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26th Aug 2011 Neil Mawson climbs Pedigree Chum
Last May my friend Paul Smitton did the 1st ascent of the Dogs dinner buttress traverse in Chee Dale calling it Pedigree Chum. This buttress is an amazing leaning wall of perfect limestone for the 1st 15-20 ft in height then it turns into the usual peak limestone rubble. The obvious challenge was to traverse this good band of rock for the full 40 meters in length! Paul graded it 8c+. Steve repeated it soon after confirming the grade and then climbed a harder version adding a V10 boulder problem crux after all the hard climbing on the original. I first tried Pedigree Chum last October just after I’d done Bat route as most of the limestone sport climbing was seeping but this was dry. I was just going on it for training to start with but soon got hooked into doing bigger and bigger links until eventually I realised I might be able to do it. I got to linking it from after the initial 6 move V7 boulder right at the start to the end but never got chance to try it from the start before it got soaked from the autumn rain. After training hard last winter this traverse was my main aim in the spring. I went out to try it soon after returning from Misja Pec in March.
It took a good few session to remember what to do as it’s very sequency and my flow on rock was rusty after the winter indoors. I got to the stage of trying to ‘redpoint’ it just as the heat wave over Easter hit the country. This made me resort to getting up at 7am to beat the heat but it was still over 18 degrees at that time in the shade which is just too hot for small crimps. I had one evening after work when it felt really good and I got to within 2 moves of the easy climbing before falling off. Gutted but psyched at the same time, as it meant I was going to do it, I went to Pembroke for a week. This turned into over 2 so I could get Muy Caliente done, as it got wet for a week, and when I returned it was too hot and I’d lost my very top power endurance I needed. I left it for the summer to do some other climbing and was wondering if I’d get another chance this year as I wasn’t psyched to train this summer. I went on it last week again and went over all the moves and did some good links.
I went back this week to do some bigger links and to get fitter on it. As I was warming up I felt really good and light so just thought I may as well give it a go. To my surprise I got through the initial 8c section to the shake out with only the pumpy 8a+ bit left. This didn’t feel too bad either and all of a sudden I’d done it! I was a bit in shock but so happy I didn’t have to return next spring to get it done. Having redpointed Bob’s 8b+, Techno Prisoners, at the cornice two nights before I’ve had a good week climbing wise! It might not be a route where you clip bolts and climb upwards but it still feels like my 1st 8c+ as it’s longer than any sport route I’ve done in Britain.
Contributed by: Neil Mawson
14th Aug 2011 More Trad Climbing
Contributed by: Neil Mawson