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Uncut footage: First ascent of Cherry Picking in the Grampians, Australia. One of my favorite problems ever!

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GREAT video from our Australia trip with Dave graham and Ian Dory, by Achromatic.tv! Brings me back so many good memories! This video got me thinking about all the amazing projects and now I can’t wait to go back! The Grampians is truly one of the most special places in the world and always gets me psyched!

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My past few months

The last months have probably been the roughest few months in a while for me. A lot of traveling, a LOT of climbing, hiking around endlessly searching for new areas, cleaning boulders, carrying heavy shit everyday, filming, making topos, building trails, battling weather… You’d think there’s always time for a little blog update, but no. Not on the schedule we’ve been on. And now, I don’t even know where to begin. So much has happened in the last few months that it’s overwhelming even just thinking about it all. Finland, Poland, Spain, Italy, Australia, South Africa, Norway, Sweden.. I completely missed summer. It’s all been amazing, but I needed a little break, some downtime to recoup. Living on the road for too long, always being on the move, takes it’s toll.


Fast forward Poland, Spain and Italy. After my last year’s trip to the Grampians, getting back to Australia was all I could think about for months. In the beginning of May I jumped on a plane to Melbourne straight from the Melloblocco event in Italy. The main crew for Australia was the same as last year; Dave Graham, Ian Dory and myself. After last years recon mission, we knew exactly what we wanted to do and focused our scope to the Victoria range in the southern part of the mountain. We booked a place in Wartook, rented a 4x4 and were much better prepared in every way. The plan of attack was clear; find the sickest new stuff out there and climb it!

View from Buandik


Buandik, where we opened lots of amazing problems last season, was an obvious place to start from. Surrounded by rock in every direction, finding something new shouldn’t be too hard. First off I finished off some old projects from our previous trip, like Slippery Slope (V12), the first line we ever saw in the area, and Losing Grip (V12) a project that we worked on a few days last trip but couldn’t pull it together. Then I found an area that we later named Amusement park. It’s another sector in Buandik, just a quick walk from the main sector. It’s all big boulders. And by big I mean BIG! There we spent days and days brushing up problems and establishing some of the best highballs like Knowing is Half the Battle (V11), which is a gigantic highball on the biggest sandstone bloc I’ve ever seen. Once you top it out, you better have a plan for getting back down… I also put up Rule Number 1 (V13) with really cool tensiony moves, Rootarded (V13) a very uniquely shaped prow and Happy Ending (V11) an amazing, basically 2-pitch highball problem. The great thing in the Grampians is that you can just go around and pick the best lines, so all the problems we put up are the cream of the crop! Of course there where many projects in the area left for next seasons, namely one that was simply too hard for us this trip.

Ian on Knowing is Half the Battle (V11)

Last year at one point there were more photographers than climbers with us, so this time we wanted to keep it a bit more mellow. We had Simon Carter shoot some great photos with us, some of which you can see here on his website. For video we did some filming on our own for an Island project and we also had Nelson join us to shoot for Chuck Fryberger’s upcoming film called The Network. Nelson got a ton of great footage and while following us around filming our efforts, he got to do a respectable amount of bushwhacking himself. For those who don’t know, the Australian bush is no joke. It can be very difficult if not almost impossible to navigate through and floods knocking down trees make things even worse. And since it’s Australia, there’s probably are all kinds of poisonous critters everywhere. If you’re carrying a pad through the bush (or trying to), you’ll be hating life!

After bushwhacking on a daily basis, like we had to, you really learn to appreciate the trails. A lot of our time was spent marking and clearing trails to some of the areas to make access easier for everyone.

Mid-July the weather turned to shit. Rain, however, didn’t stop us from still doing our thing, but surely it was a big limiting factor. At some point the rain got to be a bit too much, so we fled to Arapiles, a well-known trad climbing area further up north. There I established one of the coolest problems of the trip, which I named Never Say Never (V14) after climbing it while it was more or less soaking wet and everyone called me crazy for even putting my shoes on.

First ascent of Never Say Never (V14)

Some of the grades that I proposed for my FA’s last year were settling and a few of my old problems got upgraded. Right Thurr, which I quickly did the first ascent of in 20 minutes and graded V12, got bumped up to V14 by Dave and Ian after they spent days and days trying it. Also we all agreed that my dyno problem Massive Dynamic is definitely more V14 than V13. It’s good to get a bit more consensus on the grades as not that many people have tried them yet.

Buandik has already become a top destination world-wide for hard bouldering. Here’s a list of my first ascents in Buandik:

  • Massive Dynamic, V14
  • Occam’s Razor, V14
  • Right Thurr, V14
  • Cherry Picking, V13
  • Rootarded, V13
  • Rule Number 1, V13
  • Boredom, V13
  • Losing Grip, V12
  • Slippery Slope, V12
  • Instakill, V11
  • Tunnel Vision, V11
  • Happy Ending, V11
  • + MANY other problems

When you add Dave’s and Ian’s first ascents and what other people have opened, there aren’t many areas in the world with such a high concentration of hard boulder problems. And all of them very high quality!!

First ascent of Massive Dynamic (V14)

At Mt. Stapylton area, I had pretty much climbed all the existing projects in 2011, but there was one project left that I didn’t get to see on my previous trip. It was an old Klem Loskot dyno project at Snakepit, which had been tried by quite a few people over the years and the guidebook said that it is “destined to be one of Australia’s hardest jumps”. It’s a crazy blind double dyno that requires good coordination skills. It’s a huge dyno and you can’t see the hold you’re jumping to at any point, but you still have to coordinate it perfectly and hit precisely the right spots with both hands. I just kept rapid-firing tries on it until one time everything went perfect and I stuck the dyno. I called it Quitline and proposed V12, but it’s very hard to grade boulders like this, so we’ll see if the grade will go up. About it being Australia’s hardest dyno, in 2011 I did the first ascent of Pigeon Superstition and Massive Dynamic, both of which are V14 and the crux on both is a very hard dyno. But Quitline is still up there. It’s a different kind of dyno compared to the previous as it relies more on coordination, whereas the other two are more straight forward power moves.

First ascent of Quitline


We also did quite a bit of sport climbing, roped climbing as most of the routes have mixed protection. In Muline I climbed the previously hardest route in Australia, Flower Power (8c), on my 2nd try and flashed Eye of the Tiger, possible the best 8a route in the world!  On Taipan wall (which, by the way, has the best rope climbing in the universe) I flashed the the famous trad pitch Mirage and without shitting my pants once. Mirage is very techy and delicate climbing, some of the gear seems questionable and of course you’re doing huge diagonal runouts between placements. At the very top there is a huuuuge all points of dyno! It’s nothing like what comes to your mind when you think of trad climbing!

Flashing Mirage on Taipan wall

Also on Taipan wall I tried an AMAZING project unfortunately only on my last few days of the trip. I got really close to climbing it on the last day, but just ran out of time. I can’t wait to get back on it!!! It starts Taipan wall style with a scary section where you’d deck on a ledge if you fell. Once you get the second bolt or a cam clipped you’re safe. Here begins the first 8B boulder section with very precise and shoulder intensive moves, bad feet and the two worst slopers I’ve ever seen on a route. This is followed by an easier but absolutely amazing scoopy section to a pretty ok rest. From there you set up for one of the craziest dynos I’ve ever done! If you stick the low percentage dyno, there’s still a sustained run-out section with long moves to the anchor. Sport climbing often tends to be very basic and simple movement, but this project is NOTHING like that. It’s like a crazy boulder problem, just much longer and the rock could not get any better!

Getting painfully close on the incredible Taipan wall project on our last day.

Grampians has some of the craziest rock you’ll ever see. It’s the most bullet sandstone I’ve ever come across, yet it forms incredible features. Ranging from the dark orange pockety stuff to the grey spiderweb rock, there is a big variety of different types of sandstone, which is very rare to find within one area. Of course there’s always some choss too… oh, wait.. there isn’t any in the Grampians!

The craziest thing is that we found so many new areas that we didn’t even have time to go back to. Developing each area is always more work than you think and takes a lot of time and energy. Even a 2-month trip was barely enough to scratch the surface and see a glimpse of what’s out there!

Topos that I’ve made of Buandik can be downloaded from the topos section on my website.


From Australia, me and Dave flew straight to South Africa for another two months of bouldering on orange sandstone! Read about our Rocklands trip in my next blog post….Soon!!

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Down Under - photos

This may not be new for everyone, but I just had a chance for the first time to check out this photo essay from Keith Ladzinki. It’s full of amazing photos from our trip to the Grampians in Australia and definitely worth checking out!

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Taipan wall in the #grampians #australia (Taken with Instagram)

Taipan wall in the #grampians #australia (Taken with Instagram)

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OZ

So we’re back in the Grampians and at the moment the crew consists of just myself, Dave Graham and Ian Dory. The weather has been good so far and psyche is very high! It’s not easy to find time for writing updates, because we’ve been so focused on climbing and exploring that there’s barely been time to do anything other than climb, eat and sleep. And we’re loving it! The best rock in the world is situated here in the Grampians and we keep finding new areas every day! The potential is so overwhelming that is hard to even decide where to begin.



This time we are much better prepared, compared to last year when we had several key things missing. With 2 months of time, plenty of pads, 4x4 car, contacts to locals, a trad rack and a drill for bolting routes we’re pretty much set. We also know where to look for new areas and where not to. The other day I found a new zone just next to the the area in Buandik that we developed last year! On our first climbing days I ticked off some of the projects from last year and did the FA’s of Slippery slope V12 and Losing grip V12, both of which we tried but couldn’t do last year. In the new zone we cleaned a bunch of new projects, some of which go some that are just impossible as it often goes. The best line in the new zone so far is a boulder I named Happy Ending V11. This problem is basically a 2 pitch boulder problem. The first part is a big 45 degree overhang with some powerful moves leading to a mantle over the lip to a small rest. At this point you are already pretty high of the ground and this is where the second part starts. The last part t is a phenomenal technical prow and so tall that you don’t want to fall. I’m especially psyched on one  of the new projects! It’s a 10 meters tall highball that climbs up a clean patina face with small bomber crimps and big slopy features. The rock quality couldn’t be any better. Most of the hard moves revolve around gastons and require extreme shoulder strength! This type of climbing is very much my style and this could be a very hard project that I’ve spent a looong time looking for! Quality-wise at least, it don’t get much better!!

We also did a bit of sport climbing at Muline and Taipan. The great thing about the sport climbing here is that first of all it’s all natural and the style of climbing doesn’t seem to differ from bouldering at all, as sport climbing is often completely different in movement compared to bouldering. There are big dynos on the routes and the rock quality is truly the best there is! We’ve been to Muline a couple times now and it is one of the best crags in the Grampians along with Taipan wall. I flashed the amazing Eye of the Tiger 8a and did Flower Power 8c on my second try and both of these climbs are near perfect. I also on-sighted a 7c called Desert Flower, the lower part of which requires trad gear with ground fall potential and apparently got off route and climbed a harder direct finish to it.



Today we sessioned on Wheel of Life and perfected our beta for the full link. I made some really good links and got close to doing Sleepy rave. I’ve been working on my endurance and I notice a huge difference compared to when I tried the Wheel last year. And endurance is all you really need for a 75-move “boulder problem”. I’m psyched to get back on it and start giving it burns from the start next time. Maybe I’ll even place a cam on it so it’s a trad climb or if there happens to be puddles underneath it I’ll call it a deep water solo and then I can give it a sport climbing grade that it deserves. But seriously speaking, the Wheel is an amazing climb and whether it’s difficulty is quantifiable with a V-grade or not, it’s a truly a one-of-a-kind climb!

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A little video from our trip to Grampians, Australia last August.

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