Wednesday 23 October 2013

Rusty Peg gets new look


Tom Bunn has recently updated his website http://www.rustypeg.co.uk/ giving it a smart new look. Rusty Peg aims to provide the best free guides and media for the local climbing community in Devon and Cornwall. Of interest to climbers in South East Cornwall will be a number of photos from Tom's recent Cheesewring Quarry first ascents as well as videos by Tom and Mikey Cleverdon of boulder problems on Bodmin Moor.

So check it out here or visit the Rusty Peg Facebook page.

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Cheesewring climbing guide in today's Western Morning News!

There is a two page spread featuring the Cheesewring & South East Cornwall guidebook in the Living Cornwall section of today's Western Morning News (Tuesday 20th August 2013). The article - Rock climbing guide pays homage to beauty and art of the 'mother granite' - can be read online here on the Western Morning News website. The feature, written by Des Hannigan, has a number of photos from the guide. Des's original piece can also be found amongst the articles on the Cheesewring Climbing website.

Tuesday 6 August 2013

New F7c by Tom Bunn

Tom Bunn has successfully redpointed a hard new extension to Wring the Changes (F7b+) in Cheesewring Quarry. Although somewhat unimaginatively named Wring the Changes Extension (in deference to the parent route) it weighs in at F7c so constitutes a significant addition to the cannon of Cornish sport routes.

F7c would appear to be the ceiling for hard sport climbing in Cornwall at the moment - at least where commonly acceptable venues are concerned - with the number of routes at the grade currently standing at 6. I'm sure it won't be too long before the bar gets pushed higher.

Tom has also repeated Wring the Changes, which may only be the third ascent of this recently re-equipped test piece.

The full description of the Wring the Changes Extension can be found here

Why does Sean climb?

Sean Hawken has climbed a tough new micro-route on the wall left of An ArĂȘte (pictured above) at Kilmar Tor. Wye I Climb, E2 6b, was climbed by Sean in the beginning of June - the full description can be found here. Commenting on the route's grade Sean says: "For some reason [Rich] Hudson gave it E3, but it's not. He will say that's what I told him, however I think E2 or even E1 tops. Let's face it, you could solo it safely with mats." He adds: "I took my last chance, for the foreseeable future, to climb at Kilmar Tor and climbed this line in the rain just before leaving for Wales to live, and therefore the top seemed absolutely desperate, however on a dry day with a cool breeze?"

Sean's been an active developer of South East Cornwall's climbing for over twenty years as well as authoring the ground-breaking 1998 guide and providing co-authorship help, over the years, for other guides to the area - including the most recent one. But now he and his family have relocated from Devon to the Wye Valley. A great loss to the local scene and I'm sure his enthusiasm and humour will be missed. However Sean still intends to compile information relating to the bouldering on Bodmin Moor with the intention of producing a guide. If you have anything to add please contact him via his Bodmin Bouldering Facebook page.

Best wishes Sean and I'm sure we'll still see you back on the Moor from time to time!

Also now added to the New Routes section of the Cheesewring Climbing webpages are details of a new bouldering spot in Luxulyan Valley which has been developed by Tom Last.     
 

Climbing guidebook gains nomination in prestigious Cornish publishing awards



After receiving positive reviews in the climbing press, wider recognition was given to Cheesewring & South East Cornwall: A Climbers’ Guide as it secured a Nomination and the praise of judges at the 2013 Holyer an Gof publishing awards (often called the 'Cornish Bookers') which were presented at Waterstones, Truro on July 18th. A full report of the presentation evening has been added to the Articles section of the Cheesewring Climbing webpages. The full list of all the winning publications in the Holyer an Gof Publishers’ Awards for 2013, as well as photos of the presentation evening, can be found at www.holyerangofawards.org.uk.

Wednesday 17 July 2013

Martin Crocker climbs new South Coast E5 and E4

It continues to be a busy summer on Cornwall's South Coast and things stepped up a gear last week with a visit from Martin Crocker. In the company of his son Jonathan, Martin added five new climbs to various seaside venues. Perhaps the most noteworthy being Unzip Real Slow E5 5c, at Dodman Point, which sounds like a really frightening lead protected mostly by skyhook runners and 'feather-weight' gear. Also here Martin climbed Deadman's Chest, E1 5a, which he says is worth a star and offers excellent climbing on good rock.

The pair also paid a visit to Lantic Bay resulting in two further additions to Great Lantic Beach Rock. This must surely be the most pleasant and amenable of South East Cornwall's coastal climbing spots and Martin seems to be a fan, describing it as 'a stunningly beautiful place'. Any climbers living or holidaying in the area should take note: Lantic Bay is well worth the trip.

At Pencarrow Head - in addition to climbing all the existing deep water solos - Martin also soloed Totally Out of My Skull, F6a+ (S3.5!) in preference to using the 'gnarly' ridge descent to access the Grim Reefer Wall. While the ridge descent isn't quite as bad as it looks care does need to be taken and it is probably worth roping up for it on first acquaintance.

Previously in February Martin also climbed a new route on the remarkably good Western Gear Pinnacle at Rame Head. Keep On Lovin, E4 6a, is described as a fine pitch on great rock and takes the wall to the left of Pete O'Sullivan's 1984 route Framed. It has emerged that the two routes to the right, Retrieved and Revived, are both in fact yet to receive a lead ascent (see note on the New Route page). If anyone does lead these please get in touch and you'll get all the first ascent glory!

Full descriptions of these routes can be found here. Many thanks to Martin Crocker for providing the details and useful feedback on other things from the area.

Thursday 11 July 2013

Heaps of adventure and delightful coffee on the South Coast

The last weekend of June was a busy one for new routes on the South Coast. First up an experienced team of South West pioneers descended on Nare Head to climb a three pitch ridge-line which had been on Pat Littlejohn's 'to do list' for quite sometime. For this adventure Pat assembled a crack team of veteran climbers which included Dave Garner, Dave Hope and Des Hannigan. The resultant rock climb, named Finger Ridge (pictured above), turned out to be 200 feet of VS fun. Des Hannigan commented on the route's greatest attributes: "The coffee at Nare Hotel was a delight," he said. I dare not hazard a guess at the combined age of the route's first ascent party!

The following day just along the coast at Dodman Point, the slightly more youthful pair of Tom Bunn and Alex Orr put up a clean aid route that sounds truly terrifying. The Pioneer takes a crackline up the overhanging wall between The Jolly Farmer and Horrorshow and was climbed without recourse, of course, to hammered or drilled protection.

Unbeknownst to Tom and Alex the Littlejohn and Garner team responsible for The Jolly Farmer were just a few hundred metres away on the Prince Heathen Cliff adding more climbs to their Dodman stomping ground. A VS named Pretender, and two E2s called Quartzophenia (pictured below) and Handsome Prince were the result of a good day's work for the greatest devotees of Dodman's adventure climbing. According to Pat: "We had a great day at last finding some solid rock to climb on Dodman!"

Full descriptions of all these routes and more photos can be found on the New Routes page of the Cheesewring Climbing Website. I'd be grateful to anyone with information on new routes or other climbing news in South East Cornwall if they could get in touch to let us know. Finally many thanks to Pat Littlejohn, Dave Garner, Dave Hope, Des Hannigan and Tom Bunn for providing details of these new routes and permission to use the first ascent photos.

Tom Bunn frees Super Indirect to give Talking Heads - F7b

Tom Bunn has recently added a new sport route to Cheesewring Quarry's Central Bay. Talking Heads, F7b, is essentially a free version of the old aid climb Super Indirect, A2. First climbed over a couple of days in 1970 by Steve Chadwick, with Len Benstead and Brian Wright, Super Indirect was one of the last remaining aid climbs from this period. Although the first section had been freed in 1989 by Ken Palmer (as part of his climb Mauritius) its main aid pitch, a traverse of the Central Bay, had not been climbed free. It is this pitch which forms the bulk of Tom Bunn's impressive new route.

Spectral Radius, Black Panther and Black Sabbath are now the only '70s aid routes in the quarry that remain to be freed completely, and of these the latter two have been freed but for very short sections of climbing.

Tom made his ascent of Talking Heads just a month after he'd added another new climb to Cheesewring's walls; Destruction in a Granite Setting is a Font.7B-graded micro-route on the Southern Outcrop.

The local climbers are continuing with the re-equipping of Cheesewring's sport routes and new stainless steel bolts have now been placed on Real Live Wire, F7b (7 bolts) and Wring the Changes, F7b+ (5 bolts). A new stainless steel bolt with mailon has also been added to the previously dodgy lower-off atop Psychokiller. Concerns had been raised about the state of this lower-off in the past as a single stainless staple, which accompanied a very dubious old ring peg, seemed to be the only reliable gear.

Full descriptions of these two new routes can be found on the Cheesewring Quarry section of the New Routes page on the Cheesewring Climbing website.

Monday 17 June 2013

Bodmin Bouldering on Facebook

As many of you may know local guidebook author Sean Hawken has set up a community page on Facebook for Bodmin Moor Bouldering. The bouldering around Bearah, Kilmar Trewortha and Hawk's Tors has really had an explosion of interest of late and Sean has been compiling details with a view towards documenting it all in a guide. Anyway those of you who are on Facebook can probably 'like' the page (I guess) to get involved, find out wason, enjoy the general banter and look at photos of dogs copulating whilst Simon Downing climbs Mustang! What more could trendy social networking new media types ask for?!

Cheesewring Climbing website updated

I have finally got round to updating the Cheesewring Climbing website which was set up to help support production of the recent guide. This site will now be maintained as a source for climbing related information for the South East Cornwall area. On this site can be found general info about the area, the most recent guidebook and old reviews of the previous 1973 guide and 1998 guide. There are also pages for articles and archive material which I intend to add to from time to time.

Most importantly there is a page for New Routes and Updates where I'll be uploading descriptions of routes climbed since the publication of the definitive Cheesewring & South East Cornwall guide (2012), as well as any future updates regarding access details, re-equipping, corrections, etc.

I hope people will find these webpages useful and let me know about any additions, as in the long run it will help aid production of any future climbing guides to the area.