Moderators: chossmonkey, Dom, granite_grrl, peter, Climb Nova Scotia, Matt Peck
So Ben how about you pull your head out of your ass and get all of the facts straight before accuse people of crap and offer extreme consequences. If your worried about the void I would gladly fill it with my foot.
I think calling people names is pretty harsh, the only reason I don't delete your post for TOS violation is because I am in the debate and it could be interpreted as a bias. Sean that is pretty uncool.
Anyway I had a great day climbing today and I'm done with the Conversation. We will have to agree to disagree. BTW anymore name calling and I will delete the post (thats directed at everyone).
Why does the fact that the bolts were put there by a company play a role? The company does not exist anymore, but the bolts they placed at Polly's were well liked and well used by many members of the Nova Scotian climbing community. The only 'role' that was played by the fact that they were placed by a company for commercial reasons seems to be that you (Mitt) and Steve took great personal offense to it. The origin of the bolts was irrelevant they were there, they were used and they should not have been removed.
How does increasing the number of users to an area reduce impact? Its true, the bolts themselves cause very little impact. But the throngs of people bolts seem to magnetically attract do cause impacts.The arguments that it is a preservation area and we should practice leave no trace is beautiful flowers. We absolutely should practice leave no trace practices, that is legit, not just at Polly's because it is a preservation area, but everywhere we climb, boulder, camp ect. BUT Those bolts REDUCED the impact on the area by climbers who wanted to set up top ropes. Now climbers who want to set top ropes at Polly's have to trample around off of the path destroying the vegetation at the top setting up and removing anchors every time. How is that closer to leaving no trace then using the bolts that were already there? A second reason the leave no trace argument is beautiful flowers is that 8 bolt scars look no better than 8 bolts so you have improved nothing. The damage (if you consider it to be so, and as has been stated that is another argument) was done. Removing the bolts did nothing to improve it. But hey at least you showed Virtigo who is the boss of where bolts can go in Nova Scotia, you really stuck it to the man there.
The removal of the bolts (in my opinion) was a hugely selfish, absolutely unwarranted action. Really all it amounts to is vandalism. How would you feel Steve if someone decided that he didn't like bolts that you regularly use for a collection of his own reasons and took it upon himself to go out and chop them? You owe the climbing community an apology for stealing one of our resources, and I hope you can take the time to read the posts on here and consider the fact that you had no right to chop those bolts.
chossmonkey wrote:The bolts were placed for monetary gain on public land. They weren't necessary, they were a convenience. I'm sure bolted crack climbs would be real popular and see lots of use with the fast food mentality of modern climbing. Does that make them right?
How is it different?trad_reborn wrote:bolting a crack is NOT the same thing as putting a toprope anchor on a wall that sees a lot of traffic and the only anchor gear is many feet back from the edge.
chossmonkey wrote:How is it different?
If there is a crack to place gear there is a crack to place gear. So what if you need to bring an extra 100' of webbing to set up and anchor. Its top roping! You are supposed to expect to have to set up and anchor and bring miles of webbing to do so.
trad_reborn wrote:chossmonkey wrote:How is it different?
If there is a crack to place gear there is a crack to place gear. So what if you need to bring an extra 100' of webbing to set up and anchor. Its top roping! You are supposed to expect to have to set up and anchor and bring miles of webbing to do so.
are you serious?
bolting a protectable crack is unnecessary and does nothing for erosion remediation. putting in top rope anchors where the only other option is to damage vegetation and carry around ungawdly amounts of webbing or cord is a step that can be taken to avoid erosion.
bolted anchors have their place. if you follow your line of reasoning there really shouldn't be ANY bolts ANYWHERE... no more sport routes, just top roping on natural anchors...
it's a good thing you guys don't live around welsford b/c there are dozens of anchors that would end up getting chopped even though they were put there to avoid the trees from being killed over time and/or due to convenience.
Nate wrote:HAHAHAHA neither of you guys even lives here!? That is gold! How do you know we're not arguing about some rubbish choss heap? Have you guys been to Polly's Cove?
NS
ben smith wrote:
Choss monkey, how do you even know that there are gear placements there? Adequate gear for Steve is two mankey RPs and a possible number 5 camelot, not prime gear for anyone one who wants to toprope a 20 ft 5.6 que no?
Basically if you haven't seen the gear I'd avoid commenting on how bomber it is and how any mindless drone could place a bomber toprope there.
Nate wrote:HAHAHAHA neither of you guys even lives here!? That is gold! How do you know we're not arguing about some rubbish choss heap? Have you guys been to Polly's Cove?
NS
Normally there is a big fat "(Content Moderated)" where some thing has been snipped out.pulldown wrote:Thanks for clarifying Cara. Is there a way to denote if a comment has been moderated? It is nice to know if a post had more to it but had been edited.
Thanks
Todd
I didn't say the bolts should have been chopped. I did say "the bolts weren't necessary, they were a convenience and they shouldn't have been there to begin with." I also said "IF they were going to be chopped it should have been years ago when they were first placed."ben smith wrote: Again for all you know that gear could be trash or unusually wide,e.g pro for number 4 camelots and up only (See Eager's and Peter's posts) so if I were you I'd think twice before saying how much chopping those bolts is justified.
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