The two weeks before nationals this year I went to stone
summit for a pre nationals training camp. This was my third year doing it and
it's amazing how much it helps. When I climbed there the first day I felt like
I had absolutely no endurance and thought I was screwed for nationals... But,
after two weeks in that gym, you get endurance whether you want it or not.
The whole camp! |
As soon as camp finished, nationals started. I along with
two other people (Katie Lamb and Zoe Steinberg)
in female A flashed both of my qualifier routes. The first was a super
easy roof climb that nearly everyone flashed and the second one I was worried
would be too easy, but it actually separated our category really well.
So for
semifinals I went out third to last (I was the first person out of our three
way tie for first) and I made it to the second to last hold of our route. It
was a really long route that had an easy beginning and a slab section that went
to two bad pockets, I think the pockets were the crux of the climb. Me, Hannah
Tolson and Katie Lamb all made it past those pockets and fell on the same move,
but I got usable surface which put me in first going into finals!
This was the
first comp I've ever had where I was in first in both qualifiers and
semifinals, so that was really different for me.. I usually flail the first
couple rounds an then pull it together for finals.
Photo: Greenz Productions Qualifier 2! |
Photo: Just Fab Photography The beginning of the semifinals route! |
So on Sunday we had finals! Our finals climb was the same as female juniors, which was fun because we got to preview with them. When I was looking at the climb I was pretty positive that you could skip the hardest looking section of the climb, and I told people about it to see what they thought, but no one else thought so. We get unlimited time to climb in finals, unlike the other rounds where you had a limit of 8 minutes on the wall. So I really took my time (something that's pretty weird for me, seeing as I usually climb really fast.. Whoops). At the beginning of the climb I was super nervous, but once I got onto the flat part of the wall --about 2/3 of the way up-- all my nerves were gone. Then I was able to relax, especially when I found the best rest ever. I basically sat on a volume and got everything back.
Photo: Just Fab Photography So happy I found a great rest before the crux! (I was on this for a minute and a half) |
As soon as I got to the hard section around clip ten (where everyone had fallen, but I didn't know that) I WAS able to skip the moves that I thought I could, so I kinda bypassed the crux of the climb by doing one harder move. By then I could tell I had made it the furthest and I kinda got really excited and climbed really fast to the top and had so much adrenaline that I nearly fell clipping the anchors...! But now that's just funny to watch in the video.
Photo: Liam Murphy Finishing the climb! |
Photo: Father Coming down off the finals climb! |
Photo: Father Me and Kayla racing!! |
Photo: Liam Murphy Female A speed podium! |
Photo: Jennie Jariel Five Ten takes over speed! Brandon Lieuw, Josh Levin, Me, Kayla Lieuw. |
Then I was only home for 4 days when I went to Reno to go
do speed training! By the last day there I got a best time of 10.99 seconds for
the fifteen meter! I think I'll be able to get it down to low tens after the
pre worlds training camp in a few weeks.
Photo: Father There are very few non-Texans in this photo. |
After Reno, Josh and I drove to Salt Lake City to pick up
Charlie and climb with Ben and Sam Tresco in Maple Canyon! I ended up sending
Neptune Spear 13b on my fourth go! I also managed to
flash Gun Tower 12c which I was pretty psyched about. The style of climbing in Maple is super sick!
Photo: Me Our view from the speed wall's balcony. Reno! |
Photo: Charlie Andrews Standing in The Compound in Maple Canyon. |
Photo: Josh Levin Snow Cone Wall--Fluff Boy 13c Rifle, CO |