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2012
New River Gorge Routes.
House projects, flooring projects and of course, rock climbing projects. That's whats been happening for the last several months in Patlandia. I suppose the big deal right now for me is going to Canada this August to try and finish off a long standing project in the Vampire Peaks; A free ascent of the 3,000' Phoenix. Click here for a short article about my last attempt. This go around I will be traveling with an incredible ensemble of climbing and climbing documentary prestige - Jeremy Collins, James Q Martin and Jeff Achey. I'm excited to say the least! For this trip we received the Copp-Dash Award and are way stoked to continue the dream!!
Here are several pics and two videos I shot recently in the New River Gorge area, plus a few pics taken by friends of me doing some first ascents, I have managed to continue my 2 new routes a month average since the move from NC last August - gotta love this place!
This is a vid of me working a hard roof crack project in the Meadow.
Mike Williams styling the super classic Slash and Burn 5.12d at Kaymoor.
Here are several pics and two videos I shot recently in the New River Gorge area, plus a few pics taken by friends of me doing some first ascents, I have managed to continue my 2 new routes a month average since the move from NC last August - gotta love this place!
Tim Rose at the crux of Mono Loco, 5.14. |
The first ascent of Cigarets, Bacon and Hatred, 5.12+/5.13- Tim Rose Photo. |
First ascent of 20 Dollar Route, 5.12b - Kevin Umbel Photo |
Pluggin an offset Master Cam on 20 Dollar Route. Kevin Umbel Photo. |
K Dom on Game Theory, 5.12c. |
John Averrett on New Traditionalist, 5.12b. |
Kevin Umbel on Buzz Kill, 5.12c. |
Harrison Shull on a new route we put up tentatively called Italian Stallion, 5.12+. One of the best trad lines of its grade I have done in the area!! |
This is a vid of me working a hard roof crack project in the Meadow.
Mike Williams styling the super classic Slash and Burn 5.12d at Kaymoor.
New River Gorge Bouldering, West Virginia
The following is an article I wrote for Urban Climber Mag, issue number 57, May 2012.
Rocks: New River Gorge Bouldering, West Virginia
Words and photos by Pat Goodman
Pat Goodman summons the energy to finish Half Moon Tilt (V8) at Cotton Top.
Cotton Hill, just 15 minutes from downtown Fayetteville, hosts nearly 200 boulder problems and is comprised of two substantial sectors: Cotton Top and Cotton Bottom. This area encompasses an ensemble of desirable formations: roofs, bulges, steep faces, slabs, jugs, crimps, slopers, pinches, and cracks. Sketches, the bouldering guidebook to the New by Chris Anthony, is a wonderful resource if you can find one.
Cotton Top has an excellent selection of moderate to difficult problems, as well as many high-end projects. Lines here tend to be tall, many topping out above 25 feet. With the current trend toward highballing, this field has seen a resurgence, and several beastly lines have been established recently. Access is easy—you can have rock shoes touching stone about two minutes from the car.
Cotton Bottom offers an abundance of extremely classic problems with quick and convenient access from the parking. This is the perfect spot to dial in a circuit, and has very aesthetic boulders and lines boasting a style unique to the New River area.
Must do's
Tick list
Go about eight miles along Highway 16 north from its intersection with Highway 19 in Fayetteville. For Cotton Top, park in the large pullout on the right just after a bridge spanning the New River; this is also the parking for Hawks Nest Boulders. From the parking lot, follow the trail uphill where it will become an old logging road. Stay on the wider trail for a couple of minutes to access the boulderfield. For Cotton Bottom, continue past the bridge for a quarter-mile and park at the first big gravel pullout on the left. The boulders are obvious below the parking.
Cotton Top
Highballs and projects abound, as well as various styles, holds, and formations.
A series of blocs you can spit to from the parking lot, with a nice blend of moderates and hard problems.
Local's tips
Jessa Goebel says: Watch your speed! There are more cops around here than snakes, and they love handing out “invitations” so travelers can discuss traffic violations with the court magistrate. Ideal climbing conditions are in autumn and early spring, although with current trends the winter can also be fantastic. Summer… Well, we don’t call it “Wet” Virginia for nothing!
Camping
The Gorge Gateway Center in Fayetteville is a great facility, and you can choose between rental vacation homes, cabins, or primitive tent camping, some with full camper hook-ups. Prices start at $10/night, and it’s 15 minutes from the boulders. Chestnut Creek Campground in Lansing is run by an eccentric host you don’t want to mess with, but it stays quiet and clean. It has secluded and spacious tent sites ranging from $8 to $10 per night, covered platforms, clean restrooms, and hot showers, 20 minutes from the boulders.
Pubs & Grub
Cathedral Café is the quintessential launching platform for most outdoor enthusiasts in the area, with the finest French toast in Fayetteville! Open daily for breakfast and lunch, with Wi-Fi available. For Mexican food, Diogi’s jumbo barbeque carnita quesadilla is a sure bet after a day of tugging. Open daily for lunch and dinner. Pies & Pints Pizzeria’s gourmet selection is heaven. The Cuban pork pie is to die for, but so is the chicken Gouda pie. Or check out buffet night and taste them all. Open daily for lunch and dinner; located on Maple Avenue in Fayetteville.
The other side of the New
The sweeping cliffs of the New River Gorge, which provide sport and trad lines galore, overshadow the endless Nuttall sandstone blocs strewn throughout the hillsides and river ways. Locals get it—we have long known the bouldering here is just as good as those hot spots out West and down South. John Sherman said it best in his book Stone Crusade: “The New would be a bouldering mecca if not for all those damn cliffs!”Cotton Hill, just 15 minutes from downtown Fayetteville, hosts nearly 200 boulder problems and is comprised of two substantial sectors: Cotton Top and Cotton Bottom. This area encompasses an ensemble of desirable formations: roofs, bulges, steep faces, slabs, jugs, crimps, slopers, pinches, and cracks. Sketches, the bouldering guidebook to the New by Chris Anthony, is a wonderful resource if you can find one.
Cotton Top has an excellent selection of moderate to difficult problems, as well as many high-end projects. Lines here tend to be tall, many topping out above 25 feet. With the current trend toward highballing, this field has seen a resurgence, and several beastly lines have been established recently. Access is easy—you can have rock shoes touching stone about two minutes from the car.
Cotton Bottom offers an abundance of extremely classic problems with quick and convenient access from the parking. This is the perfect spot to dial in a circuit, and has very aesthetic boulders and lines boasting a style unique to the New River area.
Must do's
- Ride the Gravity Zip Line at Adventures on the Gorge. It soars 200 feet above the ground and goes more than 1.5 miles, zigzagging across a gorgeous ridgeline.
- The New River Gorge Bridge Walk. Take a guided catwalk tour underneath the Western Hemisphere’s longest single-span arch bridge. An incredible way to see the gorge, 851 feet above the New River!
- Visit the ghost town of Nuttalburg. A bygone mining town built in 1880, now part of the National Register of Historic Places, its remains showcase timeworn mining structures and the ruins of a lost era.
- Bridge Day! Every year for one day in mid-October, about 200,000 people converge to party, and some (legally) BASE jump off the mighty steel structure.
Tick list
Go about eight miles along Highway 16 north from its intersection with Highway 19 in Fayetteville. For Cotton Top, park in the large pullout on the right just after a bridge spanning the New River; this is also the parking for Hawks Nest Boulders. From the parking lot, follow the trail uphill where it will become an old logging road. Stay on the wider trail for a couple of minutes to access the boulderfield. For Cotton Bottom, continue past the bridge for a quarter-mile and park at the first big gravel pullout on the left. The boulders are obvious below the parking.
Cotton Top
Highballs and projects abound, as well as various styles, holds, and formations.
- McCauley Left (V3)
- Little Boy (V4)
- Scud Buster (V5)
- Puss Gut (V7)
- Half Moon Tilt (V8)
A series of blocs you can spit to from the parking lot, with a nice blend of moderates and hard problems.
- Walk the Dog (V1)
- The V9’s Right (V4)
- V6-Teen (V6)
- Bat Cave Traverse (V8)
- Pressure Treated (V9)
Jessa Goebel on Priapus, 12d, Kalymnos, Greece |
Local's tips
Jessa Goebel says: Watch your speed! There are more cops around here than snakes, and they love handing out “invitations” so travelers can discuss traffic violations with the court magistrate. Ideal climbing conditions are in autumn and early spring, although with current trends the winter can also be fantastic. Summer… Well, we don’t call it “Wet” Virginia for nothing!
Camping
The Gorge Gateway Center in Fayetteville is a great facility, and you can choose between rental vacation homes, cabins, or primitive tent camping, some with full camper hook-ups. Prices start at $10/night, and it’s 15 minutes from the boulders. Chestnut Creek Campground in Lansing is run by an eccentric host you don’t want to mess with, but it stays quiet and clean. It has secluded and spacious tent sites ranging from $8 to $10 per night, covered platforms, clean restrooms, and hot showers, 20 minutes from the boulders.
Pubs & Grub
Cathedral Café is the quintessential launching platform for most outdoor enthusiasts in the area, with the finest French toast in Fayetteville! Open daily for breakfast and lunch, with Wi-Fi available. For Mexican food, Diogi’s jumbo barbeque carnita quesadilla is a sure bet after a day of tugging. Open daily for lunch and dinner. Pies & Pints Pizzeria’s gourmet selection is heaven. The Cuban pork pie is to die for, but so is the chicken Gouda pie. Or check out buffet night and taste them all. Open daily for lunch and dinner; located on Maple Avenue in Fayetteville.
Working man.
“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.”
Henry David Thoreau
After spending the New Year in Arkansas with Jessa, Jeremy Collins, Corbin Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Lasseter, Bryan Schillig, Paige Bushling and a host of others, I have been moving non-stop.
I finished several big flooring projects, trained, climbed, shot/edited videos occasionally slept and got prepared for a trip to go climbing in Venezuela; I leave today and just now at 7:00am found the time to scribble out a blog piece.
Before I talk about some climbing projects Jessa and did over the last month, and well, didn’t do, I gotta rant a bit:
I work, I have a job and I love it! No trust fund here! At an increasingly alarming regularity I am bombarded with slightly patronizing remarks regarding my life style - “must be nice to get to climb whenever and not have to work” is more or less the assertion. And just the other day at the crag a colleague barraged me with a “woe is me, I suck at climbing because I have a job and can’t stay focused on climbing, but you wouldn’t get it, you can climb whenever”. F-you buddy, I work my ass off, on my hands and knees at an alarmingly high volume. Most jobs I do, I pack 10-12 hr days in, go home train and hustle hard so I can get up at 6:00am the day I leave for a month long trip and get packed. Just because my climbing dreams and goals are backed by the incredible support from some the outdoor industries leading equipment manufacturers, does not mean I just sit at the coffee shop and wait to find a cool scene that will make a “dope” hipstamatic pic with my smartphone, I don’t even own a smartphone.
OK. Arkansas is AWESOME! I went to try and do this wicked, old school trad project rumored to be mid 13… I got beat down, maybe 14a..? The weather has been good enough around here in WV to get the odd evening sesh in and send a few first ascents on the NRG’s incredible boulders with Jessa.
New boulder problems at the NRG.
Oh yeah, going to Venezuela today to do some community service at a small village in the Gran Sabana and climb a Tepuy, hopefully by a big, new free route!
I’m stoked and thank all my friends, family and especially Jessa – without a doubt the hardest part of a big trip is not gathering the funds, or training, it’s leaving my lady!!
Goal0, Jonny Copp Foundation, Sterling Rope, Metolius, Mountain Hardwear, Julbo, Probar, Waterstone Outdoors and Sportiva have put huge support into getting me on my way to this jungle adventure, thank you soooo much!
Cheers,
PG
Henry David Thoreau
After spending the New Year in Arkansas with Jessa, Jeremy Collins, Corbin Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Lasseter, Bryan Schillig, Paige Bushling and a host of others, I have been moving non-stop.
The crew at Jim Lasseter's cabin on Kent Mtn in AR. |
I finished several big flooring projects, trained, climbed, shot/edited videos occasionally slept and got prepared for a trip to go climbing in Venezuela; I leave today and just now at 7:00am found the time to scribble out a blog piece.
The jungle wall kit. |
Tepuy!! |
Before I talk about some climbing projects Jessa and did over the last month, and well, didn’t do, I gotta rant a bit:
I work, I have a job and I love it! No trust fund here! At an increasingly alarming regularity I am bombarded with slightly patronizing remarks regarding my life style - “must be nice to get to climb whenever and not have to work” is more or less the assertion. And just the other day at the crag a colleague barraged me with a “woe is me, I suck at climbing because I have a job and can’t stay focused on climbing, but you wouldn’t get it, you can climb whenever”. F-you buddy, I work my ass off, on my hands and knees at an alarmingly high volume. Most jobs I do, I pack 10-12 hr days in, go home train and hustle hard so I can get up at 6:00am the day I leave for a month long trip and get packed. Just because my climbing dreams and goals are backed by the incredible support from some the outdoor industries leading equipment manufacturers, does not mean I just sit at the coffee shop and wait to find a cool scene that will make a “dope” hipstamatic pic with my smartphone, I don’t even own a smartphone.
Yurt hardwood floor! |
10" of belt sanding bliss! |
Finish work. |
June Bug packed for a day at the office(s). |
9:30pm training at the "gym". |
OK. Arkansas is AWESOME! I went to try and do this wicked, old school trad project rumored to be mid 13… I got beat down, maybe 14a..? The weather has been good enough around here in WV to get the odd evening sesh in and send a few first ascents on the NRG’s incredible boulders with Jessa.
Jessa workin the fa of The Green Face 13a(ish). |
New boulder problems at the NRG.
Oh yeah, going to Venezuela today to do some community service at a small village in the Gran Sabana and climb a Tepuy, hopefully by a big, new free route!
Wow! |
Goal0, Jonny Copp Foundation, Sterling Rope, Metolius, Mountain Hardwear, Julbo, Probar, Waterstone Outdoors and Sportiva have put huge support into getting me on my way to this jungle adventure, thank you soooo much!
Cheers,
PG
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