http://www.supertopo.com/tr/The-Prow-my-first-wall-6-2012/t11504n.html
After The Prow I found myself thinking, these walls are tough man, is it really that fun? But as my body healed and the fear faded, the stoke of my first wall remained, and I was ready to get on another one. I get a call from my buddy Laughlin (pronounced "Locklin") saying that he has some time off in July and wants to get on a wall in Yosemite. He is a really strong free climber, but has not done much aid climbing at all. Despite this, I know he is a solid and smart climber so he will be able to figure it all out when we are up there. We meet up and decide that the south face would be a good route since the aid is easy and there is a decent amount of free climbing. We make the typical planning of fixing to the 5th pitch, sleeping on dinner, and then finishing the next day. Sweet, good plan, see you in a couple weeks and let's do this thing!
In the following weeks I had a lot of time to day dream about the wall. The thought kept popping into my head; maybe we should just do it in a day? The first three pitches will be fast...the kor roof doesn't seem that bad....only three real pitches of aid after that.....then some free climbing and we are there....yeah it could work.
Laughlin and I met up a few days before the climb to make the final plan and sort gear. We looked at the topo, and almost simultaneously said, maybe would should just shoot for a day? We had the usual back and forth of what if this or that happens, but in the end it was decided, in a day it is!
We got to the Valley around 12 at night and parked at the Ahwahnee. We packed my Metolius Quarter Dome haul bag tight and started the approach. About 5 minutes from the base of the wall I had a horrible sinking feeling inside me as I realized something.... I was going to strap my helmet to the haul bag on the outside, but I forgot to. DAMN!!! Time to walk all the way back to the car....
I always wanted to do the approach twice!!! Oh well, what can I do. I run back and forth and soon we are near the base. We bivy at the base (i know tisk tisk) and I toss and turn all night because I can never sleep well before a big climb.
The next morning we are climbing by 6am. No one in front of us!! Woohoo SF to ourselves.
The first pitch is basic, and the 5.8 free climbing is pretty fun!
Laughlin wants to free climb the 5.10 section on the 2nd pitch, but he ends up on the 5.11 section. On the topo it shows the 5.11 part right above the tree, but it is to the left and the 5.10 part is even farther left. Oh well time for him to get some real aid climbing in anyways!
The third pitch is easy free climbing and BAM we are on dinner ledge!!! I said, I'm glad we are doing this in a day because we would have been hanging out here for a long time if we decided to do it in two days.
Looming up above us was the Kor roof. After doing the Le Conte Boulder the roof didn't look that bad. Even though I wanted to lead it, it was Laughlin's turn and he took off up it.
As I was belaying him a party was heading up the third pitch. Turns out to be a young guy from New York and a guy from the Czech Republic. They had never done a wall before (or aid climbed) but met in camp 4 and decided to give the South Face a whirl. The were pretty sure they were going to bail after the 5th pitch, but I said you are up here early, you might as well give it a go!
Laughling cruises the roof and only uses the top bolt as pro to make cleaning easier. HOWEVER, he back cleaned his first few pieces after the roof. As I am cleaning the roof, I see the rope go from the top bolt and then sharply over the roof to the right. This will be interesting..... I clean the top bolt (kind of hard, I had to swing and pull on the bolt) and then let go.....I swung really far right, and the rope sawed across the lip of the roof back and forth as I swung in space. I knew it was unlikely that the rope would actually get cut, but it was still a horrible feeling watching and listening to the rope saw across the roof as I swung. I managed to not die once again, and finished cleaning the pitch.
The fifth pitch starts to the left of the anchor and goes up two bolts to one placement and then a roof. The bolts were not shown in the topo correctly, but follow the two bolts to the left of the anchor (pretty obvious which way to go.) The pendulum on this pitch is really fun!!! I know it isn't quite as epic as the king swing, but I still had a big ol' smile on my face as I swung across. Laughlin cleaned the pitch quickly, I taught him how to lower out, and we were cruising. We didn't haul the fourth pitch and instead hauled from the top of the 5th with the bag sitting on dinner ledge. This worked out nicely and was fine with a 60m rope.
Laughlin headed up the 6th pitch and then started to move really slow as he got close to the belay. I couldn't see him, but yelled up to see what was going on. Apparently he missed where he had to free climb right and ended up aiding up a crack to the left. He figured out a way to access a ledge and walk back down to the belay. Meanwhile, I was watching the young kid aid through the 5th pitch. He seemed a little freaked by some of the blind placements on the roof, but I cheered him on and he made it though it.
The next problem occurred when I had to clean where Laughlin had gone off route. I jumared up to his high point and watched how the rope went from the one green alien I was standing on, back down about 15 feet to my right and 5 feet below me. Trying not to think about how far I would swing if that piece blew, I reached high, clipped a fixed head, cleaned the alien and had Laughlin lower me so I could pendulum to the anchor. The crack was close enough that Laughlin cleaned the draw off the head when he was cleaning the next pitch. I could have also lowered out, but this seemed faster. Sweet! Problem solving on a wall is actually kind of fun after all.
Next I start up the longgg 7th pitch. This pitch eats up nuts (haha I just said that) and is pretty straight forward c1 with some easy free. The one part that was exciting was starting up the double crack section on the second part of the pitch. I started in the left crack and then when that stopped I had to make a big reach to the right crack and blindly stuff a cam in. The placement was bomber, but the reach was a little exciting. I get to the achor, fix the rope, and start hauling. When the bag gets to me I immediately pull out a water bottle and food. I'm dehydrated and starving. I always make the mistake of forgetting to eat and drink. I also had a why do this moment. I was tired, hungry, and dehydrated. I looked over to Half Dome and thought, how am I going to climb that, or El Cap if I'm already tired on this. I said why do I climb walls? It's hard work, it's scary at times, but for some reason it's all I want to do (except in this moment.) The food and water helps, and I find myself starting to have fun again. Alright, my head is back in the game let's finish this thing.
Laughlin reaches the anchor and says something to the effect of, my feet hurt like hell! Walls are tough. I'm glad he was feeling the same way I was. I say, at least the aid is mostly done and we are almost there! He starts up the 8th pitch with some aid and then frees the rest. The haul bag got stuck a lot in the chimney, but I was able to guide it through when I was cleaning.