Vlog #7 Most scared I've ever been

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In climbing or in life in general, I discovered the hard way that its possible to be way more scared for someone else than it is for yourself. It's kind of weird going over climbing accidents I've had. I certainly hope it's a long, long time before I'm as scared as the night I describe in this vlog.

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Not a climbing related comment, but you're an astonishingly good story teller, seems to be very natural for you.

mevversreturns
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Jesus H Christ Dave, you're a bloody wild man. Super casual telling of a story including broken bones solo falls and self rescue, make it seem like any other Sunday.

dannygrout
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Dave these videos are awesome. Really well presented, shot and edited. Quality stuff!

TomClothier
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I was hoping for an answer to the duck question, hilarious!

stebostock
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Dave, you seem like a solid dude..keep it up brother!

noahh
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i love how you break your leg and you're worried about your static rope! good stuff

ToppaliniTube
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My hands were sweating while listening to Masa's fall. Great video bro.

bodha
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by far the bist ending! :D
great content, as always!

jonasnesurd
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When I broke my ankle near a tourist route on a mountain I had to borrow sticks so I could hop the 2 miles back to the funicular where I had to wait 45m in increasing pain asking tourists to please not knock the broken foot, then wait another 45m or so to reach the bottom then get a taxi to hospital then wait for the more urgent cases to be seen first before finally getting to see a doctor and get some painkillers and a temporary cast put on before a few hours on public transport to get home - sometimes it's just easier to call emergency services... 😅

ViaFerrataCH
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Most scared I've ever been was on a 5.8 in Oklahoma. It was a severely rotten granite climb. My partner had gone up the first part and had to cross a slopey ledge where a hold broke and she almost slipped and would have almost guaranteed taken a groundfall from about 25' up. She managed to get to the other side of the ledge and was looking at the crack that was in front of her. She climbed up about 4 feet or so and realized that the crack was severely rotten and that there would be about 6' of climbing with no pro and a ledge fall. So she decided to build an anchor and bail off. I decided to give it a go and ended up taking about 20 minutes before I finally worked myself into pulling some really shitty moves. I ended up french freeing on a super shitty tricam placement to get into solid enough rock. If it had blown I would have definitely decked on the ledge. After that the crack had a break in it where there was a small jug and I reached into that jug only to find a small piece of prickly pear cactus that I had to finagle around (ended up getting some needles in my hand) and after this I had to run out a #5 offwidth crack that started getting rotten again. The topout was super slopey and once again I found more prickly pear right in the way of the last move. Yet again if I had popped out at the top of this I would have likely decked on the ledge. Needless to say the pucker factor was extreme and but I was very thankful that I love offwidth and had the skills to get through that last section.

Before that I would have to say it was a 2 pitch on sort of granite out in CO. I led the second pitch which was great rock. The very last section of this was a small ledge which I placed a #5 right below. Leading up from that ledge was a squeeze chimney which was killer. I go up the chimney which had a bit of a slab topout and the chimney squeezed down so much it forced me out onto the slab. So here i was with probably 40m of rope out and #5 about 25' below me and I had to pull out onto a slab with tons of exposure. That was only one or two moves though and I was safe so it wasn't that big a deal. The really cool part was as I was setting up an anchor a fucking F-16 (at least I think it was) buzzed no more than 40' directly over my head.

rushthezeppelin
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It sounds like you both had an absolute nightmare of a day! 🤤🤣 It must have been horrible sitting by the loch with your broken ankle, not knowing where he was, and being unable to look for him. At least you both managed to bounce back and now have a good story to tell 😁

StevenSugref
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I had a very similar experience when I was on a high ball Boulder and a hold broke. I fell off, and landed on my hand with my arm in full extension. I was high up on a ridge, and getting down required scrambling, which I would have to do crash pads and all. I couldn't extend or flex at the elbow. I managed to make it back since my left arm was fine, but I was more just sad that I would be unable to climb.. for two days I couldn't flex or extend at the right elbow, and experience a significant amount of swelling and pain. I mostly just chilled out at the campsite. I had a feeling it wasn't hospital worthy, but there was that scared part of me. Day three I noticed mobility returning to the joint. By day four I did some stretching and even some very easy low boulders. Over the weeks I continued climbing gradually harder and harder, still feeling pain from time to time but slowly trending towards being more bearable. One month later and I am stronger than I was before the injury and am sending Boulder problems that once took me several sessions in one or two goes. I think the injury probably was not serious, but I think the mental shock sort of gave me a reset. I was terrified I'd be out for months, but the fact I recovered so quickly, allowed me to be much more daring and less hesitant. Also the fact I recovered so quickly from the injury has made me realize that our bodies aremuch more strong and resilient than we think

benmoyer
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Adrenaline is a crazy thing my friend! It’s wild the things people accomplish in moments of fear. You’ve provided me a ton of super valuable insight and motivation in climbing and I’ve been super appreciative of your content, you’re one of my favourites!

staticalphabetsoup
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"I found it was surprisingly difficult to get going on a broken leg" Wow. I would have been calling mountain rescue. Loving these blogs, Really inspiring.

DerelictChad
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Those climbing coaches rolling in with the real deal of questions at the end!

Zolodar
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Great story! Wet rock/vegetation is a great leveller...I remember back in the day when we used to wear socks over our boots. I'm neurotic these days..always ensure my boot soles are squeaky clean...particularly when soloing.

marcchrys
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Absolutely top drawer, sir! These deserve to be the most popular climbing blogs out there...

harryfox
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10 duck-sized horses! Great videos Dave, keep 'em coming :)

TheAquanomad
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Scottish understatement, Mr Macleod, grand master of the Big Day Out!

cob
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Amazing story Dave! Definitely a dream of mine to visit Scotland for a climbing trip someday. Much love from Canada!

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