The wind speaks;
it doesn’t just shriek and moan. It
tells me I’ll need my fleece pullover and Mammut soft-shell in order to stay
warm. It says it came from somewhere
cold, and that soon that very cold will be here. It warns me that as soon as I get
myself high up enough on the wall, to bath in the warm sun, that it will find me.
The wind
carried in several other climbers. Larry,
the unofficial mayor of The Gap. John, the
fearless young man. John’s girlfriend
Alison, the photographer. Boyd, the
Doctor. Kyle N., or “the other Kyle”, a
quiet kid who looks like Harry Potter.
And my Kyle, affectionately known as The Stoned Master. And finally Kyle’s wife Amanda, who is
bundled up like an Eskimo and quietly reading wherever she can find some sun. I’ve never climbed with such a big group
before, usually I roll in 2’s or 3’s.
The last time I’ve seen this many cars parked below the ascent trail was
years ago, when a two-bit guide outfit put a deal on Groupon for urbanites to
crowd the small top-ropers buttress and leave trash strewn all over the
undercliff trail. Thankfully, the wild
and adventurous nature of The Gap keeps the regular visitors down to a select
few hardmen and committed locals.
Gearing Up Before Heading Up |
Larry, starting up High Falls. |
Our entire
party traversed the cliff south to the Land of The Giants wall where we divided
up. Larry and John on Point of No
Return, 5.8+ (or, 5.8+++), with Alison taking pictures on the ground. Boyd and The Other Kyle on Surprise,
5.4. And Kyle and I on Crackpot, 5.4,
with his wife sitting nearby with her book.
Crackpot is directly right of Point of No Return and we were able to
hear Larry’s incessant whistling/singing while he stuck it out in the hanging
belay – bringing up John, and then belaying him out to lead. How he kept himself in that position for so
long, I have no idea.
Kyle, leading up Crackpot. |
Kyle and I on Crackpot. |
After rappelling
Crackpot, Kyle and I found our rope was stuck when trying to retrieve it. The links on Crackpot are a bit small, and I’ve
had trouble pulling ropes from this route before. But ours were completely stuck, as in the two
of us with all of our weight and strength could not get them to budge. These things happen sometimes. Larry and John were in deep on Point of No
Returns so we had to wait for Boyd and The Other Kyle to finish Surprise so
they could free our rope, but they planned on climbing Crackpot next anyway. And before he went up, I gave Boyd a spare
biner and aluminum ring to replace those damn links up there.
Boyd, up on the cold and dark arete of Crackpot to free our ropes. |
Our day started
at 730am and by now it was nearly 3pm.
Kyle and I had planned on climbing Surprise but unfortunately, we lost
almost 90 minutes waiting. And at this point,
the sun was completely gone from the cliff and we were all very, very
cold. We all said our goodbyes after
plenty of back and forth about getting together again, here or there, to climb
this or that. I told Kyle that in the
Spring I would make the trip out to his home turf.
Back at the
parking area, the wind was blowing cold off of the river and saying that our
time was short. I don’t think that today
was my last day climbing rock in 2014, but very well could be. This rock season may not have been one of my
most active, but probably one of the best if you quantify quality.
View of The Mighty Delaware, just below The Gap. |