First Trip to the Gunks
The Gunks is on The Mohonk Preserve, a privately owned wildlife/recreation preserve of 6700 acres. We both payed 75 dollars for a yearly membership. In exchange for that, the trails are all really well maintained, there's a nice visitor center, they have programs almost every weekend on everything from Leave No Trace to singles nights.
The rock is nothing like I've ever climbed on. It's characterized by horizontal as opposed to vertical cracks and TONS of overhangs, ceilings and roofs everywhere. Even many of the easier routes go up and around big imposing overhangs.
After a two hour drive from Princeton, we got thoroughly lost trying to find our route, a classic 5.6 called High Exposure, first done in 1941 by Hans Kraus and Fritz Wiessner. We started up the wrong route before realizing that it was definitely too hard to be rated 5.6. (That climb I think was actually Airy Aria, 5.8).
Finally we found some people and they told us that the route they were on was in fact High Exposure, so we ate our lunches and waited for them to finish. Nate lead the first pitch, and I proceeded to stub my toe and gash open a big bloody hole. Fortunately, putting on my climbing shoe really staunched the bleeding because of the compression/pressure of the shoe.
The climbing took us a while, because we climbed in really short pitches. I got to lead the crazy pitch though, which was probably some of the most exposed climbing I'd ever done. You have to step around this roof on a very narrow prow. Also, because the cracks do not run vertically as they do in most areas, you don't know from below whether the rock above you will accept good protection because you can't see the cracks. It's also not as obvious where the route actually is because you don't have a crack to follow. All those facts contributed to our slow progress.
Nonetheless, the climbing was stupendous. The Gunks are amazing.
I have pictures from the trip, and you can see them at http://picasaweb.google.com/rmcgibbo/FirstTripToTheGunks
Labels: climbing







