I spend a lot of time clicking aimlessly around at YouTube. If I linked to every interesting video I saw, I’d start hundreds of threads! There are many amazing people out there in the world.
But Alex Honnold flabbergasted me so much I had to start a thread for him. He climbs vertical rock mountains without any rope. Often only the strength of a few fingertips prevents him from plunging to certain death. And once he starts, survival requires making it to the summit. Descent is impossible. His only tools besides his own fingers and the rest of his body are his rubber shoes and a bag of chalk powder to keep his fingers dry.
There are a variety of YouTubes showing his amazing climbs. (In many, the photographers are themselves expert climbers … who are tethered to ropes.) As just one example, here he is when his shoes get wet unexpectedly. This video shows just one of his several record-setting “free solo” ascents.
I have severe acrophobia and can barely watch these astounding YouTubes.
At least you warned me about this video. I hate it when I see the auto-playing vidoes on facebook about people doing crazy things at crazy heights and I always freeze just a bit and feel panic.
A recent full-length movie of his El Cap ascent was released recently, aptly titled “Free Solo”.
trailer:
It’s worth seeing in a movie theater if you can, although it’s streaming now. I think they did a good job on the movie - the drama of the climb sells itself, of course, so they just let that play out without trying to overhype it too much. I think the most compelling part of the drama is the second camera team filming the primary camera people who are all expert climbers who truly understand how much risk is involved - they linger on the guy filming from the valley floor who literally cannot watch at the crux. I’m not sure that I could have watched either if I didn’t know how it turned out.
But much of it is a personal portrait of Honnold, trying to get inside his head. It’s apparently not easy to do that, but it was certainly interesting.
I know this is often said about athletic achievements, and usually proven wrong - but it’s hard to imagine how his El Cap climb could really be surpassed - at least until we reach an era of modifying our bodies through biotech or whatever.
It’s hard to know the exact number, but his risk of death on that single climb was perhaps somewhere in the 5-10% range, perhaps a little higher even. The only way it could be surpassed would probably involve upping that to (say) a 1 in 3 chance of death… which then becomes, well, I don’t know what exactly.
This is what I thought the thread was going to be about. I heard an interview with him and the director of the documentary on NPR a couple weeks ago and sought out some of the footage of him climbing El Capitan (and also a Ted talk.) What he does is sheer insanity to me, but I gotta praise him for his dedication, planning, and living his life on his own terms. An inspirational character, but I don’t have 1/10000 of the nerve and mettle he apparently has.
Yeah, the most compelling thing is probably not his technical climbing ability - obviously he’s among the elite, but there are probably several dozen climbers with similar technical skill - it’s his mental ability, carrying out those moves when a single mistake means death. One of the notable things in the movie is that they did an fMRI scan, and (unsurprisingly) his amygdala basically doesn’t work. The test involves showing a bunch of images that trigger an emotional response in most people, but in him they weren’t enough to get any neurons in his amygdala to fire.
Of course, the amygdala is involved not just in the kind of emotional reactions you experience when under stress, but also personal relationships etc., so it’s no surprise to discover that this part of his life is not straightforward either. Although I did find the extent to which they lingered on his relationship with his girlfriend felt a bit creepy in the movie.
Alex’s exploits are pretty amazing. My wife and I always attend the traveling Banff Film Festival tour when it is in the nearby city and we have always enjoyed his films. There were a couple years of his “Sufferfest” exploits with Cedar Wright that we really enjoyed.
I just hope he gets to retire before he makes a mistake.
I was talking about this with some climber friends the other day. It seems to me that he does now have a possible psychological path to that - his El Cap climb may never be surpassed, so he can justifiably feel that he has reached the pinnacle of human achievement. And there’s a very real sense in which it would be way cooler for his legacy to do what he has done… and then die at 103 of old age.
But he doesn’t strike me as the “settle down and have kids” type, so I don’t know.
How can he be sure there is a viable path? How closely can they map the mountain side?
Yes, it is an amazing athletic achievement, and a triumph of the human spirit. But it’s like child birth - the end result is great, but I don’t care to watch the process unless I have to.
In regards to El Capitan, according to the interview I heard, he basically practiced with ropes and safety gear for two years until he had every nook and cranny absolutely memorized.
In terms of the amygdala, in the NPR interview they talked about that, but Alex did not seem to be convinced that he was necessarily genetically/physically predisposed to having a lesser to no reaction to stress, but rather framed it as a chicken or egg situation. I don’t know if there’s a conclusion one way or another in the film. It’s in my queue.
For anything but the most trivially easy (for him) route, before a solo he will have learned and practiced it many times with protection. He knows exactly how he will make every single move going up a difficult solo, it’s analogous to a concert pianist who has practiced a piece hundreds of times and is now doing it “for real” in a concert (except for the part where the concert pianist doesn’t fall thousands of feet if he makes a mistake). And he and others will have carefully cleaned the route of vegetation or loose rock.
The thing is, though, the crux of El Cap is so difficult that it’s not as though he has anywhere near a 100% record when practicing with protection, as you see in the movie. They don’t reveal the actual percentage of times he gets it, or how many consecutive times he gets it right in practice before the real thing.
Thanks. I know as little about rock climbing as I can manage.
In jujitsu, it is easy to know when you have made a mistake because somebody punches you in the mouth. In free climbing, it is also easy to know when you have made a mistake, but you only know it for a few seconds.
The terminology is a bit confusing, but “free climbing” does not mean without a rope, it means a style of climbing without using any artificial aids to take your weight or pull yourself up - but it does not imply lack of protection (rope etc.) if you should fall.
Just “soloing” means climbing alone, so I think you can even say “solo a free climb”, and that still implies using protection in case you should fall - rope and a self-belay device.
It’s the specific term free solo that means climbing alone without using any aid or protection from falling.
I watched the film “Valley Uprising” on Netflix, which chronicles the history of climbing in Yosemite from the early days thru the Honnold era, with all the characters along the way.
I think I remember them asking how the El Cap climb could be topped - Honnold’s answer - do El Cap and Half Dome in the same day! And he threw-in Mt Watkins (across the valley from Half Dome), for good measure! :eek:
The other thing these climbers are doing to top each other is speed records. I think Honnold and Caldwell speed-climbed El Cap in 2 hours. IMHO, this activity will end up getting people killed (maybe not the elite climbers, but those emulating them).