Belgian climber and musician Sean Villanueva O'Driscoll has made the second ascent of the Fitzroy or 'Fitz' Traverse in Patagonia, Argentina, first climbed by Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell in 2014. Sean completed the line solo and in reverse. It consists of 5km of granite spires (5.11d C1 65 degrees, 5000m).
In reply to UKC News: the more you think about it, the more impossible it comes, rock gear, ice gear, sleeping gear, food, fuel, everything else, on your own in Patagonia, weather, route finding etc. Nothing but brilliant beyond belief. Well done, stay safe, keep that tune in your head!
Got to be one of the most impressive feats of solo alpinism every! It took Sean 6 days and he self belayed and hauled all but the easier pitches. Anyone who has ever self belayed and hauled a big route will know how the physical effort is more than doubled when compared to climbing with a partner. You have to effectively climb every pitch twice and carry/haul more weight per person. It took Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell 5 days to climb the Fitz Traverse moving together for most of the climb. The fact that Sean managed to do it solo, self belaying and hauling in 6 days completely blows my mind. It would have been cutting edge/ world class if it was done with a partner, but doing it solo is probably doubles the physical effort and phycological commitment required. The thought of being alone on top of Fitz Roy several days in with a disintegrating rope sends shivers down my spine.
Would just comment that the physical effort and phycological commitment level is arguably far more than double solo compared to being in a team.
The full details will no doubt be revealed but my guess is that Sean VoD would have free soloed some sections, back looped and hauled some sections. Only Z climbed the very hardest pitches. Otherwise he would have taken an implausible ,with patagonian weather windows , 12 to 15 days compared to the original traverse mostly simuclimbed.
> Would just comment that the physical effort and phycological commitment level is arguably far more than double solo compared to being in a team.
> The full details will no doubt be revealed but my guess is that Sean VoD would have free soloed some sections, back looped and hauled some sections. Only Z climbed the very hardest pitches. Otherwise he would have taken an implausible ,with patagonian weather windows , 12 to 15 days compared to the original traverse mostly simuclimbed.
Caldwell and Honnold's traverse seemed to me of great historical significance because they were applying speed climbing techniques developed in Yosemite, hitherto used to do stuff faster just for the sake of doing it faster, to achieve something which would otherwise have probably been logistically impossible. So, if the reverse traverse is of comparable difficulty, SVoD has either pushed free soloing to almost unimaginable levels of boldness or been unbelievably efficient in his roped soloing (or a combination of the two). Or maybe Caldwell and Honnold are actually slackers. Or maybe I am missing something. The whole thing is quite astonishing.
Honnold and Calwell made a meal of out of it, Sean performed a one hour tin whistle set on top of Fitz Roy, that's the new benchmark in composure. All those years Caldwell spent faffing about on Dawn Wall, I wonder how long SVoD might take.
Conditions make a huge difference, it's very dry there just now, the previous ascent was made in a season with lots of storms, they encountered a lot of rime and icy cracks didn't they.
> Conditions make a huge difference, it's very dry there just now, the previous ascent was made in a season with lots of storms, they encountered a lot of rime and icy cracks didn't they.
As an observer, at the moment sat in my armchair, I wonder if some hot shots are contemplating the possibility of a two man traverse in ideal conditions.
I climbed the north pillar on Fitz Roy in the same window Alex and Tommy climbed the traverse. The headwall above the pillar was very wet/icy and I know it slowed them down, but the rest of the routes was responsibly dry. Rock climbing conditions are always better on the north faces, so it's hard to know whether it was less icy for Sean in general. To compare the Franco Argentine was completely caked in verglass after 5 days of good weather when we descended it.
Full interview here. Apparently he chose the direction just because it was new. To me the most amazing thing is that he bothered taking a toothbrush and toilet paper.
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