Riverside, Rocklands (SA). |
Two seasons have elapsed since the last time I was
in Rocklands, the renowned area in the Western Cape region of South Africa. That
trip was actually my first time out of Europe and was also a good reaching point for my first year as a full-time climber. I
was excited the day I left and the trip was brilliant for different aspects. Despite
I didn’t like some sides of the area, like the low quality below the V9
frontier, I remember a lot of positive things: some good boulders in the
highest difficulty range, the climate which was often perfect, the breathtaking
landscapes and the cost of life which was cheap for us. These things made me
keen to come back as soon as possible, even because the potential for new stuff
is probably bigger than anywhere else.
The climbing
style in Rocklands is anyway really simple. It is way simpler than in every
other place I have ever climbed. Nothing is difficult. The only thing you do is
to grab a hold, which most of the time is a good crimp, and pull it as strong
as you can. Rarely you have to figure out something technical or the climbing seldom
offers brilliant moves like spicy arêtes or sequences where minimal details are
the key. Everything is basic and repeated over and over. This is something I
like and I don’t at the sometime. I guess in some cases is really fun and nice.
Even the hardest problems are of course difficult for the strength, but super
simple for the reading and for their interpretation. After a while, I miss the
true bouldering and the gym style of the area start to get me bored; this is
the negative side.
Campground, Rocklands (SA). |
Max trying "Pinotage", Rocklands (SA). |
"Purple Nipple Clan" 8A, Rocklands (SA). Photo Max Buvoli |
This year I
booked my flight really late, like one month before or maybe even less. Me and
Max, a friend of mine, opted to come down in July and just after booking I
immediately planned a program which worked well. I went to Silvretta for a
bunch of days before my trip and I could text myself after those 2 weeks
training. I felt positive, light and in a good shape. Skin was perfect and this
meant a lot to me. I just had troubles on the endurance and some specific moves
made my shoulders feel weak; The time between Silvretta and Rocklands was
anyway enough to recover this lack. We
landed on the 11st of August and we only have 20 days of climbing ahead. It was
short, but it was definitely better than spend another full month in the
terrible Italian summer.
Everything
started well like I desired: I felt light,
I got tough skin and I kept going into a positive flow. The first 4 days were
brilliant. We first went to 8 days rain sector where I finished the classic
“Golden Virginia” 8A and flashed “Monkey Buisiness” 8A+/B. Everything seemed to promise for a joyful
trip. The days after I jumped on some classics I left in 2013 and I briefly
tried one of my favorite problem ever i.e. “Black Eagle”. I wanted to check it
out to see if coming back later or not. Unfortunately this never happened.
After the first 4 days on, I took a day off; I wanted to start working on something
harder and to look for some new projects. I had many things I wanted to do and
I knew the time was pretty short.
Since the
first day of rest, everything started to go wrong; or better I couldn’t fix my
problems properly. I started to be sick for five days and I felt weak in some moments; In the same
period I seriously split my medium tip, for an Anthyidral bad use. I started to
be stressed at that stage, probably because I knew I was wasting some of the
few days I had. I should have simply looked after myself in the coldest nights
and use the Antihydral better. Good things for the future!
I anyway started working on “Speed of Sound”,
a problem rated 8B+ and freed by Jimmy Webb. This problem sadly took me all the
trip long.
At the first
session I still had two weeks ahead; all of them have been spent working on
“Speed of sound”. It took me 4 full days
of effort in which I exclusively tried
that line for 6 or 7 hours per day. The first session I had tape on, while
during the second day I also split my index. I kept working with double tape,
but I knew I had to stop and recover my fingers properly if I wanted to climb
it. I had already spent two precious days, so I wanted to finish it before the
end of the trip. The routine was like: intensive session on “Speed of Sound”,
climbing on easier lines with tape the day after, resting 3 days and then repeat
this loop again. Everything was mentally frustrating for me. I knew that after
the resting time I could have 5 or 6 goes on the boulder, and then I had to
work the sequences with tape on. The third session went good, falling at the
very end before starting bleeding. I put tape on my tips again and I could try
the end for a while. I figured out a smarter way to climb the upper moves and I
knew that if I could have reached that point again, I wouldn’t have fallen
anymore. I removed the tape off, I looked at my fingers, I looked at the
boulder and I set my mind off until the next session, trying to keep the
positivity. I started another resting loop; it was really long to sit on the
pads all day, waiting for a bit of skin. The game started to stress my mind
more than what I expected: I was in Rocklands and I had spent lot of time on a
single problem. I still had time ahead to check some other stuff; but at the same time I
would have not recovered enough to work properly “Speed of Sound”, so I would
have thrown away one week of hard effort. I opted to choose the hardest way for
myself: keeping on resting and keeping on believing in that ascent. I had no
chance: I would have climbed it or I would have basically wasted the whole
trip. I got a risk put 1700 €, three weeks trip, 20.000 km on a single boulder
problem. A boulder problem that at the end I didn’t like so much, but at the
point it was more like a personal game between me and my mind.
The third
session was on Monday the 24th. Then the day after we went to
Campground where I climbed on easier stuff before another resting period. The
plan was simple: resting Wednesday and Thursday, try hard on Friday, then resting
on Saturday to have the last possible chance on Sunday, before leaving. Doing
this I would have had 5 total sessions for Speed of sound, 2 of them still ahead.
I honestly thought that one would have been enough, but knowing about another possibility
made me more relaxed and positive. Unfortunately the forecast damaged my plans.
On Thursday the weather forecasted rain for Friday and Sunday, while Saturday was
supposed to be a sunny day with temps between 14 and 24. I knew I only had a
couple of shots before starting bleeding and then with tape the sending would
have been much harder for me. I hence rested on Friday as well and the pressure
started to make me bad. Saturday was the day. I woke up and I immediately went
at the window to see if the rain of the previous night passed by. I wasn’t worried,
I trusted in the forecast. I wouldn’t have . It was desperately foggy and quite
wet outside. I felt nervous.
We had our
usual breakfast and we drove to the pass. Going to the Saddle, the sector where
speed of sound is, the path takes like an hour. The fog was thick. The rhino
was visible at 5 meters only. I have never seen Rocklands in that scenario. I opted
to postpone my warm up, praying to see blue sky soon. After a couple of hours I
was warming and the fog started to fade off. We went to Roadside to finish my
warm up on “Sunset Arete”. Max climbed “Pinch of herb” 7C+, while the sky was fully
azure; his send and the clear air made me much more positive than the early morning.
We hiked to the saddle in our silence. Beyond how the result would have been,
that was my last time on the way. I got under the boulder and I cooled down my
temperatures; I sheltered in the shade of the overhang and my skin started to be
colder. I made a quick warm up for the exit, re-climbing the new way I checked
the session before. I didn’t want to check the other moves to save skin; but I
would have liked. Everything seemed anyway good, just the skin was more moist
than the last time. I wondered why, but an answer would have not made any
difference. Pressure was high and I decided to break it with the first go. I
climbed so bad and roughly, missing the middle crux. I rested and I started
again. I felt too nervous and my feet slightly shake in the sequence. I grabbed
the heinous crack and I got into the hardest move but I quickly hit the pad. My
mind was not following my body. I had to stop and set it off. After 45 minutes
I sat again under the boulder and the anxiety passed by. I felt my mind was
searching for the positive stream and it miraculously found it. I was on, I
felt a turning point and I began once more. I had a really bad go, with a quick
finger snap in the easy section. I fall down, but I was much happier than ever,
because I reached a good flow with my head. I rested few minutes and I started
with a even better focus. I reached the crux, I went over and I got in the
changing feet. I felt stronger; I was climbing into the flow and the flow lead
me to the lip. I did the mantle at half past 4 PM, with only a bunch of hours
before leaving. I was happy about all the process. All the resting days have
been paid off with a single shot and an intense moment. At the beginning of the trip I had totally
other expectations, definitively much more positive. But the things roll
differently many times and I had to change my plans. This experience will make
me stronger on the red point mode; and since it is one of my weakest point, it
is what I actually needed.
Trip is
over now and it has been good to live this “bad” events and to overcome some
mental problems. It has been curios to me to see how some aspects has changed
between 2013 until and now. I would have never been able to work so intensively
on a single problem in the previous seasons and this is definitively a good
point. I am pretty excited for the fall in Europe now. I have many projects to
do, things to develop and testpieces to repeat. Hopefully the temperatures will
drop in the next weeks!
Max trying "Cedar Spine", Rocklands (SA) |
Leopard prints in Kleinfontein, Rocklands(SA). |
Roadside, Rocklands (SA). |
"Time Out" 8A+, Rocklands (SA). Photo Giulia Agatea |
"Ulan Bator" 7B, Rocklands (SA). Photo Giulia Agatea |
Giulia trying "Demi Lune", Rocklands (SA). Photo Max Buvoli |