It’s been much the same as the
summer has wound on: the odd bouldering session, the odd session clipping
bolts, almost no trad to speak of. Bah
humbug! I’m almost ashamed to say it,
but I’m starting to think about the winter bouldering season already. Even worse, the last few weeks I’ve had a
funky index finger injury, something to do with ligament round the knuckle,
according to the Highland climbing injury consultant Murdo. It’s almost totally healed now but didn’t do
much for motivation, since with my job one of my only training aids is dangling
from rock rings on the few evenings I’m home in the week. C’est la vie.
I’ve also picked up some soft tissue damage in my right foot from a
combination of running in old crap shoes and hardcore ceilidh dancing. I’m realising I don’t take being injured very
well; it’s not something I’ve ever had to get used to. Must be getting old….
It’s been interesting seeing the Farrletter debate rumbling
on on UKC. Of course, there’s no real
new ground being covered, and the usual sweeping statements and entrenched
views (of which I’m probably just as guilty) but it’s interesting to see it
being used as a proxy for a discussion about the general placement of bolts in
Scotland. Of course it’s not quite the same, as Farrletter is about retro-bolting
trad routes. With this and the long
awaited publication of the SMC’s Scottish Sport Climbs guide it seems like the
lid is being lifted on the lesser known Scottish sport crags, of which there
are quite a few, and which I wouldn’t be surprised if some found a little
controversial.
I definitely feel in the midst of an ethical quandary, and I’m
starting to see how my own views have been shaped and might be different from
others. I only started climbing in 2004,
and spent my learning years climbing with members of Edinburgh Uni
Mountaineering Club. As far as I was
concerned it was all about trad, mountains, winter, exploration and dare I say
it, danger. Sport climbing was dull,
safe and convenient. With adventurous
climbing you don’t have to be very good to still have amazing, challenging
experiences. As time passed and I got a
bit better I started to realise that sport climbing had a place. To me, easy sport is pretty boring unless it
takes in stunning ground or covers funky rock formations, but battling hard on
routes is great, and I’d probably list successful redpoints as some of my most
rewarding climbing experiences. And let’s
not forget, punters like me need easy sport routes to warm up on!
I’m realising this is a fairly out of date and idealistic view,
but I still think trad should hold sway over sport. If a new crag is being developed, I’d like to
think folk would try to get some trad lines out of it before deciding it’s too
hard, too steep or too bold and firing up the drill. And if it is too hard/steep/bold, I’d like to
think they’d have a quick think about what others might like to do – some folk
love that stuff. I might be wrong, but I’ve
got the feeling that in some circumstances it’s been a case of finders-keepers,
with who-ever makes the first move dictating the future of a crag, rather than
the result of an open discussion. Of
course, as UKC shows us, an open discussion doesn't really lead anywhere. So perhaps we’re all screwed!
I can totally understand the other side of the fence: there are loads of quality established trad
crags of all shapes and sizes and no-one is going to bolt them; if a crag hasn’t
already been developed for trad, it’s probably for good reason; there’s clearly
a growing demand for sport climbing. My
only concern (being a tree-hugging hippy) is that all these arguments are based
on current demands and fashions, rather than the potential long-term effects. Placing bolts is a pretty irreversible change
to the nature of a crag, so my feeling is that it shouldn't be done lightly.
Finally, I’ll qualify all this by saying that I clearly don’t
care enough either way as I’m neither involved in bolting or in chopping. I'm the worst kind of arse that'll happily clip your bolt but then write about it on the internet. I guess it would just be cool if those that
are involved had a quick think about the wider effects of their actions before wielding
the drill or chisel.
Right that was all a bit serious, I'm off bouldering.