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Climbing Magazine | Bouldering, Trad, Alpine, and Sport Climbing
Since 1970 Climbing Magazine has been the voice of the climbing world, publishing climbing news, interviews, features, opinions, and advice.
Climbing Magazine | Bouldering, Trad, Alpine, and Sport Climbing GET STARTED WITH YOUR NEW FEED Follow friends and authors, share adventures, and get outside. LET’S GO GET STARTED WITH YOUR NEW FEED Follow friends and authors, share adventures, and get outside. LET’S GO Climbing Powered by Outside Home Be one of the first to try our new activity feed! Tap “Home” to explore. Got it Featured Skills News Olympics Gear Places People Videos Gym Climbing Magazine More Don't miss new adventures Get all the latest delivered to your feed. Ever Wonder How Many Climbs You Have Left? Or how many more pairs of rock climbing shoes you'll be able to wear through? Matt Samet Ondrej Húserka Dies After First Ascent of Langtang Lirung’s East Face Owen Clarke World’s First 5.14—and Many World-Class Crags—Will Be Closed to Climbers Anthony Walsh Interview: Will Bosi Still Isn’t Sure What V17 Means Steven Potter Longtime California Climber Arrested on Rape Charges Steven Potter Editor's Picks How Do Climbing Careers End? I Thought Climbing “Hard” Was Everything. I’m Glad I Was Wrong. Editor's Picks Badger: The World’s Greatest Rock-Dodging, Route-Developing, Sandwich-Stealing Crag Dog. Our Print Magazine is Back! Here’s How to Buy Latest Sponsored Content The Off-Road Antidote Outside and Bronco® SUV prescribe America’s most adventure-starved workers with an outdoor experience like no other Ford Videos Weekend Whipper: Sport Climber Rips Off Big Block, Nearly Decks Maybe it’ll clean up with traffic! The Editors Published Nov 1, 2024 Places 9 Things Everyone Should Know About Route Development For instance: When developing on "chossy" rock, it’s nearly impossible to draw a clear line between regular old cleaning, “aggressive cleaning,” and chipping. Matt Samet Updated Nov 7, 2024 News Marine Thevenet Becomes the 8th Women to Climb V15 Prior to climbing ‘Juneru’ in Albarracin, Spain, Thevenet had done numerous V13s and V14s. Christopher Deuto Published Oct 28, 2024 News Americans Make Notable First Ascent of Remote Pakistani Peak Americans August Franzen, Dane Steadman, and Cody Winckler made the first ascent of Yashkuk Sar via the inspiring north buttress. They called their route 'Tiger Lily Buttress’ (AI 5+ M6 A0; 2,000m). Owen Clarke Updated Oct 29, 2024 Videos Weekend Whipper: “My First-Ever Trad Whip Turned out To Be a Bad One” No kidding! The Editors Published Oct 25, 2024 News The Yosemite Triple Crown’s Speed Record Is Now Held By… Who? Tanner Wanish and Mike Vaill just beat Brad Gobright, Jim Reynolds, and Alex Honnold on the Yosemite Triple Crown. Wanish has only been climbing for four and a half years. Jayme Moye Published Oct 25, 2024 People Remembering Armando Menocal Armando Menocal, a Cuban-American civil rights lawyer and climber, dedicated decades of his life to ensuring the sport remained accessible. Brady Robinson Updated Oct 25, 2024 Skills Ever Flipped Upside-Down While Falling? Here’s How to Avoid That Upside-down whippers are dangerous but almost always avoidable... so learn to avoid them. Steven Potter Published Oct 22, 2024 Skills How to Fly with a Crashpad (and Other Travel Advice for Climbers) Climbing and travel go hand in hand. But getting there with all your gear can be a pain. Matt Samet Published Oct 21, 2024 See All Training The Training Bible: A Complete One-Year Training Plan This eight-phase (12-month) training series will present specific workouts based on the principles of periodization. Each six-week segment will build upon the previous one. Editors’ Picks The Secret to Training Endurance? Ditch the Rope. 5 Training Myths That Are Probably Hurting You Are Most Climbers Getting Fingerboard Training Wrong? (Part 1) View More Technique Moving Fast Means Climbing More: Alex Honnold’s Favorite Efficiency Tricks Honnold is famous for (among other things) cramming as much climbing as he can into each day. To do so, he's developed some efficiency tricks that the rest of us can imitate. Editors’ Picks 7 Tricks for Speedy Swaps at Multi-pitch Belays The Power in a “PSATTTTTTTT!” The Three Things I Wish I’d Been Told as a Beginning Climber View More Longreads The Triumphs and Tragedy of Patrick Edlinger He was the first true icon of sport climbing, famous across 1980s France for his daring exploits and bohemian lifestyle. In 2012, fighting depression and the bottle, he died in a tragic accident at just 52. What happened? Editors’ Picks Were We Humiliated by Honnold or by Ourselves? How Climbing Gyms Lost Their Soul Two Eras Collide When a Legendary Rockies Face is Rap Bolted Weekend Whippers Weekend Whipper: Ice Soloist Lets Go of Both Axes and Decks. (He Lives.) There are two miracles in this week's whipper: 1) He survived. 2) He caught the fall on video. Editors’ Picks Weekend Whipper: Falling Ice Causes Upside-Down Gear Ripper Weekend Whipper: Elvis Leg + Indecision = Upside-Down Ground Fall Our Top 10 Weekend Whippers of 2021, From Harrowing to Hilarious View More Gear Metolius Just Made the Gear Innovation of the Year The Roll Up Stick Clip is a truly remarkable piece of gear. Just don’t look too closely at the price. Editors’ Picks Our Favorite Sport Climbing Shoes (Updated 2024) Our Favorite Bouldering Shoes (Updated 2023) A Beginner’s Guide to Climbing Shoes View More People Want To Be a Pro Climber? Take Notes from Tom Bolger For Tom Bolger, being a pro climber also means being an Airbnb host and an offshore oil rigger. His philosophy: being a pro is about doing whatever you can to climb as much as you can. Editors’ Picks Why One of Climbing’s Best YouTubers Hasn’t Gone Full-time Beth Rodden was a Visionary Yosemite Climber. Now, She Introduces the Rest of Herself Jordan Cannon Turned Heads Last Year on Trango Tower. But Here’s What You Didn’t Know. View More Outside Apps Gaia GPS Get off the beaten path, and stay found. Download Trailforks Discover the best trails in the world. Download Outside TV Unlock 600+ hours of ad-free films and series. Download Outside Unlock 15+ outdoor publications all in one app. Download 2024's Best Read Feature (so far) Kitty Calhoun Expected to Die at 30. She Advanced Alpinism Instead Kitty Calhoun has climbed hard alpine faces around the world, but her biggest struggles have come at home: dealing with death, identity, and a complex family history. Susan E.B. Schwartz Updated Feb 5, 2024 The dictionaries have it wrong: The summit isn’t the top. It’s only halfway. And what we do after the summit is even more important than what we did before. Few know this better than Kitty Calhoun, one of the greatest alpinists of her generation. Calhoun has survived so many epics—both on ascent and descent—that it’s hard to sum her up in just a few. Perhaps Denali’s Cassin Ridge (VI 5.8 AI 4) in 1985 is a good place to start. After a rare female ascent when she and her partner ran out of food—common for Calhoun, whose climbs notoriously scrimp gear and food—stormbound for five days, their descent turned into a fight for survival fueled by only two cups of water per day per person. Or maybe her visionary attempt at the first ascent of the North Face of Thalay Sagar (6,904m) in 1986? Calhoun survived eight days at 40 below, four without food, her “team” one other climber, Andy Selters—no radio, oxygen, basecamp support, or chance of outside help—while experimenting for the first time with a handmade portaledge anchored off ice screws on a vertical ice wall thousands of feet up. What about when Calhoun became the first American woman to summit Dhaulagiri (8,167m) in 1987, after barely surviving an avalanche on ascent? Or tackling the immense West Pillar of Makalu (8,481m) in 1990—known for knife-edge ridges, breathtaking exposure, and 10,000 feet of some of the hardest technical climbing anywhere–where Calhoun became the first woman and only the fourth climber to top out? For Calhoun, the list goes on at the risk of making the extraordinary sound mundane. Continue Reading Outside+ Join Outside+ to get access to exclusive content, thousands of training plans, and more. 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Since 1970 Climbing Magazine has been the voice of the climbing world, publishing climbing news, interviews, features, opinions, and advice.
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