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Posts Tagged ‘Colorado’

Drytooling in Ouray : Day 2

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

Jack Jefferies in the Hall of JusticeSo instead of telling climbing stories I’m going to take a few moments to respond to some of the comments from the Dry Tooling in Ouray Day 1 post.

First, I want to say “suck it!” to all the folks that left me nasty blog comments.  We’re just out having some fun climbing and you guys completely missed that.

I was a big unprepared for the Rock and Ice article: America’s Hardest Mixed Crag?  Tim had set that up, and although I sent along some basic information, I was pretty distracted by work and traveling.  I had pretty much forgot about that whole thing until our blog post started getting 500 hits a day.  When I looked at Rock and Ice’s webpage, I was a bit horrified by the title “America’s Hardest Mixed Crag?”.  That was quite a bold statement.  I knew a shit-storm would be coming.  I guess that’s what happens when you let certain things take their course.

The article itself I thought was pretty benign and more on par with what we were doing, just some climbers out having fun on the rock.  I imagine many people didn’t get past the title though.

The Hall of Justice Does Have Mixed Climbing (aka ice)

Jason Poses down

The ice in the background can get quite a bit bigger

Although we only referred to drytooling in the Hall of Justice, ice does form there.  It forms within the cave and at the top of the routes.  Due to the fact that the cave is South Facing, it’s just not there very often.  It seems more accurate to refer to it as a drytooling area as that’s how most of the routes are done most of the time.  When you’re climbing at routes of this difficulty, often times the ice makes the routes easier and the hard moves are usually on the rock.

Is Mixed Climbing Aid Climbing?

I have done a fair amount of both aid climbing and mixed climbing in my 17 years of the sport.  I have played with pretty much all aspects of the climbing and I can appreciate each one in it’s own way.  Honestly, I don’t care that much about what others choose to call it.  Aid climbing to me would generally imply standing in aiders (and often being afraid).  Hanging off ice tools feels nothing like standing in aiders, although it too is rather scary.  I could argue that using ice tools to ascend rock or ice is not much different than using chalk, rock shoes, or tape as all items are used to “enhance” the experience.  Who cares!  moving on…

 Why Aren’t We Rock Climbing in the Hall of Justice?

Steep Mega Choss

Does this really look like rock you'd want to climb on?

Well, in a sense, we are rock climbing it, just not in the traditional sense that rock climbers relate to.  I’ve established many rock climbs in the San Juans, and it’s no mystery to those that have been to the Hall of Justice why folks don’t have any interest whatsoever in rock climbing there.  Trust me, you wouldn’t want to.  There’s not an ascent in the cave where no rocks are dislodged in the process of climbing.  The cave seeps and it’s walls are continuously shedding their skin of loose pieces of rock.  In general, dry-tooling crags are chosen as such because rock climbers don’t want to climb there.

What About the Impact on Nature and the Environment?

The Hall of Justice overlooks about 15 acres of mine tailings that are likely toxic.  There are mine shaft’s in it’s walls.  There is an active mine just up the road from it.  It’s not beautiful rock.  There is avalanche debris everywhere.  A few bolts in an exfoliating cave that will either fall out or rust out over time really does not affect the “big picture”, mother nature or the experience of passerbys.

Why All the Fuss About this Place?

If you were to start picking on crags in the Ouray Area to condemn for all of these reasons mentioned in the comments of Dry Tooling in Ouray, why not look toward the Ice Park?  It is however loved by thousands and greatly helps to support the local winter economy so you’ll be up against a lot of fellow climbers.  Send your hate and misunderstanding that way, it’s plenty high profile enough.  Why do you care about the Hall of Justice?  You’ve not been there.  It could be mythical for all you know.

You Completely Missed The Point

We are out here doing this because it’s FUN.  I went through all of this work and money invested so that I and other climbers could have FUN.  We are sharing the pictures and stories because they are FUN to look at and read.

It’s not just me either.  Thousands go to ice festivals throughout the country, many of which try mixed climbing or dry tooling and know what? They have fun too!  I know this first hand.  I’m often the one standing around in the cold teaching them.

Now quit your bitchin’ and go have some FUN!  Sounds like you need it.

Let the Dry Tooling Games Begin!

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

It can be hard to find partners when you’re wanting to climb some of the most difficult dry tooling routes in the country, especially in a town of 800.  So, this year I got clever and invited a some friends to come to check out The Hall of Justice in Ouray, CO.

Gordon McArthur, fresh from winning the City Rock / Ice Holdz competition, Kendra Stritch, her brother Carter and Tim Banfield all arrived at our house on Sunday evening.  As well, Ouray local, Logan Tyler also showed up to get in on the fun.

This is a series of photos Tim shot from the first day of climbing.  Thanks for letting us post these Tim. There will be more to come!  You can view Tim’s work at timbanfield.com

I was psyched to get the first ascent of a new route I bolted this summer called Magneto Effect.  The difficulty is in the D11 or D11+ range and it’s about 33 meters long.  A big roof midway marks the routes most difficult section, and I thought it would ease off after that, but I was wrong.  The route stays hard all the way to the end.  It was a good fight, and I’m glad I won.  There’s several more lines in the cave awaiting first ascents.  Hopefully we can check some more routes off the list while I’m here getting our the house ready for winter rentals.

Update: I’ve written a response to cover most of the comments that came in for this post.  Please see the Dry Tooling in Ouray Day 2 post.

Ouray Ice Park : Website Design

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Ouray Ice Park website design

The Company

The Ouray Ice Park is a non-profit organization that manages and oversees the one of a kind Ouray Ice Park and Ouray Ice Festivals.

The Project

We created a unique website design, and a WordPress based website that integrates with the Interspire Shopping Cart.

The live website can be viewed at http://ourayicepark.com
NOTE:The Client maintains and updates this website. Visual Adventures does not have control over the content.

Ouray Mountain Sports : Website Design

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Ouray Mountain Sports Website

The Company

Ouray Mountain Sports is an outdoor retail shop in Ouray, Colorado.  A town famous for it’s ice climbing park (the Ouray Ice Park).

The Project

We created a unique website design, and a WordPress based website that integrates with the Interspire Shopping Cart eCommerce solution.  We also added some photo galleries. RSS feeds keep the site dynamic so the client does not have to manually update all of the content.

The live website can be viewed at http://ouraysports.com
NOTE:The Client maintains and updates this website. Visual Adventures does not have control over the content.

Jason Nelson appears on Verticulture site.

Monday, March 28th, 2011

jason nelsonCheck out the story and video (written, edit and produced) by Jason Nelson on the Verticulture site.

Below is an excerpt:

Zero to Hero -a new mixed climb- came together in a series of pieces. The first began about three years ago… Living in Ouray, with a population of 900, meant that climbing partners could be limited at times. I often filled that gap by establishing new routes. Bolting is something like climbing, but dirtier and different. I liken it to a sculptor removing the debris and unearthing a statue. With rock as loose as it is in Ouray, that means a lot of removing debris.

Zero to... HERO!

 

Zero to… HERO!

Inspired by stories of what was happening over in Europe and having climbed-out Ouray’s current “hard man’s mixed climbing” area, the Poser’s Lounge, I set my sights on finding something different. Why did I need to be limited to finding steep rock with ice on it for a mixed climb? While we all like to have ice on our mixed routes for aesthetic purposes, it really limits the options. Read More and see the video…

Additional Pics

 

Jack Jefferies

Jason Nelson mixed climbing

Fall Foliage in the San Juans – Pic of the Day

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

sanjuans017111.jpg I joined a mass of other photographers yesterday morning to get this pic.  Van loads of photographers lined the roads around Dallas Divide to catch a view of the Sneffels Range is full glory.  I speaking literally here, they actually do arrive by van and all set up next to each other.  It was a tempestuous day in the San Juans with hurricane force winds, blowing sand, leaves and rain while behind us in Ridgway, it was just another sunny day in Colorado.

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