Chris Bonington on Black Crag classic 'Prana'.Photo-Mountain Heritage
Black Crag, Borrowdale, at 4 o’clock on Saturday looks like
market day in the high street. Brightly coloured groups gathered on ledges, at
the top, eating and drinking at the crag-foot. Heaps of gear lie around among
the birches. A mesh of ropes, green and purple, yellow and red, connects the
stances. The sun reaches Troutdale Pinnacle around 2 o’clock, and a nearly
freezing wind has driven everyone off the saturnine east-facing steeps of Goat across
the dale - ourselves included, only we have been doing the Peeler while they have
been doing things like Bitter Oasis and Alone in Space.
We know this because they wear track-suit bottoms with twin
white stripes and of course no helmets. On the whole crag only two helmets -
ours. On the sheer left wall, where Grand Alliance, Vertigo, and Prana thread upwards
from one invisible mini-hold to another, it looks like a gymkhana. Leggy athletes
in T-shirts are spreadeagled all over it. As we start up the tortuous rearing
corner systems of the Pinnacle face, aiming at Mortician, a handsome lad with a
curly moustache, like an Edwardian advertisement for liver pills, is fiddling in a wire or two to protect
the crux of Grand Alliance. He’s been there a while. By the time I’ve led up the
scratched slab and steep corner and taken a stance on a quaking mass of earth which
supports three rowan saplings, he’s still there as I tie on, a shout of
“Below!” echoes from above.
I look up and see yellow and ochre rocks blossoming
in the sunshine like fireworks. They spin past and I look down to see my mate, Neil,
crouching with his hands on top of his head. luckily they miss him, and the dog
and the flask. No sooner has Neil’s orange helmet surfaced below me than two track-suits
start up the slabs towards us, soloing with ropes on shoulders, as track-suits
will. Neil sets about ‘entering an obvious cleaned corner with difficulty’ ,
places a wire and rests, finds a high hidden hold, which also takes a wire, and
rests again. Over on the left wall, Curly Moustache is crucified just below his
crux, poised to move but doing nothing - that is, waiting for the adrenalin to
flow. A pair to his right, talkative after finishing Prana in good style, are
abbing volubly and leisurely past him, crossing his ropes, and are sharply advised
to get on with it by Curly’s mates down beside the yew tree.
The Track-suits have reached us. They too are aiming at Mortician and we decide to let them past since we’re taking quite a while to enter the cleaned corner with difficulty. So do they. The leader (long black hair) clips into our runners in a devious way (he carries five wires on one krab), to the accompaniment of derisive ‘advice’ from his mate.....
“ What are you doing that for... Don’t you think you’ve got it twisted?”
Soon the rock bristles with gear like a bull’s shoulder full of banderillas just before the kill. Black-hair yo-yo’s for a while. Then, stung by frustration and more advice, he muscles up on the good hold and makes it into the corner, where he rests for a long time, breathing heavily like a torrid sequence in a blue movie. Chalk floats downwards.
Neil pokes about for protection and I chat with Track-suit
Two. He’s thirsting to do Grand Alliance and is enviously watching his mates,
Curly and company, disporting themselves on the wall. Curly moves delicately
up.
“I liked your shakes,” and Curly calls back: “Nearly lost it there. I went for this better hold and it was really rounded. I was twenty feet above me wires and I thought I’d lost it. But I got control again and it was all right.”
To his left a track-suit, who must be very strong, has been grappling with the overhang on Vertigo for more than half an hour, leaning out, reaching up, finding nothing, swearing. Below us, someone is leading up the first pitch of the Direct – a tall pretty girl with noticeable make-up, quite an apparition on this or any other crag.
This is the
‘swing lay-back’ which we thought was many feet below. The stance I now share
with the Extremes, a Scotsman and his mate, is of course littered with sharp
stones, trodden peaty earth, and piles of red and yellow rope. For a moment I
feel the laws of nature have come unstuck
- I’m sinking – clods of earth have landslid, stopping just in time, and the
Scotsman says, “Oh thanks! That was the stance!
Insecurity reigns. It feels like Scottish climbing. Thankfully
I find a peg. whose rusty solidity suggests it must have been banged home by Greenwood
and Ross, the first humans to pass this way, a quarter of a century ago. Thirty
dirty sloping feet beyond it I come to an oak in a corner, sturdy. Not yet quite ring-barked,
with plenty yellow buds, and l tape onto it. The Scotsman has followed me now
and clips into my runner on the peg, his finger pouring blood from his last
explosion.
In a moment Black-hair arrives at the summit of his big
corner, his nose clown-white with chalk. looking weary and remote. The bleeding
Scotsman decides to abseil off the oak and protects himself with a yellow sling
while he hovers over space. When he jumps off downwards. he leaves the sling on
the tree, which is starting to look Christmassy. Track-suit Two arrives and
climbs wordlessly past. Black-hair says, “What the hell are you doing?" Two says. “ It's called
‘leading through’." speaking very distinctly as though to a deaf
foreigner. But Black-hair has had enough and they agree resentfully to follow the
abseil fashion.
Over on Vertigo the strong track-suit is doing the same. Neil arrives, and it is even more like Christmas for a while
as Black- hair gives him back his wire from the bottom of the corner, where we
were a day or two ago - sometime this week anyway - and I hang the bleeding
Scotsman‘s yellow sling round Two‘s neck to take back down.
We follow the guide’s brief ambiguities for one more long pitch. still trusting its belief in hundred-foot run-outs round right-angles and sharp edges. Neil even believes that ‘exit right’ means you should move right and finds himself on an Extreme wall. Ten tantalizing feet below a plausible slanting finger-ledge. Balked, he retreats and belays. Being a tree-lover, I lead through past a small and well-worn holly and find a fleck or two of red and blue wool tracking upwards towards the heathery skyline. (Theseus must have felt like this in the labyrinth of Minos.)
As we coil, Track-suit Two dances into view, jumping nimbly up the
old classic, the Pinnacle itself. No rope trails behind him - he’s soloing with
Curly. As they join me, I yawn, and Curly says kindly, “You must be
tired," which makes me feel about 75. “I’m hungry“ I say, thinking that
today everyone at Black Crag must be
tired.
David Craig:First published in Climber and Rambler-March 82