Climbing media outlets worldwide are reporting this week that Emily Harrington, the 34-year-old professional climber out of Tahoe City, CA, has free-climbed Golden Gate on El Capitan in fewer than 24 hours. Her ascent marks the fourth time a woman has free-climbed El Cap in a day, starting with Lynn Hill on the Nose in the mid-’90s, followed by Steph Davis and Mayan Smith-Gobat on Freerider. (Freerider is the route climbed by Alex Honnold in the film Free Solo.) Golden Gate climbs the same line as Freerider for nearly half of its 3,000 feet before breaking right and eventually beelining across the wall via a section dubbed the “A5 Traverse.” This band, protected by a row of pitons left in situ, marks the end of the difficult climbing, where dangerous albeit easier terrain leads to the top. Harrington led the A5 Traverse at night—without a helmet—with blood running down the side of her eye from a fall she took earlier on the difficult Golden Desert pitch.

Harrington, leading the harrowing A5 Traverse at night. Jon Glassberg / Louder Than 11 Though she wore a helmet when she previously worked on the route, Harrington did not wear one that day as she didn’t want it getting in the way. “It got pretty real up there,” says videographer Jon Glassberg, who captured the ascent for an upcoming feature-length film on Harrington. Five years ago, and after extensive preparation, Harrington spent six continuous days on the wall to free climb Golden Gate. Attempts to shave five days off her climb and do it in fewer than 24 hours followed, but there were setbacks, and once she fell nearly 50 feet and required rescue.

Climber Emily Harrington Is Recovering After a Bad Fall on El Capitan

Read article

“I wanted to do this because doing El Cap in a day is the epitome of big-wall free climbing,” Harrington says.  

 

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  So much drama🦙😂 in this one!!! // In all honesty it feels a bit silly that such a big deal was made out of a little slip 🍌 . But I suppose it’s a good conversation about risk and how we analyze and apply it in our lives. Again I can’t say thank you enough to YOSAR, @alexhonnold @adrianballinger @tarakerzhner @sannimccandless @jonglassberg for the epic support and love 💕// Link in Profile // edit @susietheis // #DangerStikTV @dangerstiktv A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Jan 2, 2020 at 6:59am PST

  She completed her ascent on November 4 in 21 hours, 13 minutes. Alex Honnold supported her for the first two-thirds of the route, simul-climbing with her so the two could cover 35 pitches, including 19 (1,800 feet) in four hours. Harrington’s fiancé Adrian Ballinger took over from there and helped her to the top. He carried extra food and water, removed her gear, and belayed her through the route’s most difficult sections. She climbed light and fast, striking a balance between boldness and safety. But she admits that no matter how you slice it, free climbing El Cap is a dangerous game.

What’s Cooking: How Emily Harrington and Adrian Ballinger Fuel Their Mountain Li…

The professional climber and mountain guide share how they stay healthy while on the road filming th… Read article

The team of Ballinger, at left, Harrington, and Honnold planning the epic, 21.25-hour Nov. 4 climb. Jessica Talley / Louder Than 11 To increase her safety margin and not repeat her accident from last year, “this year I put more gear in, but I think that climbing is inherently dangerous. It was about figuring out my risk tolerance.”

Squint to see Harrington leading Pitch 19 (The Monster offwidth). Note Honnold in blue in the lower right. Jessica Talley / Louder Than 11 On the successful recent day earlier this week, she led all 41 pitches of the 5.13b route. She overcame rock as slick as glass, as well as fierce, wide climbing where you wedge your body into an endless crack, plus long moves, downclimbs, and tricky face climbing. She followed the ethic requiring that she would lower back to the belay when she fell and try again until successful.

Harrington encountering crux moves high on the wall with 70-degree temperatures. Jon Glassberg / Louder Than 11 Because she took two falls in one section, that meant that she had to lead the crux Golden Desert (5.13a) pitch three times in a row. “On the first fall, I ripped the gear out,” she said. “On the second fall, I hit my head.” I ask her, did you see stars? “I did see stars, yup,” she says. “But I didn’t lose consciousness.”

 

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  A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Nov 7, 2020 at 8:06am PST

Those back-to-back falls marked her closest moment to giving up the goal. “A part of me was starting to accept that today wasn’t my day.” After finishing the pitch and regaining her composure for 30 minutes, she set off into the A5 Traverse and got it on her first attempt. She reached the summit at 10:30 pm. “This goal was far and above my perceived limit.”  

Alex Honnold and Brad Gobright Complete Daunting Free Climb on Yosemite’s El Cap…

Read article

 

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Climbing media outlets worldwide are reporting this week that Emily Harrington, the 34-year-old professional climber out of Tahoe City, CA, has free-climbed Golden Gate on El Capitan in fewer than 24 hours. Her ascent marks the fourth time a woman has free-climbed El Cap in a day, starting with Lynn Hill on the Nose in the mid-’90s, followed by Steph Davis and Mayan Smith-Gobat on Freerider. (Freerider is the route climbed by Alex Honnold in the film Free Solo.)

Golden Gate climbs the same line as Freerider for nearly half of its 3,000 feet before breaking right and eventually beelining across the wall via a section dubbed the “A5 Traverse.” This band, protected by a row of pitons left in situ, marks the end of the difficult climbing, where dangerous albeit easier terrain leads to the top. Harrington led the A5 Traverse at night—without a helmet—with blood running down the side of her eye from a fall she took earlier on the difficult Golden Desert pitch.

Though she wore a helmet when she previously worked on the route, Harrington did not wear one that day as she didn’t want it getting in the way.

“It got pretty real up there,” says videographer Jon Glassberg, who captured the ascent for an upcoming feature-length film on Harrington.

Five years ago, and after extensive preparation, Harrington spent six continuous days on the wall to free climb Golden Gate. Attempts to shave five days off her climb and do it in fewer than 24 hours followed, but there were setbacks, and once she fell nearly 50 feet and required rescue.

Climber Emily Harrington Is Recovering After a Bad Fall on El Capitan

Read article

“I wanted to do this because doing El Cap in a day is the epitome of big-wall free climbing,” Harrington says.

Climber Emily Harrington Is Recovering After a Bad Fall on El Capitan

Read article

Climber Emily Harrington Is Recovering After a Bad Fall on El Capitan

 

 

View this post on Instagram

  So much drama🦙😂 in this one!!! // In all honesty it feels a bit silly that such a big deal was made out of a little slip 🍌 . But I suppose it’s a good conversation about risk and how we analyze and apply it in our lives. Again I can’t say thank you enough to YOSAR, @alexhonnold @adrianballinger @tarakerzhner @sannimccandless @jonglassberg for the epic support and love 💕// Link in Profile // edit @susietheis // #DangerStikTV @dangerstiktv A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Jan 2, 2020 at 6:59am PST

 

View this post on Instagram

View this post on Instagram

So much drama🦙😂 in this one!!! // In all honesty it feels a bit silly that such a big deal was made out of a little slip 🍌 . But I suppose it’s a good conversation about risk and how we analyze and apply it in our lives. Again I can’t say thank you enough to YOSAR, @alexhonnold @adrianballinger @tarakerzhner @sannimccandless @jonglassberg for the epic support and love 💕// Link in Profile // edit @susietheis // #DangerStikTV @dangerstiktv

A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Jan 2, 2020 at 6:59am PST

She completed her ascent on November 4 in 21 hours, 13 minutes. Alex Honnold supported her for the first two-thirds of the route, simul-climbing with her so the two could cover 35 pitches, including 19 (1,800 feet) in four hours. Harrington’s fiancé Adrian Ballinger took over from there and helped her to the top. He carried extra food and water, removed her gear, and belayed her through the route’s most difficult sections. She climbed light and fast, striking a balance between boldness and safety. But she admits that no matter how you slice it, free climbing El Cap is a dangerous game.

What’s Cooking: How Emily Harrington and Adrian Ballinger Fuel Their Mountain Li…

The professional climber and mountain guide share how they stay healthy while on the road filming th… Read article

To increase her safety margin and not repeat her accident from last year, “this year I put more gear in, but I think that climbing is inherently dangerous. It was about figuring out my risk tolerance.”

What’s Cooking: How Emily Harrington and Adrian Ballinger Fuel Their Mountain Li…

The professional climber and mountain guide share how they stay healthy while on the road filming th… Read article

What’s Cooking: How Emily Harrington and Adrian Ballinger Fuel Their Mountain Li…

The professional climber and mountain guide share how they stay healthy while on the road filming th…

On the successful recent day earlier this week, she led all 41 pitches of the 5.13b route. She overcame rock as slick as glass, as well as fierce, wide climbing where you wedge your body into an endless crack, plus long moves, downclimbs, and tricky face climbing. She followed the ethic requiring that she would lower back to the belay when she fell and try again until successful.

Because she took two falls in one section, that meant that she had to lead the crux Golden Desert (5.13a) pitch three times in a row. “On the first fall, I ripped the gear out,” she said. “On the second fall, I hit my head.”

I ask her, did you see stars?

“I did see stars, yup,” she says. “But I didn’t lose consciousness.”

 

View this post on Instagram

  A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Nov 7, 2020 at 8:06am PST

A post shared by ᴇᴍɪʟʏ ʜᴀʀʀɪɴɢᴛᴏɴ (@emilyaharrington) on Nov 7, 2020 at 8:06am PST

Those back-to-back falls marked her closest moment to giving up the goal. “A part of me was starting to accept that today wasn’t my day.” After finishing the pitch and regaining her composure for 30 minutes, she set off into the A5 Traverse and got it on her first attempt. She reached the summit at 10:30 pm.

“This goal was far and above my perceived limit.”

Alex Honnold and Brad Gobright Complete Daunting Free Climb on Yosemite’s El Cap…

Read article

Alex Honnold and Brad Gobright Complete Daunting Free Climb on Yosemite’s El Cap…

Read article

Alex Honnold and Brad Gobright Complete Daunting Free Climb on Yosemite’s El Cap…

For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!

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