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The life you can save
The life you can save







5.6, 15m.The end of the year is coming! And with it come the excitement, the grapes and the projects for the new year.

the life you can save

P13: Climb the blocs direct and head a little left after the only bolt to reach an anchor on the side of a large bloc. Climb the thin face through a series of roof’s and difficult iron cross before it eases off. P12: Just when you thought it was all over.

the life you can save

P11: Leave the belay and crimp your way up the thin face through a small roof. Climb the large huecos and pockets that litter the wall. P10: Rock unlike anything else found in the valley. Traverse out into the void and make difficult moves above to reach the belay. Strenuous moves gain the ledge before the roof when you must compose once more for a daunting step out into air! 5.12+, 35m. Easy moves off the belay are short lived and the holds rapidly thin as the wall steepens. P8: The crux pitch of the route is both technically difficult, sustained and committing. P7: Technical moves off the belay lead the way for a sustained pitch that eases up just before the chains where you can go either left or right. P6: A classic pitch that stems the giant flake to a ledge. P5: Follow the switching laybacks that require body tension and neat footwork. P4: A challenging corner pitch that has a small run out at the beginning. Keep composed as you power up to the chains! 5.12a, 30m. Climb up from the belay into some 5.8 terrain where the wall gradually begins to kick back. P3: A sucker pitch that is deceptively hard. P2: An easy start gets you established on the face where you are immediately met with some powerful static moves to overcome the roof. P1: The short pitch starts at the large hueco and tackles the slab to a high first bolt and finishes at the two bolt anchor above.

the life you can save

For those looking to climb the route over 2 days, It is possible to bivi under the roof at the 7th pitch but a hammock is recommended. The route is very well equipped and the harder sections can be aided through by “french free” climbing. The route takes the super direct line from the valley floor to the summit through a plethora of rock formations and styles. Equipped by visiting British climber Gareth “Gaz” Leah during his initiative Project Wall-E and NGO, Escalando Fronteras.









The life you can save