This year was the second year that we have offered multi-pitch climbing at the event. Every day four guides took eight people in two shifts up multi-pitch lines in First Creek Canyon. RRR participants got to climb things like Algae on Parade (5.7, II), Lotta Balls (5.8, II), and Black Magic (5.8, II).
The fairgrounds for the event are at Spring Mountain Ranch State Park. The ranch is a historic place with an outdoor theatre. And there is tons of room to play in the grass and hang out.
There were a lot of games at this year's Red Rock Rendezvous. Of course there was a rope coiling competition (I got second place), and there was a rope uncoiling competition, and then there was the "making a draw" competition. The idea is that you have to make a quickdraw as quickly as possible.
On the first day of this competition I came in third place, and the guy in the video below came in first. You can see my time (I'm J-Mar) on the whiteboard at the end of the video.
The thing is that this video was taken on the second day of the competition, and it turns out that if you win on one day, you don't get to compete again. So I eventually got ahead and felt like I had a solid time.
The problem was that the people running the competition decided to play a little practical joke on me. Phil Bridgers, the event coordinator and a good friend of mine, put his name up on the board with a faster time. Every time I beat his time they changed Phil's time to be a bit faster. I would go over to the table and do my best to get one or two seconds faster, then they would do it again. Finally, they couldn't help themselves and they started to laugh.
"I've never played that game in my life," Phil admitted. And I had to admit that it was a pretty good joke too. Especially since I won the draws.
There was another game that we at AAI sponsored at our booth. Casey had people compete to build an pre-equalized anchor off of three-points, finishing with two opposite and opposed locking carabiners. Whomever did it the fastest would win a $600 course credit from the American Alpine Institute.
Though I obviously wasn't eligible to win the contest, I played it anyway to see what my time would be. After figuring out all of the tricks, I got my time all the way down to 11.56 seconds. But then a young woman who'd never built an anchor before came along. She was super dexterous and blew away all the guides and non-guides alike with a final time of 10 seconds flat. And with that she's signing up for a course with a significant discount.
In the end over four hundred people took climbing clinics at the Rendezvous, nearly a thousand participated in the parties and competitions at night. There is no doubt in my mind that the Rendezvous is the best climbing festival of the year. I can't wait until 2015!!!
--Jason D. Martin
1 comment:
Great job summarizing RRR Jason! It was a great time for everyone involved! I will be back next year for sure!
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