James Pearson has made the first repeat of Jacopo Larcher's bold Valle dell'Orco trad route, Shikantaza.
The route, first climbed by Larcher in 2021, is found on a large boulder at the base of Sergent. According to a piece written by Larcher shortly after he made the ascent, the route - which he describes as 'short and very British' - breaks down as follows:
'it starts following a sloper rail on a prow until a good flake, where you place some micro cams before setting off for the crux section. After a few moves you reach a good crimp, on which I decided to place a [hook] as protection; the placement looks good, but the hold is a loose flake, which would probably break if you take a big fall'.
'I tensioned (on lead) the hook with some cord to a lower cam to stop it from falling off accidentally. The next section involves some technical moves and small crimps and ends with some insecure moves to a big flake, where you can finally place some more gear before the easier top out. The climbing is definitely not so hard, 8a-ish, but the combination of insecure moves and a possibile ground fall make it spicy!'
Speaking after his own ascent of the route, James said:
'I remember seeing the news of Jacopo doing this route and chatting to him about it, afterwards. When we ended up in Orco earlier this year, I definitely had it on my mind to go and try it, but because we ran out of time and I focussed on climbing 29 Dots I ended up not trying it on that trip'.
'However, Shikantaza had been in the back of my mind as something to try the next time I was here. Obviously, coming to Orco for the festival this Autumn was the perfect opportunity. It was a busy weekend, between looking after the kids and doing presentations/workshops for sponsors, but because the route is so short and a very quick walk-in from the car, it seemed like a realistic objective'.
'The route is super accessible, easy to set up a rope on and to work on my own. Due to it being so busy this weekend, finding a belayer was also not going to be a problem. I arrived in the Valley really late on Thursday night and by first thing on Friday morning, I had already managed to get on the route to figure out the moves and scope out the gear. I managed to link the moves together and do it relatively quickly on a top-rope'.
'Even so, I was still a little apprehensive about trying it on the lead, as a fall could have pretty nasty consequences. It feels very much like a Grit route, where it's really, really short, but there's only a small section which is particularly dangerous. However, you can very quickly do one move too many and go from feeling very safe, to suddenly realising that if you make a mistake you're going to hit the floor'.
'I went back later in the weekend, with my friend Talo Martin, tried it once more on a TR and decided to give it a go. The gear on the route is small "micro Friends" in a pretty good but slightly hollow flake, which I think would hold. Unfortunately, that gear is a little too low to protect the crux moves, so it's also possible to place a sky-hook on a higher, and somewhat more sketchy, flake. This one would most likely not hold a fall, but I placed it anyway, just in case it might'.
'I really appreciate the fact that this route wasn't bolted (even if it would have been totally acceptable to do so) and that Adriano Trombetta and Jacopo Larcher had the vision to pursue it as a trad line. It's pretty cool to see a bit of the "British" trad-spirit filtering into other places around the world!'
You can watch a video of James' ascent below:
Comments
Cool music!
It's a remix of a Massive Attack number I think. Anyone remember what that track is called?
the music is credited if you click on the video description.
"Music - Radiohead - Everything In Its Right Place (Andi Müller Mix)"
Cheers Graeme, watched the vid on the UKC page so didn't click through - I'm getting old mixing up Radiohead and Massive Attack, but it was all the 90s when the music was fantastic and completely coincidentally I was young. 🙂
Andi Müller should have kept his hands off. Ruined a masterpiece!