The first lockdown of 2020 was truly grim. Stuck working from home, family business going under and the biggest heartbreak of them all; no climbing advised by the BMC. The ‘Government-mandated exercise periods’ were the only salvation, which I put towards walking through Hepburn woods, exploring and hunting new lines to be climbed. With so much rock close to home I was, of course, tempted to climb during the lockdown, but I patiently waited and made a log of stuff I found, and then when Lockdown 1 ended, I went about tackling these potential new problems. The whole process of finding, cleaning and climbing new lines completely transformed climbing for me.
The first major change for me was I didn’t really care about aiming for the hardest grade possible. You have absolutely no idea how hard the problem is under the moss and undergrowth, therefore the whole Font grading system becomes irrelevant. It’s just about finding a good line and figuring out how to do it. Climbing outdoors is often said to be problem-solving, and I’ve found this last year that focusing on new routing has taken my technique and route reading to another level.
Of course, some problems I’ve uncovered end up being easier than originally thought, but I don’t get disheartened spending a few cleaning sessions on a problem only to ‘flash’ it on the first climbing session. It’s all a part of the process and completely counter-balanced by other lines which turn out as great physical and mental battles.
The first real battle was a large free standing boulder in Hepburn Woods above the Gruffalo area. I’d attempted this shortly after Lockdown 1, but then realised the slopey top-out was going to be atrocious in the warmer summer weather. I sidelined it, but it was always at the back of my mind. In the meantime I cleaned up a selection of problems near the old quarry below ‘A Northern Soul’. Two free-standing boulders in the undergrowth, aptly named ‘The Twins’ now contain a variety of slab climbs, as well as a difficult overhanging prow. ‘Pair Of Eighters’, around the f7b+ range was certainly my favourite.