A really great series! Please keep on posting!
jaymatt wrote:
Scares me!
Nice shots.
Me too! Thanks for the visit John.
Stash wrote:
A lot braver than I am. Not a sport for me. I don't even like climbing a ladder.
Thanks for the comment Stash, I can fall over just reaching for a dropped object. I watched these folks from a chair.
UTMike wrote:
Great series!
Thanks Mike, I appreciate your comment.
Phil
Treepusher wrote:
Excellent shots! While I admire their skill and fortitude, this is why helicopters were invented...
As my dear grandmother would have said, "I don't believe I left anything up there". Watch yourself tonight my friend! Thanks for the visit.
philo wrote:
one of the best set i have seen for this subject. there is no way or any amount of money that would get me to do this. heck at my age i'm good climbing out of bed.
Thanks philo, I appreciate your comment. I can fall over standing in the meadow looking up watching these guys. I shot these form a chair.
Don W-37 wrote:
A really great series! Please keep on posting!
Thank you Don, I do have more, maybe another set. I appreciate your interest.
Phil
Great shots Phil. What lens(s) did you use?
WOW !!! What an Exciting Series !!!
srfmhg wrote:
Great shots Phil. What lens(s) did you use?
Thanks Mark. The wide shot was with a Tamron 18-400 at 18mm, the rest were taken with a Sigma 150-500 with some aggressive cropping. This shot of climbers on different route is at 500mm with no crop.
PH CIB wrote:
WOW !!! What an Exciting Series !!!
I appreciate your visit and kind words, thank you!
Seems they had a lot of help along the way. This was really a team effort.
GRIZ357 wrote:
Seems they had a lot of help along the way. This was really a team effort.
Hi Griz, thanks for the comment. If you are referring to the two speed climbers in the link the only help they received was from other climbers moving our of their way. They did not use any lines set by other parties. They did set their own belays and use many of the existing anchor points where absolutely necessary. In the climbing culture, even among conventional parties taking three or four days to "top-out", there is a thing about not getting help on these big walls.
I appreciate your visit, Phil
rockdog wrote:
October is high season for big wall climbing in Yosemite. This past Thursday I had an opportunity to spend time in El Capitan meadow watching the heavy traffic of elite climbers on the southwest and southeast walls of El Capitan. There was a bottleneck of four or five parties below the Great Roof. The horizontal shadow within the red box (near the top) is caused by an overhang that is called the great roof and with the light-colored horizontal veins are useful landmarks for finding climbers on what is known as the Nose Route. These amazing climbers are all more than 2000 feet above the valley floor. There are 13 or 14 individuals in the second shot. Please try the downloads.
October is high season for big wall climbing in Yo... (
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they have more nerve that I do...lol. great shots of the traffic jam, phil! love the downloads!
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