He needed some time to convalesce, so Tuesday we headed to Mammoth Lakes and started a tour of area hot springs.
Thanks to the internets, we were able to find some amazing spots. In addition to hot spring soaking, Mammoth offered us the opportunity to discover the curative properties of staying in a hotel, going to the movie theater, and eating ice cream.
Thursday, afraid of getting soft and losing our dirtbag edge, we checked out of the hotel and left the cush life behind. That night, we checked out the hipster scene at the Lee Vining Mobil. That's right, the Mobil is where it's at: overpriced fish tacos, microbrew beer, collectible hats and t-shirts, and live music.
Friday, it was back to work. Sam's shoulder had 3 1/2 days to heal. Though he had nowhere near full range-of-motion and winced with pain anytime he used his right arm, we were done resting.
Logically, we figured a 15-pitch 5.10 slab route would be the perfect segue back into climbing. Anyway, there were only four actual 5.10 pitches; the rest were merely 5.8 or 5.9.
In the afternoon, we started the 4.5 mile hike in to the top of North Dome. We planned to camp there and hike down a gully to start the route--the Crest Jewel--Saturday morning. We would top out on the dome and hike back to the car by dark.
The hike in was awesome. We got close-up views of Half Dome for the first time.
From the top of North Dome, we went on an exploratory mission to find a reasonable descent route to the base of the Crest Jewel. After some traipsing around wet slabs and bushwacking, we were adequately satisfied that we'd find an efficient way to start the route in the morning.
Sam prepared a top notch camp dinner of quinoa and vegetable jalfrezi garnished with scavenged mustard packets and backpack-aged avocado. After dinner, we found a stream to replenish our water supply with.
Saturday morning, we enjoyed a scrumptious breakfast of Nutella on bread before starting out on our grueling epic--uh, I mean delightful adventure.
The adequate descent trail we had scoped the night before disappeared after about 30 minutes of hiking. From there, the 1200' decent involved walking through and crawling under thick madrone bushes, down climbing ledges, ass-sliding down dirty slopes, and balancing over lichen cover slabs for what Sam insists was a maximum of 2 hours.
We made it to the base of the Crest Jewel without injury and only minimal whining/swearing/growling from one of us.
Sam: "Getting angry won't help matters. Just enjoy this day alive on planet Earth!"
Amelia: "Don't tell me not to get angry!"
Sam: "At least your shoulder's not broken."
Amelia: "Hmph."
Once at the cliff, it was impossible not to be thrilled. We were high above the Valley with cool views. The slab looked inviting.
We had agreed that I would lead all the hard pitches because of Sam's injury. That meant Sam was up to lead the first 5.8 pitch. The sparse bolting and lack of use of his right arm only slowed Sam down a notch.
I started up the next 10a pitch ambitiously. I made it to the third bolt on the low angle, sometimes sandy slab before the runouts started to bother me. The fourth bolt--to Sam's memory--was diagonally 10 feet up from the third. The fourth bolt--to my freaked out, afraid to take a pendulum, cheese grater fall mind--was diagonally 25 feet up from the third.
After climbing up and down over a two foot section of rock for 10 minutes, I voiced some concern to Sam.
"I hate slab. Why don't they put more bolts on these slab routes? I don't wanna fall on this...I will get hurt for sure! I've never liked slab. We're supposed to be climbing cracks! You better lower me before I start crying."
Back on the belay ledge, I told Sam that retreat was wise: "You are injured and I can't climb slab--physically or mentally."
Sam reminded me that our only retreat involved climbing back up the steep mess we suffered through that morning and decided to lead the pitch despite his shoulder.
Sam is slab-inclined. He rocks that stuff with his level head and cat-like balance. Watching him confidently navigate the pitch settled my nerves. I was ready to lead the crux 5.10d third pitch.
The third pitch was much steeper than the second. So, even though it was technically harder, the falls would be clean. The bolts were only about 4 feet apart. These details combined to make the pitch one that I was psyched to lead.
I set out from the bolt anchor in slow motion. I calculated each delicate move with Sam's coaching. I was miraculously balanced on minuscule chips and creases, about four feet up from the belay anchor, when I could reach the first bolt. I blindly grabbed the red Alien from my gear loop and clipped it desperately to the bolt as my right foot slipped. As I started what would have been an 8' pendulum fall past Sam and the anchor, I managed to grab the Alien.
Sam and I both breathed a sigh of relief. I replaced the Alien with a quickdraw and pulled myself back onto the rock. I clipped the next three bolts in much the same way, using the quickdraws as points-of-aid to blow through the 10d crux section.
The next moves were through an easy overhang to a thin face. With my lead-head and footwork skills back, I miraculously climbed through a two-bolt 10c section clean! I was having fun again!
In keeping with our taking-the-free-out-of-free-climbing style, Sam pulled on most of the draws (with his left hand, of course) to follow the pitch.
He started into the next 5.9 pitch with a disclaimer: "My shoulder doesn't work. I never liked slab climbing either."
He made it to the third bolt before the runouts (or maybe the radiating, incapacitating shoulder pain) started to bother him. The fourth bolt--to Sam's memory--was diagonally 10 feet up from the third. The fourth bolt--to my freaked out, afraid to watch Sam take a pendulum, cheese grater fall mind--was diagonally 25 feet up from the third.
After climbing up and down over a two foot section of rock for 10 minutes, Sam voiced some concern to me.
I lowered Sam and took over the lead. Still happy and confident from the previous pitch, I was able to cruise up the 5.9 section of rock. Sam followed the pitch, but wasn't happy when he reached me at the anchor.
Pain and reality were getting in the way of Sam's plan for the day. My lead-head may have gotten stronger over the 4 pitches, but Sam's shoulder was getting weaker. He reluctantly admitted that his injury was preventing him from having fun.
We could see an escape route above. I would lead three-fourths of the next 80' pitch and then break left to a featured ledge that, according to the topo we carried, lead to a third class walk-off.
The climbing was more sustained and just as runout as the second pitch that I had backed-off of, but I loved the fifth pitch. When I got to the point where I planned to traverse off the route and into the escape, Sam encouraged me to finish the route instead.
"You're doing great! You're eating the slab up! We should keep climbing, you can lead all the hard stuff, we can finish the route!" Sam was psyched again. (Oh, the schizophrenic emotional roller coaster of rock climbing.)
I finished the pitch. Sam had fun following the first five feet before his shoulder shut him down.
"I feel cold and whole-body sick," he groaned.
"I think that means you should stop climbing," I announced, my medical know-how overriding my desire to climb.
At the hanging belay we shivered in the wind, ate lunch, and engaged in against-all-good-sense deliberation to keep climbing.
For the first time that day, we made a solid, self-preserving decision and rappelled to the escape ledge.
From the ledge, we followed cairns down into the woods. The decent trail met a gully and we started back up the west side of the North Dome. The west side was far less vegetated than east side we came down in the morning. After an hour an a half, we were back to the spot we had camped at.
We may have been unsuccessful in climbing the Crest Jewel, but we circumnavigated the entire North Dome. That counts for something, right? And we didn't die or get hurt. That definitely counts for something.
Back on top, we ate the rest of the Nutella before we started the 4.5 mile hike out of the woods. Back to the car, we hightailed it to the Valley for pizza, relieved to have our 24-hour, 13-mile,
1400' decent and 1400' ascent (the hike in and out to the road counts too) adventure behind us.
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| South face of North Dome |



