Wings of Steel Slide Show by Big Wall Climber Mark Smith

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    Big wall climber, Mark Smith, presents a slideshow of  his route, Wings of Steel, the most controversial climb on El Cap. Journey back to 1982 and experience sabotage, starvation and slander as they put up arguably the hardest aid route on El Cap. The climb, trashed by locals as being a “bolt ladder” proved to be harder then their critics tough language and egos. Countless attempts by some of the best aid climbers in the world ultimately vindicated Smith and his climbing partner, Richard Jensen. It wasn’t until 2011, 29 years later, that Ammon McNeely and his partner, Kait Barber spent 13 frightful days on Wings of Steel and finally made the second ascent (see the current issue of Rock and Ice Magazine for their harrowing account.)

    This event benefits Mountain Leadership Institute, a local non-profit organization.

    When: December 12, 7:00 PM
    Location: The Kravet Building
     NW Irving Street, Portland OR 97209
    Three blocks east of the Pearl District REI, and next to Columbia Rover.
     
    SEATING IS LIMITED- ORDER ONLINE! Cash-only at the door.

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    More Information:

    There is currently a film being produced about McNeely’s second ascent. You can view the trailer for the film here.

    The following is from RockandIce.com:

    Wings of Steel—likely El Cap’s hardest aid route and unrepeated since its first ascent 29 years ago was repeated this year.  After repulsing accomplished big-wall veterans including Rob Slater and Kevin Thaw, Wings of Steel has been climbed by the “El Cap Pirate” Ammon McNeely and his partner/girlfriend Kait Barber. At this writing the duo have completed Wings proper and are exiting via the Aquarian Wall.

    Wings of Steel is El Cap’s most controversial route. Mark Smith and Richard Jensen—two unknown Valley “outsiders”—arrived in 1982 to climb the apparently blank Great Slab to the left of the Salathe Wall. They found compact granite on a low-angle face that could be climbed—barely—using tiny Leeper pointed hooks on nearly invisible rugosities. So impossible did the climbing appear that numerous Yosemite locals assumed that Smith and Jensen were drilling and chipping their way up the face.

    Disgusted by the perceived desecration, the team’s snail-like pace and the fact that Smith and Jensen hadn’t paid their proper dues by repeating El Cap’s hard big walls of the day, local climbers threatened Smith and Jensen, verbally abused them and in a night-time raid, pulled their fixed rope on the first pitch and defecated on it. Rather than bailing, however, an angered Smith and Jensen reclimbed the start and completed the route in a month-long continuous push requiring horrendous whippers and a dislocated ankle.

    What followed may be the greatest character assassination campaign in climbing history, with Jensen and Smith purported to be villains, scoundrels and liars. In spite of Jensen and Smith’s reporting in excruciating detail of the route’s hook and hole count, Wings of Steel was dismissed as a bolt and hook ladder. Since their ascent, Jensen and Smith have been bashed in guidebooks, texts and magazines, and relentlessly slandered through word of mouth and in internet forums.

    Preliminary reports now suggest Smith and Jensen told the truth about everything, including the 15 or so “micro-enhancements” they made to avoid drilling rivets. The hooking is reportedly “sick” and insanely hard above long and dangerous runouts. Master speed climber McNeely required six hours and took three 30-foot falls on the first pitch alone. Higher up he also took many falls including at least one 50-footer to work out the hooking sequences. In one fall, McNeely dislocated his shoulder and reset it himself to persevere on what may be the most difficult big-wall route ever established.

    —Pete Zabrok

    From: http://rockandice.com/news/1513-el-cap-slanderfest-finally-put-to-bed


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Les Zollbrecht

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