shame on a chipper.
it's pretty amazing actually to think that one could find unclimbed boulders in the world. there's redemption in that.
http://lt11.com/2012/09/17/abyss-north-americas-highest-bouldering/#disqus_thread
it gets me thinking about the relation between this kind of exposure and the pristine possibility that opens a climbing area up in the first place. i recall my favourite climbing area, favourite because it was ours, when there was basically 1 small crew from the gym, 1 loner who painted names on rocks, and a couple of guys who had climbed there in the past. one is now an imaginative route setter; the other turned to meditation and split with his hot girlfriend. one could tell by the signs of traffic who had been there before you. this went on for several years, all quite content just to work on the problems, then go back to the gym and train more, or as you like. one stays weak if one wants to. so our days unfolded.
then an online guide was written. then dr. topo made up their video of the place, and a change occurred. the very next weekend, what was an otherwise isolated place became a scene. it was pretty amazing to see a bunch of cool, mostly friendly people with cameras out and about in a pleasant spot (except for those who left their used tape around- who litters used bandages???/) out on a solo venture, i met a super sweet couple i;d climbed with at big bend, and we climbed together again. that was cool. way out at the margins of the system, and we meet again! it's as if the boulders possessed some extra gravity.
politically speaking, the question then becomes how to leverage that exposure for the purposes of mobilization for access to the boulders.