STeveA wrote:I disagree.
To paraphrase Monty Python:
-That's not an argument, that's a contradiction. I paid for a good arguement.
-No. You paid for an argument.
Please explain.
The tree did not fall of it's own accord. A simple inspection of the stump and trunk reveal it was healthy and cut. I'm not pointing any fingers here -and I don't really care who cut it or why. The tree did not hide the crack. It was possible to squeeze gear behind it. A fall would have resulted in a pendulum into the tree, so PG or maybe R. As stated earlier a girth hitch to the trunk would also have held a fall, also PG/R. But that's not my point.
No first ascensionist in their right mind would cut 5 of the 6 trunks and leave the most prominent obstruction to the crack. Steve
is in his right mind. He felt the face was distinct from the crack and warranted bolts. At the time it was established, Anubius was a valid route (not 3 stars, but definitely worthy of notation). But that's not my point either.
Rocks fall. Trees die. Pin scars eventually enlarge to become finger-locks. Aid routes are freed. When the tree "fell" it exposed a new weakness, which has since been climbed on natural gear (Roundup, October Sky). Though neither is the same route as the original, they are well within an arms-length of it. Since the newer routes follow the natural feature, it appears as though the bolts encroach on the crack. Aside from being unsightly, this sets a precedence of acceptable proximity of bolts to cracks. (Perhaps unfair, but unless we put up a plaque explaining them...)
Now, if an historically aid route with fixed pins is freed or climbed with clean aid gear, it is generally considered
not cool to hammer in some new pitons. Similarly, if a large block that formed a crack were to fall, leaving a 30'+ blank face in it's wake, it might be acceptable to add a bolt or two provided no gear placements were available along this stretch of the pitch. I argue that if natural forces were to expose features that accept natural gear, where protection had previously been unavailable (in an historically Trad area, at least) the fixed protection should be discretely removed.