老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料

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老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 climbing isn鈥檛 what it used to be

Ed Cooper, the first climber to scale the stawamus chief, reflects on times gone by
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Conrad Haegert climbs the Top Shelf.

What was previously pioneering of the vertical realm has become something entirely different.听

Today鈥檚 rock climbers are out for an adventure when embarking on a climb up the Stawamus Chief, but it鈥檚 a different game now 鈥 one in which there is specialized equipment and better knowledge of what lies ahead.听

It was 55 years ago this past June that Ed Cooper and Jim Baldwin were the first to climb the Chief. Their literal ground-breaking ascent went directly up the Grand Wall, the prominent blank expanse below the First Peak.听

Baldwin and Cooper persevered over four weeks, advancing their position up the climb, and along the way, changing what was thought possible.听

Climbing has progressed since their pioneering efforts, with equipment, training and changes to the style, but one thing remains and that is the climbing itself.听

The activity has become part of 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 and grown massively in popularity.听

鈥淚鈥檓 not at all surprised,鈥 Ed Cooper says. 鈥淲hen Jim and I were there in 1961, we said this place is going to be a great rock climbing centre. We figured that people would come from all over to climb there and that has certainly proved to be true.鈥

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Climber Renee Vieira on the Snake. - Submitted

听With thousands of climbers coming from around the world, 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 has become a mecca for this once-fringe activity. The style has changed since those early days when Baldwin and Cooper were hammering pitons into the rock and sweating it out high up the Chief. Today, climbers ascend the Grand Wall in a matter of hours, not weeks.

The difference is akin to felling a large red cedar using a pocket knife verses using a toothy buck saw. In both instances, the undertaking poses a hazard, but with the pocket knife you would have to听work听at it 鈥 just as Baldwin and Cooper did 鈥 over the course of weeks.听

Felling a massive redwood with a puny knife would also seem utterly impossible at the outset 鈥 just as staring up at the yet unclimbed Chief.
In the early days of rock climbing, in 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 and elsewhere, ropes were made of hemp, rubber climbing shoes didn鈥檛 exist and neither did the array of options for protection (Today鈥檚 rock climber can choose from dozens of different types and brands of cams, hexes, nuts, tri-cams and big bro鈥檚 to protect climbs).听

In the 1960s, climbers often used aid climbing to advance their way up the rock. They hammered pitons into fissures and cracks to secure themselves and the rope, and to aid their upward progress. 听 听听

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Ed Cooper on the first ascent of an overhang on Nightmare Rock near 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 in 1960. - Ed Cooper

Today, climbers more regularly opt for free climbing, where the rope and protection are used to arrest a climber in the event of a fall, but not to aid their upward progress.
Climbing was truly a fringe activity in its dawn.听

鈥淎t that time, there were maybe a dozen climbers who climbed on the periphery routes, the smaller routes, on the Chief,鈥 Cooper says.
As climbing has exploded, the Grand Wall is regularly trafficked. There are often multiple parties climbing on the route at a time and a guidebook reveals the difficulties that are in store.听

Belays are bolt protected, and loose rock and lichen has been removed from the rock.

Baldwin and Cooper were explorers as much as they were rock climbers.听

鈥淏ack then, there were really no guidelines. We did not even have the equipment to handle what was required on the climb,鈥 Cooper says, recalling how the blacksmith in town fashioned some special extra-wide pitons for one portion of the climb 鈥 the split pillar pitch.

听This section of rock climbing ascends a spear of rock that is semi-detached from the main face of the Chief. It begins as a finger-width crack and widens to over a foot, allowing you to see through to the other side of the rock. Upon reaching the top, climbers stood on a little square platform in the sky.

Cooper thinks back to the experience and recalls some of the challenges including rainy weather.听

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Jim Baldwin on the chokstone in the Roman Chimney on the first ascent of the Great Wall at the Stawamus Chief in 1961. - Submitted

鈥淲e just weren鈥檛 able to climb all the time and we also came across unexpected problems, which required solutions which we had to make up,鈥 he says.

听In the years following his Chief ascent, Cooper went on to establish new routes on El Capitan, Yosemite and the Willis Wall on Mount Rainer. The Willis Wall remains a very serious piece of climbing, even with advances in technology and training.听
Cooper thinks of his lifestyle at the time.听

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have any money 鈥 a common problem among climbers even today,鈥 he says with a chuckle.听
He didn鈥檛 let a lack of funds stop him. Cooper continued to climb and travel through North America, and began shifting his focus to photographing the places he visited as much as just being among the hills.

听鈥淚n the intervening years, I travelled throughout the U.S. and Canada concentrating especially on the mountains because that was my first ever interest in photography. I take pictures of other things as well now, but mountains are still dear to my heart.鈥

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Ed Cooper (right) and Jim Baldwin at the end of the climb of the first ascent of the Stawamus Chief in 1961. - Ed Cooper

听He wound up living in Sonoma, Calif. with his partner, Debby.

One substantial change to climbing that Cooper notices is the advent of climbing gyms and what they have brought to the activity.

鈥淭here wasn鈥檛 a single climbing gym that I know of in 1961. None.听And now they鈥檙e everywhere.鈥澨
听 Cooper was back to 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 a couple times, most recently to give a presentation about his climbing career at the 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 Mountain Festival in听2011.

听More people come to 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 to climb each year. However, Cooper鈥檚 first ascent, the Grand Wall, remains perhaps the most classic of 老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料 lines.听

Not only was it the first climb up the iconic Stawamus Chief, but the climbing and the position are spectacular.

Rock climber Jon Rigg on Nanook. - Submitted
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