Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Backwards to go Forwards


The past month of this year has been crazy. Getting everything that has happened down on paper would be unrealistic but also a bit dull to read so I'll try to keep things brief...ish

L'Argentiere - EYC R1.

Things started off pretty  much a month ago with me jumping on the train from York to stay in the welcoming home of the Phillips' in Huddersfield. After an amazing set of fajitas it was a relatively early night before being whisked away at the ungodly hour of 5.30 to get to Stansted to fly to my first ever EYC. Touching down in Lyon we were met by some poor weather, a long drive ahead of us and a car that could not be understood by anyone but Lexi Basch who helped Clive figure out how to use the satnav but also whether the parking brake was on or off. Several rainy hours later we arrived at our accommodation, an amazing chalet just a few minutes up the road from L'Argentiere.

The next day the weather had perked up and we took a walk down to the town to get food, register for the comp and scope out the wall. Upon first glance it was mayhem. So many problems were set on the wall trying to figure out which ones would be ours was near impossible but everything seemed to look hard. Without a slab, the majority of the wall was slightly overhanging with more holds being used than volumes. This would mean that sequences were more easily read and so execution of the bloc in few goes was essential.


(Crazy scenery behind the comp wall)

Comp day. We (juniors) woke and ate late on comp day as we would be the last group to compete. Mooching on down to the wall in no rush we arrived in time to watch and support every category but Youth B.

Walking into the warm up area for me was a daunting thing. All the best athletes from each country, dressed head to foot in their national gear warming up by pulling crazy moves on the wall was both impressive and scary. We stuck to the game plan and warmed up as a team. Feeling psyched and ready we headed for the blocs. The qualifiers are done in scramble format with 8 blocs and 5 attempts each for every athlete with about an hour and 40 minutes to complete them.


(A photo with Mr CAC - John Ellison)

My first bloc was a simple crimp fest with super shiny holds for hands and feet. As I pulled my second foot from the floor to start, my first foot showed me just how slippy these holds were and pinged off. With a bit of squeezing hard I put my feet back on and wandered to the top. A shaky start, but a flash all the same. The second bloc required an awkward footless catch of a pinch which took me 2 goes to get, but from there it did not feel too bad until the match of the last hold where I felt as though I would barn door off until I slammed the other hand on to counteract the swing. From here on I got 2 more flashes of relatively easy problems and decided it was time to approach the harder ones with no queue.

 I chose one where I could only just reach the start hold - a slopey pinch. It then required a dynamic mantle by followed an awkward press onto the bonus. To my surprise I flashed to the last move and fell more from shock that I'd got there than the fact I couldnt do the move. Back on the ground I assessed my options and decided to give it another shot. I dropped the mantle. Tits. Third time lucky. I fought my way back to the last move and mustering all the body tension I had in me, I flicked to the last hold and stuck it. This gave me 5 tops in 8 with 3 problems still left to try; a big second gen dyno, and horrendous looking tiny crimpy thing, and something that in a word, just looked nails. I chose the crimpy bloc as again it had no queue. It hurt. And i didnt flash it. Which meant I tried it again. And it hurt more. And I fell off. This happened three times until Nath yelled "Throw your hips in" in his squeeky Huddersfield accent and I stuck the tricky move and found myself at the top. 6 in 12.

Dyno time. Dynos are mean. Its not often a question of can you get them, 90% of the time they will be doable for you, but having to do them in five goes... I find it hard. I hit the jug past the sloper 2 or 3 times but just couldn't seem to stick it. Even though I knew I could get the rest of the climb, the dyno evaded me. Feeling slightly deflated I made my way to the last bloc but with little time left I only had one go and got shut down. Overall I was pleased with how I had climbed (other than on the dyno) and popped out in 12th place. To our delight Hamish had also made finals and so we would return the next day to cheer him on with everything we had left.  Seeing the finals was truly inspiring to watch and a big congrats to Hamish for smashing 2/3 problems to secure his place on the podium.

 (Hamish flying on M2 in the finals)


London - JBBC R3

Touching down back in Stansted after a day of swimming, barbecues with the Canadian team and watching Nathan in the Tout a Bloc, I headed to Essex to stay with a friend Millie and her family before proceeding to London for the third round of the Junior British Bouldering Championships. A big thank you to Millie and her family for putting me up and looking after me!

Upon arrival at The Arch climbing wall I was disappointed to see that there were only 5 people entered into the junior category when previously at the start of the year there was more than 20. This meant that whatever the qualifying results we would all make finals. Feeling exhausted from the trip to France I started to warm up in the muggy heat. Feeling super hot but not really warm to climb, qualifiers started. With 2 and a half hours to do 8 problems, with 3 attempts on each this was ample time. I made a good start with 4 flashes and one silly second go. I then tried what appeared to be the hardest boulder, falling at the lip of the roof and then dropped the top hold twice. Moving from here to the boulder that had least tops on it, I secured a flash. 45 minutes in with one easy boulder left at the end, I dropped it. All three times. Idiot. Still with 6 tops in 7 I was in third place going into the finals.

In the finals again I feel I did not climb my best, with 1 top in 2 attemps on a slab I got nothing else. Not even a bonus. Though after the comp I did one of the problems by simply matching on the move that I got shut down on before. Showing that maybe I was just tired from being away and not thinking straight under pressure...

The results came in and it turned out that I had placed second to Hamish which meant that overall I had won with a 4th, 1st and 2nd place across the three rounds even though Hamish had only entered 2 and won both of which he had entered. A good end to an average day but an amazing week that I will never forget.


L'Argenfeld - EYC R2

Back on the road again 2weeks after London, this time I was heading to Tom and Mich's in Sheffield to jump in the car to head back to Stansted to meet the team before flying off to Munch for the second EYC in L'Argenfeld, Austria.

The layout of the two days was different at this comp to the one in Argentiere. In Argentiere there were all the qualis on one day and all the finals on the next, though in L'Argenfeld everything seemed to be a muddle with some categories having qualis and finals on the same day but others having them on separate days. As it turned out the juniors weren't competing until the second day so on the first day we went down to buddy and support the youth b's and then the youth a girls. It was clear we had upped our game from last time with good results across the board even from 4young guns that had not done an EYC before and Tara making finals with 8 tops. Stoked for the next day, we went for pizza, came back stretched and watched a film and headed to bed.

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Up and out the hotel by 11 we were down to support the youth A boys. I think the best part of being away with the team is the fact that we are a team rather than a bunch of scattered individuals. The passion and drive that each competitor gives to a team mates performance really pushes them to reach the next level on the wall and everyone is so supportive of one another and I think this makes a big difference. The youth A's finished with another great set of results and Willam Bosi securing a place in the finals with 7 tops.

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(Cosi Bosi engages super crush mode in the Finals)

With an hour to go before qualification we began to warm up. Unlike the last trip, this time we had the help of Tim Cunnington the Strength and Conditioning coach for the team to help us with our warm up. We started as usual with self-massage and then pulse raisers, though this time for me there was a bit of a twist to the warm up. While doing a set of cross-legged squats my entire leg on both sides seized with cramp. The cause of this was a combination of having tight hips and being stood still on a cold day. The sudden demand from the muscles even with light work was too much. This had a big effect on my confidence at the start of the day. Knowing there was a couple of squeezey leg moves and jumps I wasnt sure how I would do. With the help of Tim we worked on getting my legs feeling as good as they could and I started to pull on the wall. With my fingers feeling strong I was really unsure of how I would perform.

Going out for the start I pulled on the hardest problem and flashed to the bonus. After another 2 attempts I gave up and moved down the other end of the wall to try an easier one. Miss-catching a pocket on my first go tweaked my middle finger on my right hand. Two more times of falling out of this pocket and my head went out the window. A mixture of anger and disappointment at myself set in. I trudged out to the back of the wall to have a word with myself. At this point in time you just feel you want to be alone but the help of the team around me really brought my motivation back up. Rachel, my buddy for the day and Tim came round to talk to me and get me back to where I needed to be. When all you can think of is the negative thoughts and whats gone wrong, having someone there to tell you that you're not actually shit and you have only tried two problems and messed one of them up but still look pretty strong really helps. I felt like I had gone backwards a couple of years in both competition experience and mental capacity to cope with it. I couldn't remember the last time I had had a tantrum and a strop in a comp, never mind being a big enough of a muppet to lose it at an international. With my finger taped and positive words of Rach and Tim ringing in my ears I went back out to try the easiest of problems. A pleaser. Flash. Thank god.

With one top on the cards and a small amount of confidence back in the bank I went to try a tricky jump on a slab. Failing 3 times but seeing 2 people flash the problem including team mate Max I knew how to do the jump. Securing it on my fourth attempt I used Max's beta to the top (cheers dude). Happy with the send, I went back to the problem with the weird pocket purely because I knew motivation was high and it had no queue. With new beta from buddy Rach and a better head to go with it the problem was easy. 3 tops and a bit of flow in my climbing boosted me that little bit more. Moving only one bloc right another queueless climb stood before me. With no beta in front of me to be observed I asked the team on the ground and fortunately Tim had the answer. Unfortunately, I didnt have the hips to execute. 5 goes up and a bonus was all I could achieve.

3 problems left to try and half an hour to go. This is where tactics for scramble format become really important. And although I got my tactics nearly right in L'Argentiere, they were far from it here. I topped a crimpy problem on the steepest bit of wall on my second go thanks to being kept there by the team on the ground and being told not to move on. 20 minutes to go and 1 problem left that I thought I could do but I had not anticipated the wait for this climb being this big late on in the day. Again I flashed to bonus but fell off adjusting my hand on the volume. 3 minutes to go and I get to make my second attempt, securing a dirty match in a pocket I reach to the arete and line up for the last move. Tired and rushing slightly, I didnt give the move everything I have left despite it being the last move I will be able to make this comp. I fluffed it, my hand moved right across the hold I didnt hit the jug. Devastated. My performance had not been good enough. I wasn't worrying about where I had come, just that I hadnt done myself justice on the problems that were put in front of me mainly because I think my head wasnt there on the day. Speaking with other people I learned that there were few people who had topped lots of the problems and also that Max had made finals and Hamish had just missed out in 7th place. Buzzing that we had another person to cheer on in the finals but slightly worried for my voice, we made our way to eat, before heading back for the finals.Embedded image permalink
(Happy Team)

 Everyone crushed in the finals with Tara getting one top but being very close to another. William topped 2 and got 3 bonuses, getting him second place and another silver medal. Max nearly flashed the first problem and flashed to the bonus on a very difficult problem number 3. Stella performances all round.

Looking ahead to Arco I have to take the positives from this competition. I have learned if its cold, to do a pre-warm up warm up. If I feel my head starting to slip how to prevent it and also to use the team on the ground. They were the biggest help this weekend, the support and help they give is amazing and I couldn't have asked for any more.

A massive thanks to all the team for making this week epic and to the management; Tom, Jo, Mich and Tim for driving us round, making it possible, so enjoyable and doing all you do for us!

Remember Tom, we got........
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Thanks to Red Goat climbing company and beyond hope for all your great support.

Arco. Bring it on.

Thanks for reading and sorry for 3 posts in one.

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Less is More

My career in the Adult competition climbing scene began last year at the BBC's at the cliffhangar event in Sheffield. I think it fair to say my expectations of myself that year were too high. I had not anticipated the size step up in class as you progress from juniors to seniors. I was quickly shocked back into reality when only one top in two attempts gained me 34th position. A place I certainly wasn't satisfied with. Regardless I took the positives I could from the event and looked to the future.

"I've failed over and over and over again in my life and that is why I succeed." - Michael Jordan


This year I approached the competition in much greater form, although in the few training sessions I had running up to the comp, most of the time it did not feel like it. Continuing with my conditioning work it was climbing that was taking a little bit more of a back seat role in my training. Having a job in the climbing wall I find it very difficult to get motivated for a hard session after work. Most of my sessions recently have just been testing problems after a set or demoing problems in kids sessions. (Not ideal for training at all never mind for any comps really.) Trying to climb on your own problems when training for a comp almost defeats the objective of figuring out the problem as 99% of the time you will know how to do it whereas in a comp situation a lot of the time the reason you wont make the top is because you cant figure it out in the 5 minutes you have rather than the fact you're not physically able to do the bloc. Luckily enough for me however I have two other walls in the form of City Bloc and the Depot that are both under an hour away for me and a week before the BBC's Mr Barrans set the hard circuit at Red Goat meaning I had lots to test myself on when it came to onsight practice. City Bloc is brilliant as it will always have some "funk" to throw you off the wall and make you think rather than just having straight forward pulling and this is definitely what I would need knowing that the BBC's were on the works comp wall, both technical and powerful. The qualifying problems proved to be just that.

My qualification opened with a weird slab problem which I managed to fluff up 4 times before securing the top with a mere 4 seconds left on the clock. This was very frustrating as I knew I could have done it quicker, but at the same time a top on the first bloc will always settle me into the competition. The next two blocs I had very little success with. The fourth was right up my street. Some positive holds but weird moves. I secured bonus on my first attempt then after a couple of minutes rest I snatched the match on the bonus and sprung my way to the top. The last problem was nails. 

2tops in 7attempts scraped me into the finals in 9th place in group A.

(Dom Burns and Orrin Coley Battling problem 1)
(Joey Watts crushing on Bloc 4)

After staying to watch most of the womens qualifiers it was time to head home to bed. I can safely say I slept like a baby! Only to get the shock of my life when my alarm went off again at ten to seven telling me to get up and go again. I felt like I had gone 10 rounds with Mike Tyson and then been hit my a bus. SO tired. Regardless I got some breakfast and went to pick up my compatriot Luke Hughes on the way to the works. Arriving early there was time for a quick chill and chat before it was back into isolation to warm up as I was to be out second.  

Trying everything I thought possible to start the first problem but nothing worked. Every time I fell. After some time I decided it could be done as a run and jump, balancing into the start position. Boom, second go trying this method I fumbled my way to the top. Another reasonable start but again, 5 attempts. The second problem was steeper with lots of volume work. Securing the bonus on my first go I couldnt figure how to get match on the bonus and so, peeled off. Another couple of goes down and I decided to quit and save some energy for later. The third problem used some slopey, greasy holds and quite big moves. After doing the first move repeatedly I didn't get the rest. Again I quit hoping to save something for problrm 4. Leaving slightly confused but intrigued as to how the stronger guys would do the problem I sat down ready for problem 4. This used a mixture of clamping and getting as much skin in contact with the first 2 volumes as possible before moving onto 2 positive crimps and then a big double handed move onto a sloper. After dropping the crimps, being called off not tapping my foot on the start hold and dropping the sloper I was racking up the attempts (again....). Knowing it was the last problem and that i had to give it my all I pulled on one last time changing my beta slightly form using a toe to using a heel. Bingo. I stuck the sloper move. From here the was a gaston press and a rockover to the top. Before I knew it I had one hand on the top but it was on the very poor side of the hold. A couple of bumps later it found the jug. 2 tops in 10. A score that wasnt my best, but one I was certainly pleased with. 

After waiting and watching all the other guys and girls compete the semis had a nerve racking end. Until the last 2 men came out to compete I was in 6th position. Though it was with false hope that I held my breath as it was Dave Barrans and Jon Partridge, the two guys who had qualified in 1st that came out to climb and  would push me out the finals. Overall I finished (chuffed) in 8th place. 

The finals were a great watch with Dave topping every problem in the competition and cruising to victory as the other fought tooth and nail to make the podium.

A full set of results and report can be found here.

The replay of semis and finals can be found here and  here.

Of course a big thanks to Red Goat climbing, Evolv and metolius for all the help they give me. Further more a big thanks to all the volunteers and organizers of the event!!

Friday, 2 May 2014

JBBC's Round 2 - The Final Chance

Last weekend saw the arrival of the second round of the Junior British Bouldering Championships, an event I had been looking forward to since January. However my main focus had been to train for a font trip a few weeks before (my next blog will be about that but it will be long and I'm waiting on some pictures to break up the text...).

Post Font my elbows had been feeling much better though I didn't seem to be able to get back into the swing of indoor climbing. With 2weeks to the comp my first few sessions back on plastic felt hard... really physically hard. Every movement felt burly and more holds than I realised were pinches (something I had not missed at all in the sandstone world). Not doing any specific training I was merely trying to get the hang of climbing indoors again. Big feet, big moves. With one or two moderately good sessions under my belt with a some days setting and testing under my belt too it was off to Hebden Bridge on the train to jump in the car with the Murphys (thanks a lot for the lifts guys, life savers!! Pretty funny car ride too). After getting them lost a few times trying to find my hotel I hopped out the car to find another familiar, cheeky face in the form of Orrin Coley greeting me. The Premier Inn dinner was delightfully tacky and overpriced as always and with that, we head to bed, pausing only to laugh at how long a film about Snakes on a Plane could go on for so long.

A short car ride from the hotel saw us arrive at the doors of TCA Glasgow where this event has been held the past couple of years. After scouting out which problems were mine and which were easy or hard I preceded to the circuit board area to warm up. 30 minutes later the comp was underway, a couple of blocs seemed to be causing some problems but after a bit of beta sharing I fumbled my way to 7tops in 7attempts with 7 bonuses in just as many. The 8th bloc required some tricky beta mainly revolving around a big greasy volume. After trying 3 times all I could muster was a slap on the bonus hold, not even close to holding it. Hats off to William Bosi, the only one to top this problem (daamn he strong!). Seven in seven saw me comfortably into the finals in joint first with Max Ayrton and Orrin.

(Photo of a qualifying problem by Sandy Carr)

After a quick lunch we were hustled into isolation in preparation for the finals. Due to qualifying in joint first having the lowest competitor number out of the three of us in this position I was set to come out of isolation last. For me this was not ideal, I would much rather be out first than last. I get restless in isolation knowing that everyone else has attempted our climbs and this just builds to the intrinsic pressure I put on myself, though you do get a good idea of how everyone else has done and how difficult the bloc is.

The first problem followed some poor holds to a big protruding ball which doubled as the bonus hold. What came next was a series of more poor crimps, a positive rail and a slot for the finish. Balancing my way to the bonus I made a mistake on the next hold, not leaving room for a match, though with a bomber heel I was quick to shuffle the hands along and pull steadily up to what can only be described as small, slopey horribleness. Squeezing as hard as I could I pulled through to the positive rail and found myself eying up the finishing hold with a swift movement I had one hand in. I looked down to where to put my feet next to be in balance for the match, there was nothing, hmm.. damn. Not but two days before I had had this same problem down at the local wall and had dropped the top trying to campus the match. After assessing all my other options I figured this was the only one with a big pull up I prayed that I would stick the hold. My hand hit the top of the slot then seemed to worm its way onto a holdable part with my arms at full stretch. One flash, I couldn't have wished for a better start.

After another 20 or so minutes and a bit of running and dancing later in isolation, it was onto problem 2. This consisted of a mantle followed by a greasy volume and a very small but technical jump to the bonus. After this it looked like some basic crimpy moves to a finishing jugs. I had what seemed like 100's of goes on this problem. No matter how hard I tried, the small jump to the bonus felt nearly impossible for me. Every time I tried, my feet swung round in crazy style fashion and just at the last minute when I thought I had stuck the hold, my right hand would eject and I would be sprawled across the matting, arms and legs everywhere! No tops for me on this one.
(Problem 2 - photo by Sandy Carr)

When viewing problem 3 myself and fellow competitors had a dilemma. We originally read the problem and confessed it looked hard but where was the bonus. After some more inspection we found the bonus hiding on a volume but with it we found many more holds that took a different line. This looked very hard but was clearly the intended line to take. When coming out for the final bloc I decided to stick with the original beta and pull on the foothold that had been mistaken for a hand hold earlier. This method required an awkwardly high heel that put me out of balance, using the underside of a volume I snatched a positive crimp. Leaning away from the finish I secured a hold on the bonus and turned my focus to the next few moves.  Making one more move my right hand pinged of the crimp with considerable speed. I was back on the deck but it did not matter, I knew I could get there again and I knew I could make the top. Having a minutes rest I did not change my beta in the slightest. I guppied the corner of the volume I had fallen off before and slapped over the top for a big sloper. With one more steady move I was at the top. 2tops in 3 attempts. I knew I was close. But was it good enough? Being back on the ground I conferred with my fellow competitors who confirmed it. I had won! Brilliant, my first national win. I couldn't and still can't quite believe it.
(Junior Podium - photo by Sandy Carr)

The following day I was invited to join in the GB junior team training. Here I learned how to move, eat and stretch well to climb better. All aspects were very interesting and positive for me to see where I need to go from here. The weekend was topped off with me being asked to join the Junior team and being selected for the European Cups and Championships this year. This, was a weekend to remember.

I'd like to say thank you to Mountaineering council of Scotland for putting on a great comp, Alan Cassidy and Gaz for the setting and use of the wall, Tom, Lu, Tim and Nath for all the work the put in all the time behind the scenes and at the comps and training and also my sponsors; Red Goat Climbing wall and Beyond hope for all the support they give me. Cheers guys.

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Niggles and Blocs and Wads

From the beginning of February there was nothing more I could think about than the trip to Font at the end of March though I new there were some comps I had to get through without injury first. These were of course, the CWIF and City Blocs final round of their winter bouldering league. Unfortunately these fell on consecutive days though this was the least of my worries...

Towards the middle of February I was feeling about as strong as I have ever felt, though my training had taken a backseat role, mainly doing short sessions whenever I could fit them in. However, having short sessions normally means that they are very intense. This was bad for me. Doing deep locks for a long time because I could hold on longer had caused my elbows to become inflamed and feel very sore. Whenever I had to pull hard or slow I would feel a deep ache erupt from the bottom of my bicep meaning that I had to have a rest from climbing. Fortunately, the following week I had a snowboarding trip booked. ACE! A perfect time for me to rest and recover, then I could have 2 hard weeks training before the CWIF to get stronger again with my elbows healed. This unfortunately, was not the case, for the first two sessions back I felt nothing, cured!! But, we all know it doesn't always work like that. By the third session, it was back, worse than ever, leaving me unable to climb even the easiest of climbs pain free.

Reading round on the Googley Interweb I managed to find many people with the same problem, most of them weight lifters, all saying that they needed to have 1-3months off. Nightmare! Having symptoms that felt not as deep as those described (not being able to lift a cup of tea) I figured with ice, rest and ibuprofen I would be back up and running by the City Bloc comp and CWIF. Maybe not firing on all cylinders but I'd be able to climb. After a few days rest and ice there was no improvement and a session I had planned with Nathan Phillips, I had to cancel. After describing my symptoms to him he gave me an instant response of, "It's not tendinitis" - "just get a deep tissue massage". Being a bit apprehensive, not thinking that this could just be an instant cure, I took his advice and visited a masseur. My god, the pain I went through was unbearable, but it worked a charm. After another 5days rest I was able to climb lightly. Cheers Nathan!!!

City Bloc is notorious for having some of the best set problems across the country! Always having a prime mix of technical, beta related and powerful problems to throw at you. Approaching the start of this comp I had resigned myself to the fact that seeing as it was my first session back from injury (aside from testing problems I had set the day before) that I would not be upset if I did not do well. Warming up I didn't feel strong, unwilling to pull hard and see how my elbows were doing I progressed through the grades and realised I was pain free. Epic. The finals were done in world cup format with the climbers going out one at a time. Having placed in 7th but with Nathan and some others having dropped out, in reverse order I was out 3rd.

The first problem was relatively easy to read with crimps and heel hooks on guiding the way to the top. Matching a volume with 2 micro crimps on it, I found myself 2 holds from the top but with few feet, greasy hand holds and a long way to go, I found myself stuck. In a moment of desperation I put a heel on a lower down volume and decided I would go with the wrong hand to the second to last hold and match it. However, upon rocking over on my heel I discovered the top not too far away. With a swift pop, I was there, top hold, flash. A good start. This put me in joint 1st with Tom Peckitt and Josh Farrel.

The next problem was slightly harder to read with a run a stand into a corner to start. This was awkward, every time I jumped in and put my hands on the starting patch I seemed to fall out. After what seemed like hundreds of attempts with a slower jump I jammed my foot on the second starting hold and stuck it. The next move was a weird crossover and dyno to a jug. I missed it. I missed the jug. With a few more goes to get into the corner I committed to the dyno knowing now what the move felt like and stuck it. Pulling through some easier moves I found myself at the top. Dropping places though, Will Buck, Will Atkinson, Tom and Josh all topped this in fewer goes than myself meaning I dropped to third. With 2 tops in loads of attempts rather than 2 tops in few.

The final climb had a press into a volume then a move to a small crimp, from here you put a foot by your hand on the volume and cranked for a positive arĂȘte. With an awkward flick into a sidepull pinch the next section was hard to read. I ended up matching the pinch and pressing into a volume rather than crossing over to a volume like it had been set, from here I flipped my left had to a guppy and flicked to a crimp. Having messed around so much in the middle finding different methods I fell off. With two more goes down falling off the start, I pulled on with one second to go (tighter than  wanted it to be) using my matching beta I raced through the start to maintain energy for the end. Hitting the crimp I dropped before,here I got a knee bar and reached for glory! Score. Three tops. This put me in third place but watching the others to see how they got on. No one else secured a top. 1st place, no elbow pains, a good start to the weekend.

Full set of results here.

The next day I travelled to Sheffield to take part in the CWIF. In previous years I have entered CWIF but been unable to attend due to injuries and family affairs. I had no idea what to expect. I had no expectations before I started. I had seen the start list and had seen the sheer WADdage that was attending this year. So many internationals were coming, just for this. Looking down the morning qualifier list I could see 20 names that were fighting for a place in semis, never mind in the afternoon session too. To be competing alongside the like of; Rustam Gelmanov, Tito, Gabriel Maroni, and Mina Markovic (to name but a few) was incredible! The problems looked super techy with two or three that looked powerful. It was possible to drop even the easiest of climbs. Crushing effort from Megos and Stew Watson for flashing them all!!

I approached the problems in usual fashion, do some easy ones, get on the hard ones, then come back to the rest. This worked for the most part but silly errors came into play, like leaning out on a slabby problem and a foot slips on a smears meant that I dropped crucial points. 10 more points were dropped on a last hold where a super deep lock was required to secure the last hold, with my hand in the jug I slipped off - 3times!! Feeling slightly hard done by I finished on a respectable score of 245 having not topped 4 climbs. This put me in 36th place, going away without a place in the semi finals but lots of things to work on.

Full Qualifying results for cwif here:


Sorry for the lack of photos, I was climbing and unable to take any.. :(

Over the next three weeks I will be in Font, tearing it up with Nathan Phillips, John Thornton and Will Buck! (Hopefully we'll bring you back a nice video too)

Thanks to Red Goat, Evolv and Metolius for all their help!

BRING ON FONT! :D

Saturday, 8 February 2014

R.O.C.Fest and F-BO

So after a relatively successful start to the season outdoors, it was time to get back indoors for a few comps. (Not that I venture to far from the warmth of an indoor wall very often

Last weekend saw both the final round of the evolv bouldering league at the Climbing Works and R.O.C.Fest 5.0 at Rock Over climbing in Manchester on consecutive days. After arriving at the works feeling fresh I warmed up on the easy boulders and finally cranked my way to doing all but 3 of the problems in relatively few goes including a flash of the mens bonus problem.

After getting home at gone midnight on the Friday I awoke early in the morning for the long drive to arrive at Rock Over for 9.30(ish). After scouting the problems for half an hour, it was sussed that there were 4 or 5 hard climbs and 20 flashable, but droppable problems. Warming up on the systems board made it clear to me that the day before hard taken it out on me both mentally and physically, my skin stung and was red raw and I couldn't get focussed. However I knew getting completely warm was crucial as I had entered this competition twice before and both times, I had been unable to complete the day, pulling out with finger injuries both times.

Moving quickly through some of the easier problems to get fully warm I felt  much better. The crowds here we tremendous and therefore getting on problems early was essential, I was basically running between problems. So many people!! Time flew by, it seemed my subconscious had kicked in and I was rattling through the climbs fast. Done, everything tried. Overall I managed to qualify for the finals in 5th place with a score of 212. Happy already.

After watching the slacklining jam, (an incredible scene for those who haven't seen how good some of those guys are) we headed for isolation. After the briefing we headed out for viewing. Some pretty straight forward problems that were easy to read lay ahead of us, however they looked very burly and hard.

The first problem was  what can only be considered, my best attempt on a problem. A balancey start to turn round on a volume, followed swiftly by an outward facing dyno, a knee bar to secure a small crimp then a big flick to a slot. The final move was a big yuck from this small slot to the finishing jug. Running out of isolation to cheers from the crowd, this was by far the loudest crowd I had ever heard and the best show of finals I had ever had the pleasure of being in. On my flash attempt I secured the dyno and before I knew it I was at the second to last hold with distant calls from Callum and Cowan of "Come one Joe!!" and "PASSION!" It felt to me like the deepest lock any man had ever. I couldn't reach. I jumped off one foot, missing the jug. It was only when I was standing back on solid ground I realised my mistake. Two feet, is better than one. From here I could not secure the slot again. I was battered. Thinking it was a four minute dead time limit on the finals I quit with 20 seconds to go, only to find out when back in isolation it was 4+. Tits.


From here, it was all down hill. The second and third problems required very tricky jumps both from and to very poor pinches, slapping a bonus was all I could muster. The fourth saw more big moves and a cross through from a terrible hold on a volume to a positive crimp. Unable to hold the crimp I locked in to touch the bottom of the hold in control, jumping off I thought I had been given it, unfortunately not. Damn. I was bumped down from 5th to 6th with Orrin Coley putting in a strong finals performance to take 4th. Solid work on the first problem. However I came away with a cheeky £50 so all was well.
(ROCfest podium and finalsists, congrats guys!)

This weekend saw the arrival of F-BO 2014 at the foundry. Having not attended a comp at the foundry before, I was inquisitive as to how the day would plan out but new above all else, most of the problems would be on the unforgiving, steep and powerful wave. It appeared most of the climbers here were of a different crowd to those at ROCfest, fewer well know comp climbers appeared, but instead it drew in the "outdoor lot". Those who have significant ticklists and crazy hard assents. The legends.

Jumping on the technical problems early my strategy here was different to at ROCfest. I left almost all problems till the end. This was a horrendous mistake. Like, a truly bad decision.From having success on a few of the other hard problems early on I was going well but was becoming drained. 5 problems left all on the steepest part of the wall. I was burned out I had little left. 3 went down, flashes. Two problems that were within my capabilities for a normal climbing session seemed stupidly hard. This was no normal session however, this was a foundry, powerful, wave comp. I needed to flash one to make the finals. Close, but no cigar, after being given "slow" beta by Nathan on my third go of one problem, I managed to see it off on my fourth. The other bloc required an awful drop in from a crimp and a poor undercut. What came next was a big but not super hard move to a pinchy sloper. I reached the very last hold of this with an arm outstretched for the top. The tank was on zero, the reserve tank was on zero.  The wave had beaten me. I fell.

Wave 2 - 0 Joe

I finished on a score of 216. Respectable, but I was by no means happy with this. 

Nathan Phillips and Diane Merrick made up a team that can be described in 3 words. Team number A. I was carried to a second place by Nathan and Diane with them scoring 244 and 187 respectively. They both did crazy well in the finals with Nathan getting to the top hold of every problem on his flash attempt but seemingly was scared of the top and so achieved one flash, but was inches (literally) from coming first. Diane scored a wicked 4tops in 6 attempts to secure third place. Well done guys, you were sick!!

Cheers Red Goat climbing and Beyond hope, super help!!

Monday, 27 January 2014

Night Sessions

The new year and about time I started to write a blog...

With the new year having past, and what felt like all the food under the sun having been consumed over Christmas, it was time to get back on the unforgiving grit stone. The first grit trip of the new year saw me accompanied by Nathan Phillips and Callum Sewell to the famous Stanage Plantation.

The gloomy weather hung over the peak district threatening to rain in the late hours of the morning. Upon arrival at the crag we decided if it was wet we would sack it off and hit the works. Strolling up the path we were not holding our breath for a good day out as it looked sodden and damp but as we reached rock we discovered only a few things sheltered by the wind were wet and the rest was dry. After walking around checking out what was dry the rain rolled in. Great indoors it was. All we had done was manage one warm up climb, and to entertain Nathan, the same climb, one-handed. We stuck around for a while in the hope that the rain would pass and bumped into Hamish Potokar who had been trying The Ace (F8B), desperately trying to keep the holds dry with his jacket. Twenty minutes later and luck was in our favour. The rain had passed and the wind picked up. We're in!

Not being bothered to warm up again we decided to jump on Captain Hook, a cool small roofed F7B with a funky top out. We saw this off relatively fast, myself having to repeat the problem because of kicking the rock while trying by best to "whale-mantle" myself onto the top. After this we took a short walk to Deliverance, a classic slab wall with a dyno to finish. We got shut down. This was hard. So instead we hiked the incredible distance of about 40 yards to Hamish and The Ace. Nathan jumped straight on The Joker (F8A), tickling the jug in his first few attempts. After around half an hour, gaining some super psyche from Hamish getting agonisingly close to topping The Ace, Nathan pulled off the starting block and smashed the campus with his feet flying everywhere. (This was a sick effort, nice one Nath!)

My aims for the day had been to try out Careless Torque (F8A), one of the coolest looking lines at the crag, as well as Brad Pitt (F7C+). From checking earlier in the day we knew Brad Pitt was wet so we went to try and figure the first few moves on Careless Torque. Nathan quickly managed to get the first few moves but no further and after countless efforts to get the first move, I concluded, I would need to be stronger. MUCH stronger.

In a last ditch effort to grab another tick before the sun went down we checked Brad Pitt one last time. It was dry! Someone was there trying it, perfect. After 10 minutes the local sent the problem, leaving behind his beta but also a lack of light, brilliant. Within 15 minutes on the problem under the light the flash on my phone I had stuck the first move 3 times and hit both the left and right sides of the ledge, not sticking it any of the times I had hit it.... This was unbelievably frustrating.  Throwing my heal back on the starting crimp I decided if it did not go soon we may have to leave and save it for another day. Summoning all my strength I hit the first hold perfectly, this was it, just a match and flick to the top and it would be done. My heal felt poor on the starting hold but I knew if I adjusted it and came off, there would be no getting here again. I stuck with it, matching the crack. With one powerful flick I hit the ledge bang in the middle, YES!! First F7C+ in the bag! Clambering over the top my hands and feet were sodden from the puddles at the top of the boulder that I could not see in the dark, but I couldn't care less. I was happy, a sick day out!
(Hamish Potokar hitting the top hold on The Joker (F8A)