Gear Scene About BD

20 Questions
Describe your climbing background.
Conan Dax Librarian 8a (Araotz) was my first 5.13 route. I was then 14 years old and it made me really feel the difficulty inside of myself. This route was one of the most important at the time in order to know what was rock climbing and to try to evolve.

 Il Domani 9a (Baltzola) was the first route where I did clean a 5.15. It was equipped by myself with some help and it turned out to be totally on natural holds. Besides, after several unsuccessful tries along a fall, it made me change my mind and I started to train daily more motivated to achieve these goals, these amazing lines.

At last, Biographie 5.15a+ proved my own progression and it’s a futuristic route located on one of the best lines on amazing, excellent quality rock.

Was there a big breakthrough or defining moment for you?
Of course there were several, but the most important happened in the fall 2002. By that time I had climbed during a full year doing clean all what I could, but even so I needed an improvement of quality. I wanted to climb faster those routes and ameliorate my level…the change was obvious, my mind turned to be more ambitious and motivated as ever, and the destiny was to train 100 % harder giving everything of myself towards unattainable goals to that moment and available to me.

Describe a memorable climbing experience.
To me, all the time I climb is memorable, full of sensations and lessons. Climbing, training and exploring my limits are the things I enjoy the most.

What are you up to when you’re not climbing?
When I’ve got left time over I play with my imagination in the kitchen inventing recipes. That’s why I’m not sure if my destiny is climbing or “high class cooking”.

Any training advice or suggestions?
First of all and before anything, you need to have fun with what you do. In addition, you need to have attainable goals that won’t frustrate your hope and once you get this, if you train, do it seriously.

Who or what inspires you?
I admire all the people that have worked very hard, with a lot of energy and against many adversities who have fulfilled their dreams.

How do you see climbing evolving in the next five years?
It has evolved a lot very quickly without having the chance to settle down. There are a lot of 5.15, a lot of on sights and therefore, I believe that it’ll follow the same path and difficulty will reach extraordinary levels.

What do you think about the 5.15 grade?
The 5.15 grade is something real, very hard and at the same time something precious. It’s a difficulty which will continue to improve together with climbing evolution, climbers, training techniques and mentality.

Care to comment on: pre-clipping more than one draw on sport routes or pre-placed gear on trad routes, clipping/ comfortizing holds, glue vs. no glue?
First of all, I’d like to point out that sport climbing has to be safe. Sometimes it’s essential to have a couple of pre-clipped draws in the first part of a route due to its location. Most of the times these draws are clipped thanks to a stick-clip or when you pull down the rope. But some other times, I’ve seen people with three, four or some more pre-clipped draws not because the danger, but because they’re impossible physically or psychologically  to do the route clean…I repudiate that, it’s not in my philosophy.

On the other hand, for example, when you do clean a difficult route and you clip in all the draws, you feel more accomplish. Nowadays almost all the routes are pre-clipped to make the climb easier or to ease the end of the day (it’s almost harder to pick up the draws than to climb the route). That’s why 99% of climbs are pre-clipped.

And about the matter of natural or artificial holds, of course I would like that all routes would be natural, but that’s not possible all the time. Rock isn’t always the same, not always it’s possible to climb on rock, rock quality changes, etc…and therefore, artificial holds are essential. You try to keep a harmony with the rock and always look for the most natural holds…but you need to wonder where the limit is…where do you go from natural to artificial…imagine a route with the following conditions: painful holds, spiky holds, etc…that route will have few ascents; now imagine this one: well finish, well filed down holds, glue reinforced breakable edges etc…that route will have 75% more ascents than the other one. That’s why you need to be realistic, climbing has evolved a lot thanks to technology and using it will still help to evolve.

A very important example is Biographie 5.15 a+ is a route we think is natural, but what would it be without its comfortizing holds so they don’t hurt or the third hold of the route (which is a small sharp pick) without an exterior glue reinforcement? First of all, the route would have broken (the sharp pick), and in the other hand, the attempts would decrease due to muscle tissue injuries…

Do you have any vices and what are they?
Beer, fruits and cookies, how tasty!

Any near death experiences?
Nooooooooo, well only a small fright on my first climbing day. It was in Atxarte, a crag close from home. I was 10 years old and I had 0 years of experience. I went with a friend to a trad route, Naufragos nocturnes V (5.9) and just before the first belay I almost flew while my friend was looking at me and my dad was doing it too from the ground…Ah, and another time I had a fall of 7 metres in Frankenjura. The belayer made a mistake and “catapun”…I was lucky to fall over a German guy “crashpad” instead of a rock…but I almost was in trouble with the German guy whom I had to thank very politely afterwards for being there at that precise moment…

Are you a fan of climbing history? Explain?
Only a little bit since I’m more interested by reality, the moment right away and the evolution of climbing. Although, I’m curious about certain activities done along the history, I don’t really know a lot about climbing history.

What are your future plans or goals in climbing?
To give a 100% of my person together with the people I love around me. If I accomplish this, I’m sure I’ll evolve sporty facing until now unattainable goals. 

 

 

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