credit, Matt did his time sussing out everything on the route so that on the second shot, there was absolutely no doubt. Locked in the satchel.


Dafni had taken Susy a few shots on the 2008 trip too. The style of this main wall at Ghost Kitchen was a challenging one. So it was to her credit that she climbed with such a great focus and determination to onsight Remember Wadi Rum 6c up the guts of the main wall. This route makes use of nearly every technique in climbing - crimps, jugs, handlebar rests, kneebars, stemming, chimneying - it's got it all! Glenn and Owen also 'remembered'. I cleaned up the remaining couple of routes I hadn't done on the wall. On both Sisyphus Junior extended 7b and Durgol 7a I underestimated the quickdraw load and had to enter backcleaning mode before scurrying through to the anchors.

But there's no doubt that the tick of the day was Sheree's. Let's paint the picture here a second. Sheree is a naturally strong climber, but she almost never lead climbs. Prior to this trip she'd done only a couple of leads. In Kalymnos, she's been leading nearly every day. Today however she really pulled out the stops with a rock solid lead of the smooth slab Parasitos, graded 6a+ or 19! She actually climbed it more smoothly than any of the team who repeated it. And this is her hardest lead by several grades. It makes us all wonder what she's actually capable of.


There was a few hours of light left, so the perfect place to while away the afternoon was Kastelli. It's right down by the sea and hosts some routes that are in a truly magical position perched above the ocean. The ocean was so inviting in fact that I scrambled down the slope and took the plunge. The route to do here is Pillar Of The Sea 6a+ which everyone climbed, and I took a million silhouette photos. Sheree's was best thanks to her ponytail.


Sam and Susy also raved about the next door Merci Brothers 6a. So I guess we have to thank the Remy brothers for that one. Cheers boys!

The team watched the latest episode of Survivor and *spoiler alert* couldn't believe the coup that Russell enacted. Unbelievable! :)

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Kalymnos 2010 - Trip Report 2 (Odyssey)

Thanks for joining us again on our next installment. When we last left you, we were enjoying our rest day. Although - don't you find that the first enforced rest day is the hardest one to take? You've only done two days of climbing and you know you should rest, but...ohhh, you're so excited and just want to do one more day...

Anyway, we played it smart and it was lucky, because coach Cujes (me) had some brutality in store at one of the premiere cliffs on the island, the varied Odyssey.

It started cold and we were snug in our down jackets, and then fingertips were frozen on the limestone of the warmups. Circe 6b, Femio 6a+ and Laertes 5c+ were all dispatched by the crew.

"What was that one like Glenn?" 
"Dunno - couldn't feel a thing!"

Next it was time for a crag tour to find the line which inspired. With about 50-60 classics of all grades to choose from, it wasn't hard. For Matt, the steep and thuggy Lucky Luca 7b beckoned. For Owen, it was the gently overhung, polished and pumpy Amorpha 7b. Glenn and Susy were seduced by the long and technical Dafni 7b. And me, well, I had an old project from the 2008 camp Marci Marc 7c+ - that super enduro mega line. One of the most coveted routes on Kalymnos.

Owen only had a couple of hangs on his first shot on Amorpha 7b (remember, this is the guy who is supposed to be climbing 6a/18 because of his wrist). Solid, solid effort up front. We spent a good while sussing the top crux and getting the sequence just right. On his second shot, he went right through cleanly to the rest 4m from the top, and even though he rested well, the forearms were out of juice for the deadpoint to the two finger pocket - one move shy of the top. Tragedy! Seriously though, don't you love a route that takes you right to the edge? What a perfect proj - he'll be back for it later in the camp.



Owen and his Amporpha 7b © S Cujes 2010

While Lucky Luca 7b may have "looked onsightable", it wasn't to be for Matt who discovered the start is mega bouldery on steep tufa snake pinches. Not surprising, he found some sweet kneebars and kneescums and came away with a smooth second shot send. Tidy work from the Coolum Kid.



Matt putting Lucky Luca 7b to bed © L Cujes 2010

Dafni 7b is a long and imposing, wandering line up a pure white sheet of limestone. Given Glenn's hardest route is 7a/23, the fact he got on this with no beta, placing the draws and working it out as he went was a bloody top effort. Susy then helped refine beta and they both had shots on it together. This is an ace way of figuring out a hard route, particularly if you both have different styles, as sometimes one person is better at unlocking the sequence and the other person benefits from that. Super fun. No sends, but good learnings and great progress. A potential goer for later in the trip.



Glenn on Dafni 7b  © L Cujes 2010

So that leaves me on Marci Marc 7c+. The route is a full 30m long and overhangs about 10m or so. In 2008, I tried it several times, always avoiding the potential kneebar at half height. You have to climb out to it, put it in, and then climb back onto the line and I always thought it probably didn't allow much of a rest anyway. It certainly didn't feel good when I tried it. But here we are in 2010 and I'm in possession of our newly developed Upskill Friction kneebar pads, I thought it'd be wrong not to suit up and get into them. So I tried the kneebar and yep - pretty dang good with these pads! Second shot I climbed solidly from the ground, through to the kneebar, recovered, and then blitzed the crux. What a relief! 10m victory whipper from the top (thanks Susy's rope and Matt's soft catch) and I'm down.



Me chilling in the kneebar on Marci Marc 7c+ © S Cujes 2010

After the big efforts on our projects, we hit the slabs for some no pressure fun. Sheree once again upped her tally of leading on routes such as Eumeo 4b, Argo 4c and Telemaco 5b, and we all played around on these fun slabs with cool features (big stones sticking out of the more weathered limestone).



Slab fun!! © L Cujes 2010

Join us next time as we steepen things up at the dripping tufa wall of Ghost Kitchen!