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GKelly wrote: If its a 5.13 or harder perhaps it's reasonable to extend that but that just complicates things. Lets face it. If you have a sub 5.12 project
*Chris* wrote:Personally... I think the whole discussion is a bit retarded.
Dom... would your question change at all if the route developer was credited as part of a route's description? As you've mentioned before, you don't see any value in mentioning the first ascentionist of a line unless he/she get's it all free on lead. That's fine with me... but personally I think the route developer deserves mention (especially if they put in the time to develop a line for others that they ultimately can't send).
STeveA wrote:The initial guidelines also only allowed 1 project per person at a time. This results in increased competition, and incentive for people to finish projects. These guidelines were effective when there was lots of new route potential, and now that new routes are getting harder to find, it does not make sense to let people hog the limited real estate because they were first to put a tag on it. If projects take too long people simply climb them and don't mention it.
Fred wrote:For the record, Marty and I have a project at Mt Dough which I'm sure is the fire for this discussion.
Yes, originaly the project may have been tagged by placing a bolt anchor and simply rapping the line. However, in recent weeks I have spent much time cleaning this line and it is almost ready for bolting. So based on your mention of amount of effort put into it we would respectfully request that you give us some more grace period to finish the project.
Should anything be diffrent for a strong climber....? I don't get this one.... might be my french translation lol!
Greg wrote:provided that they are legitimately trying for the FFA and not just squating
theriault wrote:Read this article in Rock and Ice this morning and had to post it! These are NOT my word or the way I am thinking about this situation and I am not pointing the finger at anyone, I just thought it was funny and somewhat fitting in this little mess! lol
The Problem:
REDTAGGING (V10)
The Beta: Have you ever rented a room from a homeowner? Your landlord wants your money... but he doesn't actually want you to live there. It's a paradox that creates an overall sucky situation for all. This is what redtagging is like.
The first ascentionist doesn't want to be the guy who redtags his routes, but he also doesn't want someone else to send the route first. He wants to be "cool" and let other people climb on his project ... but he doesn't actually want that. It creates an uncomfortable situation.
Further, the people who say redtagging is B.S. and that it holds back climbing from progressing are usually the same people who don't put up routes themselves.
The Solution: If you want to do tha first ascent, openly and proudly redtag your route. You get one year (365 days) to send it before it opens. Also, you can't "redtag" a boulder problem - not necessarily because brushing and cleaning a small piece of rock doesn't entitle ownership, but because you literally can't place a red tag on a boulder problem. Finally, if you become a climber who people respect - a quality that must be earned, not asked for - then you don't need redtag in the first place. And if you're the type of climber who snakes someone's project just to get attention and "win" a first ascent - especially if you haven't climbed any other routes in the area - then you're just a douche.
Tuesday Night Bouldering
by Andrew Bisharat
Rock and Ice
Issue 197
Dom wrote:Red tags ethics vary throughout the world so I posted this specific poll in the New Brunswick section to know what people think of red-tags/closed projects in New Brunswick.
Dom wrote:Red tags ethics vary throughout the world so I posted this specific poll in the New Brunswick section to know what people think of red-tags/closed projects in New Brunswick
theriault wrote:Read this article in Rock and Ice this morning and had to post it! These are NOT my word or the way I am thinking about this situation and I am not pointing the finger at anyone, I just thought it was funny and somewhat fitting in this little mess! lol
coryhal wrote:6 weeks is plenty of time, if you havent climbed the line by then you (A) dont care or (B) bolted somthing that is way over your limit.
and just because you toproped a line doesnt make it your route, it has to be properly cleaned and bolted before it can be called a closed project, and your 6 weeks starts after that point, like after the first bolt goes in or somthing.
i thought this closed project thing only applied to sport/mixed routes? a trad line is always up for grabs so you better climbe her fast.
Matt Peck wrote:coryhal wrote:6 weeks is plenty of time, if you havent climbed the line by then you (A) dont care or (B) bolted somthing that is way over your limit.
and just because you toproped a line doesnt make it your route, it has to be properly cleaned and bolted before it can be called a closed project, and your 6 weeks starts after that point, like after the first bolt goes in or somthing.
i thought this closed project thing only applied to sport/mixed routes? a trad line is always up for grabs so you better climbe her fast.
Wow. That's pretty black and white. Heaven forbid life doesn't actually let you go climbing whenever you want.
Ha. I love it.PeterA wrote:... the chouinard constant...
-PJ
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