Most notably, Steph has made unbelievable progress on an excellent route called Bébé Sabart. When she first tried the route, she hung through the first two bolts and pretty much stopped there. Now, after a few days of working on it and getting the knack of all sorts of tricky jessery, she's piecing entire sections together, including the crux.
The route starts with a couple of bolts of cool tufa climbing. Perfect pinches and a world-class butt scum lead a horizontal roof, where the casual climbing ends and the jessery begins.
A sneaky heel hook in a perfect hole allows her to clip and get ready for the crux.
The technical crux is moving into the roof feature. There are a multitude of ways to do it, but Steph has figured out a graceful way that involves a powerful dropknee with her toe jammed into a small hole, before eventually walking her feet in front of her to another foot cam and a powerful gaston move. I've seen several other climbers try this route and I think she does it more gracefully than most of them, which is cool.
The final walk through move/foot cam of the crux section. The foot cam is excellent, but hard on the knee since most of her weight is on it for several moves. When she first tried the route, she couldn't do a single move on the entire crux section and she was super apprehensive about the foot cams. Now, she can do the entire crux section and has figured out how to effectively move on the steep terrain.
Clipping this bolt is still a work in progress. The holds aren't great and the foot cam is painful, but I think with another day, she'll figure out a sequence that works for her and be off to the next little section. Both of us spend a bit of time doing a few moves, then making a grab to a draw... All holds are on in our book... even the ones that shine. :)
Aside from all the new climbing techniques that she is learning, Steph is also getting good at all the other shenanigans that go along with hang-dogging sport routes. Her boinking skills have gone up 5000%... from not being able to pull up on the rope, to using her hips and body to generate the necessary force to get her back up. Climbing on horizontal terrain is certainly a new experience and I also notice a marked difference in her comfort level. When she first started climbing the route, she only tried it on toprope, which was a total nightmare because TR + Horizontal Roof = catastrophy. Although it was intimidating at first, Steph soon realized that it was far better (and much easier) to work the route on lead. Now, she leads the sections well (still working on the clips occasionally) and doesn't appear to be near as intimidated to fall. She regularly takes falls and is working up to piecing together the next section of the route which has a bit of a runout. She is definitely getting much stronger physically, but I think the biggest improvement has been with her mental confidence and capability. It has been really fun watching her realize a small part of her potential.
Steph working on the next sequence that leads to a double kneebar, no-hands rest just before the final cruxy section and a really bizarre finish that entails crawling into a vertical hole in a horizontal roof.
In addition to Steph's progress, we've also met a few of the local climbers, including a young guy named Josef. It has been super fun getting to know him and learn about the region and language. Josef has been awesome about showing us secret beta, helping us learn all the climbing terminology and teaching us a random assortment of slangy sayings that I unwittingly use inappropriately with frequency.
He's of the "I have stupid strong fingers" generation and is getting back into shape impressively fast after completely tearing a pulley and having surgery six months ago. Today, he made a smooth ascent of "La Chica," the line pictured above after finding a couple of key kneebars and completely crushing the crux pinch with his "weak" hand. I'm frightened to see what will happen after he quits his temporary job scrubbing cheese next week. College doesn't seem to be on the horizon, but I imagine he will quickly be crossing things off his ticklist when he gets some calluses and climbs more than once a week.
For the time being, the weather is still hot, so I imagine we'll continue to climb in the cool, shaded grotte for a while. I'm super psyched to see Steph make more progress on Bébé Sabart. With some work, I think she could piece it together. Regardless of whether or not she links the route though, her improvement is incredibly impressive and inspiring. I can't wait to go back and she her work on it more.





























