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Home > News : Hill skills
Tuesday 9 February 2010 | Personalise | Help  
 HILL SKILLS 31 / 03 / 06
 

Tech Tips - Multi-Pitch Climbing

By Jules Barrett

Multi-pitch Climbing

So you've spent the winter in the wall, climbed on single-pitch crags and now you're moving into the mountains to tackle the bigger rock routes. You've read the books, seen the photos, practiced tying up the dining room furniture and been inspired by great names like Dinas Cromlech, Bosigran and Cloggy.

The greatest experience of your climbing career awaits you but there's so much to think about when you're multi-pitch climbing; anchors, fall factors, route finding…and halfway up the Rannoch Wall is a particularly bad time to get it wrong.

I remember my first visit to Gogarth on Anglesey with my brother. We'd asked a gnarly old-timer in the Padarn the week before about the place and all we got back was "Gogarth! Yer need balls the size o' water melons youth". Helpful, but not really practical advice. Here are a few pointers to ease the transition from steely-fingered gym rat to experienced trad climber.


Lead pitches in blocks

It's common in the UK to swap leads on multi-pitch routes. It's something to do with our British sense of fairplay; we don't want to hog all the leading (especially when the next pitch looks a bit stiff!). However, it's worth experimenting with leading pitches in blocks i.e. on a six-pitch route I might lead the bottom pitches and my mate might lead the top three. There are a couple of key advantages:

1. There's no need to keep swapping the equipment over at each stance. The leader just takes the protection that the second's removed and is ready to go.

2. It can take a bit of time to 'get your eye in' with placing gear so you might find that you place better gear if you climb a few pitches together.


Avoid tangled ropes

It's common to use double ropes on multi-pitch routes. They can help to reduce rope drag and also allow double-length abseils which is particularly handy if things don't go according to plan. Anyone who's climbed with double ropes will have spent some time on belay stances cursing the tangled mass of rope that's threatening to take over the whole of the stance. We can save ourselves a load of stress and hassle if we just think about things a bit. These basic principles might help:

1. The leader should figure out which way the route goes next before setting up a belay. If you're leading pitches in blocks (see above) and the route goes up and rightwards the leader should be on the right hand side of the stance. If you're swapping leads at this stance the second would come up and stand on the right. Easy.

2. If you're leading in blocks, the second should clip into the belay UNDER the leader's ropes. This allows the leader to exit without getting tangled.


Extendable Quickdraws

Even if you're really slick with your double ropes, single ropes still rule on routes that are straight up and where you're not likely to have to abseil. They're light and straightforward to use.

When climbing on a single rope it's a good idea to carry a couple of extendable quickdraws that can be used either short or long. Using them long allows the rope to take a straighter line so you get less rope drag. To make an extendable quickdraw, make up a normal quickdraw using a 50 cm sling and two snapgate krabs. Pass one krab through the other and clip two strands.

We've now bought ourselves some time for something really useful...


Time spent assessing the quality of anchors is time well spent

The ability to assess the quality of an anchor is a critical multi-pitch climbing skill and something that you should look for opportunities to practice. Today I take far more care assessing belay anchors, abseil anchors and runner placements than I did ten years ago because accidents have happened in the meantime because people checked anchors but didn't check them thoroughly enough!

It's common to concentrate on learning slick rope techniques but simple rope systems tied to bomber anchors are the sign of a climber at the top of their game.


Racking Krabs

Get rid of all those non-load bearing krabs/clips that you use for racking and organising. One day someone who's not aware might abseil off them. Swap them for full-strength snapgate krabs that are easier to handle and can be used for protection when you're running out of gear.


Something to think about...

Suppose you're half way up a multi-pitch trad route. You're leading and find yourself underneath the crux with twenty metres of rope out beneath you. The gear on this pitch so far has been excellent but runs out a couple of metres beneath the crux. You can see there's no decent gear until a few metres past the crux. Question is: do you build a belay beneath the crux or push on past it?

Got an opinion? Get on the forum and discuss it :-) See link below.


This is the first of a new series of fortnightly OM tech tips by Jules Barrett, a member of the Association of Mountaineering Instructors who runs Orion Mountaineering. You can contact Jules by e-mail at jules@orionmountaineering.com

Tech Tip Man

Jules Barrett is a member of the Association of Mountaineering Instructors and runs Orion Mountaineering, a UK-based mountain instruction and guiding company. When not working he enjoys climbing, caving, cave diving and other stuff that insurance companies don't approve of.

For more information on rock climbing, scrambling, navigation and caving courses throughout the UK visit Orion Mountaineering.



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Discuss this article, 1 of 18 messages, read more:
Jules (Orion Mountaineering) 
Posted: 31/03/06 09:53:02 02
Thought I'd start a thread for comments, any other multi-pitch tips that you'd like to share, suggestions for future articles etc.

So what you going to do? Belay above or below the crux...and more importantly why!
Read more...
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